Vol. 67.] PROCEEDINGS OF THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETT. ill 



The following specimens, etc. were exhibited : — 



Specimens of Eocene fishes from Egypt and lantern-slides, exhi- 

 bited by Dr. W. F. Hume, A.R.C.S., F.G.S., in illustration of his 

 paper. 



Rock-specimens, photographs, and lantern slides, exhibited on 

 behalf of Mr. A. It. Horwood, in illustration of his paper. 



December 7th, 1910. 



Prof. W. W. Watts, Sc.D., M.Sc, F.R.S., President, 

 in the Chair. 



Frederick Robert Bader, M.Inst.C.E., Public Works Department, 

 Bombay (India) ; Alfred William Vincent Crawley, Kilo ( Belgian 

 Congo), via Fort Portal (Uganda) ; Francis A. Holiday, A.R.C.S., 

 Caledonian House, Port of Spain, Trinidad (B.W.I.) ; Brees van 

 Homan, 17 Gracechurch Street, E.C. ; William Jones, Assistant 

 Demonstrator in Geology at the Imperial College of Science & 

 Technology, Felinfoel, Llanelly (Caerniarthen shire); Arthur Leonard 

 Leach, Giltar, Shrewsbury Lane, Shooters Hill (Kent) ; Montagu 

 Lubbock, M.D., F.R.C.P., 127 Monnt Street, W. ; Arthur Douglas 

 Lumb, 47 Putney Hill, S.W. ; William Theophilus Ord, M.R.C.S., 

 L.R.C.P., Greenstead, Madeira Road, Bournemouth ; Frank M. 

 Preston, Assoc. M.Inst.C.E., 15 Exchange, Bradford ; James Ernest 

 Richey, B.A., Demonstrator in Geology in the University of Oxford, 

 University Mnseum, Oxford ; William Wilfred Samuel, Tanlan 

 House, Llanelly (Caermarthenshire) ; William Pinckney Walker, 

 Ingles, Heaton Grove, Bradford ; and Stanley Dawson Ware, 

 4 Connaught Avenue, Mutley, Plymouth, were elected Fellows of 

 the Society. 



The list of Donations to the Library was read. 



Dr. A. S. Woodward communicated an account of recent excava- 

 tions in the cavern of La Cotte, St. Brelade's Bay (Jersey), made 

 during the present year by the Jersey Society of Antiquaries. 

 According to the report of Mr. E. T. Nicolle and Mr. J. Sinel, 

 shortly to be published by the Jersey Society, the cave has yielded 

 evidence of human habitation and traces of Pleistocene Mammalia. 

 About a hundred flint-implements of the Mousterian type have been 

 obtained, besides part of a molar of Rhinoceros antiquitatis, and both 

 teeth and antlers of Rangifer tarandus. Human remains and teeth 

 of Bos have also been examined and determined by Dr. C.W. Andrews 

 and Dr. A. S. Woodward, to whom the whole of the collection of 

 mammalian remains was referred. This being the first discovery 

 of typical Pleistocene Mammalia in the Channel Islands, the Jersey 

 Society hopes to proceed with the excavations as soon as possible. 



