Notices of Memoir—J. A. Brown—Mammoth at Southall. 317 
I1.—Unterprvoniscue Crinoipen. Von Dr. Ortro Fonimann. 
Verh. d. nat. Ver. Jahrg. xxxiv. 5 Folge, 1V. Bd. pp. 113-188, 
HIS paper gives detailed descriptions of a numerous suite of 
Crinoids collected by Herr B. Stiirtz from the Lower Devonian 
strata of Bundenbach and Gemiinden. ‘These fossils are mostly in 
a pyritized condition, but they have been treated by the same 
methods which proved so successful with the Asteroidea from the 
same beds, and many new structural features have been brought 
to light. The following new species are described and figured :— 
Triacrinus elongatus, Calycanthocrinus (n. g.) decadactylus, Taxocrinus 
Stuertzii, T. Grebet, Codiacrinus Schultzei, Ctenocrinus acicularis, C. 
stellifer, and C. rhenanus. Additional details are likewise given of 
twelve other species previously described from the same geological 
horizon. 
IIJ.—Discovery or HirpHas PRIMIGENIUS ASSOCIATED WITH FLINT 
Imptements at Sournatt. By J. Auten Brown, F.G.S., 
Geologists’ Association, 6th May. 
URING last year some important drainage works were carried 
out at Southall, and sections were exposed in Windmill Lane, 
a road running from Greenford, through part of Hanwell, across 
the Great Western Railway to Woodlake, skirting Osterley Park, 
as well as in Norwood Lane, leading from Windmill Lane, south- 
westward. 
The remains of the Mammoth were discovered in Norwood Lane, 
about 550 yards from its junction with Windmill Lane, and at the 
88 foot contour. They were embedded in sandy loam, underlying 
evenly stratified sandy gravel, with a thin deposit of brick-earth 
about a foot in thickness, surmounting the gravel—in all about 
} feet of river drift above the fossils. 
The labourers described the tusks as being found curving across 
the “shore” or excavation, attached to the skull, parts of which, 
with the leg-bones, ete, and teeth were exhumed. Other bones 
were exposed in the side of the cutting. 
It is probable that the whole of the remains might have been 
obtained if they could have been carefully exhumed, and if means 
had been at hand to remove them, as they were in a soft pulpy 
condition. 
The author obtained many of the bones in a fragmentary state, 
including parts of the fore limbs and jaw, and portions of the tusks, 
as well as two of the teeth, which were much better preserved; a 
third molar was found, but broken to pieces by the labourers. 
Although many of the bones were when gelatinized too much 
broken to admit of determination with certainty, they were quite 
unrolled and the joints and articulations of the leg bones and 
the teeth were unabraded. There can hardly be a doubt that the 
bones of the whole of the fore part of the Elephant, if not of the 
entire skeleton, were in juxtaposition. 
Several flint implements were found in Norwood Lane in close 
