202 



THE ICE AGE IN CANADA. 



As the paper was ro-jn'inted in the Canaditoi Nuturnlid 

 (Vol. v., X.S.) it is unnecessary to notice these species 

 further here, excc])t to state that out of twenty-nine 

 s]»ecies of recent Ostracods ol)taine(l l)y Mr. lirady from 

 material from the (lulf St. Lawrence, furnislied by me, 

 thirteen liave been recognized in the I'leistocene of 

 Canada and Maine. It is further remarkable that out 



Fossils. — I M.ATK VII. 



Pleistocene Criistncca.—\, Bulaiitis Ihtmcri (one iif tlie Ixiity valves); •_', l:. llameri 

 (()l)t>rciil.ir valves); ;i, Ctlthcriika MitUerl—{(i) valves uiiituLl; (h) left valve; 

 (c) natural si/e. 



of thirty-three fossil species from Maine and Canada, no 

 less than twenty-three occur in the Scottish glacial beds 

 and twenty-five are living in the British seas, while six 

 are new species, 



Balanus Uameri. Ascanius. 



Fossil —Montreal ; St. Nicholas ; Quebec ; Anticosti ; Riviere-du- 

 Lrup ; also, Uddevalla ; Russia (Murchison) ; Greenland (Spengler). 



