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VI.—Notes on the Graptolite-bearing Rocks of New Zealand1
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 May 2009
Extract
The series of beds containing graptolites in New Zealand occur in the Whakamarama district, which is situated in almost the extreme north-west of the South Island. They consist of intercalated bands of quartzite and carbonaceous argillites, with a north and south strike and dipping at a low angle to the west. As a result of the natural erosion of the land surface taking place more rapidly in the slaty layers than in the harder quartzites, the ridges and stream valleys exhibit a noticeable parallelism, those streams which enter the sea on the western coast usually taking a very sharp bend to the west, and with a somewhat gorgy channel to the sea. The valleys are for the most part densely clothed with forest trees, while the ridges of quartzite are barren, with the exception of a stunted growth of manuka (Leptospermum scoparium and L. ericoides), and in places a covering of peat to a depth of a few inches.
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- Original Articles
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- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1909
Footnotes
See paper by Mrs. E. M. R. Shakespear D.Sc. “On some New Zealand Graptolites”, Geol. Mag., Dec. V, Vol. V, April, 1908, pp. 145–8.
References
page 75 note 1 Bull. N.Z. Geol. Survey, 1907, No. 3.