285 



BIBLIOGRAPHY: 



Papers and records published with respect to the Natural History and 

 Physical Features of the North of Eng-Iand. 



NEUROPTERA and TRICHOPTERA, 

 1884, 1885, 1886, and 1887. 



Joseph Ch appell. - Lane. S. 



Obnoxious and Injurious Insects [Atropos pulsatoriiis^ etc.]. Young Xat., 

 April 1S87, viii. 64. 



T. D. A. CocKERELL. Lanc. S, 



A September Walk throug-h Lancashire .... [Sep. loih, 1S85, Hcmero- 

 hius iiei-vosiis and Li»niop]iilus luiiatiis from near Rainhill ; named by 

 R. McLachlan]. Xat., Feb. 1886, p. 59. 



A. E. Eaton. Derbyshire, Cumberland, Westmorland. 



A Revisional Monograph of Recent Ephemeridae or Mayflies [The only 

 notes referring to the North of England in this exhaustive treatise are 

 the following: — Cicnis diinidiata Steph., var. riviiloruin Eaton, the Uove, 

 near Mayfield, Ashbourne, Derbyshire, June (page 144), and the Eden in 

 Cumberland, profusely abundant at Langwathby on certain evenings towards 

 sunset, so as to produce an appearance as of mist or dense haze hovering over 

 the course of the river (p. 320) ; Bactis scandnis Eaton, Ashbourne and 

 Norbury, Derbyshire, in the Dove and in the Henmoor Brook, June and 

 September (p. 160), and aljundant in Briggle Beck and in the Eden near 

 Little Salkeld in Addingham, Cumberland (p. 320) ; B. teiiax Eaton, rills 

 and streamlets on Ashbourne Green, Derbyshire, in June (p. 165); Rhithrot^ena 

 seniicolorata Curt., the typical race in Cumberland ascends on Cross Fell to 

 about 1,500 ft. (p. 258); Ecdyuriis insignis Etn., England, in rapid parts of 

 rivers, such as ... . the Eden p. 289); E. lateralis Curt., nowhere has the 

 author found it more abundant than it was along the shore of Ullswater, in 

 Westmorland, under Kailpot Crag, on 1st July (p. 295) : EpJie»ierella notata^ 

 sp. nov., locally common by shallow and swift parts of the river Eden in 

 Cumberland during June, near the villages of Langwathby and Salkeld 

 (p. 306)]. Linnean Transactions, 2nd Series, Zoology, vol. 3, parts I 

 (Dec. 1883, pp. 1-77), 2 (July 1884, pp. 77-152), 3 (April 1885, pp. 153-230), 

 4 (Dec. 1885, pp. 229-281), 5 (Dec. 1887, pp. 281-319), and 6 (Feb. 1888, 

 pp. 320-352), with 65 plates. 



J. E. Fletcher. Westmorland. 

 Drag-on-flies near Worcester [a specimen of Leucon-hinia dubia V.d.L. 

 mentioned as captured with SynipetniDi scoticiiia Donov. at Witherslack, 

 some three or four years since, by Mr. J. H. Threlfall]. Ent. Mo. Mag., 

 May 1884, XX. 273-4. 



James Hardy. Cheviotland. 

 Boreus hyemalis [among mosses on the porphyry rocks behind Wooler]. 

 Proc. Berw. Nat. Club, vol. x, part 2 (1885), p. 608 ; and Scott. Nat., April 

 1885, viii. 64. 



n. Wallis Kew. Line. N. 



Shells of the Ponds and Streams [near Louth ; with mention of the 



caddis-cases of Liifuiephilus flavicornis and Fliryganea grandis in canal]. 

 Nat. World, April 1886, iii. 62. 

 H. Wallis Kew. Line. N. 



A Half-Day's Ramble on the Lincolnshire Coast [at Mableihorpe, 3r(l 

 April; cz.>^ oi J^uiuicphiliis Jlavicornis noted]. Nat., June 1886, j). 173. 

 II. Wallis Kew. Line. N. 



On the Lincolnshire Wolds [caddis-cases of Limnephilus Jiavii ontis noted 

 as very plentiful in a drain near Louth]. Nat. World, Aug. 1886, iii. 142. 

 Oct. 1888. T 



