1867.] Appendix. 223 



Lias (lower.) 

 Cephalopoda. 



Ammonites Tubar (Strachey.) 



PL Niti, p. 32, PI 20 fig. 2 a— c and PI. 21 figs. 1 a— c. 



Three good specimens of this shell showing well all the characters 

 and the suture, as represented by Mr. Blanford. 



From a muddy and sandy brown bed, very sparingly calcareous, in 

 the Chichali pass near Kalabagh, Punjab. 



Ammonites, sp. 



Pal. Niti, PI. 19 fig 3 a, 6 and c. 



The figure in the Palaeontology of Niti is exactly like our shell ; 

 it is not described in the text and not named. It resembles ;i little 

 the A. Striatulus (Sow.). — Found in the same bed as the preceding. 



Belemnites, sj). 



A coarse species when full-grown, with a well marked front sulcus, 

 and often a back one also. The section is oval. 



From the same bed as above in Chichali and from some brown 

 sandstones under the Oolite at the foot of Sheikh Bodeen near Tora 

 Obo. 



Post-Scriptum. I find this species described and figured by Mr. 

 Stoliczka, (Sections across HimaL, Mem. Geol. Surv. of India, Vol. V. 

 Part 1, fig. 78, PL VIII. fig. 1-4,) under the name of B. Bisalcutus 

 (Stol.) from the lower Lias of Spiti. 



Lamellibranciiiata. 



GrypJicca Arcuata (Lam.) 



Some specimens, from the Chichali pass and the same bed as the 

 Ammonites, belong certainly to this well-known species. 



Astarte, sp. 



A very circular Astarte from the same bed, Chichali. 

 Oolite (Oxfordian). 



Cephalopoda. 



Ammonites Biplex, Soiv. 



Journal Asiat. Soc. No. 2, 1863, p. 129, PL II., fig. 5 and PL III. 

 figs. 4 and 5. 



Ammonites Strigilis, Blanford. 



Op. Cit. p. 126, PL III figs. 1 and la. 



Five fragments showing well the single ribs bending forwards. 



