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the Cotteswold, Bristol and Cardiff Field Clubs. Notably at the 
opening Meeting of the Blackmore Museum at Salisbury, on 5th 
September, 1867, he gave a short account of the presence of 
the Bubalus (since named by Prof. Boyd Dawkins, Ovibus) 
Moschatus in the drift of Wiltshire. This animal allied to the 
sheep rather than the ox, and now driven into the inhospitable 
regions of the Arctic circle, had been found only in five localities in 
England, The first near Maidenhead, the second between Limpley 
Stoke and Freshford, the third nearer Bath, the fourth at Bromley 
in Kent, and the fifth, and most perfect specimen at Crayford. 
The Mammalian drift in which these were found covers the Bath 
basin to the depth of 10ft., and extends as far as Bradford. In 
this drift, near Freshford, he found the head of the only female 
known, having previously discovered that of the bull near the 
‘same place, both are deposited in the gallery of the Bath 
Museum together with a very fine tusk of Elephas primigenius 
from the same spot and close by one of the heads. Remains of 
Rhinoceros, Cervus and Bos were also found by him in these 
gravels, and he draws attention to the curious and well-known 
fact of the bones of animals usually denizens of the Tropics 
associated with those characteristic of the Artic regions. 
Charles Moore was a frequent attendant at the Meetings of the 
British Association for the Advancement of Science, and read 
several papers before Section C. My earliest acquaintance with 
him was in the year 1863, shortly after my arrival in Bath, when 
we went together to the Newcastle Meeting as two of the local 
Secretaries for the Meeting to take place the following year in Bath.; 
and in the Report of the Transactions of Section C., presided over 
by Warington W. Smyth, F.R.S., is a short abstract of Moore’s 
paper ‘‘On the equivalents of the Cleveland Ironstones in the W. 
of England.” He had traced these Ironstone bands from Lyme 
Regis to Yeovil and Bath. They formed a marked contrast in 
mineral wealth to those in the North, for where the ore was 
sufficiently rich to work it was not thick enough, and vice versd. 
