70 bibliography: geology and paleontology, 1887. 



E. Hull. Yorkshire. 



Dr. Hinde on the Origin of Carboniferous Chert [remarks on Dr. Hinde's 

 paper]. Geol. Mag., Nov. 1887, dec. iii, vol. iv, pp. 525-526. 



S. Hyde. Derbyshire. 



Peakland and the Baths and Climate of Buxton [containing a few 

 geological notes, with description of Poole's Cavern, etc.]. i2mo, Man- 

 chester, 1887. 



Elijah Jackson. Yorkshire. 



Recent Discoveries of Fossil Trees [at Clayton near Bradford, and in 



Darley Street, Bradford]. Wesley Nat., April 1887, i. 40 and plate [coarse]. 



O. W. Jeffs. South Lanes., Cheshire. 



A Buried Valley [at about 300 yds. from the Liverpool side, the upper part 

 of the Mersey Tunnel intersected for about 100 yds. a gorge filled with boulder 

 clay and erratics ; the clay is hard and of the usual type of lower boulder 

 clay, elsewhere found resting on the Triassic sandstone ; well-rounded 

 boulders of granite, greenstone, etc., taken out of the clay]. Nat., April 

 1885, p.' 212. 



T. Rupert Jones, and two others. Westmorland, Yorkshire. 



[Palaeozoic Phyllopoda, being the] Fourth Report of the Committee, con- 

 sisting of Mr. R. Etheridge, Dr. H. Woodward, and Prof. T. Rupert Jones 

 (secretary), on the Fossil Phyllopoda of the Palceozoic Rocks [discussing fossils 

 from the Lower Wenlock rock of Helm Knot, Dent, the Wenlock beds of 

 Kirkby Lonsdale, and the Upper Ludlow beds, Benson Knot near Kendal ; 

 Ceratiocaris papilio and C. stygia are both tabulated with a query for Benson 

 Knot, and C. inomata, C. ruthveniana, C. solenoides, C. gobiiformis, C. peror- 

 nata, and Emmelozoe elliptiai are definitely tabulated for the same place ; 

 while for Kirkby Lonsdale the only species cited is C. valida, and for Helm 

 Knot C. leptodactyhis\ Brit. Assoc. Rep., Birm. 1886 [pub. 1887], pp. 229-234. 



A. J. Jukes-Browne. North Lincolnshire. 



Note on a Bed of Red Chalk in the Lower Chalk of Suffolk [identifying 

 it with the lower of the two red bands in the chalk near Louth, which are 

 described]. Geol. Mag., Jan. 1887, dec. iii. vol. iv. pp. 24-28. 



A. J. Jukes-Browne. East Lincolnshire. 



The Geology of Part of East Lincolnshire, including the Country near 

 the Towns of Louth, Alford, and Spilsby (Explanation of Sheet 84) 

 [After a general description of the district, and an account of the lowest 

 formation — the Kimeridge Clay, the author gives a very complete description 

 of the Lower and Middle Chalk, and of the Glacial and Post-glacial deposits; 

 a chapter is also devoted to the physical features (hills and valleys), and 

 another to the economic products and water-supply ; appendices give the 

 particulars of well-sections and lists of fossils, while an index completes 

 the work]. Mem. Geol. Surv. England and Wales, 181 pp., London, 1887. 



P. Quin Kegan. Westmorland. 



Glacial Action near Grasmere [drawing attention to moraine heaps in the 



upper part of Ennerda'.e, around Greenside Reservoir, in Greenup Valley, 



and all over the summit of the Stake Pass, etc.]. Sci. Goss. , Sep. 1886, 



p. 212. 



P. Q. Keegan. Cumberland, Westmorland. 



The Minerals and Flowers of the English Lake District [giving localities 

 for a number of minerals]. Sci. Goss., Jan. 1887, pp. 1-4. 



J. D. Kendall. Cumberland. 



On the best locality for Coal beneath the Permian Rocks of North-West 



Cumberland [a criticism of a paper by Mr. T. V. Holmes upon the same 



subject]. Trans. Cumb. and Westm. Assoc, No. x (1884-85, pub. 1885), 



pp. 109- 1 1 3. 



Naturalist, 



