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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 May 2009
On the north side of the outcrop of the Chalk in the Isle o Purbeck, there is an outlier of Tertiary beds the exact age of which has given rise to some discussion. There must be some reason for the form of Creechbarrow Hill, and the outline suggests that it is due to some hard bed near the top, which we find on close examination to be a tough limestone, a considerable portion of which is hard and porcellaneous. The upper beds of this conical hill, which rises to a height of 637 feet above sea-level, are cut off from the adjoining masses, and therefore no continuous section can be traced to the well-known formations on the south or on the north. The section is further complicated by the occurrence of faults on both the north and south sides. We have, therefore, only the lithological character and fossil contents to depend upon for the correlation of the beds occurring in this outlier.
1 New Ser., Dec. IV, Vol. IX, 06, 1902, p. 241Google Scholar; Vol. X, April and May, 1903, pp. 149, 197. Proc. Dorset Field Club, vol. xxii, p. liv.
2 “Guide to the Geological Model of the Isle of Purbeck”: Mem. Geol. Survey.