| 1. | The Coal Measures.—Sandstones, shales, and grits, with numerous beds and seams of Coal; ironstone nodules. Land plants in profusion. Intercalations of bands of limestone with fresh-water bivalves and crustaceans in some districts; and with marine shells in others. |
| 2. | Millstone Grit.—Sandstones, shales, and quartzose conglomerates and grit, (provincially, Millstone-grit): with shales and thin seams of coal, and plants of the coal-measures in some localities. The conglomerates and grits have evidently resulted from the destruction of granitic rocks. |
| 3. | Carboniferous, or Mountain Limestone.—A series, nearly 1,000 feet in thickness, of limestones and flagstones, abounding in crinoideans, corals, and marine shells and crustaceans; with layers and nodules of chert. Ores of lead, zinc, copper, barytes; fluor spar, &c. Limestones, with innumerable shells of the genera Productus, Spirifer, Goniatites, Orthocera, Bellerophon, &c. Several varieties of black, bluish grey, and variegated marbles. Coal occurs in the mountain limestone of some parts of Russia. |
Obs.—The strata comprised in the carboniferous (coal-hearing) system, consist of sandstones more or less felspathic, and of dark bituminous shales with innumerable ferns, and other vascular cryptogamiæ, and coniferæ, &c. The uppermost group is composed of numerous alternations of coal, clay, shale, ironstone, and sandstone; the middle, of sandstones, shales, clays, and quartzose conglomerates, generally of a dull red colour; and the lowermost, of crystalline limestones with occasional layers of chert, abounding in marine shells, corals, crinoidea, and other exuviæ. These lower limestones are the principal repositories of the lead ores of Derbyshire.
The Devonian or Old Red Formation. (Wond. pp. 204 and 751). Conglomerates, quartzose grits, sandstones, marls , and limestones; the prevailing colour is a dull red. Shells, corals, and ganoid fishes, of a very peculiar type. Reptiles, (Telerpeton; Batrachians? Chelonians?); the most ancient reptilian remains hitherto discovered. Ferns, Lepidodendrons, and other trees of the carboniferous flora; fluviatile plants with batrachian ova(?).
Subdivisions:—
| 1. | Sandstone, quartzose conglomerates, and shale, with but few fossils. |
| 2. | Flagstones, marls, and concretionary limestones; provincially termed corn-stones; laminated reddish and greenish micaceous sandstones (prov. tilestones). Peculiar genera of fish; orthocerata, and many species of marine shells. |
Obs.—The term Devonian, by which the series of strata comprehended in this formation is now generally distinguished by geologists, was first proposed by Sir R. Murchison, as being more precise than the name formerly applied to this group. In Scotland, where the formation is of vast extent, it was first characterized by its peculiar ganoid fishes (Pterichthys, Coccosteus, Cephalaspis), and will probably always there retain the original name of Old Red.[22] In Devonshire it is marked by the presence of shells of a character intermediate between those of the Silurian and Carboniferous systems.
The sandstones are in various states of induration, and when slaty, are employed for roofing. The red colour predominates in the marls, and is derived from peroxide of iron. The formation of these rocks has manifestly resulted from the waste of ancient slate rocks, the detritus of which is cemented together into coarse conglomerates. In South Devonshire (at Torquay, Babbicombe, &c.), beautiful coralline marbles occur in this formation.
[22] See the charming volume of Mr. Hugh Miller, entitled "The Old Red Sandstone, or New Walks in an Old Field."
The Silurian System. (Wond. p. 765). Marine limestones, sandstones, shales, and calcareous flagstones, characterized by peculiar types of corals, crinoideans, mollusks, and crustaceans, constitute this important and extensive system of rocks; the Grauwacké, or Transition series of the earlier geologists.