The hotels, of which there are several, are all delightfully situated; but the Temple Hotel, which stands on a terrace on the side of Masson Hill, about a hundred feet above the river, has the preference in my estimation; its elevated situation, its seclusion from the noise and bustle of the village, and its bowers and hedge-rows of sweet-briar and roses, imparting a character of sylvan beauty to the spot, peculiarly grateful to the traveller who wishes to enjoy a quiet sojourn at Matlock Dale. The local guide-books afford the necessary information to direct the visitor to the celebrated picturesque spots of this beautiful region; our immediate object is to point out the most important geological phenomena.[798]

[798] The book entitled "The Gem of the Peak," by W. Adams, price Is., and the "Brief Remarks on the Geology and Botany of Derbyshire," by the same author, price 1s., will be found to contain much valuable information. The "Derbyshire Tourist’s Guide," with plates, 8vo., by E. Rhodes, price 6s., is a delightful hand-book.

LONDON TO MATLOCK.

Geological Position of Matlock Dale.—That the reader may clearly comprehend the geological character of the romantic district in which he is now situated, we will briefly enumerate the several formations over which we passed, in our rapid transit from London; by the aid of the geological map, the following description will be easily comprehended.

Our route from the metropolis commenced from the centre of the Tertiary strata, upon which London is situated, and which fills up an extensive depression or basin in the Chalk; we then passed over, or rather (by the tunnel) through the north-west boundary of the Chalk basin, and successively came upon the Portland stone and other beds of the Oolite, and the Lias; the strata of these formations successively rising from beneath each other as we proceeded. In Leicestershire, the beds of the New Red or Triassic formation emerged from under the Lias; and at the Trent Junction the nature of the deposits was concealed by the alluvial plains of the river. Beyond Derby, we entered upon strata of the Carboniferous system, the Millstone grits and sandstones, and finally reached the Mountain limestone and its associated Magnesian limestones, which compose the mountainous district of Derbyshire. The following diagram will serve to illustrate this description.

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The immediate vicinity of Matlock is, therefore, a region of Carboniferous limestone and millstone strata, which, as we have previously explained (see p. 31), are of marine origin; and those beds that contain organic remains abound in extinct species of shells and crinoidea. These rocks are also the grand depository of the ores of lead (see Wond. p. 681), calamine, &c., and contain a variety of minerals of great beauty and interest. This district has also been the theatre, in very remote periods, of great physical changes, and the strata have been upheaved and displaced by volcanic action, the solid rocks rent asunder, and beds of mineral substances, rendered fluid by intense heat, have been injected between the layers, and into the fissures of the sedimentary strata; to these revolutions, the present bold and picturesque features of the country are attributable. Here then are phenomena replete with the highest interest; the very beds of lava may still be seen—the rents and fissures caused by their explosive action, and now lined with rich metallic ores and spars, may be examined—and the thermal waters, rising in perpetual fountains from an incalculable depth, testify that the internal fires, the sources of these catastrophes, though latent, are not extinguished.

MATLOCK INCRUSTING SPRINGS.