Geology and Natural History. 241 
Plates.—Contains descriptions of species of Corals, Brachiopods 
and Gasteropods. The figures are excellent. 
ll. On the Fossil. Man of the cavern of Broussé-roussé, in Italy, 
called the cave of Mentone; by E. Rrvrerv.—This skeleton is very 
nearly complete, it wanting only some bones of the feet, and also 
the lower extremity of the left tibia, and the posterior extremity 
of the caleaneum of the same side, broken by the stroke of the 
pick-axe which brought the skeleton to light. 
© measurements show that the skeleton is one of large size. 
The skull was very dolicocephalous, and its facial angle good, ap- 
eee eee Fr closely resembles the man of Cro-Magnon found 
daphus, Cervus Canadensis, a Cervus which may be the stag of 
apra primigenta(?), Antilope rupicapra 
of ZL Among these animals, three 
b mong the other objects present there are two flint knives, a 
ne pin cut from the radius of a stag, and 22 canines of the stag 
perforated, 
h e bones were all'in place, the attitude being that of a man 
Who had died in his sleep just where he was found, that is, on a 
m f h 
e. 
13. The Geology and Physics of the Post-glacial period, as 
. Liverpoo 
©Ol. Soe, uthor, after giving detailed des- 
ean of the region and its Post-glacial formations, presents the 
followi i after a laying down of the boulder- 
clay, the land was elevated above its present level, and again 
depressed below it, the valleys of the present Lancashire and 
