14 Johns: The Yoredale and Pendleside Serves. 
This table is reproduced below, but reference should be made 
to the original paper for the reasons that suggestsd the nomen- 
clature employed. It is, perhaps, sufficient to point out that 
BE 
a8 S Level of the Plant break. 
Pad 
O 
L Gane Upper Yoredale Coral Fauna. 
5 Voredalian! || ae 
a) te Lower) Entrance of Lower Culm or Pendleside 
Se a fauna (Posidonomya becheri). 
o = 
Ete ilar 
5 O | Viséan : 
= Entrance of C-S fauna (Caninia patula, Clisto- 
v < phyllum ingletonense). 
° 
o Tournaisian 
Dr. Wheelton Hind’s correlation of the Lower Culm and the 
Pendleside Series is duly recognised, and that the claims of 
priority, to say nothing of the great work of Phillips in York- 
shire, leaves Yoredalian as the only acceptable name for the 
Upper Division of the Avonian. 
NEWS FROM THE MAGAZINES. 
‘The Lost Towns of Holderness ; a Glimpse of a fast vanishing Land ’ 
is the title of an illustrated article in The Tramp by Mr. A. L. Armstrong. 
The ‘ Museums Journal’ (Vol. X., No. 5) includesa paper by Mr. A. 
J. Caddie, on ‘ The Board of Education and Provincial Museums,’ and 
Mr. E. E. Lowe writes on the Plymouth Museum and Art Gallery. 
The floods have been very bad in the Midlands lately, but they seem to 
have been most severe at Barnsley, where, according to the Barnsley 
Chronicle, ‘the rains have been so heavy that the roads have been covered 
with weter to a depth of over /wo mz/es in places.’ 
Writing in ‘ The Annals and Magazine of Scottish Natural History ’ 
(No. 76), Her Grace tne Duchess of Bedford, in describing visits paid to 
the Island of N. Rona, says :—‘ The horrible modern tombstone erected 
to the memory of the late two inhabitants who died there in 1887, and 
placed in the little chapel-yard amongst tine old locally-carved stone crosses, 
had been re-whitewasned. If ever I commit sacrilege, it will be here !’ 
In the same journal Mr. W. Eagle Clarke records that six Scottish Eggs of 
the Golden Eagle found in a snop in Inverness, were forfeited to the Crown, 
and sent to the Edinburgh Museum. Three were retained in Edinburgh, 
the remainder being sent to the Inverness Museum. 
Naturalist, 
