271 
BIBLIOGRAPHY: 
Papers and Records published with respect to the Natural History and 
Physical Features of the North of England. 
CRUSTACEA, 188. 1884 to 1892. 
THE present instalment has been compiled and edited by 
SON ROEBUCK, 
wM. F.L.S. 
It includes the record important work done in con- 
bE n 
Coasts; while the Marine Zoology Committee of the Yorkshire 
Naturalists’ Union has so far been unsuccessful in inducing members 
to work out the coast of that county. 
The work of the Liverpool Naturalists is, spighien, worthy of all 
the praise that can be given to them; and the 
thereby secure also the collateral advantage of setting funds free for 
the heavy expenses of the actual investigations ? 
ANON. [signed ‘E. C. B.’). urness, 
‘Barnacles’ [excerpt from Gerarde’s Herball, 1597, p. 1391, of the 
generation of geese from barnacles at a ‘small [lande in Lancashire, called 
the Pile of Foulders’).  Siteatand Note Book, part 1, March 
ANon. [signed ‘ R. T. L.’]. Cumberland. 
‘Barnacles’ [in conn er gwenbeg eneration of geese from them; 
and derivation therefrom of name of a Pcatieslaint er Rotington (from 
Rotgeese)]. Westmorland Note hosk. part 1, March 1888, p. 2 
ANon, [not signed]. “York S.E. 
rmal e Weight of Lobster [( Homarus vulgaris): dimensions 
given of one caughe at Whitby, which weighed when ative 9 Ibs. 6 oz. J, 
Zool., Sep. 1890, p. 359- 
H. Cooper Ali York N.W. 
[Presi ] rage yneside Naturalists’ Field Club 
- . May 24th, 1886 noting dacs Piers 
the Ure and a portion of one in a little stream on Thornton Rust Moor, 
26 June, posed 18s Hist. Tran agg Tor berland, Durham, aed Newcastle, 
ES Estas part oF 
Sept. 1894. 
