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may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages,
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++++ The below data was compiled from various identification fields
in the bibliographic record of this title. This data is provided as
an additional tool in helping to ensure edition identification:
++++ The Newark System Of Pomperaug Valley, Connecticut William
Herbert Hobbs, Frank Hall Knowlton Govt. print. off., 1901 Geology;
Geology, Stratigraphic
For a number of years I have been gradually accumulating material
for a thorough revision of the Tertiary floras of the Pacific
slope. Fossil plants are known to occur at numerous points within
this area, and their study and identification has already furnished
valuable data bearing on the geological history of the region, and
when still further exploited it is confidently expected that they
will afford more exact data for the use of geologists. This
investigation is progressing satisfactorily, and at no distant day
it is hoped to have it in form for final publication. From time to
time various members of the United States Geological Survey, as
well as others not connected with this organization, have sent in
small collections of fossil plants for determination. These have
been studied and reported upon as fully as the condition of the
problem permitted, so that the determinations could be immediately
available to geologists, but with the reservation that none of the
questions could be fully settled until all known material had been
studied and properly correlated. The rich fossil plant deposits in
the John Day Basin, as set forth more fully in the historical
account which follows, have been known for a period of nearly fifty
years, but their study has been carried on in a more or less
desultory manner. There has also been considerable confusion as to
the horizons whence these plants came. As various species of plants
described originally from the John Day region were detected in
various other localities in Oregon, and in surrounding areas, as
central Washington, western Idaho, and northern California, it
became more than ever apparent that a thorough study of all
material obtainable from this type area would be necessary before
any definite or satisfactory conclusions could be reached. The
immediate incentive for this revision was furnished by the receipt
of a considerable collection of plants, made by Dr. John C. Merriam
in 1900 while he was in charge of an exped
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