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Ch. 3: Brooklyn and Queens

Ch. 3: Brooklyn and Queens Page of 281 Ch. 2: Richmond | Staten Island Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
170             GEOLOGY OF NEW YORK CITY
studied at Kingsbridge. They lie in the river valleys, or more1 correctly, the rivers have formed their valleys in the lime­stone depressions as more easily eroded and dissolved. Tib-bit's Brook has worn its channels partially in a limestone rock, the northern extension of the Kingsbridge dolomite; the Bronx River has its head in limestone at and north of Wil-liamsbridge; and it may be so with Westchester and West Farms Creeks.
These limestone beds were traversed by the Subway tunnel under the Harlem River, and a deep, open cut made in them (Fig. 40), at 149th Street, toward Third Avenue, brought in view their crystalline integrity, and bedded structure. Lime­stone beds are seen at Jerome Avenue reservoir, where actino-Mte, titanite, pyrite, pyrrhotite, orthoclase are developed in a metamorphic seam. (J. H. Adams.)
Note.—Mr. Edwin W. Humphreys has furnished me with the following epitome of his observations in a Pleistocene or recent swamp in the Bronx Borough:
" Situated in the valley which is just back of Claremont Park, Bronx Borough, is a most interesting swamp. In it, a thick de­posit of peat has accumulated. The forcing up of the peat by the filling in of a street across it, some years ago, revealed the fol­lowing fossil shells, Valvata tricarinata, Say, Planorbis parvus, Say, Planorbis bicarinata, Say, Physa heterostropha (?), Say, Anmicola limosa (Say)Hald, Pisidium virginicum (?) (Gmelin) Bourg."
Ch. 3: Brooklyn and Queens Page of 281 Ch. 2: Richmond | Staten Island
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