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Description of
Case, &c.

YORKSHIRE (I.) Size 13 × 10 inches.

(a) Series of the Leeds Geological Association.

No. of Photographs in Case, &c.

Part 6. (Portfolio.) (b) Series of Mr. J. W. Woodall, illustrating effects of recent floods on Chalk

MISCELLANEOUS (II.)-SOUTHERN COUNTIES. Size 17 × 12 inches. Part 7. (a) Series of East Kent Natural History Society, illustrating (Portfolio.) Thanet beds and Chalk of the Elham Valley.

Part 8.

(Portfolio.)

(b) Views and Sections in Devon, Surrey, Somerset, Berks, and
Wilts

SCOTLAND (I.) Size 13 x 10 inches.

(a) Series of Professor Heddle and J. A. Harvie Brown, illus-
trating Caithness, Island of Mull, &c.

(b) St. Kilda: Weathering of volcanic rocks
(c) Stigmarian roots at Partick.

60

24

32

Part 9.

(Box.)

MISCELLANEOUS (III.) Size 16 × 14 inches.'

Series of Mr. J. J. Cole, F.R.A.S., illustrating sections in Dorset,
Devon, Cornwall, and the Snowdonian region, North
Wales

MISCELLANEOUS (IV.) -PLATE AND-PLATE PHOTOS.
Size 9 x 5 inches.

Part 10. (Case.)

(a) Microscopic Sections of Phosphatic Chalk, Taplow.
(b) Saurian footprints from the Cheshire Trias.

(c) Sections in vicinity of the Manchester Ship Canal.
(d) Views in Dorset.

(e) Views in Nottingham and Derbyshire.

The following are all on standard-sized mounts :

Part 11. (Case.)

Part 12. (Case.)

NORTHUMBERLAND AND DURHAM (II.)

(a) Mr. Garwood's Second Series, illustrating Whin Sill, Tees-
dale, &c.

(b) Mr. G. Hingley's Series, Marsden Bay, &c. .

YORKSHIRE (II.)

Series of the Leeds Geological Association and others

Part 13. (Case.)

Part 14. (Case.)

IRELAND (II.)-Co. ANTRIM.

Series of Dr. Tempest Anderson, Mr. W. Gray, the Belfast
Naturalists' Field Club, Miss M. K. Andrews, and Mr. R.
Welch

IRELAND (III.)

Series of Miss Andrews. Mr. W. Gray, Belfast Naturalists' Field
Club, &c., illustrating counties Londonderry, Down, Done-
gal, Fermanagh, Clare, and Cork

18

41

34

111

84

67

Description of
Case, &c.
Part 15.
(Case.)

Part 16. (Case.)

SCOTLAND (II.)

No. of Photographs in Case, &c.

Series of Messrs. Valentine, illustrating Staffa and Skye.
Series of Mr. W. Lamont Howie, illustrating Pillars of Old Red
Conglomerate, Morayshire (and Earth Pillars of the Tyrol),
the Scottish Highlands

Series of the Perthshire Society of Natural Science.
Series of Mr. Wilbert Goodchild, illustrating Sections in the
vicinity of Edinburgh, &c.

NORTH AND SOUTH WALES AND ISLE OF MAN (II.)

Series of Mr. W. W. Watts, Mr. C. J. Alford, the Manchester
Geographical Society, &c., and of Mr. F. J. Eaton (Isle of
Man).

CHESHIRE, DERBYSHIRE, SHROPSHIRE, AND MONMOUTH. Part 17. Series of Mr. W. W. Watts, Manchester Geographical Society, and (Case.)

others

MIDDLESEX, BERKS, HERTS, STAFFORD, WARWICK, AND WORCESTER. Part 18. Illustrating various Sections at Tewkesbury, St. Albans, Nun(Case.)

Part 19. (Case.)

eaton, &c. .

DORSET, KENT, HANTS, CORNWALL, AND SURREY.

Series of East Kent and Dover Natural History Society and
others, illustrating various Sections, &c., and groups of
bone and flint implements and teeth, from Kent's Cavern,
Torquay (Mr. A. R. Hunt)

Total.

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886

APPENDIX II.

