BIHLIOGKAPIIY OF I'AL-'KOZOIC CRUSTACEA. 63 



Paheoiitologv of the coasts of the Arctic lands 



visited by the hite British expedition under Capt. Sir 

 George Nares, etc. 



In Quart. Jonr. Geol. Soc. London, vol. 34, ISTS, p. 068. 



Bronteiis sp.? allied to li. hiberniciis Port., B. ftahellifer Goldf. Am/ihus 

 UVie A. tt/r-muius Miirch. Vnhimfiie .toiaria Conrad? n. sp. fiJiirriimrus 

 III vis Ang. Proetiis s\). 



Address of the President. 



In Quart. Jonr. Geol. Soc. London, vol. 37, 1881, Proceedings, p. 37. 



Reports of the committee, consisting of Mr 



K. Etheridge, Dr. Henry Woodward, and Prof. T. Rupert 

 Jones, secretary, on the fossil Phyllopoda of the Palaeo- 

 zoic rocks. 



See reports of the secretary, recorded ijnder Jones (T. Rupert). See, 

 also. Woodward (Henry) and Etheridge (Robert); Huxley (T. H.) and 

 Etheridge (Robert, Jr.) 



Etheridge (Robert, Jr.) Memoir Geological Survey of 

 Scotland. • Edinburgh. Explanation Map, 23, p. 93. 



Ceratocaris. 



On the remains of Pterygotus and other Crus- 



taceans from the Upper Silurian series of the Pendland 

 Hills. 



In Trans. Geol. Soc. Edinburgh, vol. 2, 1874, part 3, pp. 314-316. 



Fragmentary remains of Pterygotus and a supposed Crustacean, prob- 

 ably a Phj'Uopod. Species of Dictyocaris are described, but without specific 

 names. 



Notes on further localities for Acanthospongia 



y^iiiithii Young, and Esther ia davjsoni Jones. 



In Geol. Mag. decade 2, vol. 3, 1876, p. 576. 



Estherla dawsoni Jones recorded from the Red Sandstone group, the lowest 

 member of the Calciferous series at the base of the British Carboniferous 

 formation. 



On the remains of a large Crustacean probably 



indicative of a new species of Eurypterus, or allied genus 

 (Eurypierus? stevensoni), from the Lower Carboniferous 

 (Cement stone group) of Berwickshire. 



^ In Quart. Jour. Geol. Soc. Loudon, vol. ,3.3, 1876, pp. 223-228. 



