Class ijied Index. 



481 



CU M BERLrAND— ^o«/m«d?rf. 



Munay, 62 ; mention of papers on beetles 

 at Lazonby Fell and Kanon Wood, 96; 

 I'selaphus dresdensis in Cumberland, 

 ]•■. 1 1. Day, 191 ; Oliorhynchus muscorum 

 near Carlisle, J. Murray, 264. 



Crustacea : Lake District Occurrences 

 cif Cladocera noted. 224. 



Flowering Plants : G. C. Druce's 

 work at Keswick, 31 ; Ononis repens on 

 the Cumberland Coast, S. L. Petty, 190 ; 

 Article in ' Spectator ' on the Natural 

 Gardens of the River Eamont, 412. 



Geology and Palaeontology : Hibli- 



n^iaphy for 1900, T. Sheppard, 141-160, 

 and for 1901, T. Sheppard, 413-416, 463- 



I-",. A. Newell Arber's work on fossil 

 flora of Cumberland Coalfield, 31 ; 

 Glacial Boulders on the N.W. Coast, 

 n. G. Mantle, 32 ; photograph of Sub- 

 merged Forest on the Cheshire Coast, 

 162. 



Lepidoptera : Cupido minima, large 

 forin in Cumberland, R. South. ^2. 



Mammals : Stoat feeding on Lapwing's 

 l-'.ggs at VVaberthwaite, E. T. Baldwin, 

 407 ; Marten at Wastdale in 1887, 448. 



Mineralogy : Figure of Aragonite from 

 Cumberland, 260. 



Mollusca: Helix aculeala at Bassen- 

 thwaile figured, 98 ; N'allonia pulchella 

 on a mill-roof at Bassenthwaite, H. 

 W'allis Kew, 343. 



Museums, etc.: Nature Study Lectures 

 at (^"arlisle, 41 1. 



Personal Notices: Notes by H. Brit- 

 ten, H. Donislhorpe, and F. H. Day 

 on Cumberland Coleoptera, 288, 462 ; 

 Death of VV. T. Aveline, 320. 



Prehistoric Archaeology : Ancient 

 Earthworks at Ijampton, Penrith, Miss 

 Noble, 228 and figure. 



Reptiles and Amphibians : Newts in 

 Tlirelkeld Tarn in 1705, S. L. Petty, 

 267. 



DERBYSHIRE. 



Bibliography : Notice of Notts and 

 Derbyshire Naturalists" Ouarterly, 27. 



Birds : !■'. C. R. Jourdain's Notes on 

 Derbyshire Ornithology, 1900- 1902, 

 mentioned, 95 ; Rough-legged Buzzard 

 and Montagus Harrier in Derlnshire, 

 320. 



Geology and Palaeontology : liiblio- 



graph\- for 1900. T. Sheppard, 141-160; 

 and for igoi.T. Shep]:)ard, 413-416, 463- 

 473- 



Seciit)ns ol Derbyshire I^imeslones, 

 normal and metamorphosed, J. Barnes, 

 65 ; Cave-remains at Doveholes, W. 

 Boyd Dawkins, 226 ; \\. H. Arnold 

 Bemrose's work on Derbyshire Lime- 

 stones, with figure, 323. 



Mammals : Mammals noted in Cave- 

 remains of Pliocene age at Doveholes, 

 VV. Boyd Dawkins, 226. 



Mollusca : Sinistrorse Helix rotundata at 

 Castleton, 96 ; view of the Goyt Valley 

 locality for Limax cinereo-niger, 445. 



Museum : S. L. Mosley's opinion of the 

 Derby Museum, 41 1. 



Earthtpiake in Derby- 



Physiography 



shire, 192. 



Prehistoric Archaeology : Palaeolithic 

 drawing of horses head from Cresswell 

 Crags figured, 99. 



Worms : Notes on I^erbyshire Annelids, 

 1 1. Friend, 21-22. 



DURHAM. 



Birds: bolder Duck at Stanho|je, j. W. 

 Fawcett, 92; figlit between Heron and 

 Peewits in Weardale, J. \\'. Fawcett, 93 ; 

 Little Bunting at Durham, 95 ; Raven 

 at Seaton Carew, T. IL Nelson, 189 ; 

 Little Stint at .Sunderland, J. W. l""awcett, 



190-5 DoceiiilHT I. 



216: Curlew Sandpiper near Sunder- 

 land, J. W. Fawcett, 304 ; Albino 

 Ring Ouzel at ^liddleton-in-Teesdale, 

 C. F. Milburn, 406 ; Red-spotted Blue- 

 throat at the Tees Mouth, C. .Milburn, 

 4.S9- 



