GEOLOGICAL SECTION. 



27 



At Crickley Hill, the old quarries on the right of the road which 

 descends the hill from the public house called the Air Balloon, give 

 very good sections of Pea Grit, which is here much more fossiliferous 

 than at Leckhampton, several Echinoderms, Ammonites Murehis- 

 onice, Nautilus^ and various Terebratula and Rhynconellcz have 

 been obtained from this locality by the President and Mr. Macdonald 

 and the place is one which should be visited several times. 



On Cleeve Hill not very much was found, but some good fossils 

 have been obtained there in days gone by, and the locality is one 

 which should be well searched. 



From these and the other exposures of the Inferior Oolite a good 

 local collection of fossils should without much difficulty be obtained, 

 and it is hoped that those who belong to the section and others 

 will not only collect for themselves but will assist in gradually getting 

 in the Museum a good local geological collection. This will no doubt 

 take years to do, but everyone can do a little and increase the collec- 

 tion while he is at the school. Presentations have been made during 

 Xmas term by W. H. Williams and I. Francis. 



No list of members of this section is given this year, as no record 

 of the section during the first two terms of the year are to be found 

 and therefore a complete list of members cannot be made out. 



