[95e] Ibidem.

[96a] Ibidem, pp. 198–222.

[96b] White’s Dictionary of Lincolnshire. Article on the Geology by W. J. Harrison, F.G.S.

[97a] Quoted Ibidem.

[97b] Geolog. Survey Memoir of S. Yorks and N. Linc. p. 3.

[97c] Mr. F. M. Burton, F.L.S., F.G.S., Naturalist, 1894, p. 251. In “A Selection of Papers relative to the County of Lincoln,” read before the Lincolnshire Topographical Society, published by W. and B. Brooke, 1843, there is a paper by W. Bedford on the Geology of Lincoln. He divides the rocks into 26 beds, commencing from the north of the Cathedral and descending to the bed of the Witham. He gives a very interesting coloured section, showing these different strata, where the springs arise beneath the oolite; then the ferruginous gravels, the clunch clay, and the lias underlaying all.

[97d] Geolog. Survey, “Around Lincoln,” pp. 33–35.

[98a] Article on Geology, White’s Lincolnshire, p. 70.

[98b] Ibidem.

[98c] Taken from a paper read by Surgeon-Major Cuffe, V.D., before the British Medical Congress, held in London, August, 1895.