Few students of Geology can doubt that the elevation of the Weald has been the most important factor concerned in determining the present surface-geology of the south-east of England. It has been constantly before my own mind in all my studies of Tertiary Geology for the last ten years, as the problem to the solution of which many other preliminary questions required answers. In my first paper on Tertiary Geology, read before the Geologists' Association in 1883, I pointed out that the presence of Eocene pebble-beds in the Woolwich and Reading series and in the Bagshot series afforded strong evidence of the encroachment of the sea upon the Upper Chalk in Eocene times. This conclusion is accepted by our greatest authority on Tertiary Geology, Prof. Prestwicb. The fact alone furnishes a strong presumption that the elevation of the Weald had commenced before the close of the Eocene period; while the many outliers of the Woolwich and Reading beds at high altitudes on the N. Downs, taken along with the general absence of the London Clay there, seems to tell us that the initial elevation of the Weald hill-range had gone far enough for this to form a shore to the area of deposition of the London Clay. I have shown further, in a former volume of the Geol. Mag., that, though there is no absolute proof, there are grounds for believing, that certain outliers of sands on the N. Downs (at Chipstead, Headley, and north of Netley Heath) are more likely to turn out to be of Upper Eocene age, than of any age to which they had been hitherto assigned by different writers.