270 PROCEEDINGS COTTESWOLD CLUB 1906 
6 C. latissimus, Agassiz. Lilliput, railway-cutting, near Chip- 
ping Sodbury. (Dr A. Vaughan 
and Prof. S. H. Reynolds.) 
) " " Garden Cliff, Westbury-on-Severn. 
(Collected by P. C. A. Stewart, 
and deposited in the Museum of 
Royal College of Science). 
8 " " Spinney Hills, near Leicester. (W. J. 
Harrison’; see also H. E. Quilter.) 
9 n " Stanton-on-the-Wolds, _ Nottingham- 
shire. (E. Wilson.)! 
10 0 " Penarth, near Cardiff. (Collected by 
W. H. Wickes).5 
Thus Ceratodus latisstmus has been recorded from the 
Rheetic at ten different localities in Britain. 
There are two records of the teeth of Cervatodus from 
rocks other than Rheetic in this country. 
In the British Museum (Nat. Hist.) there is a specimen 
labelled C. 4evissimus from the “ Bone-Bed” in the Upper 
Keuper Sandstone which was formerly exposed in the 
railway-cutting at Ripple, near Tewkesbury. It is not 
known who gave the specimen this name; it may have 
been the Rev. W. S. Symonds.° Prof. Miall states in his 
monograph that the specimen does not resemble those 
from the Rhetic, but those from the German Trias.’ . 
The other record is from the Stonesfield Slate of 
Stonesfield. The specimen was sent to Agassiz for 
description by Prof. Phillips.’ Agassiz named it Cervatodus 
1 Q.J.G.S., vol, lx. (1904), p. 209. “A good number of pieces have been found, 
but anything like a perfect specimen is rare, and they are all of the small flat 
type (C.parvus, Ag.). They are more plentiful in the lower bed on the old 
Red Sandstone than in the higher one on the Carboniferous Limestone.” W. 
H. Wickes, 2 /itt., July 21st, 1906. 
Q. J. G. S., vol, xxxii. (1876), p. 213. 
Trans. Leicester Lit. and Phil. Soc. (1889), p. 17. 
Q. J. G. S, vol. xxxviii. (1882), p. 452. : 
“Only in the lower bed [i.e. the ‘ Fish-Bed’: see L. Richardson, Q. J. G. S., 
vol. xi. (1905), pp. 391, 392-,] and mostly in a bad condition and much 
weathered. Only a few fragments have been obtained.” W. H. Wickes, t# 
litt., July 21st, 1906. - 
Vide Proc. Cotteswold Nat. F. C., vol. xiv., pt. 2 (1903), p. 134. 
Page 32. 
“ Manual of Geology’ (1855), table on p. 324. 
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