- Bathonian Series
Bathonian Series refers to a series of rock strata dating from the
Bathonian epoch of theMiddle Jurassic .The typical Bathonian Series is the Great
Oolite series ofEngland , and the name was derived from the "Bath Oolite", extensively mined and quarried in the vicinity of that city, where the principal strata were first studied by William Smith. According to English practice, the Bathonian includes the following formations in descending order:Cornbrash ,Forest Marble withBradford Clay , Great or Bath Oolite,Stonesfield Slate andFullers Earth . The Fullers' Earth is sometimes regarded as constituting a separate stage, the "Fullonian".The "Bathonien" of some French
geologist s differs from the English Bathonian in that it includes at the base the zone of theammonite "Parkinsonia Parkinsoni", which in England is placed at the summit of the Inferior Oolite. The Bathonian is the equivalent of the upper part of the "Dogger" (Middle Jurassic ) ofGermany , or to the base of the Upper Brown Jura, substage "E" of Quenstedt.Rocks of
Bathonian age are well developed inEurope : in the northwest and southwest oolitelimestone s are characteristically associated withcoral -bearing,crinoid al and other varieties, and with certain beds of clay. In the north and northeast,Russia , etc,clay s,sandstone s and ferruginous oolites prevail, some of the last being exploited foriron . They occur also in the extreme north ofNorth America and in theArctic regions,Greenland ,Franz Josef Land , etc; inAfrica ,Algeria ,Tanzania ,Madagascar and near theCape of Good Hope (Enon Beds); inIndia ,Rajputana andGulf of Kutch , and inSouth America .The well-known Caen stone of
Normandy and "Hauptrogenstein" ofSwabia , as well as the "Eisenkalk" of northwest Germany, and "Klaus-Schichten" of the Austrian Alps, are of Bathonian age.References
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