220 Bibliography : Geology of the North of England. 



Walcot Gibson. Northern Counties. 



Coal in Great Britain. The Composition, Structure, and Resources 

 of the Coalfields, Visible and Concealed, of Great Britain. viii. + 

 3" PP- 



J. C. M. Given. Lanes., Cheshire. 



Presidential Address [brief reference to local geology]. Proc. Liverp. 

 Geol. Soc, Vol. XII., pt. IV., pp. 363-364. 



J. C. M. CjIVen. Northern Counties. 



The Divisions of the Pleistocene Period [Presidential Address]. 

 Proc. Liverpool Geol. Soc, Vol. XIII., pt. i, pp. 2-17. 



Anderson Gr.\h.\m. Northumberland. 



Highways and Byways in Northumbria. London : pp. xx. ^ 370. 



J. Frederick N. CIreen. Lake District. 



The Geological Structure of the Lake District. Proc. Geol. Assoc. 

 Vol. XXXI., p. 109-126. See The Naturalist, Nov., pp. 345-346; 

 Geol. Mag., May, pp. 231-232 ; and Nature, April 22nd, p. 242. 



H. W. Greenwood. Lanes., S. Chesliire. 



The Trias of the Macclesfield District, with notes on its Relation 

 to the adjacent Carboniferous Rocks, and to the Trias of the 

 Midlands. Proc. Liverpool Geol. .Soc, Vol. XII., pt. 4, pp. 

 325-338. See also The Naturalist, Aug., p. 245. 



H. W. Greenwood. Nortliern Counties. 



On the Distribution and Significance of Barium Compounds in 

 Sedimentary Rocks, with Special Reference to the Trias. 



Proc. Liverpool Geol. Soc, Vol. XII., pt. 4, pp. 355-361. See 

 also The Naturalist, Aug., p. 245. 



J. W. Gregory. Northern Counties. 



The Conservation of our Coal Supplies [Address to Glasgow Phil. 



Soc.]. Nature, March 25th, pp. 108-10. 



Robert H.^dfield. Northern Counties. 



The Great Work of Sorby. Journ. Rov . Micro. Soc, Dec, pp. 114-118. 



F. C. H.\rdinge and H. C".. Stokes. Northern Counties. 



The Changing Face of England. Windsor Magazine, Feb., pp. 179-89. 



{To be continued). 



We find from The Leeds Mercury, May iqth, 1921, that Mr. .\rlhur 

 Draper, of .\pplcby Carr, near Harrogate, has got thirteen live ducks 

 from ten duck-eggs put under a broody hen. A correspondent adds :-— 

 ' You can't beat this in Hull ! ! ' 1 think the tale might have been im- 

 proved in one respect, he ought to have said he got 13 ducks from 10 

 hen's eggs, put under a Cuckoo. 



We learn from The Yorkshire Weekly Post 'It is recorded that a 

 notorious malefactor at Tyburn claimed his right to make a last dying 

 speech and confession from the scaffold, and said, if the audience would 

 permit him, he would like to make a few remarks on the Corn Laws. 

 Certain writers of Nature Notes take an equally wide view of their 

 privileges. We came across a column the other day, describing the 

 birthday presents received by the author, explaining how he came to 

 be so good and great a man, and offering a few general remarks as to the 

 state of his wife's health. This was headed " Nature .Vniund lliulders- 

 lield.'" 



Naturalist 



