I40 CRETACEOUS PALEONTOLOGY. 



Solyma Kneolata Con. 

 Cymbophora lintea (Con.). 

 Corhula crassipKca Gabb. 

 Panopea decisa Con. 



Gastropoda. 



Scala sillmani (Mort.). 

 Gyrodes petrosus Mort. 



Cephai^opoda. 



Nautilus dekayi Mort. 



Locality 12^. — On the south side of Tower Hill, in the eastern 

 part of the town of Red Bank, a coarse, red, incoherent, quartz 

 sand, belongingf in the Red Bank formation, is exposed. The 

 fossils are poorly preserved but the following species have been 

 recognized : 



Pe^IvECypoda. 



Ostrea nasuta Mort. 

 Gryphaea sp. 



Gryphaeostrea vomer (Mort.). 

 Pecten venustus Mort. 

 Lima reticulata (L- & F.). 



Locality 11.2. — In the bank of a small brook at a road corner 

 2.5 miles southwest of Middletown, a black, clayey sand of the 

 Red Bank formation, similar lithologically tO' the beds along the 

 Shrewsbury River at Red Bank, has yielded the following fauna : 



PELECypoda. 



Nucula whitfieldi n. sp. 

 Perrisoiwta protexta Con. 

 Nemodon eufcmiensis (Gabb). 

 Nennoarca cretacea Con. 

 Axinea coinpressa n. sp. 

 Pteria navicula Whitf. 

 Ostrea nasuta Mort. 



