Bulletin of The Natural History Museum 
Geology Series 
Earlier Geology Bulletins are still in print. The following can be ordered from Intercept (address on inside front cover). Where the complete backlist is not shown, 
this may also be obtained from the same address. 
Volume 34 
No. 1 
No. 2 
No. 3 
‘olume 35 
Relative dating of the fossil hominids of Europe. K.P. Oakley. 
1980. Pp. 1-63, 6 figs, 17 tables. £8.00 
Origin, evolution and systematics of the dwarf Acanthoceratid 
Protacanthoceras Spath, 1923 (Cretaceous Ammonoidea). 
C.W. Wright & W.J. Kennedy. 1980. Pp. 65-107, 61 figs. £6.25 
Ashgill Brachiopoda from the Glyn Ceiriog District, north 
Wales. N. Hiller. 1980. Pp. 109-216, 408 figs. £14.75 
Miscellanea 
Type specimens of some Upper Palaeozoic Athyridide 
brachiopods. C.H.C. Brunton. 31 figs. 
Two new British Cretaceous Epitoniidae (Gastropoda): 
evidence for ev olution of shell morphology. R.J. Cleevely. 14 
figs, 1 table. 
Revision of the microproblematicum Prethocoprolithus Elliott, 
1962. G.F. Elliott. 4 figs. 
Basilicus tyrannus (Murchison) and the glabellar structure of 
asaphid trilobites. R.A. Fortey. 12 figs. 
A new Lower Ordovician bivalve family, the Thoraliidae (? 
Nuculoidea), interpreted as actinodont deposit feeders. N.J. 
Morris. 7 figs. 
Cretaceous brachiopods from northern Zululand. E.F. Owen. 
13 figs. 
Tupus diluculum sp. nov. (Protodonata), a giant dragonfly from 
the Upper Carboniferous of Britain. PE.S. Whalley. 1 fig. 
Revision of Plummerita Bronniman (Foraminiferida) and a 
new Maastrichtian species from Ecuador. J.E. Whittaker. 34 
figs. 1980. Pp. 217-297. £11.00 
Lower Ordovician Brachiopoda from mid and south-west 
Wales. M.G. Lockley & A. Williams. 1981. Pp. 1-78, 263 figs, 
3 tables. £10.80 
The fossil alga Girvanella Nicholson & Etheridge. H.M.C. 
Danielli. 1981. Pp. 79-107, 8 figs, 3 tables. £4.20 
Centenary miscellanea 
Reassessment of the Ordovician brachiopods from the 
Budleigh Salterton Pebble Bed, Devon. L.R.M. Cocks & M.G. 
Lockley. 35 figs. 
Felix Oswald’s Turkish Algae. G.F. Elliott. 3 figs. 
J.A. Moy-Thomas and his association with the British Museum 
(Natural History). P.L. Forey & B.G. Gardiner. 3 figs. 
Burials, bodies and beheadings in Romano-British and Anglo- 
Saxon cemeteries. M. Harman, T.I. Molleson & J.L. Price. 5 
figs, 7 tables, VI appendices. 
The Jurassic irregular echinoid Nucleolites clunicularis 
(Smith). D.N. Lewis & H.G. Owen. 4 figs. 
Phanerotinus cristatus (Phillips) and the nature of 
euomphalacean gastropods. N.J. Morris & R.J. Cleevely. 12 
figs. 
Agassiz, Darwin, Huxley, and the fossil record of teleost fishes. 
C. Patterson. | fig. 
The Neanderthal problem and the prospects for direct dating of 
Neanderthal remains. C.B. Stringer & R. Burleigh. 2 figs, 1 
table. 
Hippoporidra edax (Busk 1859) and a revision of some fossil 
and living Hippoporidra (Bryozoa). P.D. Taylor & P.L. Cook. 6 
figs. 1981. Pp. 109-252. £20.00 
No. 4 The English Upper Jurassic Plesiosauroidea (reptilia) and a 
review of the phylogeny and classification of the Plesiosauria. 
D.S. Brown. 1981. Pp. 253-347, 44 figs. £13.00 
Volume 36 
No. | Middle Cambrian trilobites from the Sosink Formation, Derik- 
Mardin district, south-eastern Turkey. W.T. Dean. 1982. Pp. 
1-41, 68 figs. £5.80 
No. 2 Miscellanea 
British Dinantian (Lower Carboniferous) terebratulid 
brachiopods. C.H.C. Brunton. 20 figs. 
New microfossil records in time and space. G.F. Elliott. 6 figs. 
The Ordovician trilobite Neseuretus from Saudi Arabia, and the 
palaeogeography of the Neseuretus fauna related to 
Gondwanaland in the earlier Ordovician. R.A. Fortey & S.F. 
Morris. 10 figs. 
Archaeocidaris whatleyensis sp. noy. (Echinoidea) from the 
Carboniferous Limestone of Somerset and notes on echinoid 
phylogeny. D.N. Lewis & P.C. Ensom. 23 figs. 
A possible non-calcified dasycladalean alga from the Carbonif- 
erous of England. G.F. Elliott. | fig. 
Nanjinoporella, a new Permian dasyclad (calcareous alga) 
from Nanjing, China. X. Mu & G.F. Elliott. 6 figs, 1 table. 
Toarcian bryozoans from Belchite in north-east Spain. P.D. 
Taylor & L. Sequeiros. 10 figs, 2 tables. 
Additional fossil plants from the Drybrook Sandstone, Forest 
of Dean, Gloucestershire. B.A. Thomas & H.M. Purdy. 14 figs, 
1 table. 
Bintoniella brodiei Handlirsch (Orthoptera) from the Lower 
Lias of the English Channel, with a review of British 
bintoniellid fossils. PE.S. Whalley. 7 figs. 
Uraloporella Korde from the Lower Carboniferous of South 
Wales. V.P. Wright. 3 figs. 1982. Pp. 43-155. £19.80 
No. 3 The Ordovician Graptolites of Spitsbergen. R.A. Cooper & 
R.A. Fortey. 1982. Pp. 157-302, 6 plates, 83 figs, 2 tables. 
£20.50 
No. 4 Campanian and Mastrichtian sphenodiscid ammonites from 
southern Nigeria. P.M.P. Zaborski. 1982. Pp. 303-332, 36 figs. 
£4.00 
Volume 37 
No. | Taxonomy of the arthrodire Phlyctaenius from the Lower or 
Middle Devonian of Campbellton, New Brunswick, Canada. 
V.T. Young. 1983. Pp. 1-35, 18 figs. £5.00 
No. 2 Ailsacrinus gen. noy., an aberrant millericrinid from the Middle 
Jurassic of Britain. P.D. Taylor. 1983. Pp. 37-77, 48 figs, 1 
table. £5.90 
No. 3 Miscellanea 
