130 bibliography: geology and PALyEONTOLOGV, 1888. 



W. Hrvvitt. Lancashire. 



Notes on the Topography of Liverpool [rtTening to the water-supply, 

 boulder-clays, and quarries]. I'roc. Liverp. Geo). See, vol. v. jjp. 145-150. 



\V. Hewitt. Isle of Man. 



Notes on Glacial Deposits and Markings in the South of the Isle of 



Man [describing the till and the ice-scratches ab(iut Port Erin, Port St. Mary, 

 and Castletown]. Proc. Liverp. Geol. Soc. , 1888, vol. v. pp. 352-358. 



W. HEwnr. Cheshire. 



Report of Field Meeting at Runcorn [describing the Keuper beds there 

 exposed]. Proc. Liverp. Geol. Soc, 1888, vol. v. p. 390. 



W. Hewitt. Lancashire. 



River Deposits in the Ribble Valley [a resume of the papers by Mr. E. 

 Dickson on the same subject]. Research, July 1888, pp. 9, 10. 



W. Hill. Lincolnshire and York S.E. 



On the Lower Beds of the Upper Cretaceous Series in Lincolnshire 

 and Yorkshire [the Hunstanton Limestone is represented by the Red Chalk, 

 with varying thickness up to 30 ft. at Speeton : the base of the Chalk Marl 

 is marked by a bed of compact limestone etjuivalent to the 'sponge-bed'; 

 the upper limit of the Chalk Marl is fixed by certain courses of grey chalk 

 representing the Totternhoe Stone, with frequent red coloration in Lincoln- 

 shire]. Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc, vol. xliv. pp. 320-364; Abstract in Geol. 

 Mag. (3), vol. V. pp. 234, 235 ; Phil. Mag., May (5), vol. xxv. pp. 445, 446. 



Bernard Hobson. Isle of Man. 



The Glaciation of the Isle of Man [draws attention to the glacial stria^ on 

 Carboniferous Limestone at Scarlett Point near Castletown, direction E. 35° N. 

 and E. 37^° N. ; at Port St. Mary, on the outer side of the shore end of the 

 new concrete jiier, average direction E. 33° N.; from the beds immediately 

 overlying the limestone at Port St. Mary — a rounded and well-scratched 

 boulder. The article is written in refutation of Mr. Keegan's article in 

 Sci. Goss., April 1888, p. 73]. Sci. Goss., July 1S88, pp. 165-166. 



B. Hoi-OATE. Yorkshire. 



The Magnesian Limestones of Yorkshire [after general remarks upon 



the Permian formation, localities are given ; divisions of the Permian rocks 



of Yorkshire (|uoted ; also their economic uses]. Trans. Leeds Geol. Assoc, 



1888, Part iv. pp. 182-184. 



B. Hoi.cATE. Westmorland and Cumberland. 



Notes on the Lake District [visits to Castle Rigg near Keswick, the Glenda- 



terra Pass near Skitldavv, and othfer places described ; metamorphism of the 



Lake District rocks illustrated]. Trans. Leeds Geol. Assoc. 1888, Part iv. 



204-206. 



J. HoRNELL. Isle of Man. 



Ice-graving in the Isle of Man [a note on the glacial striations of the 



isL-ind, mentioning localities]. Sci. Goss., June 1888, pp. 140, 141. 



W. H. HuDLESTON. Lincolnshire and York E. 



A Monograph of the British Jurassic Gasteropoda. General introduc- 

 tion, pp. 1-15, ^iid Part i. No. i; Gasteropoda of the Inferior Oolite, 

 pp. 17-56 [Inferior Oolite of P^ngland divided into four districts ; No. 3, the 

 East Midland, including Lincolnshire and South-East Yorkshire; No. 4, the 

 Yorkshire Basin proper ; comparison of Dorset and Yorkshire coasts, p. 35]. 

 Palreontographical Society, vol. xl. (for 1886, pub. 1887). Part i. No. 2 ; 

 • Gasteropoda of the Inferior Oolite, pp. 57-136, plates i.-vi. [Lincolnshire 

 Limestone described, pp. 71-73 ; the introductory portion of the monograph 

 discusses the details of the Inferior Oolite in the East Midland district and 

 the Yorkshire Basin, pp. 74-77 ; systematic part of work, which follows, 



describes many Yorkshire species]. Vol. xli. (for 1887, pub. 1888). 



Naturalist, 



