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The well-known brick-earth called “Reading mottled clay,” so extensively developed on the outskirts of the London basin, and in the Isle of Wight and Hampshire generally, furnishes a good example of a lacustrine deposit. Many millions of bricks are made from this bed every year, and in some parts of the districts mentioned the stratum is thick and extensively developed. It is pure enough to be suitable for terra-cotta manufacture here and there. No one who had seen this remarkable deposit could possibly fail to recognise it again. The natural colour of the clay when damp is brilliant red, scarlet or crimson, in large blotches and patches mottled tea-green and yellow, and locally white.
We have been intensely amused to note the efforts in recent years to obtain possession of a few acres of this coveted deposit for brickmaking in divers localities. Not long since we visited a large brickmaking establishment where these Reading plastic clays are actively raised and used, the works being situated four miles from the nearest railway. There were no other brickworks between it and the railway line, and there was no water accommodation. Enquiry revealed the fact that the greater part of the intervening land belonged to the same landowner as the ground where the brickyard stands, and that no difficulty was apprehended of the owner letting out such intervening land for the same uses and on the same terms if other brickyards were contemplated. The proprietor of the brickyard in question volunteered the information that the reason he started so far from the railway was because the earth at the point selected was the only kind suitable for brickmaking in the neighbourhood. We then questioned him as to his knowledge of the brick-earths in the district, and eventually elicited the fact that he chanced upon the spot selected, without any reasoning therefor, and commenced operations. As a matter of fact, precisely the same clay extended from his works all the way to the railway line, and had he known anything whatever of the geology of the district (even the merest boy’s knowledge of the subject), he would have seen how to save that four miles of road carriage. What prevented him from knowing the fact was a thin mantle of gravel and soil about four feet in thickness, which covered the plastic clay in the area generally, except in the immediate vicinity of his brickyard. That was in reference to a lacustrine deposit—the Reading plastic clay—and shows the value of knowing something of its persistent character; if it had been a river deposit there would not have been so much room for wonderment.