Page:Great Neapolitan Earthquake of 1857 Vol 2.djvu/59

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PATERNO—MARSICO NUOVO.

period of time, after it was over. They described it in the usual terms as a "rolling," "murmuring," "trampling" (calcamentura) sound, &c. There was noise with the second shock, of an hour after the first. They had no accurate information as to the time of either, nor had any of the people in the valley of the Agri or its tributaries, any notice of unusual lights having been seen.

I had now traced the shock in a south and S.E. direction, to nearly the parallel of the head of the Gulf of Policastro, and it seemed more important to push the examination north and N.E. than to devote much more time, to the region I was in.

My return from Tramutola was made by an entirely different track over the great ridge; crossing two small ridges of hills, and the Torrent Cauoli, near its source, we struck into the valley of the Aggia, a branch of the Agri falling in on its right bank, and ascended by it, to the north side of the Piano of Maorno, leaving the lake upon the south of us, and diverging at Paterno, to the N.E. of Monte St. Elia, a mile or two north, for the purpose of examining cursorily Marsico Nuovo.

At about 2 miles from Tramutola, I lost the argillaceous beds, and came again upon white limestones, which are again succeeded within less than a mile, by the clay slates and clays—green, red, and yellow—with highly ferruginous beds, all twisted and disturbed in every direction. At the junctions, I passed many singular metamorphic rocks; at about the fifth mile the slates, &c., again disappear, and are succeeded by limestones, after which there were several short alternations, nearly to Paterno.

At Paterno I diverged northwards towards Marsico Nuovo,