1? Rofe—New Actinocrinus. 
Pullastra decussata ; rare; Pentney and Bilney. 
Placunomia patelliformis ; rare; Pentney. 
Syndosmia alba; rare; Pentney. 
Buccinum undatum; rare; Pentney. 
Spines of Echinus miliaris (E. Forbes)? ; Pentney Warren. 
Balanus; imperfect, only one valve; Pentney. 
Elephas primigenius ; teeth and vertebra; East Winch and Narford. 
Rhinoceros tichorhinus ; fragments of teeth; East Winch. 
Equus caballus ; teeth ; E. Winch and Bilney. 
Cervus elaphus; fragments of antlers; West Bilney. 
Dr. S. P. Woodward, F.G.S., obligingly identified the 
Molluscs of this list with their recent congeners. Professor 
Otto Torell, of Lund, on a brief visit to me last year, recog- 
nized among these fossils several identical with those found in 
a similar deposit at Uddevalla in Sweden. 
Ill. Descrietion or A New SPECIES OF AcTINOCRINUS FROM THE 
MouNTAIN-LIMESTONE OF LANCASHIRE. 
By Joun Rorg, F.G.S. 
MONGST a number of Crinoidal remains collected from 
the Mountain-limestone near Clitheroe, in Lancashire, I 
found one which differs from any I have before seen, and which 
is believed to be new. This is as yet unique, and is now in the 
British Museum. 
The fossil is an Actinocrinus, of the subgenus Amphoracrinus, 
taking M. de Koninck’s view that Amphoracrinus is only a sub- 
genus or group. 
Fig. 2. View of the under- Fig. 1. Side-view. Fig. 3. Diagram of the ‘cup.’ 
side of the ‘ cup.’ : 
Actinocrinus (Amphoracrinus) brevicalix, Rofe. a, a, anal plate. 7, 7, 2, 7, inter-radial plates. 
The ‘cup’ of this species is remarkably shallow, the depth not 
being equal to quite one-fourth of the whole height. In this re- 
spect it resembles Actinocrinus Atlas, McCoy (Palzxozoie Fossils 
Camb. Mus., pl. 3, fig. 5); but it altogether differs from it in other 
