260 
I 
9 
PROCEEDINGS COTTESWOLD CLUB 
RIVER-CLIFF, MAISEMORE. 
QUARTZITE-PEBBLES, etc. 
CLAY, marly, pale-yellow and bluish-grey, often 
indurated so as to constitute intermittent argil- 
laceous limestone-bands, the most important of 
which occurs at 2 feet 10 inches above bed 2, 
is from o inch to 5 inches thick, and contains 
Foraminifera. At 1 foot 4 inches above bed 2, 
is a zone of thinly-laminated black shale full of a 
species of Pseudomonotis. In the clay immedi- 
ately above the limestone-bed were found 
numbers of scales of Lugnathus,; Lingula? 
(fragment). About az aie os 
Cay, black, laminated ee ne aa a 
LIMESTONE, grey, weathers yellowish : almost made 
up of the ossicles of Pentacrinus tuberculatus, 
Miller: o inch to 3 inches ie Siti 
CLAY, blue, imperfectly laminated except near the 
centre where it is thinly laminated and contains 
in great abundance Pseudomonotis ? aie 
LIMESTONE, crowded with Pentacrinus tuberculatus. 
When the limestone is absent the ossicles occur 
in the clay; 0 inch to 3 inches ns ae 
CLay, blue; Gryphea arcuata (Lam.), Pentacrinus 
LIMESTONE, ripple-marked : Grzyphea arcuata, Pent- 
acrinus ; 0 inch to 2 inches Ses ae 
CLAY, blue, laminated at horizons equally spaced ; 
Gryphea arcuata abundant (small), Arnioceras? : 
1 foot 8 inches to 2 feet re aay m4 
CLAY, blue, imperfectly laminated, impure limestone 
in places. Crowded with Foraminifera (see 
list), and Ostracoda ; Pholidophorus ? (scales), 
Hybodus delabechei, Charlesworth, Lima (Pla- 
giostoma) gigantea (Sowerby), Gryphea arcuata, 
Nuculana sp. «+: me's oat sa vr 
CLay, blue, tough. Top layer crowded with 
? Pseudomonotis papyria (Quenstedt), and 
another species... : a se ae 
1906 
Thickness in 
Feet inches 
12 oO 
fe) 8 
- 
O I 
2 fe) 
fo) I 
e) 9 
fo) I 
I 10 
6 6 
o- 8 
The lamellibranch recorded above as Pseudomonotis 
papyria (Quenstedt), was provisionally identified with 
this form by Mr E. T. Newton, F.R.S. 
I am indebted to Mr Joseph Wright, F.G.S., of Belfast, 
for kindly determining the forms. That entered on the 
list as Cornuspira infima (Strickland), was identified by 
