part 2] PROCEEDINaS OF THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY. Ixxiil 



Oxford ; Henry Day, M.Sc, c/o Bird & Co., Research Depart- 

 ment, P.O. Box 46, Calcutta (India) ; John Kane, Grlenside, 

 Wattstown, Ynishir (Grlamorgan) ; Wilham Rush ton Parker, M. A., 

 M.D., F.L.S., Regent Palace Hotel, W. 1 ; David Meredith Scares 

 Watson, M.Sc, Jodrell Professor of Zoology & Comparative 

 Anatom}'- in University College, London, 115 Greencroft Gardens, 

 N.W. 6 ; and Sidney William Wooldridge, B.Sc, Demonstrator 

 in Geology in King's College, London, 3 Bank Mansions, Heme 

 Hill, S.E. 24, were elected Fellows of the Society. 



The List of Donations to the Library was read. 



The following communications were read : — 



1. ' The LoAver Carboniferous Succession in the Settle District 

 and along the line of the Craven Faults.' By Prof. Edmund 

 Johnston Garwood, Sc.D., F.R.S., Y.P.G.S., and Miss Edith 

 Goodyear, B.Sc, F.G.S. 



2. ' The Miocene of Ceylon.' By Edward James Way land, 

 AssocR.C.S., F.G.S. , and Arthur Morley Davies, D.Sc, Assoc. 

 R.C.S., F.G.S. 



Specimens and lantern -slides were exhibited in illustration 

 respectively of the paper by Prof. Garwood & Miss Goodyear, 

 and of that by Mr. Wayland & Dr. Morley Davies. 



A plaster cast of a model of Peloneustes i^liilaTcus, modelled by 

 the Rev. Henry Neville Hutchinson, M.A., F.G.S., & Mr. Edward 

 Godwin, was exhibited, and it was announced that Mr. Hutchinson 

 had presented the cast to the Society. 



A photograph (presented by Mrs. A. M. Blake) of a portrait 

 painted by Eddis, of William Blake, Pres. Geol. Soc. 1815-16, was 

 also exhibited. 



May 24th, 1922. 



Prof. A. C. Sewakd, Sc.D., F.R.S., President, and afterwards 

 Dr. G. T. Peioe, F.R.S., Vice-President, in the Chair. 



The List of Donations to the Library was read. 



The Peesident then proceeded to deliver a lecture (illustrated 

 by lantern-slides, microscope-slides, specimens of rocks, fossils, and 

 plants) entitled ' Geological Notes on Western Greenland.' 

 He remarked that Greenland is a ' closed ' countrj' ; the trade is a 

 monopoly of the Danish Government, and no foreigners or Danes 

 other than Government officials are allowed to go there without 

 special permission. On June 18th, 1921, the Lecturer left Copen- 

 hagen, accompanied by Mr. R. E. Holttum, of St. John's College, 



