102 Bibliography - Geology and Paleontology, 1894. 
aera by a list of paths on the organisation of the Fossil Plants of 
eC 
oal Measures and G — Index to mgr? contents; deals principally 
ra the fossil ferns]. aes and Proc. Manch. Lit. and Phil. Soc., 
ee Vol. 8, No. 2, pp. coda: 
W. C. WILLIAMSON. Lanc. S: 
On the igh NORE of the ean tg Plants of ee Coal Measures. - 
Part x [Oldhamia, etc.]. Trans. Roy. Soc., Vol. 184B, 1894, by 
ond ‘ph. I-9. RS 
WILLIAMSON. Lanc.' S. oa 
Correction of an Error of Observation in Part xix. of the Author’s at 
sao 8 se e 4 etre ey of the Fossil Plants of the Coal Measures. 
- Soc., Vol. 55, 1894, p- 422. 
~C. Wiitamabnes é «He Lanc. S. 
The wae of Lyginodendron finest: Will, Proc. Roy. Soc. 
London, V pee 
ALBERT WILMO ANC. Ss. 
Correspondence [a ‘iia to the ae = _ peamesen ane yah ha 
recording e boulders in the dis Ine, and subgents went 
|. 
they may ag a been dispersed by sm eciett in an pope apni lake 
Glac. Mag., Dec. 1894, pp- fapicer © 
LINC. Sy 
The Co omposition of the Fen Soils of en Lincolnshire. Chem 
News, 28th S Rar Vol. 70, pp. 153-15. 
Bus L. CHESHIRE. 
Pebbles of Clay i in gsi Gravel a Sand [refers to a paper 
vy eade in ag. for ruary 1 3 in eee it is 
pointed out that ‘eniducen or 1 pebbles 0 of pitas were found in a bed of sand 
a railway cutting in the Wirral; ‘from evidence of similar ands in 
Aiea Prof. Winchell adds :—-‘ The conclusion ae drawn : 
to admit that clay balls . - may be produced and eenbeddiiad 4 in 
gravel and sand which wer e the di fed or of the wastage of the om 
glacier, and that they are oe unquestionable evidence of the former ie 
action of an oceanic shore line’]. Glac. Mag., March 1894, pp. 171-174. am 
THOMAS WISE. LANc, S,; ETC, 
The Flora of the Carboniferous isos {a general seinethbet ae 
but little. definite local application]. and Trans. Manch. Field Nat. 
Soc. for 1893, publ. 1894, pp. 75-80. 
A. SMITH esa ARD, York S.E. 
: d British sp ona of the Jurassic Fish Eury us 
j Tico th ak oe t rst specimen, described Bs Sir Ben Egerton, - 
- me o Seicvebenid egerton?, is said : een obtained from 
he A Gault, ‘Speeton'y Geol. ies, Ma y 1894, ae Wee 
Sa ee Mer ar ; 
alee - aa pee Lae 
ts ai eC GE te cin dee ee FE a ge EIS a) eg es 
A. SMITH WOODWARD York S.E., Linc. N. anp S, 
hited on the Sharks’ Teeth from ey Cretaceous Formations 
[though no specimens from the No ngland are referred to in this 
paper, descriptions and ilustrations of the Sharks’ teeth 
considerable value to workers amongst the oR ee rocks o Sper 
and Lincolnshire]. Proc. Geol. Assn., Vol. 1894, pp- 
and Plates 5 and 6. eS 
HENRY Woopw York Mip W. ss . 
ributions to ¢ wie r knowledge of the Genus Cyclus, from t the . 
Carboniferous Formation of various British Localities TTwith’ woodcut of 
. woodwardi Reed, mt Settle]. Geol. Mag., Dec. 1894, pp. 530-539- 
" Naturalist, 2 
