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[[image - pencil sketch of landscape with strata labelled as S, CN, W & B]]

sides New Harbor.

[[image - pencil sketch of landscape with strata labelled T and compass directions labelled N and NW]]
T. End of point appears like basaltic trap semicolumnar and in places like met. sdst.

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lar stratification.

3. Above this come beds ten to 30 feet thick of conglomerate beds (C1) showing the effects of heat very strongly in some places reddened & appearing as if baked but distinctly stratified and very rotten where exposed.
4 - Next a bed from 3 to fifty feet thick of black sandstone (B) also much altered in places, but very distinctly  stratified & in thin lamināe.  The plane surfaces of the laminae much harder than their broken edges and the result is a very bizarre weathering of fallen blocks.  This stratum continues all around New Harbor being much thicker on the W side where it is also broken & the crevices filled with the chalce

Transcription Notes:
Ambrosia: reviewed with additional description to image and minor edits. "lar" is a continuation of the word from the previous page "regular" "chalce" continues on to next page chalcedonic