. The British Charophyta. Characeae. GEOLOGICAL HISTORY OF THE CHAROPHYTA. 83 In several of the Middle and Upper Eocene beds in tMs country Charophyte-fruits have been found rather sparingly, but of these none is of a sufficiently distinct type to call for notice. In the Headon beds, variously regarded by geologists as Eocene and Oligocene, the remains are particularly abundant, and a number of types of fruit are represented. In the Lower Headon beds of Hordle Cliffs (Hants), alone, as many as 16 more or less distinct forms were described and figured by Clement Reid and myself (17); a few of t


. The British Charophyta. Characeae. GEOLOGICAL HISTORY OF THE CHAROPHYTA. 83 In several of the Middle and Upper Eocene beds in tMs country Charophyte-fruits have been found rather sparingly, but of these none is of a sufficiently distinct type to call for notice. In the Headon beds, variously regarded by geologists as Eocene and Oligocene, the remains are particularly abundant, and a number of types of fruit are represented. In the Lower Headon beds of Hordle Cliffs (Hants), alone, as many as 16 more or less distinct forms were described and figured by Clement Reid and myself (17); a few of these are shown on Plate XLV, Figs. 11-18. One of the large spherical type, C. Wrightii, Salter, occurs in. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Groves, James; Bullock-Webster, George Russell, 1858- joint author. London, The Ray society


Size: 1707px × 1465px
Photo credit: © Central Historic Books / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, bookpublisherlondo, bookyear1920