172 ACCOUNTS, ETC., OF THE BRITISH MUSEUM. 



Carboniferous Limestone from Lough Erne, containing Beller- 

 ophon, &c. (presented by Major Herbert Trevelyan). A collec- 

 tion of Gastropoda and Lamellibranchia from the Calciferous 

 Sandstone of Fifeshire (James Wright, Jun., Coll.) has been 

 registered and prepared for incorporation. 



The unexhibited portion of the Gilbertson Collection of 

 Carboniferous Gastropoda and Lamellibranchia has been 

 removed from Gallery XI. and is being re-labelled for incorpo- 

 ration with the General Collection. 



The Mesozoic and Tertiary Gastropoda and Lamellibranchia 

 registered, labelled, and incorporated include : — Tertiary shells 

 from Cyrenaica described in Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc, 1911 

 (J. W. Gregory Coll.) ; French Tertiary shells (L. Staadt 

 Coll.) ; Lamellibranchia from the Miocene of Chili ; and non- 

 marine Tertiary shells from Cos (E. Forbes Coll.), Germany 

 (K. Fischer Coll.) Spain, Belgium, Switzerland, Russia, 

 Roumania, and Asia Minor. Important additions to the 

 exhibited collection are plaster casts of species of InoceraTnus 

 from the Cretaceous of Saxony and Bohemia, Miocene Lamelli- 

 branchs from India and Chili, and Pliocene shells from the 

 Mekran coast, Baluchistan (C. Birley Bequest). 



The exhibited specimens of Inoceramus from the English 

 Chalk have been re-arranged and re-labelled, in accordance 

 with the Palseontographical Society's Monograph by Mr. H. 

 Woods. 



Numerous Cretaceous and Tertiary MoUusca from various 

 parts of Africa have been determined and named. 



The Mollusca and other invertebrate fossils from Norway, 

 Sweden, Belgium, Denmark, and Holland in the Geological 

 Society's collection, have been cleaned and prepared for study 

 and registration. 



Number of specimens of Mollusca registered : Cephalopoda, 

 291; Gastropoda, 2,979 ; Lamellibranchia, 1,938. 



Arthropoda (Gallery 8 and Workroom). — The acquisitions 

 registered, labelled, and incorporated include: — Insects in 

 amber (Blattidse described by the late R. Shelford, and the 

 Termites studied by Kurt Baron Rosen) ; Trilobites from the 

 Olenellus Limestone of Comley, Shropshire, the Shineton 

 Shales (H. Keeping Coll.), the Cambrian of Herault, the Lower 

 Ordovician of Bohemia (Kloucek Coll.), and the Upper 

 Ordovician of Keisley and Dufton, Westmoreland ( Bather 

 Coll.); Cirripedes from the Cenomanian of Bohemia (Perner 

 Coll.), the Chalk detritus of Charing (W. Harris Coll.), the 

 Senonian of Hanover, the Msestrichtian of Holland (Bosquet 

 Coll.), the Pliocene of the Mekran Coast (C. Birley Bequest, 

 F. W. Townsend Coll.), and the Crags of East Anglia (Sowerby, 

 S. V. Wood, Wigham Colls.) ; Ostracoda from the Kimmeridge 

 and Oxford Clays of Bucks, the Chalk Marl of Cambridgeshire, 

 the London Clay of London (F. Mockler Coll.), and Cretaceous 

 and Tertiary Rocks of various European localities (Geisendorfer 

 Coll.) ; various Crustacea from the Calciferous Sandstone, Fife 



