Marwick.—Genus Glycymeris in Tertiary of New Zealand. 69 
(g.) Kawau: No specimens very near the type were seen. 
(^.) Oamaru: The many fossiliferous localities in this district and the 
various horizons represented give Hutton's use of'the name a 
very wide meaning. Тһе Target Gully “ shell-bed " was unknown 
to him, and, as he used “ Awamoa " as a separate locality, it is 
ame 
t White Rock River, Pareora, and these, principally, were used in this 
paper for comparative purposes (see Plate 7, fig. 2). 
Localities :— ' 
Kanieri. (Lectotype.) 
165—White Rock River, Pareora. (Also a flat varlety in Otago 
Museum collection.) 
458—Lower Gorge, Pareora River. , 
231 —" Upper part of Mount. Brown limestone, Trelissick." 
151a— Pareora beds, Thomas and Porter Rivers 
Opihi River, South Canterbury (north bank, two miles west of 
Pleasant Point) (Marwick). 
Grey Marls, Mead Gorge, 25 ft. below conglomerate (Thomson). 
Tutamore Ridge, Poverty Bay district (Ongley and Macpherson). 
Shingly Creek, Lake Heron (Canterbury Museum collection: two 
specimens, one with a high, sharp beak). 
Records to be eliminated from N.Z. Geol. Surv. Pal. Bull. No. 8 : 
Page 23. Onairo = G. manaiaensis. 
Page 45. Motunau beds, Weka Pass = G. manaiaensis. 
Page 48. Trelissick Basin, loc. 239 — G. trelissickensis. 
Page 49. Trelissick Basin, loc. 449 = G. trelissickensis. 
Glycymeris subglobosa Suter. (Plate 3, fig. 3; Plate 4, fig. 3.) 
1917. Glycymeris subglobosa Suter, N.Z. Geol. Surv. Pal. Bull. No. 5, 
р. 66, pl. vii, fig. 8. 
164— Kakahu. (Holotype.) (Also in Dr. Marshall's collection.) 
176—Black Point. (Poor specimens.) 
