xIy 



A Spur, from Chili , Capt. Caddy, Wendron, 



Flint Ase, from Denmark Mr. B. M. Wright, jun> 



Fragments of a Sword-Fish, and of wood in 



which its beak was broken oS after piercing 



2h inches of sound English oak — a plank of 



the John and Mary of Truro, then sailing 



in the Bristol Channel Capt. J. Dunstone, Port Loe. 



Silver Medal commemorative of the Peace of 



Utrecht, in 1713 * Bev. J. J. Wilkinson. 



Two Silver Coins of Parthia Ditto. 



Jamestown Weed, grown in Cornwall in 1870, 



from seed gathered in 1867, on the banks of 



James Eiver, near Jamestown, Virginia, 



U.S Mr. T. Cragoe, Penhillick„ 



ADDITIONS TO THE LIBKARY. 



The London, Edinburgh, and Dublin Philo- 

 sophical Magazine, and Journal of Science. 

 Fourth Series. From No. 234, January, 

 1868, to No. 268, November, 1870 



Mineral Statistics of Victoria, for the year 

 1869 



Eeports of the Mining Surveyors and Eegis- 



trars (Victoria). 



For Quarter ending 31st December, 1869. 



ditto, 31st March, 1870. 



ditto, 30th June, 1870. 



Address delivered at the Spring Meeting of 

 the Eoyal Institution of Cornwall, on the 

 17th of May, 1870. By WiUiam Jory Hen- 

 wood, F.E.S., Member of the Geological 

 Society of France ; sometime Her Majesty's 

 Assay-Master of Tin in the Duchy of Corn- 

 wall ; President of the Institution 



Parochial and Family History of the Deanery 

 of Trigg Minor. By John Maclean, Esq., 

 F.S.A., Member of the Eoyal Archaeological 

 Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, etc. 

 Parts I and II 



From Mr. Henwood, Presi- 

 dent, 1870. 



Ditto. 



Ditto. 



Ditto. 



Ditto. 



The Life of Sir Thomas Seymour, Knight, 

 Baron Seymour of Sudeley, Lord High 

 Admiral of England and Master of the Ord- 

 nance. By John Maclean, F.S.A., Member 

 of the Eoyal Archaeological Institute of Great 

 Britain and Ireland From the Author. 



* On the obverse is a bust of the Queen, with laureated head, and the 

 ordinary regal legend. On the reverse, Britannia, with an olive branch in 

 her right hand, stands on a low sea-shore between figures emblematical of 

 agriculture and commerce ; the legend, " Gompositis venerantur annis.'" 



D 3 



