THE CAMBRIAN PERIOD. 



8 9 





we have but few traces, and these wholly confined to the higher 

 beds of the formation. We meet, however, with examples of 

 the wonderful genus OrtJioceras, with its 

 straight, partitioned shell, which we shall 

 find in an immense variety of forms in the 

 Silurian rocks. Lastly, it is worthy of 

 note that the lowest of all the groups of 

 the Mollusca namely, that of the Sea- 

 mats, Sea-mosses, and Lace-corals (Poly- 

 zoo] is only doubtfully known to have 

 any representatives in the Cambrian, 

 though undergoing a large and varied 

 development in the Silurian deposits. 



An exception, however, may with much 

 probability be made to this statement in F ; g 33 ._ Fragment of 

 favour of the singular genus Dictyonema Dktymuntasociaie,c- 



. r * . . . . , . . , , . . - siderably enlarged, show- 



(ng. 33), WhlCU IS highly Characteristic Ot ing the horny branches, 



the highest Cambrian beds (Tremadoc ^^^1^-?^* 

 Slates). This curious fossil occurs in the of ceils on each side. 

 form of fan-like or funnel-shaped expan- 

 sions, composed of slightly-diverging horny branches, which 

 are united in a net-like manner by numerous delicate cross- 

 bars, and exhibit a row of little cups or cells, in which the ani- 

 mals were contained, on each side. Dictyonema has generally 

 been referred to the Graptolites ; but it has a much greater 

 affinity with the plant-like Sea-firs (Sertnlarians) or the Sea- 

 mosses (Polyzoa), and the balance of evidence is perhaps in 

 favour of placing it with the latter. 



LITERATURE. 



The following are the more important and accessible works and memoirs 

 hich rr 

 gical rel; 



which may be consulted in studying the stratigraphical and pakeontolo- 

 elations of the Cambrian Rocks : 



(1) 'Siluria.' Sir Roderick Murchison. 5th ed., pp. 21-46. 



(2) 'Synopsis of the Classification of the British Palaeozoic Rocks.' 



Sedgwick. Introduction to the 3d Fasciculus of the 'Descrip- 

 tions of British Palaeozoic Fossils in the Woodwardian Museum,' 

 by F. M'Coy, pp. i-xcviii, 1855. 



(3) ' Catalogue of the Cambrian and Silurian Fossils in the Geological 



Museum of the University of Cambridge.' Salter. With a Pref- 

 ace by Prof. Sedgwick. 1873. 



(4) 'Thesaurus Siluricus.' Bigsby. 1868. 



(5) " History of the Names Cambrian and Silurian." Sterry Hunt. 



'Geological Magazine.' 1873. 



(6) 'Systeme Silurien du Centre de la Boheme.' Barrande. Vol. I. 



(7) ' Report of Progress of the Geological Survey of Canada, from its 



Commencement to 1863,' pp. 87-109. 



