282 JOURNAL OF CONCHOLOGY, VOL. I4, NO. 9, JANUARY, 1915. 



I. — The Student's Handbook of Practical Geology. 

 II. — Handbook of Historical Geology. 

 III. — Handbook of Stratigraphical Geology. 

 IV.— The Building of the British Isles. 

 V. — The Cretaceous Rocks of Britain. 

 As already mentioned, it was comparatively late in life that Jukes- 

 Browne began the study of the recent moUusca in detail, and the list 

 of the following papers shews where the drift of his observations lay, 

 being mainly the study, mostly based on the hinge-formations, of cer- 

 tain families of Pelecypoda, notably Mytilidce and Veneridcs. 



I. — A Review of the Genera of the Family Mytilidce. Proc. Malac. 



Soc, Lond., vi., p. 211 (1905). 

 II. — The Application of Poli's Generic Names. lb., viii., p. 99 



(1908). 

 III. — ^On the Genera of Veneridce represented in the Cretaceous 



and Tertiary Deposits. lb., viii., p. 148 (1908). 

 IV. — On the Application of the Names Gotnphina^ Mania, Hemi- 



tapes, and Katelysia. lb., viii., p. 233 (1909). 

 V. — On Petricola, Lucinopsis, and the Family PetricolidcE. lb., ix., 



p. 214 (1910). 

 VI. — On the Names used by Bolten and DaCosta for Genera of 



Venerida. lb., ix., p. 241 (191 1). 

 VII. — The Nomenclature of the Veneridce: A Reply to Dr. W. H. 



Dall. lb., X., p. 36 (1912). 

 VIII. — The Genus Dosinia and Its Subdivisions. lb., x., p. 95 



(1912). 

 IX. — On Dosinia liicinalis (Lamk.) and Its Synonyms. lb., x., 



p. 214 (1912). 

 X. — On Tivela and Grateloupia. lb., x., p. 266 (191 2). 

 XI. — On Callista, Amiantis, and Pitaria. lb., p. 335 (1913). 

 XII. — A New Species of dementia} Ann. and Mag. N.H., ser. 



viii., vol. xi., July 1913. 

 XIII. — Note on dementia subdiaphafia Cpr. Ann. and Mag. 



N.H., ser. viii., vol. xiii. (March, 1914), p. 338. 

 XIV. — On the Shells known as Gemma, Parastarte, and Psephi- 

 dion. lb., vol. xii., p. 473 (Nov., 1913). 

 I may add that the nomenclature of moUusca was another import- 

 ant subject to which he had devoted considerable time and thought, 

 and he was, for instance, very averse to the resurrection of Bolten's 

 Catalogue names, as he called them. 



I C. obliqua J.Br. , afterwards considered bj' Dr. Dall a variety only of C. suhdiaphana Cpr. 

 from California. 



