I So bibliography: geology and PAL/EONTOLOGY, 1886. 



Samuel CiiAinvicK. Yorkshire. 

 Geological Report to Malton Scientific Society [A long and interesting 

 list of Fossils collected from the Cretaceous and Oolitic iormations of the 

 Malton district is included, comprising many sponges and detached spicules, 

 a fine spine of Asteracanihiis ornaiissifuus^ palatal teeth of Gyrodiis and 

 Fycnodiis, numerous Zoophyta, Echinodermata, Lamellibranchiata, Cephalo- 

 poda, and some specimens of fossil fruit named Carpolilhes cojiicus, exhibiting 

 distinctly kernel, shell, and outer rind]. Malton Field Naturalists' and 

 Scientific Society's Third Annual Report, 1885-6. 



S. Chadwick. Yorkshire. 

 Asteracanthus ornatissimus in the Middle Oolites near Malton. 



Naturalist, 1886, p. 102. 



F. Clowes. Notting-hamshire. 

 Barium Sulphate as a Cementing- Material in Sandstone [the first record 

 in the British Lsles. The sandstone occurs near Nottingham, forming Staple- 

 ford and Bramcote Hills and the Hemlock Stone. A specimen analysed gave 

 30 per cent, of barium sulphate.] Brit. Assoc. Report, 1885, Aberdeen, 

 pp. 1038, 1039 ; Chem. News, vol. lii. p. 194, Oct. i6th, 1885 ; Journ. 

 Chem. Soc, Abstracts, vol. ii. p. 35, 1886; and Midi. Nat., ix. 48. 



E. M. Cole. , Yorkshire. 



Geology of the Hull, Barnsley, and West Riding Junction Railway and 

 Dock [Reviewed in Naturalist, June 1886, p. 191]. Hull, 1886, 60 pp., 

 with sections and map. 



W. G. CoLLixGWooD. Westmorland. 

 On Lake-basins of the neighbourhood of Windermere [opposing the ice- 

 erosion theory of their origin]. Trans. Cumb. and Westm. Assoc., No. x. 

 1884-5. 



John Cordeaux. Lincolnshire. 



Lincolnshire (General review of its Geology). Naturalist, 1886, pp. 6-8. 

 J. W. Da^ is. Yorkshire. 

 On some remains of Fossil Trees in the Lower Coal Measures at 

 Clayton, near Halifax [Short description of the fossil trees found at 

 Clayton, Wadsley, and Queensbury]. Proc. Yorks. Geol. and Polyt. Society, 

 1886, pp. 253-256. 



J. W. Davis. Yorkshire. 

 On the Exploration of the Raygill Fissure in Lothersdale [Brief 

 account of the latest operations]. Proc. Yorks. Geol. and Polyt. Society, 

 1886, pp. 280, 281. 



J. Vr. Davis. Derbyshire. 

 Carboniferous Fish-remains from the Mountain Limestone of Derby- 

 shire [Twelve species are new to Derbyshire, and five have not previously 

 been described. The specimens are from near Chapel-en-le-Frith]. Geol. 

 Mag., April 1886, Dec. iii. vol. iii. pp. 148-157. 



R. M. Deeley. Derbyshire, Nottinghamshire, Lincolnshire, etc. 



The Pleistocene Succession in the Trent Basin [In this valuable con- 

 tribution to the correlation of the British glacial deposits, the author divides 

 the Pleistocene of the Trent Basin into three epochs, the oldest being marked 

 by the absence of chalk-debris. These three epochs are subdivided, and the 

 deposits discussed in detail, with particulars of many interesting sections. 

 Abstract. Proc. Geol. Soc, May 12th, 1886]. Quart. Journ. Geol. Society, 

 vol. xlii. pp. 437-480. 



C. E. De Range. Lincolnshire, Yorkshire, etc. 



Eleventh Report of the Committee, consisting of ... . [20 names] .... 

 a])pointed for the purpose of investigating the Circulation of Underground 

 Waters [etc.]. [Particulars are given of borings near Grimsby, Goole, Raw- 

 Naturalist, 



