(4.) In the Sanquhar Coal Basin, at the foot of the Kello Water, an old buried river course was found by Mr. B. N. Peach. It ran at right angles to the Kello, and was filled with boulder clay which cut off the coal; but, on driving the mine through the clay, the coal was found in position on the other side.

(5.) An old river course, under the boulder clay, is described by Mr. Milne Home in his memoir on the Mid-Lothian coal-fields. It has been traced out from Niddry away in a N.E. direction by New Craighall. At Niddry, the hollow is about 100 yards wide and between 60 and 70 feet deep. It seems to deepen and widen as it approaches towards the sea, for at New Craighall it is about 200 yards wide and 97 feet deep. This old channel will probably enter the sea about Musselburgh. Like the channels in the Midland Valley of Scotland already described, it is so completely filled up by drift that not a trace of it is to be seen on the surface. And like these, also, it must have belonged to a period when the sea-level stood much lower than at present.

(6.) At Hailes’ Quarry, near Edinburgh, there is to be seen a portion of an ancient watercourse under the boulder drift. A short account of it was given by Dr. Page in a paper read before the Edinburgh Geological Society.[290] The superincumbent sandstone, he says, has been cut to a depth of 60 feet. The width of the channel at the surface varies from 12 to 14 feet, but gradually narrows to 2 or 3 feet at the bottom. The sides and bottom are smoothed and polished, and the whole is now filled with till and boulders.

(7.) One of the most remarkable buried channels is that along the Valley of Strathmore, supposed to be the ancient bed of the Tay. It extends from Dunkeld, the south of Blairgowrie, Ruthven, and Forfar, and enters the German Ocean at Lunan Bay. Its length is about 34 miles.

“No great river,” says Sir Charles Lyell, “follows this course, but it is marked everywhere by lakes or ponds, which afford shell-marl, swamps, and peat moss, commonly surrounded by ridges of detritus from 50 to 70 feet high, consisting in the lower part of till and boulders, and in the upper of stratified gravels, sand, loam, and clay, in some instances curved or contorted.”[291]

“It evidently marks an ancient line, by which, first, a great glacier descended from the mountains to the sea, and by which, secondly, at a later period, the principal water drainage of this country was effected.”[292]

(8.) A number of examples of ancient river courses, underneath the boulder clay, are detailed by Professor Geikie in his glacial drift of Scotland. Some of the cases described by him have acquired additional interest from the fact of their bearing decided testimony to the existence of inter-glacial warm periods. I shall briefly refer to a few of the cases described by him.

In driving a trial mine in a pit at Chapelhall, near Airdrie, the workmen came upon what they believed to be an old river course. At the end of the trial mine the ironstone, with its accompanying coal and fire-clay, were cut off at an angle of about 20° by a stiff, dark-coloured earth, stuck full of angular pieces of white sandstone, coal, and shale, with rounded pebbles of greenstone, basalt, quartz, &c. Above this lay a fine series of sand and clay beds. Above these stratified beds lay a depth of 50 or 60 feet of true boulder clay. The channel ran in the direction of north-east and south-west. Mr. Russell, of Chapelhall, informs Professor Geikie that another of the same kind, a mile farther to the north-west, had been traced in some of the pit workings.

“It is clear,” says Professor Geikie, “that whatever may be the true explanation of these channels and basins, they unquestionably belong to the period of the boulder clay. The Chapelhall basin lies, indeed, in a hollow of the carboniferous rocks, but its stratified sands and clays rest on an irregular floor of true till. The old channel near the banks of the Calder is likewise scooped out of sandstones and shales; but it has a coating of boulder clay, on which its finely-laminated sands and clays repose, as if the channel itself had once been filled with boulder clay, which was re-excavated to allow of the deposition of the stratified deposits. In all cases, a thick mantle of coarse, tumultuous boulder clay buries the whole.[293]

Professor Geikie found between the mouth of the Pease Burn and St. Abb’s Head, Berwickshire, several ancient buried channels. One at the Menzie Cleuch, near Redheugh Shore, was filled to the brim with boulder clay. Another, the Lumsden Dean, half a mile to the east of Fast Castle, on the bank of the Carmichael Burn, near the parish church of Carmichael,—an old watercourse of the boulder clay period—is to be seen. The valley of the Mouse Water he instances as a remarkable example.