up so as to form n land area, it was at least a subaqueous plain of very even and level surface. The deeper layers of the formation may have sagged a little toward the middle of the estuary on account of the progressive depression that the region had suffered during the accumulation of the entire mass, but their departure from horizontality was moderate. Yet at present the whole series, with but trifling exceptions, inclines at an angle of twelve, fifteen, or twenty degrees to the eastward. Evidently a serious disturbance has affected the original attitude of the beds. The eastward slant or dip of the series might be imitated by
Down in New Jersey, the corresponding red sandstone forma-