OF THE PTJEB'ECE: FORMATION. 



325 



List of Specimens &c. {continued). 

 Nos. of the speci- 

 mens in T. E. J.'s 



Collection. Locality. Collector or Museum. Species. 



123 a. "Eidgwaj. Chert and its dirt-bed." 1855. Yf\t]x~\valdensisf. 

 Char a, fishbone, &c. \ punctata. 



" Chert-bed, Eidgwaj-. O. Fisher." With Chara, and [ Forhesii. 

 Tlanorbis'i Geol. Soc. J leguminella. 



II. Wilts. — Yale of Wardou 



38&45. 



83, 84, 

 85. 



387*. 

 194. 



W. Cunnington, F.G.S., Sex^t. 1870. 

 Eey. 0. Fisher, January 1883. 

 Eev. O. Fisher, in the Eev. P. B. 



197 



Teffont. 



• Teffont. 



Teffont. The 



Brodie's paper, Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc. vol. x. p. 476 

 mentions , 



Vale of Wardour. With Cyrena. M. P. G. |i. 



" Dallard, Wilts. Fitton." Limestone, made up of Cy- 

 pridae. Geol. Soc. 



"Between Hand Cross and Chicksgrove." See Fitton's 

 'Memoir on the Strata below the Chalk,' &c., 1837, 

 pp. 251, 260 Cypridse, with some casts of Cyrena, 

 making up the rock. Casts of Cyyence full of Cypridse. 

 The rock a mass of Cypridse. 



Ladydown. See Fitton's ' Memoir,' &c., pp. 262, 272, 



" Lady Down. Miss Benett. 9674." Geol. Soc. 



" Lady Down in Tisbury. Miss Benett." With Fish- 

 remains (Sauropsis). Geol. Soc. 



" Between Dallard and St. Catherine's Ford. Fitton." 



Geol. Soc. 



fasciculata. 

 fasciculata. 



fasciculata. 

 fascicidaia. 



■ ])unctata. 



•fasciculata. 



fasciculata. 

 fascicidata. 



fascicidata. 

 fasciculata. 



Cypridea gramdosa {fasciculata) is particularly characteristic of 

 this division of the series, and Metacypris Forhesii is also peculiar 

 to it. 



III. Ostracoda from the Loiuer-Purheclc Beds, 



I. DOESET. 



§ 1. Portland. 



389. " Purbeck stone, Portland." Fitton, Guiol. ^oc. 'X bononiensis. 



Marked as containing " C. faba" (=C. valdcnsis). Ia7isata. 

 A white limestone. J ptcrbec/censis. 



§ 2. Durlston Bay. 



366 & ] " Durlston Bay, Isle of Purbeck. Bed No. 9 of Lower 



368. f Purbeck |. Soft grey Cypris-shales." V purbeckensis 



Horace B. Woodward, July 1884. 



t This is the only instance in which I hare found Cypridea valdcnsis in the Pur- 

 beck beds. Some doubtful specimens, however, may be mentioned as occurring in 

 black shales from a pit in Archer Wood, near Battle, Sussex, and in ironstone] at 

 Poundsford. 



\ Mr. Bristow's list in Damon's new edition, 



II Cypris purbeckensis, M. P. G. Xsf, is entered in the Catal, Fossils M. P. G. 1865, 

 p. 254, as belonging to the " Middle Purbeck " (of Durlston Bay?), together with Ser- 

 pulites and Archcsoniscits ; but this, I think, must be a mistake, for this species and the 

 other fossils here mentioned, for by far the most part, characteristically belong to the 

 Lower Purbeck, It is referred to as " 17 in O." 



Q. J. G-. S. No. 163. 2 A 



