APPENDIX. 65 



LiLJEBOKG, W. De Cmstaceis ex Ordinibiis tribus, Cladocera, Ostracoda, et Copepoda in Scania oceiir- 



rentibus. 8vo, Lund., 1853. Plates. 

 Redss, a. E. Beitrage zur Charakteristik der Kreideschichten in den Ostalpcn. Denkscriften d. k. 

 Akad. d. Wissenschaft. zu Wien, 1854, vol. vii (p. 138), pi. 26 and 27. 



Beitrage ^ zur Charakteristik der Tertiarsehicliten des nordlichen und mittleren Deutschlands. 

 Sitzimgsberichte d. k. Akad. d. Wiss. Wien, 1856, vol. xviii, p. 253, pi. 9 and 10. 



Bescbreibung der fossilen Ostracoden und Mollusken der tertiaren Siiswasserschichten des 



nordlichen Bohmens. 1849. Palseontographica, vol. ii, p. 1 6, figs. 



Die Crustaceen des Beckeus von Rein in Steiermark. Berichte k. Akad. Wissen. zu Wien, 



vol. xiii, 1854, figs. 1, 2, 3, pp. 189, 190. 



Die Foraminiferen und Entomostraceen des Kreidemergels von Lemberg. Naturw. Abhandl. 



Haidinger, 1851, vol. iv, part 1, p. 46, pi. 6. 



Die Fossilen Entomostraceen des osterreichischen Tertiarbeckens. Naturwisserischaftliche 



Abhandlungen, herausgegeben von \V. Haidinger, 1850, vol.iii, p. 40, plates 8 — 11. 



Ein Beitrag zur genaueren Kenntniss der Kreidegebilde Meklenburgs. Zeitsch. d. Deut. geol. 



Ges., 1855, vol. vii, p. 277, plates 10 and 11. 



Ein Beitrag zur Palaontologie der Tertiarschichten Oberschlesiens. Zeitscbrift der Deutschen 



geologischen Gesellschaft, 1851, vol iii, p. 176. 

 Ueber die fossilen Foraminiferen und Eutomostraceen der Septnrienthone der Umgegeud von 



Berlin. Zeitschrift der Deutschen geologischen Gesellschaft, 1851, vol. iii, p. 89, figs. 

 White, A. List of the Specimens of British Animals in the Collection of the British Museum. Part IV, 



Crustacea, 1850, p. 100, &c. 

 Zenkeh, W. Monographie der Ostracoden. Archiv fiii- Naturgeschichte, 1 854. Erstes Heft. (Plates 1 — 6). 

 Ueljer die Geschleclitsverhaltnisse der Gattung Cypris. Archiv fiir Anatomic, Phys., &c., 



1850, p. 193, &c., pi. 5. 



these old genera to the Phyllopoda, rather than to the LophjTopoda, is not invalidated by this discovery (as Mr. King seems 

 inclined to think, loc. cit., p. 61, note); since other and more important structural differences exist between the palaeozoic 

 bivalved Entomostraca and this eye-tubercled Cijpris of Australia. See ' Annals Nat. Hist.,' 2d ser., 1856, vol. xvii, p. 97. 



Mr. King places my Cythereis (as described and figured by Dr. Baird) in relation with his new genus Newnhamia {loc. cit., 

 p. 60), and thinks that they are " closely connected" by each having " two eyes and a very tuberculose shell." Cythereis, being 

 probably a Cythere, may be supposed to have two eyes, but they are not evidenced externally ; the little crystalline tubercles seen 

 at the antero-dorsal angle of its valves, being related to the anterior hinge and to nothing else. The carapaces of Newnhamia 

 and Cythereis differ widely also in all other characteristics, not excepting their style of tuberculation. 



' This Memoir, treating of the Forarainifera and Entomostraca of the Oligocene deposits (Upper Eocene in Table VI, p. 62 ; 

 Lower Miocene according to some authors) of Northern and Central Germany, has come to hand whilst this sheet is in the press 

 [Nov. 1856]. 



