456 Classified Index. 



SPECIES AND VARIETIES NEW TO SCIElSiCE— continued. 



Flowering Plants. 



Discovery of Carex sylvatica var. 

 capillariformis at Heybeck, near 

 Woodkirk, P. F. Lee, 349-350 ; 

 Further note and full description of 

 same Sedge, F. A. Lees, 350-351 



FexGi. 



Coprinus cheesmani found in South 

 Africa, noted, 161 



Coprinus cordisporus Gibbs, further 



note, C. Crossland, 178 

 Flammula carnosa Massee at Castle 



Howard, C. Crossland, 419 



MOLLUSCA. 



Notes on Mytilus cloacinus sp. nov. 

 found in Rhaetic Bone Bed, Aust 

 Cliff, 369-370 



NOTES AND COMMENTS. 



January. — Lincolnshire Naturalists — 

 Dr. \V. E. Hoyle — Norwich Museum 

 Association — Museum Conference at 

 Rochdale — Liverpool Biologists — 

 ' Cancer ' — ' Granny ' Crabs — Cum- 

 berland Intrusive Rocks — Eskdale 

 and Wasdale Granite — Geology of 

 Harrogate — Yorkshire Zoologists — 

 Our Dumb Friends — 1-5 



February. — The Palaeontographical 



Societ}^ — The South Eastern Nat- 

 uralist — Hornets — Ray Society's 

 Publications — British Marine Anne- 

 lids and their Colour — A Lanca- 

 shire and ' Cheshire Naturalists' 

 LTnion — Liverpool Geologists — 

 Labels showing Geographical Dis- 

 tribution, 33-37 



March. — Large Larch Sawfly in the 

 Lake District — A Poisonous Fungus 

 — The Food of Birds — A Thousand 

 Cheshire records — New Botanical 

 Finds — New Spiders — Derbyshire 

 Glaciers — A Geographical Observa- 

 tion — Glaciers and Place-names — 

 The National Trust — How to tell the 

 Birds from the Flowers, 65-70 



April. — Important Work on Diatoms — 

 Evolution of Diatoms — Plankton 

 — Degraded Diatoms — Origin of 

 Diatoms — The Doncaster Museum, 

 129-130 



May. — Speeton and South Africa — 

 African Fungi — Seeds from Peat, 161 

 162 



June. — The Flamborough Peregrines — 

 Swings — The Girls' Realm extended 

 — Eggs as Tops — The Descent of 

 Darwin — The British Association 

 Report — The Solitary Ant — A Primi- 

 tive Dreadnought — 209-212 



July. — Memories : Francis Galton — 

 Croton Oil — A Boot Story — A Seal 

 Story — An Impression — The Darwin 

 Celebrations at Cambridge — The 

 Boulders of the Cambridge Drift — 

 Boulder Clays, 241-243 



August. — Salmon Scales — A Pre- 

 historic Man Hunt — A Case of 

 Courtesy — Stone Memorials and 

 Jacob — Prof. G. S. West, 273-274 



September. — Charles Darwin as Geolo- 

 gist — A Useful Hammer — Interest- 

 ing Find at Huddersfield — A 

 National Folk-Lore Museum, 305- 

 306 



October. — The Cambridge Natural 

 History — Crustacea and Arachnids — 

 The Volcanic Origin of Coal — Marble 

 as a Volcanic Rock — Between Pat- 

 rington and Easington : August — 

 Glacial and Post-Glacial Features — 

 Coast Changes in Yorkshire, 337-339 



November. — Non-Glacial Striae — 

 Mytilus cloacinus in the Rhaetics — 

 A New Species — Professor P. F. 

 Kendall, 369-370 



December.— The late Dr. W. H. Dalhn- 

 ger, F.R.S. — A Climbing Snapdragon 

 — The Bielsbeck Deposit — Migration 

 of Terns, etc., 401-402 



CHESHIRE. 



Arachnida : Ischnothyreus velox Jack- 

 son (new to Science) from Chester ; 

 Erigone arctica from Cheshire, 

 Hahnia pusilla L. Koch, Theridion 

 impressum L. Koch, Maro falconerii, 

 Entelecara jacksonii Camb., from 

 Delamere Forest, noted, 67 



Birds : Comments on Mr. Robert New- 



stead's paper on ' The Food of some 

 British Birds,' 65-66 



Coleoptera : Comments on Mr. W. E. 

 Sharp's 'Coleoptera of Lancashire and 

 Cheshire,' by E. G. Bayford, 108-1 10 



Societies : Lancashire and Cheshire 

 Entomological Society, Proceedings 



of. 335 ' 



Naturalist. 



