300 Yorkshire Naturalists at Goathland. 



Club, XIII. (1S92), pp. 199-231. [Cheiridium museorum, Lincoln- 

 shire ; Chernes nodosus, Cumberland and Yorkshire ; Chelifer 

 latreillii, Northumberland (?) and Lincolnshire ; Obisinm mus- 

 eorum, Cumberland.] 

 (4V Roebuck, W. D. The Naturalist, 1893, p. 172. {Chelifer latreiUii, 

 Mablethorpe.] 



(5) Baker, W. F. 'Foundation of a Lincolnshire Naturalists' Union.' 



The Naturalist, 1893, p. 261. [Chelifer latreillii, Mablethorpe.] 



(6) GOULDING, R. W. 'Lincolnshire Naturalists' Union at Mablethorpe.' 



The Naturalist, 1901, pp. 151-4. [Chelifer latreillii, Chthoniiis 

 rayi. ] 



(7) Kew, H. \V. 'Lincolnshire Pseudoscorpions : With an Account of 



the Association of such Animals with other Anthropods.' The 

 Naturalist, 1901, pp. 193-215. [Cheiridium fnuseoruin, Chernes 

 nodosus, Chelifer latreillii, Chthonius raj'i.'\ 



(8) Johnson, H. E. ' East Riding- Pseudoscorpions.' Transactions of 



the Hull Scientific and Fitld Naturalists' Club, I. (1901), p. 228. 

 [Chelifer latreillii. Spurn.] 



(9) Cambridge, F. O. P.- ' The Victoria History of the County of 



Cumberland,' I. (1901), p. 157. [Chernes nodosus, Obisinm vins- 

 coru/f!.] 



(10) Peacock, E. A. W. 'Lincolnshire Naturalists at Torksey.' The 



Naturalist, 1902, pp. 133-8. [CJithonius rayi.] 



(11) Peacock, E. A. W. 'Lincolnshire Naturalists at Scunthorpe.' The 



Naturalist, 1902, pp. 375-380. [Chthonius rayi.] 



-^ » ^ 



YORKSHIRE NATURALISTS AT GOATHLAND. 



Goathland, Fen Bogs, and Murk Mire Moor were visited by 

 about fifty members and associates of the Yorkshire Naturalists' 

 Union on Saturday, 27th June. Goathland, itself, has recently 

 been 'improved' by g-olfers, and is assuming- the gfarb of 

 a suburb of a busy city. Once outside the village, however, 

 this aspect is gone, if not forgotten, and typical Yorkshire 

 moors, for the most part in their natural condition, extend for 

 miles and miles, to the great delight of the student of 

 Nature. 



The fauna and flora of this wild tract were investigated by 

 a party led by Messrs. J. T. Sewell and W. Ingham. Fen Bogs 

 proved a glorious hunting ground for this section. 



The geologists, under the leadership of Mr. P. F. Kendall 

 and the Rev. J. Hawell, visited Murk Mire Moor. Sections were 

 few, and fossils were fewer, and hammers and bags were hardly 

 needed; } et the geologists had a 'field day' such as will not 

 soon be forgotten. They were on groimd which has recently 

 been brought prominently before the geological world by the 



Natiir.-ilisi, 



