﻿434 
  ME. 
  E. 
  P. 
  KICHAKDS 
  ON 
  THE 
  GBAVELS 
  AND 
  [Aug. 
  1 
  897, 
  

  

  Flints 
  exhibiting 
  traces 
  of 
  human 
  workmanship, 
  from 
  the 
  

   peat-fields, 
  have 
  been 
  noticed 
  ; 
  and 
  those 
  found 
  by 
  the 
  present 
  

   Author 
  in 
  the 
  peat 
  and 
  gravels 
  of 
  Newbury 
  are 
  enumerated 
  

   at 
  p. 
  208 
  (vol. 
  iv.) 
  of 
  the 
  same 
  Transactions, 
  in 
  his 
  notes 
  

   contributed 
  to 
  Mr. 
  Walter 
  Money's 
  memoir 
  ' 
  On 
  the 
  Prehistoric 
  

   and 
  Mediaeval 
  Antiquities 
  found 
  at 
  Newbury 
  during 
  the 
  

   Drainage 
  Operations 
  in 
  1894.' 
  A 
  general 
  geological 
  section 
  

   through 
  Newbury 
  (pi. 
  ii) 
  was 
  also 
  contributed 
  by 
  Mr. 
  Eichards 
  

   at 
  the 
  same 
  time. 
  

  

  A 
  list 
  of 
  mammalian 
  remains 
  from 
  the 
  peat 
  and 
  marl 
  was 
  

   published 
  iu 
  T. 
  Eupert 
  Jones's 
  ' 
  Lecture 
  Geol. 
  Newbury,' 
  1854, 
  

   p. 
  41 
  . 
  This 
  was 
  copied 
  in 
  Mem. 
  Geol. 
  Surv. 
  Expl. 
  Sheet 
  12, 
  

   1862, 
  p. 
  48, 
  with 
  a 
  mark 
  of 
  doubt 
  to 
  Ursus 
  spelceus 
  [?]. 
  It 
  

   may 
  probably 
  have 
  been 
  U. 
  arctos. 
  

  

  In 
  Dr. 
  Palmer's 
  memoir 
  above 
  referred 
  to 
  (pp. 
  131-133) 
  the 
  

   list 
  of 
  mammalian 
  relics 
  from 
  the 
  peat-beds 
  includes 
  — 
  

  

  Wolf. 
  

  

  Badger. 
  

  

  Otter. 
  

  

  Bear. 
  

  

  Beaver. 
  

  

  Water-Vole. 
  

  

  Horse. 
  

  

  Eed 
  Deer. 
  

  

  Eoe. 
  

  

  Goat. 
  

  

  Gigantic 
  fossil 
  Ox, 
  or 
  Ure 
  Ox. 
  

  

  Long-fronted 
  or 
  small 
  fossil 
  Ox. 
  

  

  Wild 
  Boar. 
  

  

  See 
  also 
  Owen's 
  ' 
  British 
  Fossil 
  Mammals 
  and 
  Birds,' 
  1846, 
  

   pp. 
  193 
  etc. 
  

  

  Such 
  as 
  were 
  found 
  during 
  the 
  excavations 
  for 
  the 
  drainage 
  

   in 
  1894 
  are 
  briefly 
  mentioned 
  in 
  Trans. 
  Newbury 
  District 
  Field 
  

   Club, 
  vol. 
  iv. 
  (1895) 
  p. 
  209. 
  

  

  An 
  antler 
  of 
  Cervus 
  megaceros 
  is 
  said 
  to 
  have 
  been 
  dug 
  out 
  

   of 
  the 
  peat 
  of 
  the 
  Kennet 
  Valley 
  a 
  few 
  miles 
  below 
  Newbury, 
  

   Geol. 
  Mag. 
  1891, 
  pp. 
  95 
  & 
  480. 
  

  

  Y. 
  Prof. 
  T. 
  Eupert 
  Jones's 
  list 
  of 
  the 
  land 
  and 
  freshwater 
  shells 
  

   found 
  in 
  the 
  peat 
  and 
  shell-marl 
  was 
  reproduced 
  in 
  Mem. 
  Geol. 
  

   Surv. 
  Expl. 
  Sheet 
  12, 
  1862, 
  p. 
  48 
  (with 
  the 
  nomenclature 
  

   after 
  Sowerby's 
  ' 
  Illustrated 
  Index,' 
  etc., 
  1859, 
  instead 
  of 
  

   Turton's 
  ' 
  Manual,' 
  etc., 
  1840), 
  and 
  slightly 
  shortened. 
  

  

  The 
  seed-vessels 
  of 
  Chara 
  were 
  also 
  noticed, 
  and 
  some 
  

   Cyprididae, 
  which 
  were 
  described 
  (Annals 
  & 
  Mag. 
  Nat. 
  Hist, 
  

   ser. 
  2, 
  vol. 
  vi. 
  1850, 
  pp. 
  25-27 
  & 
  pi. 
  iii. 
  figs. 
  3, 
  7 
  & 
  8) 
  as 
  Cypris 
  

   setigera, 
  Candona 
  reptans, 
  and 
  Candona 
  lucens. 
  

  

  Appendix 
  II. 
  

  

  VI. 
  Notes 
  on 
  the 
  Mollusca 
  from 
  the 
  Kennet 
  Valley 
  Deposits. 
  

   By 
  A. 
  S. 
  Kennakd, 
  Esq., 
  and 
  B. 
  B. 
  Woodwaed, 
  Esq., 
  F.L.S., 
  F.G.S. 
  

  

  The 
  first 
  list 
  of 
  the 
  mollusca 
  from 
  the 
  Holocene 
  deposits 
  of 
  the 
  

   Kennet 
  Valley 
  at 
  Newbury 
  was 
  given 
  in 
  1854 
  by 
  Prof. 
  T. 
  Eupert 
  

   Jones 
  (' 
  Lecture 
  on 
  the 
  Geological 
  History 
  of 
  the 
  Vicinity 
  of 
  New- 
  

   bury/ 
  pp. 
  41, 
  42), 
  and 
  contained 
  fifty-one 
  names. 
  The 
  collection 
  on 
  

   which 
  this 
  list 
  was 
  founded 
  was 
  made 
  in 
  1842 
  by 
  Prof. 
  Eupert 
  

  

  