26 LIST OP PUBLICATIONS OP THE 



Catalogue of the Fossil Cephalopoda in the British Museum 

 (Natural History) continued. 



Part II. Containing the remainder of the Suborder 

 Nautiloidea, consisting of the families Lituitidae, 

 Trochoceratidse, Nautilidse, and Supplement. By 

 Arthur H. Foord, F.G.S. Pp. xxviii., 407. 86 Wood- 

 cuts. [With Systematic Index, and Alphabetical 

 Index of Genera and Species, including Synonyms.] 

 1891, 8vo. 15s. 



Part III. Containing the Bactritidse, and part of the 

 Suborder Ammonoidea. By Arthur H. Foord, Ph.D., 

 F.G.S., and George Charles Crick, A.R.S.M., F.G.S. 

 Pp. xxxiii., 303. 146 Woodcuts. [With Systematic 

 Index of Genera and Species, and Alphabetical Index.] 

 1897, 8vo. 12s. Qd. 



List of theTypes and Figured Specimens of Fossil Cephalopoda 

 in the British Museum (Natural History). By G. C. Crick, 

 F.G.S. Pp. 103. [With Index.] 1898, 8vo. 2s. Qd. 



A Catalogue of British Fossil Crustacea, with their Synonyms 

 and the Range in Time of each Genus and Order. By 

 Henry Woodward, F.R.S. Pp. xii., 155. [With an 

 Alphabetical Index.] 1877, 8vo. 5s. 



Catalogue of the Fossil Bryozoa in the Department of 

 Geology, British Museum (Natural History): 



The Jurassic Bryozoa. By J. W. Gregory, D.Sc., F.G.S., 

 F.Z.S. Pp. [viii.,] 239 : 22 Woodcuts and 11 Plates. 

 [With List of Species and Distribution, Bibliography, 

 Index, and Explanation of Plates.] 1896, 8vo. 10s. 



The Cretaceous Bryozoa. By J. W. Gregory, D.Sc.^ 

 F.R.S., &c. : 



Vol. I. Pp. xiv., 457 : 64 Woodcuts and 17 Plates. 

 [With Index and Explanation of Plates.] 1899, 

 8vo. 16s. 



Vol. II. Pp. xlviii., 346. 75 Woodcuts and 9 Plates. 

 [With List of Localities, Bibliography, Subject 

 and Systematic Indexes, and Explanation of 

 Plates.] 1909, 8vo. 13s. 



Catalogue of the Blastoidea in the Geological Department of 

 the British Museum (Natural History), with an account of 

 the morphology and systematic position of the group, and 

 a revision of the genera and species. By Robert Etheridge, 

 jun., of the Department of Geology, British Museum 

 (Natural History), and P. Herbert Carpenter, D.Sc., F.R.S., 



