In the neighbourhood of Aix-la-Chapelle the lower members of the Cretaceous formation, viz. the Greensand, Galt, and Chalk-marl, are well developed, and comprise a series of littoral deposits of the great Chalk ocean that extended westwardly between France and England, on both sides of the existing Channel, and eastwardly over North and Central Germany, Sweden, Poland, and Russia, far into Asia. The series of strata at Aix-la-Chapelle is several hundred feet in thickness, and the lowermost beds lie immediately on the Carboniferous rocks of the country.
Dr. M. H. Debey,[181] to whose scientific labours we are indebted for an accurate knowledge of these interesting facts, divides these cretaceous deposits into four groups, the lowermost of which appears to be the equivalent of our Greensand; it consists of beds of clay and sand, the middle portion abounding in stems, leaves, and fruit, and the resin of coniferous trees.
[181] See Geol. Journal, vol. vii. p. 109.
The epidermis of the leaves often occurs in a carbonized state, and is recognizable by its microscopic structure. Xylophagous mollusks are found in the petrified and carbonized wood. Fresh-water Desmidiaceæ, and a few marine remains, are associated with this fossil flora, which is distinguished by the abundance of Ferns and dicotyledonous leaves, and the scarcity of Cycads; among them are undoubted Proteaceæ.
The specimens collected by M. Debey from the lower cretaceous beds are the following:
Algæ, 15. Filices, 28. Hydropteridæ, 2. Cycadeæ, 5. Naiadeæ, 5. Palmæ, 1. Coniferæ, 20. Julifloræ, 5. Credneriæ, 3. Leaves of Dicotyledons, undetermined, 26. Fruits undetermined, 8. Woods.[182]
[182] Geol. Journal, vol. vii. p. 111.
This assemblage of angiosperms, with gymnosperms, and cryptogamia, at the commencement of the Cretaceous epoch, when the Iguanodon and other reptilian forms of the Oolite and Wealden still inhabited the land and water, proves, as Sir Charles Lyell has remarked,[183] that the meteorological phenomena of that remote period differed in no essential particular from those which now prevail.
[183] Supplement to the New Edition of Elements of Geology, 1852, p. XV.