DEPARTMENT OF GEOLOGY. 157 



Thirty bones of Lynx from Gales Dale Cavern, Derby- 

 shire, described by W. Storrs Fox, Proc. Zool. Soc, 1906, 

 vol. i., p. 65, text-lig. 26. 



Reptilia. — Two slabs of footprints from the Keuper, 

 Storeton, Cheshire. 



A skeleton of Ichthyosaurus from the Lower Lias, 

 Somersetshire, containing embryo, described by Dr. Chaning 

 Pearce in Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist., vol. xvii. (1846), 

 pp. 44-46. 



A skull of Ichthyosaurus from the Lower Lias, Char- 

 mouth, Dorset, showing the remains of skin. 



A portion of skull of Petrosuchus levidens, a shell of 

 Pleurosternum, a slab of scutes of Goniojyholis, and one 

 Chelonian costal bone, from the Purbeck beds, Swanage. 



A collection of reptilian remains, chiefly Dinosaurian, 

 from the Upper Cretaceous, Transylvania, including the 

 type-skull of Limnosaurus transylv aniens and remains of 

 Mochlodon, described by Baron Nopcsa in Denkschr. Akad. 

 Wiss. Wien, 1900-02-04. 



A mandible of Coniasaurus crassidens from the English 

 Chalk. 



A skull of Fteranodon from the Chalk of Kansas, dis- 

 covered by C. H. Sternberg. 



A Pterodactyl bone from the Gault of Folkestone. 



-Pisces. — A specimen of Wardichthys cyclosoma from the 

 Lower Carboniferous of N. Berwick. 



Fifteen vertebrate remains from the Coal Measures, 

 Northumberland, some described by T. P. Barkas, "Coal 

 Measure Palaeontology." 



One Pholidophorus from the Lower Lias, Charmouth, 

 Dorset. 



Seven Ganoid fishes from the Jurassic, S. Maria de Meya, 

 Lerida, Spain. 



Two fish-teeth from the Lower Cretaceous, Potton, 

 Bedfordshire. 



A portion of a fish-skull, from the Gault^ Folkestone. 



Fins of Protosphyrcena, two skulls of Protosphyrcena, 

 one Chimaeroid fin-spine, two groups of teeth of Ptychodus, 

 two remains ot Gorax, and one Lamna from the Chalk of 

 Kansas, collected by C. H. Sternberg. 



A jaw of Ptychodus decurrens, two groups of teeth of 

 Ptychodus, and five other fish-remains from the English 

 Chalk. 



Mollusca. — Two Cephalopoda from the Ordovician of 

 Bohemia. 



Sixty-seven Cephalopoda from the Trias of Sicily. 



