On Cretaceous Cephalopoda, from Zululand. 219 



Family TURRILITID^E : 

 Gen. Turrilites, Lamarck. 



14. T. cf. gresslyi, Pictet & Campiche . . .289 

 2. NAUTILOIDEA : 



Gen. Cymatoceras, Hyatt. 



15. C. manuanense, G. C. Crick sp. . . . 290 

 36. C. cf. manuanense, G. C. Crick sp. . . . 291 



17. C. cf. albense, d'Orbigny sp 292 



18. C. sp. ind. 293 



19. C. sp. nov. ? ind 293 



20. C. cf. kossmati, Spengler sp 294 



21. C. ? cf. clementinum, d'Orbigny sp. . . . 295 

 B. SENONIAN: 



22. Peroniceras cf. dravidicum, Kossmat sp. . . 295 



23. Kossmaticeras (Madrasites) lhavani, Stoliczka 



sp. . . ... 299 



24. Placenticeras cf. siibkaffrarium, sp. nov. . . 300 



25. Cymatoceras ? sp. cf. justum, Blanford sp. . 301 

 OBSERVATIONS ON THE MANUAN CREEK FAUNA .... 302 



IV. AMMONOIDEA FEOM ISOLATED LOCALITIES . 307 



A. NORTH-WEST SHORE OF FALSE BAY (SENONIAN). 



1. Mortoniceras vanuxemi, Morton sp. ..... 308 



2. Bostrychoceras ? sp. . . ..... 308 



B. POWELL'S CAMP, UPPER CATEMBE (APTIAN) . . . 309 



1. Aconeceras nisoides, Sarasin sp. ... . 311 



2. Cheloniceras gottschei, Kilian sp. ..... 312 



3. Cheloniceras (Acantliopliies ?) delagoense, Krenkel sp. . 316 



I. INTRODUCTION. 



THE Cephalopoda that form the subject of the present paper were 

 included in a collection of Cretaceous fossils, sent by the Director of 

 the South African Museum, Cape Town, and the writer is greatly 

 indebted to Mr. Henry Woods, F.R.S., for entrusting him with the 

 study and description of these Cephalopoda. They comprise some 

 eighty specimens, and their study has proved of the greatest interest. 

 Aptian fossils are described from a new locality in South Africa, 

 and, of the later forms, some are quite new to science, whereas 

 others have not before been recorded from this continent. It may 

 suffice to point out here that, e. g., a near ally of " Schloenbachia acuto- 

 carinata (Shumard) var. -nmltifida" Steinmauu, i. e. of a group hitherto 

 recorded chiefly from localities in North and South America, is re- 

 presented in this collection. But the main interest of the collection 

 lies in the demonstration of the occurrence, together, at some of the 

 previously known fossil localities of Zululand, of deposits of varying 

 dates, hitherto confused on account of similarity of matrix. 



