178 ACCOUNTS, ETC., OF THE BRITISH MUSEUM. 



By Mr. R. Shelf ord. 

 1. The British Museum Collection of Blattidse enclosed in 

 Amber. Journ. Linn. Soc, ZooL, vol. xxxii., pp. 59-69, 1 pi. 



By Dr. Ray S. Bassler. 

 1. The Early Palaeozoic Bryozoa of the Baltic Provinces^ 

 Bull. U.S. Nat. Mus., No. 77, pp. 382, pis. xiii. 



By Mrs. Rina Scott. 



1, On Traquairia. Ann. Botany, vol. xxv., pp. 459-467, 

 pis. xxxix., xl. 



By Dr. Marie C. Stopes. 



1. The "Dragon Tree" of the Kentish Rag, with Remarks 

 on the Treatment of Imperfectly Petrified Woods. Geol. Mag. 

 [5], vol. viii., pp. 55-59. 



By Dr. R. Zeiller. 



1. Etude sur le Lepidostrohus browni. Mem. Acad. Sci.,. 

 Paris, vol. lii. 



Various fossils in the Department of Geology have also been 

 described and figured by Prof. S. H. Reynolds, Dr. R. H. 

 Traquair, and Mr. H. Woo is, in the Monographs of the 

 Palfeontographical Society, vol. Ixv. for 1911. 



V.- 



A. — By Donation. 



The Geological Society of London's Collection of Colonial 

 and Foreign Fossils, which, as now arranged in the Department 

 of Geology, occupy 672 drawers and 2 wall-cases. They have 

 been arranged geographically in the same order as in the 

 Society's Museum, and represent all parts of the world. They 

 include a large number of type and figured specimens, and 

 specially illustrate memoirs and papers published by the 

 Geological Society. Among European fossils maybe mentioned 

 the Daniel Sharpe Collection from Portugal : among Indian 

 fossils, the C. W. Grant Collection from Cutch, the S. Hislop 

 Collection from Central India, the South Indian fossils 

 described by Prof. Edward Forbes, and the Nummulitic fossils- 

 forming the subject of a work by d'Archiac and Haime ; 

 among South African fossils, the Bain Collection described by 

 Daniel Sharpe, and various Secondary fossils described by 

 Prof. Ralph Tate ; among other fossils. West Indian Tertiary 

 Corals and Australian Tertiary Corals and Echinoderma 

 described by Prof. Martin Duncan. Presented by the Geological 

 Society of London. 



A series of nine hundred and fifty invertebrate fossils from 

 the Tertiary and earlier rocks of Egypt, namely, three hundred 

 and seventy-eight Post-pliocene, nine Pliocene, seventy-six 

 Miocene, two hundred and twenty-eight Eocene, two hundred 



