376 REPORT—1896. 
IRELAND. 
feported by the Belfast Naturalists’ Field Club.} 
Further occurrences of the Ailsa Craig eurite are recorded at Kenbane Head, 
White Park Bay, Ballylesson, on the flanks of the Spinkwee Mountain 
and in the Belfast brickyards. ~ } 
’ 
Co. Down. 
Lallyholne, near Bangor— 
100 stones from the Boulder-clay included 55 Ordovician grit; 10 vein quartz; 
12 chalk; 2 quartzite; 2 flint; 1 Riebeckite eurite ; 3 Tertiary volcanic 
rocks from dykes in co. Down; grits from the Cantyre area; felsite, 
eurite, and diorite from the Clyde area; Lower Silurian (with fossils), 
Girvan district ; metamorphosed grit, quartzite, and Old Red Sandstone 
from N. Antrim or Cantyre ; syenite either from Pomeroy (co. Tyrone) or 
Scotland; granite either from co. Down or 8. Scotland; flint from Ordo- 
vician rocks of co. Down; and porphyrite, co. Down. Foraminifera and 
shell fragments also occur. 
Co. ANTRIM. 
Diwis Mountain, 1,400 feet O.D.— 
100 stones from Boulder-clay include 52 chalk ; 10 flint; 38 basalt. Foramini- 
fera and shells also occur. 
Belfast—Brickfields A, Limestone Road, near Alexandra Park— 
100 stones from Boulder-clay include 77 basalt; 6 chalk; 4 flint; 3 mica 
schist; 3 rocks from Cushendun; 2 Upper Greensand with Belemnites ; 
2 Lower Lias with fossils; 2 Riebeckite eurite of Ailsa Craig; 1 white 
quartz. Other stones observed were:—Pegmatite vein from Girvan 
area ; diorite and Crinoidal limestone from Clyde area. 
Old Park— 
From Boulder-clay: 2 Old Red Sandstone pebbles from co. Antrim; Sherd 
shale; Carboniferous Limestone; 2 altered Chalk; eurite from Annalong; 
Riebeckite eurite from Ailsa Craig; dykes (Tertiary), co. Down; felsite, 
N. Antrim or Clyde; ‘porphyry,’ Cushendall; Metamorphic rocks, N. 
Antrim or Derry. 
Spring field— 
From Boulder-clay: Ailsa Craig eurite ; Mica-schist, Lias, Metamorphic rocks, 
co. Antrim; Old Red Sandstone, N. Antrim; Greensand, Tornamoney; 
gneiss, Carboniferous conglomerate, eurite, of Cultra; ‘porphyry,’ Cushen- 
dun; eurite, Mourne Mountains; ‘Neck’ dolerite and other volcanic 
rocks of Antrim; quartz rock, Down or Scotland. 
Woodvale— 
From Boulder-clay: Belemnites and Micraster from Cretaceous rocks; and 
rocks from Clyde area or Cantyre. 
Ardoyne— 
From Boulder-clay : Micraster from Cretaceous; fossiliferous Lias; Old Red 
Sandstone from Cushendun; quartz, Ordovician shale, and porphyrite 
from N. Antrim ; rock from Cushleake, N. Antrim. 
Annadale— 
From Boulder-clay: Magnesian Limestone and Carboniferous rocks of Cultra. 
Pebbly quartzite; Ordovician shale; ‘porphyry’ of Cushendun; porphy- 
rite and quartzite of N. Antrim or Clyde; eurite of Ailsa Craig; granite 
and porphyrite, Mournes or §. Scotland ; ‘ porphyry ’ and felstone porphyry, 
Cushendall; Metamorphosed grit, N. Antrim or Cantyre. 
1 Printed in greater detail, though unfortunately not im extenso, in the Annual 
Report and Proceedings of the Belfast Naturalists’ Field Club, 1895-96. 
