4 PROCEEDINGS COTTESWOLD CLUB 1904 
great Malvern fault passed between this mass and the 
Triassic sandstone which appeared close at hand to the 
east. In driving to Mitcheldean, the Silurian sub-divisions 
were crossed in reversed order, and a fine section of the 
overlying Old Red Sandstone was passed. Before lunch, 
a visit was paid to the church, where the rector, the Rey. 
L. Wilkinson, gave an interesting account of its history. 
The afternoon was occupied with a study of the Carbon- 
iferous rocks of Drybrook, with the subjacent transition 
beds, and the massive Old Red conglomerate which crops 
out on the road to Mitcheldean station. 
On Tuesday, June 23rd, our second Field Meeting was 
held at Faringdon. The chief object of the visit was the 
study of the famous “Sponge-gravels” of the Lower 
Greensand. They were well seen at several localities, 
especially at the Little Coxwell pits, where Mr Davey, F.G.S., 
met the Club, and gave the members his assistance in 
naming the specimens which they collected in great 
variety. The Coralline Oolite was also visited, and the 
characteristic corals were obtained. At the church, the 
members were met by the Rev. A. F. Alston and Mr 
Luker, and a paper on the history of the structure, pre- 
pared by the latter, was read. 
The Club met for the third Field Meeting at Worcester 
on Thursday, July 23rd. At Bromwich Hill the members’ 
investigated the gravel, in which worn shells of marine 
mollusca and mammalian remains had been found, as 
described by the President in his recent Annual Address. 
The examination was afterwards continued in the Worcester 
Museum, and the worn and fractured condition of the 
shells was compared with an unworn /Aznoceros-tooth 
from the same pit. In the Museum, the members studied 
the fine collection of fossil fish and saurians presented by 
the late Canon Winnington-Ingram in 1887, and their 
