Classified Index. 



393 



SPECIES AND VARIETIES NEW TO B'RlTM^—contimted. 



ISOPODA. 



Trichoniscoides sarsi, found at Whitby, 

 noted, 196 



Mosses and Hepatics. 

 Cephaloziella pulchella C. Jens., found 

 on Skipwith Common, W. Ingham, 

 367 



POI.YZOA. 



Barentsia benedeni found at Hull by 

 Mr. J. Thompson, figured and de- 

 scribed in Transactions of the 

 Royal Society of Edinburgh, vol. 

 XLVH, Part 4, 5 



NOTES AND COMMENTS. 



January. — British Mycologists — Silver 

 Leaf — Polypores and Clavarias — - 

 The Club-shaped Fungi — The Study 

 of Fungi — The Yorkshire Myco- 

 logical Committee — The British My- 

 cological Society — East Riding 

 Nature Study — Metallurgy and En- 

 gineering — History of Fossil Botanj^ 

 — The Structure of Fossil Plants — ■ 

 Leaves of Calamites — A British 

 Polyzoon — Glacial Geology of Nor- 

 folk and Suffolk — Yorkshire Nat- 

 uralists' Union — Valuable Yorkshire 

 Maps — Urocyclus Roebucki, 1-6 



February. — A Prehistoric Route — 

 Museum for Ripon — The Scottish 

 Naturalist — Microscopic Structure of 

 Coal — New Species — A New (?) Ox, 

 33-35 



March. — The ' Lancashire ' Naturali.st 

 — New Publications — Local Pub- 

 lications — New .Societies — A Pub- 

 lication — A Change of Name — What 

 should not be in a Journal — The 

 Contributions — A Warning — The 

 Scottish Botanical Review — The 

 Little Auk, 65-68 



April. — Some Scientific Serials — The 

 Nature Book — British Birds' Nests — 

 British Mammals — Land and Fresh 

 water Mollusca — ' Scientific ' Names 

 — European Biological Stations — 

 Prehistoric Anthropology — Ancient 

 Hunters — And Their Modern Re- 

 presentatives — Prehistoric Man — 

 Evolution in the Past — Restorations 

 of Ancient Life — Lancashire Pigmy 

 Implements — An interesting Palaeo- 

 zoic Fern — Yorkshire Type Am- 

 monites — Stratigraphical Names — 

 The Mineral Kingdom — A strange 

 Animal, 97-104 



May. — Foreign Birds in Britain — The 

 Great Auk — The Ipswich Skeleton — 



1912 Dec. 1. 



Glacial Age not proven — A cast of 

 the Skull— The Divining Rod— The 

 Post Office and Natural History 

 Specimens — The Law and Natural 

 History Specimens — The South 

 Kensington Museuni — The Palaeon- 

 tographical Society — Fossil Mam- 

 mals — Ganoid Fishes — Fossil Fishes 

 of the Chalk — Fossil Chalk Inocer- 

 ami, 133-137 



June. — Relics of Early Man — West 

 Indian Rhizopods at Whitby — 

 Cleansing Greasy Insects — The I'orts- 

 mouth Report — The Hornsea Ex- 

 periment — Yorkshire Universities' 

 JNIarine Laboratory, 165-167 



July. — The Sportophyte — An Eco- 

 logical Study — Clare Island — And 

 its Botanical Survey — 'Punch,' 

 The Naturalist — The new London 

 Museum — And its Catalogue — The 

 public utility of Museums — The 

 York ^luseum — Roman Iron from 

 Corbridge — An East Anglian Ele- 

 phant — The Ipswich Skeleton — An- 

 kerite in Coal — Insect remains in 

 Coal — The origin of life, 197-203 



September. — The National Trust — ■ 

 Exeunt — The Bradford Scientific 

 Journal — Prehistoric Thorpe — ■ 

 Seventeenth Century Science — The 

 Origin of Life — Carlisle Naturalists 

 — Glasgow Geologists — Changes in 

 the Lower Dee Valley — ^Guide to 

 the National Reading Room, 261-265 



October. — The British Association — 

 The Handbook — Sectional Reports 

 The Annual Report — The Presi- 

 dential Address — The Origin of Life 

 — Spontaneous Generation — Forma- 

 tion of Living Substance — /^io,ooo — 

 Sir Joseph Hooker — A Philosophical 

 Biologist — Address to the Botanical 

 Section — Mendelism, 293-297 



