Mr Pengelly, while describing the well-known submerged forest in Torbay, makes the following remarks :—
Hoxne Brick-earth.
Perhaps the most conclusive evidence of the relation of the works of Palæolithic Man to the glacial period is that of the committee appointed by the British Association, in 1895, to ascertain the relation between the implement-bearing brick-earth at Hoxne and the neighbouring boulder clay. The investigations were carried out by sinking pits and borings across the ancient silted-up channel of what was a small tributary stream, now represented by the brick-earth deposits at Hoxne, of which descriptive plans and sections are given in the committee's report for 1896 (Liverpool Meeting, p. 400). The following precise statement, quoted from the committee's concluding remarks, will suffice for our present purpose :—