502 PROCEEDINGS OF THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY. [May 25, 
I must particularly guard against the inference from this specimen 
that any of the sandstone-nodules are of Kocene age; the scute is 
water-worn, and its occurrence in the sandstone is sufficiently ex- 
plained as above. 
List of Organic Remains from the Bow-stones. 
Vertebrates. 19. Nassa ?, rare. 
cs ») 7 9 
1. Trilophodont Mastodon. (Pl. z0. Henle, =, (costature 7 pack 
7 ¥7 47 Te / 2 
9 Honea 1A) 21. Pectunculus glycimeris, abundant. 
a. . yD) 7 
8. Carcharodon megalodon (tooth). | ~~ ee REXLY fe 10 eh eee 
4. Oxyrhina (tooth). 9 j ERR oH) : 
5. Crocodilian scute (derived from a Fanopea, sp, (Wanjasit), ob mare. 
Hocene beds) 24, Mya, sp. ?, not rare. 
j 25. Cyprina islandica, rare. 
, 26. —— rustica, rare. 
Mollusca. 27. Venus (large sp.), 1 specimen. 
6. Conus Dujardinii (?), 2 specimens. (Pl. XXXIV. fig. 7.) 
(PI. XXXTV. fig. 5.) 28. Glycimeris angusta (sp.?), 3 spe- 
7. Voluta Lamberti, rare. cimens. 
8. Voluta auris-leporis, 1 specimen. | 29. Astarte sulcata, 2 specimens. 
(Pl. XXXTV. fig. 6.) 30. Pecten opercularis, rare. 
9. Pyrula reticulata, more abundant | 31. Pecten (small sp.), not rare. 
than Voluta. 32. Cardium decorticatum, not rare. 
10. Cassidaria, sp., rare (8 specimens). | 33. Cardium venustum, | specimen. 
(Pl. XXXIV. figs. 8, 9.) 34. Abra, sp., not rare. 
11. Trochus ziziphinus, 2 specimens. 39. Tellina, sp., rare. 
12. Trochus, sp., 1 specimen. 
13. Natica, sp., 1 specimen. Cirrhipede. 
14. Natica, sp., 2 specimens. 7 . : 
15. mien eels is ik tee 36. Balanus inclusus, | specimen. 
16. Bulla, sp., not rare. Veaetabl 
17. Trophon, sp., rare. aoa as 
18. Trophon, sp., rare. 37. Wood (exogenous), not rare. 
Til. A new Zrentor Creracnan From tre Surrorx Bonr-BED 
(Choneziphius Packardi). Pl. XXXIII., figs. 1-4. 
The fossil about to be described was found lying by the side of a 
erag-pit near Felixstow, Suffolk, and was for many years in the col- 
lection of the lady after whom Nucula Cobboldiw was named. It 
has lately been presented by Mr. Cobbold, with some other fossils, 
including a wonderfully fine specimen of Plewrotoma intorta, to the 
Ipswich museum, that institution having during the past year, 
through the exertions of Mr. Edward Packard, Mayor of the town, 
been much enlarged and extended in its series of crag fossils. Mr. 
Packard has given some very valuable specimens from his own collec- 
tion to the museum, besides contributing largely to the expense of ar- 
ranging the collection and filling up gaps in the suite of crag mollusca. 
The specimen is exceedingly heavy, and is in precisely that 
mineral condition which characterizes the cetacean bones from the 
Suffolk bone-bed, and which demonstrates them to have lived, not in 
the crag sea (the proper cetacean remains of which are pulverulent, 
as I pointed out in the Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc. 1865, p. 223), but 
