i So Bibliography : Geology and Palaeontology, 1896. 



John Cordeaux. Linc. N. and S. 



Lincolnshire Natural History [Presidential address to Linc. Nat. 



Union, delivered at Lincoln, 24th May 1894; geology referred to]. Linc. 

 Notes and Queries, Jan. 1896, pp. 15-16, and remainder in April 1896. 



G. C. Crick. Xorth of England. 



On Goniatites evolutus, Phillips, and Nautilus tetragonus, Phillips, 



with a list of the species belonging" to the genus Subclymenia [describing 

 numerous Palaeozoic cephalopods from Yorkshire, Northumberland, Derby- 

 shire, Isle of Man, etc.]. Geol. Mag., 1896. pp. 413-419. 



J. J. Davies. Linc. S. 



Lincolnshire Naturalists at Bourne [Geological notes]. Naturalist, 

 Oct. 1896, pp. 294-296. 



W. Boyd Dawkixs. Isle of Man. 



On the Geology of the Isle of Man [dealing with (a) the Ordovician 



Massif, (b) the Carboniferous Limestone of the South, ("c) the Permian 

 Strata of the North of the Island, (d) the Strata underneath Drift-covered 

 Northern Plain, (e) general conclusions as to solid geology, (f) the 

 Boulder-drift of the north, and (g) the Pre-historic strata]. Rep. Brit. 

 Assn. (Liverpool Meeting), 1896, pp. 776-779. 



Charles E. DeRance. Lanc. S. 



The Depth to Productive Coal-Measures between the Warwickshire 



and Lancashire Coalfields. Trans. Fed. Inst. Mining Engineers, Vol. 10, 

 1896, pp. 244 et seq. 



Charles E. DeRance. ? Cheshire. 



Notes on the Geological Features of the Coast of North Wales 



from Liverpool to Menai Bridge. Trans. Fed. Inst. Mining Engineers, 

 Vol. 11, 1896, pp. 552 et seq.; and Coll. Guard., Vol. 72, 1896, pp. 178 et 

 seq. [not seen]. 



C. E. DeRance. Cheshire. 

 Excursions. | — j I. -Anderton, Great Budworth Church, and the 



Marston Salt Mine [geological observations reported]. Ann. Rep. and 

 Trans. North Staffs. N. F. Club for 1895-96, Vol. 30, pp. 128-9. 



R. M. Deeley. Derbyshire. 

 Discovery of Mammalian Remains in the Old River Gravels of 



the Derwent, near Derby, Part 2 [describing- in detail the deposits in 

 which the mammalian remains, described by Arnold-Bemrose, were 

 found; and also gives an account of the g-eology of the surrounding 

 country ; ' the gravels (containing- the remains) are of later date than the 

 Great Chalky Boulder Clay, and were formed at a time when the rivers 

 were removing from their pre-glacial valleys the older boulder clays, with 

 which they had been partially filled']. Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc, Vol. 52, 

 1896, pp. 501-510 (plan and sections) ; abstracts in Geol. Mag., 1896, 

 p. 283; and Ann. and Mag. of Nat. Hist., June 1896, p. 468. 

 See also ' H. H. Arnold-Bemrose.' 



Joseph Dickenson. 

 River Valleys [not seen]. Trans. Manch. Geol. Soc, Vol." 24, 1896. 

 pp. 137 et seq. 



E, Dickson. See 'P. Holland.' 



Jane Donald. Cumberland. 

 Notes on Some Carboniferous Gasteropoda from Penton and 

 elsewhere [not seen]. Trans. Cumb. Assn., Vol. 9, 1895, pp. 127 et seq. 



G. Dunston. Notts. 

 The Eastern Extension of the Midland Coalfield, and Exploration 



at Southcar. Proc. Midi. Inst. Min. Engin., Vol. 14, pp. 245-252, 1896. 



Naturalist, 



