146 ACCOUNTS, ETC., OF THE BRITISH MUSEUM. 



11. On a Mandible oi Labyrinthodon leptognathus, Owen. 

 Rep. Brit. Assoc, Leicester. 



12. The Fossil Fishes of the English Chalk, Part III. 

 Mon. PalsBont. Soc. 



By F. A. Bather, M.A., D.sc. 



1. Ordovician Cystidea from Burma (in F. R, C. Reed, 

 The Lower Palaeozoic Fossils of the Northern Shan States, 

 Burma). Pal^ont. Indica, N.S., vol. ii., No. .3, pp. 6-40, 

 pis. i., ii. 



2. The Discovery in West Cornwall of a Silurian Crinoid 

 characteristic of Bohemia. Trans. Roy. Geol. Soc. Cornwall, 

 vol. xiii., pp. 191-197. 



3. Australian Palaeontologists on Silurian Ophiurids. 

 Geol. Mag. [5], vol. iv., pp. 313, 314. 



4. Nathorst's use of Collodion imprints in the Study of 

 Fossil Plants. Ibid., pp. 437-440. 



5. Echinocrinus versus Archceocidaris. Ann. Mag. Nat. 

 Hist. [7], vol. XX., pp. 452-456. 



By R. B. Newton, f.g.s. 



1. Relics of Coloration in Fossil Shells. Proc. Malac. Soc, 

 vol. vii., pp. 280-292, pi. xxiv. 



By C. W. Andrews, d.sc, f.r.s. 



1. Note on some Vertebrate Remains collected in the 

 Fayum, Egypt, in 1906. Geol. Mag. [5], vol. iv., pp. 97-100. 



2. Notes on the Osteology of Ophthalmosaurus icenicus, 

 Seeley, an Ichthyosaurian Reptile from the Oxford Clay of 

 Peterborough. Ibid., pp. 202-8. 



3. Note on the Cervical Vertebra of a Zeuglodon from the 

 Barton Clay of Barton Cliff (Hampshire). Quart. Journ. 

 Geol. Soc, vol. Ixiii., pp. 124-127. 



By G. C. Crick, a.r.s.m., f.g.s. 



1. Cretaceous fossils of Natal. Third Rep. Geo). Surv. 

 Natal, pp. 163-250, pis. x.-xv. 



2. The Cretaceous Rocks of Natal and Zululand and their 

 Cephalopod Fauna. Geol. Mag. [5], vol. iv., pp. 339-347. 



3. Note on two Rare Forms of Actinocamax from the 

 English Upper Chalk. Ibid., pp. 389-395. 



4. On the Arms of the Belemnite. Proc. Malac. Soc, vol. 

 vii., pp. 269-279, pi., xxiii. 



By W. D. Lang, m.a., f.g.s. 



1. The Evolution of Stomatopora dichotomoides (d'Or- 

 bigny). Geol. Mag. [5], vol. iv., pp. 20-24. 



2. A Tabular View of the Cretaceous Polyzoa of the 

 Family Idmoniidse. Ibid., pp. 122-132. 



