188 ACCOUNTS, ETC., OF THE BRITISH MUSEUM. 



Twenty Scaphites and Hamites and one Belemnite from 

 the Yorkshire Chalk. 



Fifteen Lamellibranchia from the Cretaceous of France. 



A block of shell-limestone and five Mollusca from the 

 Cretaceous of the Lebanon. 



Five Lamellibranchs from the Cretaceous of Waels, Bel- 

 gium. 



Two Heterotissotia and two Buchioceras from the Senonian 

 •of Peru. 



Eighteen non-marine Gastropoda from the Oligocene, 

 Creechbarrow, Dorset. 



Sixteen Pliocene Mollusca from Vienna. 



Thirty-two Pleistocene non-marine Mollusca from Madeira. 



Twenty-four species of Quaternary Mollusca from Weimar. 



Arthropoda. — Twenty-four Trilobites from the Ordovician 

 •of Portugal and Norway, Devonian of Turkey, and Cambrian 

 •of Italy. 



Cheirurus from the Silurian, Malvern. 



About a hundred and fifty specimens of Arthropods from 

 the Coal Measures, Coseley, Staffs. 



A Limulus from the Lithographic Stone of Bavaria. 



Seventeen plates of Cirripedia from the Cretaceous of 

 Westphalia and Belgium. 



Xanthopsis hispinosus, from the Eocene of Highgate. 

 Forty-eight Entomostraca from the Tertiary of the 

 Philippines. 



Echinoderma. — One Silurian Crinoid from Kentucky. 

 Three Cystids from the Lower Silurian of Thuringia. 

 Nine Cystids from Bohemia. 

 Thirteen Devonian Asteroids from Bundenbach. 



An Echinoid and two Crinoids from the Carboniferous 

 Limestone of Belgium. 



A slab of Muschelkalk with Ophioderma from Scharley, 

 near Beuthen, Upper Silesia. 



Three Solanocrinus from the Cenomanian, Bohemia. 



Eight Cretaceous Crinoids from Peru, and one from France. 



A hundred and forty-five Mesozoic Echinoderma from 

 ,S. France (Charpy Coll.). 



The type-specimen of Millericrinus charpyi, from the 

 Corallian of Andelot, near St. Amour (Jura). 



Polyzoa. — Eighty-two Polyzoa from the Chalk, Seaford. 



Four hundred Polyzoa from the Upper Chalk, Liineburg. 



Anthozoa. — A hundred and forty-three Trias Corals from 

 ihe Tyrol. 



