xvi. INTRODUCTION. 



187475. 



54. " On the Geology of Needwood Forest." Mr. MOLY- 



NEUX. 



55. " On the Extinct Glaciers of Snowdon." Mr. J. L. 



CHERRY. 



56. " On Uriconium." The Rev. J. S. BROAD. 



57. " On Salt." Mr. WARDLE. 



58. "On Ancient Church Bells in Staffordshire." Mr. 



LYNAM. 



59. " On the Structural Features of Plants in relation to 



their uses in the Arts and in Medicine." Dr. 

 ARLIDGE. 



60. Annual Address " On the Sepulchral Monuments of 



Staffordshire." Mr. LYNAM. 



Besides these written papers, addresses have been given by 

 members of the club and others upon many curious and 

 interesting subjects of natural history, etc. Thus, Mr. Garner 

 has discoursed on the natural history of the immediate 

 neighbourhood of Stoke-upon-Trent and of the Upper Trent 

 Valley, on the birds of Leek and its neighbourhood, on the 

 History of Dudley Castle, and on the manner in which the moult 

 of certain Crustacese, e.g., crabs, lobsters, &c., is performed 

 He has exhibited and commented upon a white-fruited variety 

 of the common bilberry, Vaccinium Myrtillus, found at 

 Swynnerton ; a hybrid between the bilberry and cowberry, V. 

 Vitis-idsea, found at Maer ; the Hutchinsia Petrsea, from 

 Dovedale, one of the least of flowering plants ; the House 

 Ant, Diplorhopterum Molesta ; the Euplectella Aspergillum 

 from the Philippine Islands ; and the curious mechanism of the 

 dorsal and fin bones of the Chsetodon Anthriticus. Dr. 

 Nevill, F.L.S., Bishop of Dunedin, has addressed the club 

 on the true place of the Hydrachne Globulus, and on the 

 surface geology of Otago, New Zealand. The Rev. H. G. 



