230 Field Meetings, 1910. 
ever,’ I fear, though there is a specimen in the County Herbarium 
from this bog. 
Dr. Wallace reports upon Coleoptera: The most interesting 
species taken were :—Bradycellus placidus, Gyll., one by sweeping in 
a very marshy spot, and Poophagus sisymbru, F., occurred on 
aquatic plants. 
Mr. W. Denison Roebuck writes :—The Conchological party 
had a good time in Freshney Bog and added several species to the 
list for Division 4, including Agriolimax levis, and some very fine 
varieties of Helix aspersa and H. nemoralis were collected. 
Cecilioides acicula turned up at Little Coates Sandpit, as was 
shrewdly suspected by the conchologists who noted the place on 
passing it in the forenoon. 
The return was made to Grimsby for tea, which was provided 
by Dr. Felton, (President of the Grimsby Society), at the Clarence 
Hotel, after which the reports were made. 
The Sixty-ninth Field Meeting was held at CROWLAND, 
on June 28th. The remoteness of this locality was the cause of a 
very small attendance. The President and Secretary arranged to go 
over night and devoted the whole of their time to the Mollusca; 
the neighbourhood was very systematically investigated, the 
result being that the list for Division 16, S.E. was raised from 23 
to 47 species, the results in fresh water species being very good. 
A search in the garden of Mr. Pitts’ house yielded Limax flavus 
and Milax sowerbyi. Sphavium lacustve was found, but Afplexa 
hypnorum which Messrs. Roebuck and Musham had found so 
common early in the year about Holbeach, did not occur. 
Worthy of note was the finding of Blaps mucronata in 
Crowland Abbey Burial ground—the first record for Lincolnshire 
South. 
The Seventieth Meeting was held at WELTON WOOD, 
July 28th. The attendance was not large though the area 
investigated was most interesting. 
The President was unable to be present but reported that of 
the specimens sent to him, five additions were made to the 
division. Messrs. Smith and Howard collected the mollusca and 
found Cyclostoma elegans and Helix laminata in their haunt on the 
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