Ohio History Journal

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PREGLACIAL MAN IN OHIO

PREGLACIAL MAN IN OHIO.

AT the meeting of the Boston Society of Natural History2

for November 4, 1885, Mr. Putnam showed an implement

chipped from a pebble of black flint, found by Dr. C. L.

Metz in gravel, eight feet below the surface, in Madisonville,

Ohio. This rude implement is about the same size and shape

of one, made of the same material, found by Dr. Abbott in

the Trenton, N. J., gravel, and is of special interest as the

first one known from the gravels of Ohio. This announce-

ment, coupled with a letter from Dr. Metz, saying that he

had since found another such implement at Loveland, led

me, on the 11th and 12th of November, to visit the locali-

ties and see their relation to the glacial deposits of the region.

The results I here detail.

Madisonville is situated eleven miles northeast of Cincin-

nati, in a singular depression connecting the Little Miami

River with Mill Creek, about five miles back from the Ohio.

The Little Miami joins the Ohio some miles above Cincin-

nati, while Mill Creek joins it just below the city. The gen-

eral height of the hills in that vicinity above the river is from

400 to 500 feet. But the hills just north of Cincinnati are

separated from the general elevation further back by the de-

pression referred to, in which Madisonville is situated.

The depression is from one to two miles wide, and about

five miles long, from one stream to the other, and is occupied

by a deposit of gravel, sand, and loam, clearly enough be-

longing to the glacial-terrace epoch. The surface of this is

generally level, and is about 200 feet above the low-water

mark in the Ohio. On the east side, on the Little Miami

River, at Red Bank, the gravel is rather coarse, ranging from

one to three or four inches, interstratified with sand, and

underlaid, near the river-level, with fine clay. There is here

a thin covering of loess, or fine loam. On going westward

this loess deposit increases in thickness, being at Madison-

 

1See Proc. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist., Vol. XXIII., p. 242.

257