[64] Voyages aux Alpes, tom. iv. § 1881.
[65] See Note xv. on Granite.
As the consent, if not universal, is very general for the stratification of the primary schistus, and the fact itself abundantly obvious, in almost all the instances I have ever met with, I have not considered it as necessary to enter here into any argument on this subject.
Note iv. § 8.
Primary strata not primitive.
152. An account of the facts referred to § 8, may be found in Hutton's Theory, vol. i. p. 332, &c. To what is there said, of the shells contained in the primary limestone of Cumberland, I must add, that I have since had an opportunity of verifying the conjecture, that the limestone rock, in which the shells were found, near the head of Coniston Lake, is part of the same body of strata, where shells were found, in a quarry between Ambleside and Low-wood. The limestone of that quarry contains several marine objects; it is in strata declining about 10° from the perpendicular, toward the S. E., and forms a belt, stretching across the country from N. E. to S. W.
In a quarry where the argillaceous schistus, on the south side of this limestone belt, is worked for pavement, are impressions of what I think may safely be accounted marine objects; they have the form of shells, are much indurated, and full of pyrites. They seem to be of the same kind with the impressions said to be found in a slate quarry, near the village of Mat in Switzerland.[66]
[66] Hutton's Theory, vol. i. p. 327.
Another spot, affording instances of shells in primary limestone, is in Devonshire. On the sea shore on the east side of Plymouth Dock, opposite to Stonehouse, I found a specimen of schistose micaceous limestone, containing a shell of the bivalve kind: it was struck off from the solid rock, and cannot possibly be considered as an adventitious fossil.
Now, no rocks can be more decided primary than those about Plymouth. They consist of calcareous strata, in the form either of marble or micaceous limestone, alternating with varieties of the same schistus, which prevails through Cornwall to the west, and extends eastward into Dartmoor, and on the sea-coast, as far as the Berry-head. These all intersect the horizontal plane, in a line from east to west nearly; they are very erect, those at Plymouth being elevated to the north.