A Classified and Annotated Bibliography of the Palaeozoic 
Crustacea, Part 2; Supplement to Occasional Papers 
California Academy of Science, Embracing the 
Publications for the Years 1895 to 1917. 
Airaghi (Carlo). Di aleuni Trilobiti della cina. 
Atti Mus. Milano, vol. 41, 1902, pp. 3-13, plate. 
The author describes Aguostus Pii n. sp. compares Agnotus acadicus Hartt and 
other species, the new species very much like < gvotus Chinenis, Dames, 1883. 
Olenoides Paronai n. sp., O. Leblanci Berg. Microdiscus Paronai n. sp. 
Drepanura premesnili, Berg. ‘Trilobites gen. sp. ind. 
Part 2 describes a Trilobite from Scitan tung, Teingan, as Cheirurus Paronai n. sp. 
Ami (Henry). Belinurus grandacvus, a new species of Palaeozoic 
limuloid Crustacean recently described by Prof. T. Rupert Jones and 
Dr, Henry Woodward, from the Eo-Carboniferous of Riversdale, Nova 
Scotia. 
Ottawa Nat., vol. 13, 1899, pp. 207-208. 
See also Geol. Mag., Decade 4, vol. 6, 1899, pp. 388-395, pl. 15. 
The genus Belinurus has been found in Lower Devonian and Silurian forms in the 
Kiltorcan beds of Ireland. 
See Review of this paper, Geol. Mag., Decade 4, vol. 7, p. 177, 1900. 
Andrée (Karl). Zur Kenntniss der Crustaceen Gattung Arthropleura 
Jordan, und dern systematischer Stellung, 
Palexontographica Bd. 57, Stuttgart, 1910, pp. 67-103, plates 4-5. Arthropleura 
armata, Jordan, 4. mammata, Salter. 
Gives a Bibliography of the literature on 4rthropleura, 1854, 1909. 
— Neue Kunde von Arthropleura armata Jordan. 
Centralbl, fiir Mineral, 1909, pp. 753-755. 
Arber (I. A. Newell). The Culin Measures of the Exeter District. 
Geol. Mag. Decade 5, vol. 8, 1911, p. 495. 
The Arthropod remains from Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire coal fields in this 
paper are described and illustrated by Lewis Moysey. 
Leaia trigonoides sp. nov. Glabella region of Prestwichia figured. 
Baldwin (Walter). Belinurus Konig from Sparth, Rochdale. 
Trans. Manchester Geol. and Mining Soc., vol. 28, pt. 6, 1905, pp. 198-202. 
The author remarks Belinurus is generally associated with Unio-like shells and 
Scattered plant remains, and suggests that it was an inhabitant of shallow, muddy 
water and lived in close proximity to the shore line. He also gives a Bibliography 
of the genus, 
Belinurus forms were first discovered in the Pennystone iron nodules of the Coal 
Measures at Dudley in Staffordshire and Coalbrook Dale, in Shropshire. 
Martin, the first author to describe a species in 1809 (Petrifacata Derbiensia, pl, 45, 
fig. 4), classes it among the Trilobites as Entomolithus lunatus, 
Charles Koenig, who was the first keeper of the Mineralogical and Geological De- 
Partment in the British Museum in the year 1825. 
Published under the title of Icones Fossilium sectiles, n. d. (1820) in two parts: 
