On the Correlation of the Deposits in Cefn and Pont-newydd Caves with the Drifts of the North-west of England and Wales

1876; Geological Society of London; Volume: 32; Issue: 1-4 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1144/gsl.jgs.1876.032.01-04.13

ISSN

2058-105X

Autores

D. Mackintosh,

Tópico(s)

Evolution and Paleontology Studies

Resumo

I n the present state of Posttertiary geology it is of very great importance (as may be inferred from the Presidential address just published, May 1875) that some one should attempt to correlate the deposits in caves with the glacial drifts of the neighbourhood. I therefore venture to bring before the Society a brief statement of the results of observations lately made in and around the Cefn and Pont-newydd Caves, Denbighshire. These caves are situated near to each other in the face of a limestone escarpment, on the north bank of the river Elwy. The Pont-newydd cave has been described by Professor M'Kenny Hughes and the Rev. D. E. Thomas, in the Journal of the Anthropological Institute (vol. iii. p. 387), and by Mr. W. Boyd Dawkins, F.R.S., in his work on Cave Hunting. By these writers the cave-deposits are regarded as Postglacial. The best account of Cefn Cave, as it existed before the deposits were nearly all cleared out, is perhaps to be found in Mr. Joshua Trimmer's ‘Practical Geology,’ published in 1841, the following being the order of succession therein stated or implied:— 1. Sand, silt, and marl, with sea-shells in one or more places (uppermost). 2. Loam, with angular fragments of limestone and bones, filling the cavern nearly to the roof ( diluvium of old authors). 3. Crust of stalagmite. 4. Loam, with smooth pebbles, bones, teeth, and fragments of wood (lowest). Mr. Trimmer believed that the lowest of these deposits was introduced, before the glacial submergence, by the adjacent river while flowing

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