Page:Great Neapolitan Earthquake of 1857 Vol 2.djvu/120

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.

CHAPTER XXXV.

DEPARTURE FROM POTENZA EN ROUTE FOR AVIGLIANO.


On leaving Potenza, the ruins of a place known as Revisco Diruta, are seen northward upon the summit of a low hill, the Pietra Colpa, and are said to be the result of an ancient earthquake. Within half a mile, I pass a great monastery on the east (Di Santa Maria), in the lofty-boundary walls of which, are very large fissures, 5 to 6 inches wide at top. The building is nearly cardinal, and has a low hill to the north, upon the slope of which it lies, as also another to the eastward.

The fissures run nearly north and south, a little west of north, and, so far as I can observe them, without going into the monastery, are confirmatory of all I have determined at Potenza.

The hills all around to the east, and in the immediate neighbourhood, are rounded in sweeping outline, and not lofty, but large; they have generally a deep covering of clay boulders and detritus. The rock beneath, is the argillaceous slaty stuff, with limestone here and there. The beds, wherever I can see them exposed, are at very various strikes, and much dislocated, but all steeply inclined.

I am obviously, here upon the western edge of the vast tertiary deposits, that form the low hills and great plains of the Murgies, stretching far away to the Adriatic. To the