Page:Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society of London, vol. 26.djvu/150

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tive condition of the coral tracts of England and the rest of western Europe. No attention is paid to the existence of land masses.

Great Britain. Western Europe. Reefs. Deep-sea. Littoral. Reefs. Deep-sea. Littoral.

Trias.

Rhaetic.

A. planorbis.

A. angulatus.

A. Bucklandi.

Middle Lias.

Upper Lias.

Inferior Oolite.

Middle "

Coral rag.

Portland Oolite.

Neocomian.

Gault.

Cenomanian.

Lower Chalk.

Upper ".

Eocene.

Oligocene.

Miocene.

Crag-Pliocene.

Recent.


R after an asterisk denotes the paucity of reefs or of deep-sea conditions.

X. Corals and Coralliferous Deposits in consecutive Geological Periods.

The Trias.

There are no vestiges of coralliferous deposits in the British Trias. Formed as a marine deposit, the almost unfossiliferous Triassic sandstones were land- surfaces, whilst there were corresponding tracts reaching far away to the south-east, and great coral-reef areas to the east of the Vosges. The depth of the marine deposits of the Muschelkalk is very great ; and some of them contain compound Madreporaria and some simple forms. The reef origin of much of the dolomite may he inferred ; and the general affinities of the corals of the Muschelkalk and the St.-Cassian deposits indicate successive reefs upon nearly the same area, an elevation of the sediments of the first- named strata having occurred intermediately.

Rhoetic Series.

The subsidence of portions of the Triassic land surface in Britain accompanied the deposition of the Avicula-contorta beds and the White Lias. Some few stunted forms of littoral and deep-sea corals existed in the seas of the period in Great Britain. There were no reefs in our area ; nor are there any evidences of such structures in Europe, except in the Lombardian Alps and to the north of Savoy.

The Azzarolan deposits on the Lake of Como* contain abundance

  • Stoppani, op. cit.