part 2] PEOCEEDINGS OF THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY. Ixix 



February 22nd, 1922. 



Prof. A. C. Sewaed, Sc.D., F.R.S., President, 

 in the Chair. 



Irene Helen Lowe, M.Sc., Egremont, Manorgate Eoad, Kingston 

 Hill (Surrey), and Trevor Hughes Stonehouse, Lawnswood House, 

 Hill Grrove Crescent, Kidderminster, were elected Fellows of the 

 Society. 



The List of Donations to the Library was read. 



The following communications were read : — 



1. * Description of a New Plesiosaur from the Weald Clay of 

 Berwick (Sussex).' By Charles William Andrews, B.A., D.Sc, 



F.R.S., F.a.s. 



2. ' The Carboniferous Rocks of the Deer-Lake District of 

 Newfoundland.' By Thomas Landell-Mills, F.Gr.S., Arthur Smith 

 Woodward, LL.D., F.R.S., Pres.L.S., F.G.S., and Albert Gilligan, 

 D.Sc, B.Sc, F.a.s. 



Specimens, microscope-slides, lantern-slides, and maps were 

 exhibited in illustration of the above-mentioned papers. 



March 8th, 1922. 



Mr. R. D. Oldham, F.R.S., Vice-President, 

 in the Chair. 



Cecil Stevenson Garnett, 25 Crompton Street, Derby ; George 

 Johnston, Keloil, Kelham, Newark (Nottinghamshire) ; William 

 Russ, B.Sc, Assistant Geologist, Geological Survey of Northern 

 Nigeria ; and Cecil Edgar Tilley, B.Sc, A.I.C., Emmanuel College, 

 Cambridge, were elected Fellows of the Society. 



The List of Donations to the Library was read. 



Dr. A. Smith Woodward described certain photographs 

 (natural size) oi Des7nostylus teeth from the Lower Miocene 

 Sandstone of Southern Vancouver Island (B.C.) exhibited 

 by Ira E. Cornwall, F.G.S. 



The exhibitor wrote that these Besmostylics teeth are slightly 

 different from any found in either California or Japan, as they 

 show a well-developed cingulum. They may be from an older 

 species than Desmostylus liesperus, as r^/twrn L . roablli tk«4ias shown 

 that the formation in which i\iQj ^^^;^;^^^^%^^^t)i(^^^'>ijo^ev 



TOL, LXXVIII. /^ ./ ^/^ 



[^ SEP 16 1922 ^' 