REFERENCE LIST OF PHOTOGRAPHS ILLUSTRATING GEOLOGICAL
PAPERS AND MEMOIRS.

6

Geologists' Association. Proceedings.' Vol. XIII., Part 9. August, 1894. Illustrating Paper on 'The Geology of South Shropshire,' by Professor C. LAPWORTH, LL.D., F.R.S., and W. W. WATTS, M.A., F.Ġ.S. (From Negative by Rev. J. MACLEOD, of Hope.)

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Geological Magazine, Dec. 10, Vol. II., 1894. Plate XL. (From Nega

1179-1192 Cannock Chase

tives by C. C. Howarth.)

'Pitted' pebbles from Bunter Conglomerates

Geological Society.

Quarterly Journal.'

Vol. L., 1894. Plate XVIII. and page 371. Figs. 1-6. (From Negatives by W. W. WATTS.) 1194-1205 Tardree, Sandy Braes, &c. . Perlitic cracks in Quartz

Geological Society. 'Quarterly Journal.' Vol. LI., 1895. Plates XX. and XXI. (From Negatives by W. W. WATTS.)

1206-1215 Sulby Glen, &c., Isle of

Man

Microscopic sections of 'Crush Conglomerates'

Hertfordshire Natural History Society. Transactions.' Vol. VII., Part 8. February 1894. Illustrating Report on Field Meetings of the Society, by JOHN HOPKINSON, F.G.S.

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Liverpool Geological Association.

6

Journal.' Vol. XIV., 1893-94. Illus

trating Paper on The Fossil Footprints of Storeton,' by OSMUND W. JEFFS. (From Negatives by F. N. EATON.)

741-746 Slabs of sandstone, from the Keuper of Storeton, Cheshire, showing various types of saurian footprints (3 plates, 6 photographs).

Stonesfield Slate.-Second Report of the Committee, consisting of Mr. H. B. WOODWARD (Chairman), Mr. E. A. WALFORD (Secretary), Professor A. H. GREEN, Dr. H. WOODWARD, and Mr. J. WINDOES, appointed to open further sections in the neighbourhood of Stonesfield in order to show the relationship of the Stonesfield slate to the underlying and overlying strata. (Drawn up by Mr. EDWIN A. WALFORD, Secretary.)

THE shaft sunk by the Committee in 1894 was reported by the workmen to be unsafe, and an unsuccessful attempt was made to find the old sinking of 1830 at Reed Hill, near Stonesfield, reported upon by Professor Ed. Hull. The work was ultimately continued upon the Stocky Bank shaft to a depth of 60 feet. At that depth it had penetrated 13 feet into one of the highest beds of the Inferior Oolite-the Clypeus-Grit (zone Ammonites Parkinsoni). It has proved the continuance not only of the compact barren limestones (sub-Bathonian) so well developed around Chipping Norton, but also of the sandy limestone beds between them and the Glypeus-Grit.

The section, as before stated, has been made by scarping a bank for about 30 feet, and by sinking a shaft to a depth of 60 feet on the step of the It is practically a continuous section, only 2 or 3 feet intervening, laterally, between the ending of the one cut and the beginning of the

other.

Section at Stocky Bank, Stonesfield, from the Great Oolite coral beds to the Inferior Oolite, showing position of Stonesfield Slate series and Chipping Norton limestones.

1. Surface soil with Limestone fragments. Nerinæa, Corals, Thamnastraa
Lyellii, Isastraa limitata, Cryptocenia Prattii, &c. 'Rift Bed'.

2, 3. Marls and Limestone, with Oysters and Rhynchonella concinna
4. Limestone, cream colour, shelly and compact

5-9. Marls and Limestone, five beds with Oysters and Rhynchonella 10-13. Stonesfield Slate beds :

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21, 22. Limestone, with Marl parting a top, Mytilus Sowerbyanus, Rhynchonella concinna, Ostrea Sowerbyi

23. Black Clay, crowded with Placunopsis and with Perna, Nucula, and Ostrea.

24. Shelly Limestone made up of fragments of Ostrea, passing into a brown Limestone, blue hearted, crowded with shells, Perna quadrata, Cyprina, Corbula, Macrodon, &c.

