8o editor's notes. 



PALEONTOLOGY. 



Caziot. — Indication des Mem. parus et des fossiles decrits appartenant au terrain 

 lacustre d'age cretace du midi de la France. Feu. Jeun. Nat., 1894, pp. 

 91-93, 107-109. 



Clarke, J. M. — Nanno a new Cephalopod. Amer. Geol., 1894, vol. xiv., 

 pp. 205-S, 1 pi. 

 Mr. Crick points out to us that this supposed new form is hard to distinguish 

 from the proto-conch of Endoceras figured by Holm in Pal. Abhandl., iii., Hft. i. 



Crick, G. C. — Jurassic Cephalopoda from Western Australia, 2 pts. Geol. 

 Mag., 1894," pp. 385-93 and 433-41, 2 pis. 

 Several new species of Ammonites. 



Dawson, J. W. and Hind, W.- — On the genus Naiadites as occurring in the 

 coal -formation of Nova Scotia. Quart. Journ. Geol. Sue, 1894, pp. 435- 

 42, 1 pi. 



Futterer, K. — Beitrage zur Kenntniss des Jura in Ost-Afrika. Zeit. Deutsch. 

 Geol. Ges., Bd. xlvi., pp. 1-493, 6 pis. 



Jimbo, K. — Beitrage zur Kenntniss der Fauna der Kreideformation von 

 Hokkaido. Palseont. Abhandl., N.F. ii., lift. 3, pp. 47, 9 pis. 



Kittl, E. — Die triadischen ( lastropoden der Marmolata und verwandter Fundstellen 

 in den weissen Riffkalken Siidtirols. Jahrb. K.K. Geol. Reichsanst, Bd. 

 xlix., pp. 99-182, 6 pis. 



Locard, A. — Descrs. des Moll, quarternaires nouveaux . . . de Cremieu (Isere). 

 Ann. Soc. Linn. Lyon, T. xli, pp. 201-20. 

 1 Succinea, 1 Hyalinia, 7 Helix, 2 Zua. 



Moricke, W. — Versteinerungen des Lias und Unteroolith von Chile. Neiie* 

 Jahrb., Beil. Bd. i\.. pp. 1-100, 6 pis. 



Schwarz, E. H. L. — The Aptychus. Geol. Mag., 1894, pp. 454-9, figs. 



BIOGRAPHICAL. 

 Anon.— Isaiah Gregor (obituary). Naut., 1894, vol. viii., pp. 56-7. 

 Crosse.— Paul Fischer (with portrait). Journ. de Conchy., 1894, pp. 6-12. 



EDITOR'S NOTES. 



I trust that those malacologists who have so generously supported my efforts 

 in the past will continue to support those of Mr. Webb and myself in the future, 

 so that volume iii. when complete may be a great advance upon either of its 

 predecessors. 



One of the main features of the Journal — the "Bibliography" — will be 

 continued and made even more complete than in the past. To those authors 

 who have assisted in the past I am deeply grateful, and especially to Mr. E. R. 

 Sykes for his labours in this department. 



