272 Antediluvian Zoology and Botany. 
Among _ these 
deposits few are 
so rich in zoo- 
phytes as the 
crag, and none 
have been so 
much neglected. 
As most of these 
bodies have never 
been noticed be- 
fore, we are in- 
duced to devote 
Sarcinula anguliris of Dr. Fleming.. It is similar to the porpital 
madreporite, Org. Rem. pl. vii. fig. 3. From Dudley limestone. @ larger space 
Favosites alveolata, Parkinson’s Jztroductiun, p. 69. ‘ 
ee ig than this branch 
of zoology would otherwise be entitled to. They belong to a 
class not capable of easy identification, and are introduced here 
inore for the purpose of attracting naturalists to their better 
consideration, than with the expectation of clearing up the 
Niner 
: PM 
; 
a 
a, Retipora ? 
bef, E’schara, 
c, Turbindlia. 
a 
obscurities which attend them. Several species may be traced 
referable to the genera Spongia? Sertularia, Flistra, E’schara, 
Caryophyllee’a? Retipora, Millépora, Turbindlia, Corallina ? 
Fig.61. A spherical 
body, of which great 
abundance exists in 
some localities ; varying 
from the size of a pea 
nearly to a hen’s egg. 
External surface co- 
vered with minute cy- 
lindrical pores. Interior 
construction — exhibits 
numerous fine tubes, 
radiating to the ex- 
ternal cells or pores. 