25. Black Clay

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26. Roe stone, an oolitic stone, blue hearted, made up of whitish oolites
in blue or brown base (like the blue oolitic slate)

27. Callous' Limestone-stone in fragments cemented together
28. Bastard Freestone, fine grained, oolitic, with masses of fossil wood
29. Buff and brown Marly Rubble, with carbonaceous markings and remains
of shells, Cyprina, &c.

30. Bastard Freestone, cream coloured, without plant remains
31. Bastard Freestone, with black dendritic markings
32. Freestone of poor quality, splintery, more distinctly oolitic than beds
30 and 31

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33. Sandy Limestone, fine-grained, blue-hearted, oolitic

4 0

34. Grey, blue and brown Marls, with Oysters and fossil wood in lower part 35. Limestone, shelly, oolitic, cream-coloured and fine-grained, pale blue centres, and with brown vertical markings

3 0

4 0 09

36. Rubble with ochreous patches and carbonaceous markings
37. Clypeus-grit; a coarsely oolitic rubbly Limestone with Clypeus Plotii,
pinkish in upper part

(About 12 feet of stone can be made out below.)

13 O

Whether beds 16 to 26 are in their proper place is open to doubt. They contain fossils (excepting corals) similar to those found in the railway cutting at Ashford Bridge, barely a mile distant, and the clay courses are alike. Many authors report the slate to underlie the carbonaceous clays and coral bed in the Ashford Bridge cutting. The Stocky Bank is much faulted.

In the open section at Reed Hill, as described by Mr. H. B. Woodward, the slate is covered by 5 feet of marls with Modiola gibbosa, Rhynchonella concinna, and Ostrea Sowerbyi. In the Stocky Bank section, in the near shafts, and in other open workings, the succession of strata is the same.

In order to consider more fully the true position of the beds 16 to 26 and to study relative sections and their fossil contents, your Committee would defer the final report until 1896.

The Fossil Phyllopoda of the Paleozoic Rocks.-Twelfth Report of the Committee, consisting of Professor T. WILTSHIRE (Chairman), Dr. H. WOODWARD, and Professor T. RUPERT JONES (Secretary). (Drawn up by Professor T. RUPERT JONES.)

1§. A SHORT provisional list of the Silurian Peltate Phyllopods was appended to our Report (the Tenth) for 1893; but since then a complete catalogue of the Lower Palæozoic Phyllopoda (Phyllocarida), with their geological horizons, their range and localities, has been made with the obliging help of Dr. C. Lapworth, F.R.S. This is now produced in four tables, as it greatly enhances the value of our Reports on these fossils, and will be of considerable use to palæontologists both at home and abroad.

TABLE I.-List of the Genera and Species of the Lower Paleozoic
Phyllopoda referred to by T. RUPERT JONES and H. WOOD-
WARD in their Reports to the British Association, 1883–94.

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(The figures at end of lines refer to pages in the Monogr. British Palæozoic
Phyllopoda,' Palæont. Soc., Part II., 1892.)

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Bryntwr Summerhouse

Moel-y-gest, hill behind Portmadoc (? Tremadoc) 77, 79
Wern, near Penmorfa, near Tremadoc

(Upper part of).—Cae'n-y-coed, near Maentwrog

Gwern-y-barcud

Ffestiniog

Middle Lingula-flags.-Borth, Portmadoc

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Upper Lingula-flags.

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Wern, cutting near. G. J. Williams.
Moel-hafod-Owen, near Dolgelly
Upper Tremadoc-flags.-Garth Hill, near Portmadoc
Pont Seiont Shales.-Pont Seiont, Caernarvon

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L. Salteriana, T. R. Jones and H. Woodward

Lower Lingula-flags (upper part).-Cae'n-y-coed, near Maentwrog. Lower Tremadoc Slate Series.-Tu-hwant-i'r-bwlch Quarry, Portmadoc. ? Brathay Flags.-E. side of Long Skeddale

L. sp.

Schiste Ardoisier inférieur (Faune 2nde).-Maine-et-Loire.

77

79

77

78

77

77

77

77

79,80

81

82

82,83

83

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