N. A. INVERTEBRATE PALAEONTOLOGY. 743 



legs. At the same time the Carboniferous Anthracarkkc were probiibly 

 the forerunuers or ancestors of the Mesozoic and later Uri/onidce. From 

 the nature of the differentiation of the telson in the Galatheidcc the 

 author is inclined to believe, from what he has observed from the speci- 

 mens before him, that the telson of Anthrapalccmon is subdivided in 

 nearly the same manner. If so, the genus cannot be referred to the 

 Eryonidcc, and should therefore be regarded as the type of a distinct 

 family, which he calls A^itlvracaridce, and briefly characterizes. 



Peach, B. K — Ancient Air-breathers. Xature, vol. xxxi, pp. 295-298, 

 figs. 1 and 2 on pp. 296 and 297. 1885. London and New York. 

 A general review of Palaeozoic scorpions ; cites the genus Eoscorpius 

 Meek and Worthen. States that Professor Lindstrom shows that Pa- 

 Ixcoplioneus nuncius was a land animal and a true air-breather. Con- 

 siders that Gyrichnites, of the Lower Devonian of Gasp6, may have been 

 animals which supplied food to the ancient scorpions. 



Peach, B. N. — (Notice of.) (A Compendium to our Knowledge of the 

 Ancient Scorpions, Nature., January 29, 1885.) Amer. Nat., vol. xix, 

 p. 706. July, 1885. Philadelphia. 



Cites Meek and Worthen's description of Eoscorpius in 1866. 



Perry, J. H. — Note on a Fossil Coal Plant found at the Graphite De- 

 posit in Mica Schist, at Worcester, Mass. Amer. Jour. Sci., 3d ser., 

 vol. XXTX, pp. 157, 158. February, 1885. New Haven. 



Eeports finding two specimens of Lepidodendron referred to Lepido- 

 dendron {Sagenaria) acuminatum Goeppert, by Prof. L. Lesquereux, who 

 says that they are the first specimens seen by him from America. Prof. 

 C. H. Hitchcock considered the mica schist of Huronian age. 



PoHLMAN, Julius, and Whitfield, E. P. — An American Silurian 

 Scorpion. Science, vol. vi. No. 135, j)p. 183, 184, fig. on p. 183. Sep- 

 tember, 1885. Cambridge. 



Mr. Pohlman states that the scorpion described by Professor Whit- 

 field on pages 87 and 88 of Science, vol. vi, is undoubtedly a young spec- 

 imen of Eusarciis scorpionis (Grote and Pitt; Bulletin of the Buffalo 

 Society of Natural Sciences, vol. iii, pp. 1, 2), so named by an error, 

 and which will be redescribed as Eurypterus scorpionis in the forthcom- 

 ing vol. V of the society's bulletin. He gives a figure of the youngest 

 specimen in his possession. 



In a note Professor Whitfield gives his reasons for not believing the 

 fossil described by him to be the young of that or any other Eurypteroid. 



EoGERS, W. B. — A Eeprint of Geological Eeports and other Papers on 

 the Geology of the Virginias, by the late William B. Eogers, pp. 

 i-xv, and 1-832, with six plates of fossils and maps in pockets. 1884. 

 New York. 



Contains, amongst the other papers, a reprint of " On the Age of the 



