184 Bibliography : Geology and Palceontology , i8q6. 



W. F. HOLROYD and J. Barnes. York Mid W. 



On the Stratified Clay of Strathern, and on the Imatra or " Fairy 



Stones " found therein [Stalag-mitic and stalactitic deposits from the 

 Permian rocks near Ripon also exhibited and briefly described]. Trans. 

 Manch. Geol. Soc, Vol. 24, Part 7, 1896, pp. 110-112. 



W. F. Holroyd. See 'J. Barnes.' 



Henry H. Howorth. York S.E., Linc. N. 



The Dislocation and Disintegration of the Chalk in Eastern 



England and in Denmark [considering- that the beds probably from the 

 Oolites upwards were affected by a great movement in which they were 

 moulded into wolds and valleys ; the movement led to considerable dis- 

 location and disintegration, and subsequent denudation], Geol. Mag., 

 1896, pp. 298-309. 



Henry H. Howorth. Eastern Counties. 



Ice-Sheets and Scandinavian Boulders [discussing at some length 



the various foreign boulders which occur in East Anglian glacial beds,, 

 and their bearing on the Scandinavian Ice-Sheet theory ; convinced by 

 arguments and facts brought forward by T. Sheppard that his former 

 contention that the Scandinavian boulders were brought to England by 

 human agency is wrong]. Glac. Mag., Vol. 4, Part 3, Dec. 1896, pp. 

 95-110. 



Henry H. Howorth. York S.E., etc. 



The so-called Middle Sands and Glacial Gravels of Eastern 



England [thinks 'there is every ground for believing the process (of 

 distributing the drift beds) to have been rapid, and, if not sudden, to 

 have been continuous and not intermittent']. Geol. Mag., 1896, pp. 533- 

 54 1 - 



Henry H. Howorth. York S.E., Linc. N. 



The Chalky and Other Post-Tertiary Clays of Eastern England 



[considers (p. 463) that ' these clays present no single feature consistent 

 with their having been deposited by ice']. . Geol. Mag., 1.896, pp. 449-463. 



H. H. Howorth. York S.E., Linc. N., etc. 



The Destruction and Shattering of the Chalk of Eastern England 



[enlarging on the observations made by Prof. G. A. J. Cole and Rev. E. 

 Hill; thinks the masses of Chalk found in the drift in the Eastern 

 Counties ' are not far-transported boulders at all, but . . the remains . . 

 of the once continuous strata which occupied the areas']. Geol. Mag., 

 Dec. 4, Vol. 3, Feb. 1896, pp. 58-66 ; abstract in Glac. Mag., Vol. 4, No. 1, 

 June 1896. p. 43. 



Wilfrid H. Hudleston. Linc. N. and S., York N.E. 



A Honograph of the Inferior Oolite Gasteropoda: Part 9, pp. 445- 



514, PI. xli.-xliv. [describing and figuring many species from the Lincoln- 

 shire Limestone, the Dogger, and the Scarborough Limestone ; the 

 new species include Trochotoma lindonenis from Lincoln, Emarginula 

 lindonensis from Stoke Lodge, Cylindrites brevispira from Weldon, 

 Brachytrema pontonis from Ponton, and Nerincea neglecta from .Weldon]. 

 Palaeontograph. Soc, Vol. 50, 1896. 



W. H. Hutchinson. • North of England. 



Prehistoric Man and Beast (illustrated), 8vo., pp. xxiii. + 2o8. 



London, Smith, Elder & Co., 1896 [refers to the Cave Deposits of the 

 North of England, the Chalky Boulder Clay, etc.]. See review in Geol. 

 Mag., Feb. 1897, pp. 77-80. 



W. and A. K. Johnston [Publishers]. Northern Counties. 



Geological Map of the British Isles. W. & A. K. Johnston, 



Edinburgh and London, 1896 [Scale of 14 miles to an inch]. 



.Naturalist, 



