126 bibliography: gp:ology and pal/eontology, 1888. 



Wm. Chf:ktham. York N.W. 



From the Millstone Grits to the Silurians [description of a tour by road 

 from Horsforth, via Ilkley, Burnsall,Gras.sington, Arncliffe, into Ribblesdale; 

 thence returning via Stainforth, Giggleswick, Gargrave, Skipton, and Otley ; 

 principal geological features mentioned]. Trans. Leeds Geo). Assoc, l888, 

 Part iv. pi^. 194-204. 



I). C[ka(;ue]. Lancashire. 



Notes of the Month [account of excavation made at north end of Hope 

 Street, Liverpool, showing a soft sandstone belonging to the Upper Bunter]. 

 Trans. Liverpool Geol. Assoc, 1886-7, '^ii- 53- 



E. Maule Coi.e. Yorkshire. 



Notes on Flamborough Head Boulders [erratic blocks on Beacon Hill, 

 Thornwick Bay, and Bempton briefly described ; Granite, Whinstone, Sand- 

 stone, and Mica Schist]. Nat., Jan. 1888, p. 19. 



E. Maule Cole. York S.E. 



The Rudstone [details of the great monolith at Rudston near Bridlington ; 

 it is a grit similar to that of the Lower Oolite found on the watershed of the 

 North Eastern moorlands ; author suggests that it is a bloc perche, and 

 brings evidence to support his theory ; derivation of word ' Rudstone ' given 

 at length]. Nat., March 1888, pp. 81-S2. 



E. Maule Cole. Yorkshire. 



[Reports upon Erratics in North and East Ridings of Yorkshire ; 



details of erratics at Stillington near Easingwold, Gristhorpe near P'iley, 



Carr Naze, Filey Brigg, Muston near Filey, Bempton, and Buckton]. Nat., 



Nov. 1888, pp. 333-335. 



E, Maule Cole. Lancashire. 



A Lake-Dwelling in Lancashire [details of a section, 30 ft. deep, exposed 

 in works for diverting course of Ribble, at Preston, and constructing docks ; 

 in the area of the unfinished dock have been found 52 pairs of antlers of red 

 deer, 43 heads of Urus, 14 human skulls, two ancient canoes hollowed 

 out of the trunks of trees, and a bronze spear-head, but no flint or pottery; 

 in the gravel-beds are piles standing vertically, and driven in to a depth of 

 from 8 ft. to 15 ft., and near the top a quantity of brushwood had been laid 

 horizontally between the piles, so as to make a solid and firm floor]. Yorks. 

 Geol. and Polyt. Soc, vol. xi. part i. pp. 90-91 ; Nat., Dec. 1888, p. 360. 



Henry Cowburn. Lancashire. 



Boulders in Coal Seams [brief description of two hard fine sandstone 



boulders found in the coal about six inches from the bottom of the seam in 



the Five Feet Mine at Brookside Colliery, Leigh]. Trans. Manch. C!eol. Soc, 



vol. xix. part 16, pp. 404-405. 



H. W. Crosskey. Yorkshire. 



Note upon the Hitchingstone, Keighley Moor [its claim to be considered 

 an erratic block finally negatived]. Nat., Jan. 18S8, pp. 23-24. 



11. "W. Crosskey. Durham, Yorkshire, and Lancashire. 



[Erratic Blocks, being the] Fifteenth Report of the Committee, consisting 

 of . . [eleven names] . . for . . recording the position, height above the sea, 

 lithological characters, size, and origin of the Erratic Blocks of England, 

 Wales, and Ireland, reporting other matters of interest connected with the 

 same, and taking measures for their preservation [the reports are obtained 

 chiefly through the Yorkshire Boulder Committee ; they include Bulmer's 

 Stone at Darlington, and the Sadberge Stone ; blocks at Northallerton, 

 chiefly from the Cheviots and Scotland ; boulders on the Yorkshire coast — 

 the Hitchingstone near Keighley, and the boulders from the base of the 

 Carboniferous at Norber and Malham ; also some detailed notes by Rev. John 

 Havvell of the erratics in his parish of Ingleby Greenhow, and notes by 

 R. H. Tiddeman on the distribution of boulders from the base of the car- 

 boniferous series at Norber and Malham Tarn]. 57th Rep. Brit. Assoc, 



Manchester, 1887 (pub. 1888), pp. 236-244; see also Nat. 



Naturalist, 



