468 Bibliography : Geology and PalcBontology , igoi. 



Herbert B. Muff. See ' Albert Jowett ' and ' P. F. Kendall.' 

 G. S. Nares. Lanc. S., Cheshire. 



Report on the present state of the Navigation of the River Mersey, 

 1901, pp. 1-22. 

 E. T. Newton. York S.E. 



British Pleistocene Fishes [records remains of the Perch {Perca 

 flxtviatilis Linn.) in the lacustrine deposits at Hornsea and Withernsea ; 

 and Codfish (Gadiis morhua Linn.) from the Pre-gflacial beds at Sewerby]. 

 Geol. Magf. , Feb. 1901, pp. 49-52. 



Richard D. Oldham. Lake District. 



On the Origin of the Dunmail Raise (Lake District) [Points out 



that the principal valleys in the Lake District may be subsequent, not 

 consequent, in origin, and g-ives reasons for this conclusion]. Quart. 

 Journ. Geol. Soc, Vol. 57, 1901, pp. 189-197; Abstract in Geol. Mag., 

 March, 1901, p. 14J ; and in Nature, 21st Feb., 1901, p. 411. 



R. D. Oldham. Cumberland. 



Beach Formation in the Thirlmere Reservoir [describes the 



formation of beaches around this reservoir]. Rep. Brit. Assn. (Bradford), 

 1900 (publ. 1901), pp. 763-764. 

 R. D. Oldham. Cumberland, Westmorland. 



The Basal (Carboniferous) Conglomerate of Ullswater and its 

 Mode of Orig'in [concludes that it is a torrential deposit, formed on 

 dry land near the foot of a range of hills]. Rep. Brit. Assn. (Bradford), 

 1900 (publ. 1901), p. 764. 

 Owners of the Middlesbrough Estate [supplied by]. York N.E. 

 Sections of Borings for Salt near Middlesbrough [details of boring 

 1,440 feet deep given]. Proc. Cleveland Nat. Field Club, \'ol. i. No. 3, 

 190 1, pp. 82-83. 

 Edward Adrian Woodruffe Peacock. Linc. N. 



Lincolnshire Naturalists at Horncastle [Brief geological notes]. 

 Naturalist, Feb. 1901, pp. 51-55. 



E. Adrian Woodruffe Peacock. Linc. N. 



Helix cantlana: Its Range and Soil Preferences in North Lincoln- 

 shire [Brief reference to the relation of the shell to the subsoil]. 

 Naturalist, Aug. 1901, p. 232. 



H. W. Pearson. Northern Counties. 



Oscillations in the Sea-level [From data extending as far back as 

 B.C. 300, endeavours to prove that there have been oscillations in the 

 level of the sea all over the northern hemisphere every 300 years ; 

 numerous pieces of evidence quoted from the northern counties]. 

 Geol. Mag., 1901, April, pp. 167-174, May, pp. 223-231, and June, 

 pp. 253-265. 



R. H. Philip. See ' F. W. Mills.' 



H. Preston. Linc. S. 



[Geological Notes on the Excursion of the Lincolnshire Naturalists' 

 Union to Lincoln, describing sections in the Lias, Oolites, etc. ]. Naturalist, 

 Sep. 1 90 1, pp. 257-259. 



Henry Preston. Linc. N. 



Lincolnshire Naturalists at Scunthorpe [Describes and figures 

 sections in the Lias from which the ironstone is worked, etc.] Naturalist, 

 April 1901, pp. 109-114. 



Henry Preston. Lincolnshire. 



Lincolnshire Naturalists at Little Bytham [Describes and figures 

 sections in the Lower Oolites, etc.] Naturalist, Feb. 1901, pp. 57-62. 



Naturalist, 



