biblio(;raphv : oeolocv and pal/EONtologv, 1889. 349 



SiK J. A. I'icTON. Lane. S. and Cheshire. 



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

 in and about Liverpool [especially as to the evidences of elevation in the 

 estuary of the Dee and depression in that of the Mersey]. I'roc. Liverpool 

 Geol. Soc, vol. vi. part i, pp. 31-42; Abstract in Research, Dec. 1888, 

 vol. i. p. 97. 



I. Postlethwah K. Cumberland, Westmorland, and Furness. 



Mines and Mining in the Lake District [giving an account of the Lower 

 Palreozoic rocks of the district, with lists of fossils and notes on the igneous 

 intrusions ; an annotated list of minerals ; and an account of the several 

 mines, with a calendar of State papers referring to mining in the Lake Dis- 

 trict ; also a geological map, plate of fossils, and numerous sections and plans 

 of mines]. lOl pp., 8vo, Leeds, 1889. [2nd edition, enlarged.] 



T. Mellaud Readi:. Lane. S. and Cheshire. 



The Physiography of the Lower Trias [suggesting that the Lower Triassic 

 rocks were laid down in arms of the sea subject to strong tidal currents], 

 eieol. Mag., Dec. 1889 (3), vol. vi. pp. 549-558 ; Research, Oct. 1889, vol. ii. 

 p. 78; Newc. Daily Chron., Sep. 13th, 1S89 ; Rep. Brit. Assoc, for 1889, 

 pp. 566, 567 (1890). 



T. Mei.laki) Reade. North- Western Counties. 



The New Red Sandstone and the Physiography of the Triassic Period. 

 Nat., April 1889, pp. 108-111, 



T. Meli.ard Reade. _ Cheshire. 



Saxicava Borings and Valves in a Boulder Clay Erratic [describing a 

 boulder with burrows and shells of this mollusc found in the workings of the 

 New Ferry Brick and Tile Co., and held by the author to prove the marine 

 origin of the ' low-level boulder-clay ' of Cheshire and Lancashire]. Nature, 

 July nth, 1889, vol. xl. pp. 246, 247. 



T. RoTiEKTs. Lincolnshire. 



The Upper Jurassic Clays of Lincolnshire [pointing out the occurrence 

 between the Oxford and Kimeridge Clays of certain black selenitiferous clays 

 of Corallian age ; these beds are to be correlated with the Ampthill Clay 

 of Bedfordshire and Cambridgeshire ; they contain both Giypluca dilatata 

 and Ostrea deltoidea, and of the 23 fossils found, 22 are known Corallian 

 forms; a map is given]. Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc, vol. xlv., pp. 545-559; 

 Abstract in Geol. Mag., July 1889 (3), vol. vi. p. 334; Phil. .Mag., Aug. 

 1889 (5), vol. xxvii. pp. 140, 141. 



C. Roeder. Lane. S. 

 Some Further Remarks on the Oxford Street Section [noting the 



boulders met with in the Boulder Clay]. Trans. Manch. Geol. Soc, 18S9, 

 vol. XX. pp. 163-173. 



J. Silencer. Yorks. S.W. 



On the Occurrence of a Boulder of Granitoid Gneiss or Gneissoid 



Granite in the Halifax Hard-bed Coal [from Shibden Head Pit ; with 



a note on the rock by Prof. Bonney]. Rep. Brit. Assoc, for 1888, pp. 661,662. 



D. STtK. Northumberland, Yorks. W., and Lancashire. 

 Momentaner Standpunkt meiner Kenntnisse uber die Steinkohlen- 



formation Englands [correlating the various coal-deposits of the English 

 Carboniferous series with those of Europe ; also giving critical notices of 

 species of fossil plants in the Newcastle Museum]. Jahrb. d. k.-k. Geolog. 

 Reichsanstalt, 1889, vol. xxxix. pp. 1-20 ; Abstracts in Geol. Mag., Oct. 

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A. Norman Tate [not signed]. Derbyshire. 



Scientific Aspects of Health Resorts.— IL — Buxton [its geology described, 



with illustrations of Chee Tor, Chee Dale, and Mam Tor]. Research, 



Aug. 1S8S, pp. 20-22. 

 Nov. 1890. 



