452 E. B. Tawney—W oodwardian Laboratory Notes. 
The following Cervide will have to be removed from the “ Forest 
Bed” lists, for reasons given below. 
Azvis.—Dr. Falconer included this genus in his list of Forest Bed 
and Norwich Crag species, but I can get no clue to the specimen, and 
must therefore omit the name, as it may have been from the Crag. 
Cervus urdeus, Croizet and Jobert.—A portion of an antler in Mr. 
Gunn’s Collection is called Cervus ardeus, apparently on Dr. 
Falconer’s authority ; but it does not agree with any of the figures 
given by MM. Croizet and Jobert, and cannot be referred to that 
species. Prof. Boyd Dawkins has omitted the name from his latest 
lists, and one cannot well do otherwise. 
Cervus Dama, Linn.—No true C. Dama is known from the 
“Forest Bed.” The determination appears to have rested upon frag- 
ments which in all probability belong to other species. 
Cervus martialis, Gervais.—The specimens which were referred to 
this species appear to have been portions of antlers similar to those 
subsequently called C. Sedgwickii, by Dr. Falconer, and the species 
cannot therefore be regarded as a ‘“‘ Forest Bed ” form. 
Cervus tarandus, Linn.—I have been unable to trace any specimen 
referable to this species, and it seems to have been a mistake, for it 
only appears in Sir C. Lyell’s third edition of the “ Antiquity of 
Man,” and is omitted from the later edition in 1873. 
List or THE UNGULATA OF THE ‘‘ Forest BEp SERIES’’ CORRECTED IN ACCORD- 
ANCE WITH THE ABOVE NOTES. 
(Those marked with an asterisk are new to the ‘‘ Forest Bed Series.’’) 
Equus caballus fossilis, Rutimeyer. Cervus bovides, Gunn, MS. 
* ,,  Stenonis, Cocchi. >  eapreolus, Linn. 
Rhinoceros etruscus, Falconer. >,  carnutorum? Laugel. 
a megarhinus 2 Christol. * ,,  Dawkinsi, Newton, n. sp. 
Hippopotamus major, Owen. »,  elaphus? Linn. 
Sus scrofa, Linn. % 5,  etueriarum? C. & J. 
Bos primigenius? Cuyier. *,, Sitchii, Gunn, MS. 
* Caprovis Savinii, Newton, n. sp, 
Gunnii, Dawkins, MS. 
»,  latifrons, Johnson. 
megaceros ? Hart. 
,,  olignacus, Robert. 
»,  NSedgwickii, Falconer. 
verticornis, Dawkins. 
In addition to the above, there are, scattered through different 
collections, some eight or ten distinct forms of Cervine antlers, which 
have yet to be determined. 
III.—Woopwarptan Lazsoratory Nores.—NortH Wates Rooks. 
Contributed by E. B. Tawney, M.A., F.G.S., 
Woodwardian Museum, Cambridge. 
Parr II, 
(Continued from the May Number, p. 215.) 
Diabase-porphyrite—from hill designated as a Trigonometrical 
Station 14 mile N.N.E. from Pwllheli: the hill is quarried for 
road metal; a good hand-specimen is easily obtained; it has a 
dark-green ground with porphyritic felspars up to } inch long of 
en greenish colour; a little pyrites; very slight effervescence with 
acids, 
