134 BIBLIOGRAPHY : GEOI.OCV AND PAL/?':ONTOLOGY, 1 888. 



of Lancashire ; Insecta — two wings of an Orthopterous insect, Protophas- 

 mida:, from the Ravenhead Beds, Middle Coal Measures, are in the Liverpool 

 P'ree Museum ; Polyzoa — represented in the Coniston Limestone by Fenestella 

 assiviilis and Plilodiclya ; Gasteropoda — I\}iap]ii stoma sp. occurs at Skiddaw ; 

 Cephalopoda — Orthoccras vai^aus in the Coniston Limestone at the top of 

 Skelgill ; Amphibia — the earliest occur in the Coal Measures, and belong to 

 the Labyrinthodonta (see Mr. Atthey's collection in the Museum of the Nat. 

 Hist. Soc. of Northumberland at Newcastle-on-Tyne) ; Reptilia — the earliest 

 belong to the Lacertilia, and occur in the Permian ; there are two species, 

 Profosaurus speiiceri and P. huxleyi from Durham]. Proc. Liverpool Geo). 

 Soc, vol. V. part 3, 1887, pp. 209-241. 



G. H. Morion. Lancashire. 



The Microscopic Characters of the Millstone Grit of South-West 



Lancashire [at Knowsley Park, CJrimshaw Delph near Wigan, and Parbold : 



the grit is mainly of quartz-grains, with some reddish orthoclase and a little 



mica]. Proc. Liverpool C>eol. Soc, 1887, vol. v. pp. 280-283. 



G. H. Morton. Lancashire. 



Report of Field Meeting- at Eastham [describing the Lower Bunter as 

 there seen]. Proc. Liverp. Cleol. Soc, 18S7, vol. v. p. 291. 



G. H. Morton. Cheshire. 



Stanlow, Ince, and Frodsham Marshes [the south coast of the estuary of 

 the Mersey between Ellesmere Port and the river Weaver is bounded by 

 a marsh, which is divided at Ince by a promontory of the Lower Pebble Beds, 

 and there is an outlier of the same rock at .Stanlow Point ; a section of the 

 lieds about one hundred yards \V. of Ince Lighthouse given]. Proc. Liverpool 

 Geol. Soc, vol. V. part 4, 18S8, pp. 349-352. 



G. H. Morton. Lancashire. 



Local Historical, Post-Glacial, and Pre-Glacial Geology [a Presidential 



Address on the recent geology of Liveri)OoI]. Proc. Liverpool. Geol. Soc, 



1 888, vol. v. pp. 303-334. 



E. T. Newton. York N.E. 



On the Skull, Brain, and Auditory Organ of a new species of Pterosaurian 



{Scaplipgiiathiis piirdoni) from the Upper Lias near Whitby, Yorkshire 



[exceptionally perfect specimen]. Phil. Trans., clxxix. 503-537, plates 77, 78. 



Thos. Parkinson. Yorkshire. 



Reports upon Boulders near Northallerton [details are given of the 

 following boulders : — Thornton-le-Beans, near Northallerton — .Shap Granite ; 

 Thornton-le-Moors, near Northallerton — three boulders of Granite, coarse 

 Dolerite or Gabbro, and closely-grained Trap or highly-altered fine Ash ; 

 North Otterington — Ciranite]. Nat., Nov. 18S8, pp. 344-345. 



John H. Pan i,n'.s. York N.E. 



Notes on Shap Granite Boulders at Scarborough [a number of erratic 

 blocks collected in the neighbourhood of Scarborough noted — .Shap Granite], 

 Nat., Jan. 1888, p. 23. 



Sir JAMF.s PicTON. Lancashire. 



Notes on the Local Historical Changes in the Surface of the Land in 

 and about Liverpool [rejiort only]. Research, Dec. 1888, vol. i. p. 97. 



H. M. Platnauek. Yorkshire. 



Reports upon Boulders in the Grounds of the Yorkshire Philosophical 

 Society, York [iletails of sixteen boulders obtained from the Boulder Clay 

 that was dug out when the York New .Station was built, and now placed in 

 the Museum Grounds ; .Shap Granite, Mountain Limestone, Oolitic Limestone, 

 Lithostrotion, greenish-grey Trap, etc.]. Naturalist, Nov. 1888, pji. 344-345. 



H. M. Platnauer. Yorkshire. 



Note on some Crystals of Celestine [from the bed of the Nidd at Knares- 

 liorough]. Annual Report \'orks. Phil. .Soc. for 1887, p. 34. 



N.Ttur.Tlist, 



