II. THE LOWER OOLITES.—Above the Lias comes a complex series of partly arenaceous and argillaceous, but principally calcareous strata, of which the following are the more important groups: a, The Inferior Oolite (Terrain Bajocien of D’Orbigny), consisting of more than 200 feet of oolitic limestones, sometimes more or less sandy; b, The Fuller’s Earth, a series of shales, clays, and marls, about 120 feet in thickness; c, The Great Oolite or Bath Oolite (Terrain Bathonien of D’Orbigny), consisting principally of oolitic limestones, and attaining a thickness of about 130 feet. The well-known “Stonesfield Slates” belong to this horizon; and the locally developed “Bradford Clay,” “Corn brash,” and “Forest-marble” may be regarded as constituting the summit of this group.
III. THE MIDDLE OOLITES.—The central portion of the Jurassic series of Britain is formed by a great argillaceous deposit, capped by calcareous strata, as follows: a, The Oxford Clay (Terrain Callovien and Terrain Oxfordien of D’Orbigny), consisting of dark-coloured laminated clays, sometimes reaching a thickness of 700 feet, and in places having its lower portion developed into a hard calcareous sandstone ("Kelloway Rock"); b, The Coral-Rag (Terrain Corallien of D’Orbigny, “Nerinean Limestone” of the Jura, “Diceras Limestone” of the Alps), consisting, when typically developed, of a central mass of oolitic limestone, underlaid and surmounted by calcareous grits.
IV. THE UPPER OOLITES.—a, The base of the Upper Oolites of Britain is constituted by a great thickness (600 feet or more) of laminated, sometimes carbonaceous or bituminous clays, which are known as the Kimmeridge Clay (Terrain Kimmeridgien of D’Orbigny); b, The Portland Beds (Terrain Portlandien of D’Orbigny) succeed the Kimmeridge clay, and consist inferiorly of sandy beds surmounted by oolitic limestones ("Portland Stone"), the whole series attaining a thickness of 150 feet or more, and containing marine fossils; c,