CONTENTS OF VOL. I. 



Address to the Cottesvvold Naturalists' Club, read at Gloucester, 

 January 18, 1849. By T. B. Lloyd Baker, Esq., President A 



On the Poison Gland in the Jaw of Geophilus longicornis. By 

 Thomas P. Wright, Esq., M.D. &c ^AT 



A few general Remarks on the Fossil Conchology of the Great 

 Oolite of Minchinhainpton in comparison with that of the same For- 

 mation in other localities. By John Lycett, Esq H // 



Notes on the distribution of the Fossil Conchology of the Oolitic 

 Formations in the vicinity of Minchinhampton, Gloucestershire. By 

 John Lycett, Esq fi\ 2/ 



Address to the Cotteswold Naturalists' Club, Read at the Winter 

 Meeting, January 22, 1850. By Sir Thomas Tancred, Bart 29 



Heights of some points of the Cotswold Hills, with some experi- 

 ments with the Aneroid Barometer. By W. Henry Hyett, Esq., 

 F.R.S 38 



On Trichites, a fossil genus of Bivalve Mollusks. By John Lycett, 

 Esq 42 



On the Structure and Arrangement of the Tesserae in a Roman 

 pavement discovered at Cirencester in August 1849. By James 

 Buckman, F.L.S., F.G.S 47 



Sketch of the Geology of the neighbourhood of Grantham, Lincoln- 

 shire ; and a comparison of the Stonesfield Slate at Colly weston in 

 Northamptonshire with that in the Cotswold Hills. By the Rev. P. 

 B. Brodie, M.A., F.G.S 52 



Tabular View of Fossil Shells from the middle division of the Infe- 

 rior Oolite in Gloucestershire. By John Lycett, Esq 62 



A Stratigraphical Account of the Section from Round Tower Point 

 to Alum Bay, on the North-west coast of the Isle of Wight. By 

 Thomas Wright, M.D 8/ 



Address to the Cotteswold Naturalists' Club, read at Bristol, Feb. 10, 

 1852. By T. B. Lloyd Baker, Esq., President 101 



Contributions to the Palaeontology of Gloucestershire :— On the 



