tion is unconformably overlain by the Cretaceous strata of the coastal plain, proving that the sandstones were not only tilted but deeply eroded before the Cretaceous beds were laid upon them. The formations in New Jersey and Connecticut are so much alike that we may safely conclude that the period of dislocation was the same in both; hence we shall suppose that the Meriden sandstones and lava-sheets were tilted and faulted into the position illustrated in Fig. 10 during the interval between Triassic and Cretaceous time—that is, in the Jurassic period. From that time to now their history is concerned chiefly with the erosion by which their original constructional inclined planes have been reduced to their present surface of varied topography.
There is good reason to think that the history of the erosion is a double one, comprehending first a longer cycle, and second a shorter cycle of time. During the first cycle, the great relief of the uptilted beds was reduced to a lowland of denudation, a surface of a moderate relief close to the base-level of erosion, an almost plane surface, a "peneplain"—the evidence of this being found in the even uplands of the crystalline plateaus which now inclose the Triassic valley on the east and west. No explanation for the evenness of these plateaus can be found save the one which regards them as having been reduced from some greater mass by a long-continued process of erosion, at a time when the region