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To give some idea of the extent of that particular horizon, we may say that not only is the plastic clay alluded to found so extensively in the London and Hampshire basins, it is even more expanded in the north-eastern parts of France, and is there as much utilised as on this side of the Channel for brickmaking.

Lacustrine deposits are sometimes of enormous value to the clayworker, on account of the general purity of the clays. This is more particularly the case when the material deposited is in part or wholly derived from chemical disintegration of granitic rocks, as in the celebrated Bovey Heathfield clays near Newton Abbot, so well described in a small pamphlet by Mr. S. Smith Harvey. Here an experimental boring proved the clays to a depth of 130 feet with no signs of exhaustion. In the divers clay-pits but a small proportion of waste is found, the different levels vary in composition, and, like almost all thick clays, improve in quality as the depth increases. The strata are very irregular towards the surface, due perhaps to the action of local freshets in the final periods of the history of the lake. These clays are extensively employed for the manufacture of stoneware pipes, facing and other bricks, fire-bricks, etc. They constitute a somewhat remarkable exception to the class of clays laid down in lakes, as a rule, and, as will have been observed, are of enormous thickness.

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