40 Mr. George Clinch on Recent 
Genus ANoMALINA. 
Test nearly alike on both faces; coarsely porous. 
Anomalina ammonoides, Reuss.— Upper Gault and bottom of 
cutting. Lower Greensand, recent. 
A. rudis, Reuss.—Upper Gault. Gault, Cenomanian. 
A. complanata, Reuss.—Upper Gault and bottom of cutting. Ap- 
tian, Hocene. 
When sending me the list of names, Mr. Chapman wrote :— 
“The assemblage is of much interest, and especially I would 
note the occurrence of Spiroloculina papyracea, Burrows, Sher- 
borne, and Bailey, in some abundance from the Upper Gault. 
I did not find this at Folkestone, and, in fact, it has been found 
only at Speeton, in the Red Chalk, possibly at about the same 
horizon. Some of the Gault specimens approach my S. nitida 
from Folkestone, but differ in some respects. Marginulina 
soluta, Reuss, also was not obtained from Folkestone, but occurs 
in the Cambridge Greensand.” (See Annals of Nat. Hist. for 
April (1899 ?) ). 
OsTRACODA. 
Bairdia subdeltoider, Miinster.—Bottom of cutting. 
Cythereis auriculata, Cornnel.—Bottom of cutting. 
C. triplicata, Romer.—Upper Gault. 
C. ornatissima, Reuss, var. reticulata.—Bottom of cutting. 
Cytherella ovata, Romer.—Bottom of cutting. 
C. Muenster, Romer.—Bottom of cutting. 
C. Williamsoniana, Jones, var. stricta.—Bottom of cutting. 
4,.—Recent Discoverres at Wappon, SuRREY. 
By Gerorce Cuincu, F.G.S. 
(Read October 21st, 1902.) 
Karty in June, 1902, our Vice President, Mr. W. Whitaker, 
F.R.S., was so good as to draw my attention to the fact that 
certain subterranean chambers had been found under the lawn 
near Waddon House, the residence of the late Mr. Philip 
Crowley, F.L.8. I took an early opportunity of visiting the site, 
and found that in the course of some excavations for a projected 
sewer in these grounds three chambers, cut in a bed of compact 
sand, had been brought to light. The chambers, of which a 
sketch ground-plan is here given, were found to be partly occu- 
pied by sand, which had probably been washed in by the rain. 
On the removal of the loose sand, however, a compact floor was 
