111 
of Fife and the Lothians,” published in 1839, in which the 
beds under discussion are very clearly defined. The Doctor 
considered that the correlation of the Drybrook beds with those 
of the Calciferous series in Scotland was a most important 
discovery, and showed the value of the work to be done by 
local Geologists. Professor Harxer, adverting to the annelid 
jaw, considered it to be a most interesting discovery, and that 
the character of the organism had been correctly determined. 
Mr Lucy brought for exhibition a pair of antlers of the 
stag (cervus elaphus,) which had been found in the bed of the 
Severn, near Awre, at a distance of a mile from the bank. 
They are in fine preservation, and of extraordinary size, 
measuring three feet seven inches from base to tip. The 
width from tip to tip is three feet one inch and a half, with 
seven spurs on each. The brow antler measured fifteen inches 
in length; and the beam measured nine inches and three 
quarters in circumference at the base. In size this far exceeds 
the horns of any stag at present existing in this country : 
examples of the same race are occasionally met with in 
turbaries, and the dark colour of the portion of skull to which 
the horns in question are attached, gives reason to believe that 
they may have been derived from some such source. 
Mr Ley also exhibited a carefully measured section of the 
Hock Crib on the Severn, and promised a future Paper, with a 
list of fossils from the different beds. 
This was the last Meeting of the season, which was fitly 
brought to a conclusion by Mr Werueren’s very important 
Paper. Ii is fit, too, that I should bring to a conclusion this 
unusually long Address, which owes its length to the large 
amount of matter accumulated at our different Meetings, all of 
which testifies in the most satisfactory manner to the energy 
and vitality of the Cotteswold Club. 
