Biblios;niphy : Geology ami Palccontology, igoi. 415 



Anon, [not si.^-ned]. Derbyshire, Yorkshire. 



[Review of] Catalogue of the Bateman Collection of Antiquities 



in the Sheffield Public Museum. Prepared b)- E. Howarth. Geol. 

 Mag:., Jan. 1901, pp. 37-40. 



Anon. [sig;ned ' W. H.']. Derbyshire. 



[Review of] The Scenery and Geology of the Peak of Derbyshire. 



By Elizabeth Dale [Summarises the contents of the various chapters, 

 etc.]. Geol. Mag-., Feb. 1901, pp. 89-93. 



Anon, [not sij=-ned]. Yc»rk S.E. 



[Review of] Memoirs of the Geological Survey of the United 



King-dom. Tiie Cretaceous Rocks of Britain. Vol. I. The Gault and 

 Upper Greensand of England. By A. J. Jukes-Browne. 1900 [see 

 Bibliography for 1900 under A. J. Jukes-Browne]. Geol. Mag., Feb. 

 1901, pp. 82-89. 



Anon, [not signed). York Mid W. and S.W. 



Some Yorkshire Claypits [an account of the Coal-measure clays 



and shales oi the neighbourhood of Leeds, with sections of various pits]. 

 Quarry, Vol. 5, 1901, pp. 515-524. 



Anon, [not signed]. Cheshire, York N.E. and S.E. , Durham. 



The Lost Land of England [describing the encroachment of the 



sea upon both west and east coasts during historic times]. Strand 

 Magazine, Oct. 1901, \'ol. 22, pp. 398-408, with illustrations. 



Anon, [signed 'Overwhelmed Recorder']. York Mid W. and S.W. 

 The Fish Fauna of the Millstone Grits [letter criticising Dr. 



Wellburn's paper in a previous number]. Geol. Mag., June 190 1, p. 286. 



G. Abbott. Durham. 



The Concretionary Types in the CeMular Magnesian Limestone of 



Durham [suggesting their division into five primarv forms, viz., rods, 

 bands, rings, balls, and modified spheres, and eggs, and discussing their 

 probable mode of origin]. Geol. Mag., Jan. 1901, pp. 35-36; Rep. Brit. 

 Assn. (Bradford), 1900 (publ. 1901), pp. 737-738. 



William Ackroyd. Lanc. S., York S.W. 



On the Circulation of Salt in its Relation to Geology [points out 



that during a storm in 1839 tons of salt per acre were spread over 

 Lancashire and Yorkshire which had been brought from the Irish Sea]. 

 Geol. Mag., Oct. 1901, pp. 445-449. 



William Ackroyd. York S.W. 



Researches on Moorland Water. Part 11. On the Origin of the 



Combined Chlorine. Journ. Chem. Soc, \'ol. 79, 1901, pp. 673-674. 



William Ackroyd. York Mid W. and S.W. 



On the Distribution of Chlorine in West Yorkshire [gives 



analyses of waters from the Wharfe, Aire, Calder, etc., so far as the 

 chlorine is concerned]. Rep. Brit. Assn. (Bradford), 1900 (publ. 1901), 

 pp. 694-695. 



William Ackroyd. York S.W. 



On a limiting Standard of Acidity for Moorland Waters [refers 



to the acidit}' of the moorland waters and its effect — plumbism]. Rep. 

 Brit. Assn. (Bradford), 1900 (publ. 1901), pp. 695-696. 



Theodore Ashley. York S.W. 



Notes on the Occurrence of the Adwalton Stone Coal and the 



Halifax Hard Coal [gives details of the beds and of the overh'ing and 

 underlying strata]. Proc. Yorks. Geol. and Polyt. Soc, Vol. 14, Part Zy 

 1901, pp. 253-260. 



1903 October i. 



