320 Geology. 



1896 ; with it was a MS. catalogue compiled by Prof. T. Rupert Jones. 

 Few of the fossils bear any distinctive labels. 



Keeve (W.) 



Presented bones of Dinornis casuarinus from Glenmark Swamp, New 

 Zealand, 1870. 



Keid (CLEMENT) 



Presented Pleistocene Mollusca from N. Italy and S. France, 1891. 



Eeid (JAMES) 



Presented Palieospnndylus and other Fishes from the Old Eed Sand- 

 stone of Caithness, 1896. 



Rich (WILLIAM) 



This dealer, who had a shop opposite the British Museum, also kept 

 a small establishment at Bristol, in which he was helped by his sister, 

 Miss A. Rich, a very active and careful collector. She was one of the 

 earliest to collect from the Lower Carboniferous Limestone series at 

 Clevedon Bay, and the Austins acknowledge the help obtained from her 

 in their "Monograph on Crinoidea" (see esp. pp. 71, 92). In 1867 the 

 Trustees purchased from Rich 13 palatal teeth, 2 trilobites, and 287 

 remains of crinoids, collected as above, and including specimens of 

 Poteriocrinus plicatus (PI. ix., 4 A-c) and P. pentagonus (PL xi., f. 2o) 

 figured by the Austins. The originals of PI. ix. ff. 1 and 2A are not now 

 to be found and probably never reached the Museum. 



Richards (UPTON) 



Presented Mammalian remains from Kent's Cavern, 1845. 



Richardson (Sir JOHN) 



Presented Arctic Palseozoic Brachiopoda, 1848, and Tertiary leaves 

 from the Mackenzie River, Canada, 1861. 



Richmond (Duke of} 



Presented Old Red Sandstone Fishes from Tynet Burn, 1859. 



Rickard (T. A.) 



Presented a Fish, Priscacara, from the Eocene of Wyoming, 1889. 



Ripley 



A collector and dealer in the fossils of the Whitby Lias, from whom 

 were purchased a skull of Steneosaurus and a skeleton of Pelagosaurus, 

 1841, 1842. 



Robertson (DAVID) 



Presented Post-Tertiary fossils from the Clyde, 1883, 1884. 



Rofe (JOHN) [1801-1878] 



That Rofe was early a keen geologist is shown by the " Observations 

 on the Geological Structure of the Neighbourhood of Reading," contributed 

 by him to the Geological Society in 1834 (Trans. G. S., 1837). Later 

 on, while resident for twenty-five years at Preston as engineer to the 

 gas-works, he made a fine collection of fossils, mainly Crinoids and 

 Blastoids, from the Carboniferous Limestone of the neighbourhood, and, 

 on his retirement, devoted himself to the study of their internal anatomy, 

 on which he published valuable papers in the Geological Magazine. 



