In the central part of the field, south of Bilston, we get the following sections:—
Bradley Lodge.
FT.
IN.
Fire-clay and batt
4
8
Dark ground
3
0
Fire-clay and ironstone balls
3
9
11
5
Lower Bradley.
FT.
IN.
Fire-clay
9
8
Little coal
0
10
Fire-clay
6
0
Rock
3
0
Fire-clay balls, an occasional ironstone
4
0
Dark ground
26
6
Around[1] Highfields, Deepfields, and Tipton colleries there are only 2 to 4 feet of fire-clay, clunch, or binds; but at Coneygree, near Dudley, these beds again swell out to the following section:—
FT.
IN
Fire-clay
2
0
Rock-binds
8
0
Rough rock
3
6
Binds mixed with peldon
4
0
Fire-clay balls ironstone
4
0
Hard rock
3
6
Batt
1
2
26
2
We will leave the attempt to trace these beds south and west of Dudley till after the description of the Fire-clay coal. Going north from the district already described, (north of Willenhall that is,) we find these beds to have a more constant character than elsewhere, always preserving a thickness of more than 20 feet, and consisting of alternations of rock, fire-clay, and clunch, as the three following sections will show:—
Central Part of Bentley Estate.
FT.
IN
Batt, fire-clay, and binds
8
8
Rock
1
4
Binds
7
4
Rock
0
8
Binds and ironstone
4
0
Coal
0
7
Fire-clay and binds
9
0
31
7
Dudley Brothers Colliery, between Bloxwich and New Invention.