Bibliography : Geology and Palaeontology , i8g8. 



3 l 7 



surface since glacial limes; (2) the absence of palaeolithic implements in 

 the district and the cause thereof; (3) the relative age of the buried cliff 

 at Sewerby and the gravels of Central Holderness ; (4) the relation ot* the 

 estuarine silt at Kirmington to the shelly gravels of Croxton ; (5) the 

 • want of information regarding the beds below sea-level in Holderness ; 

 (6) the condition of the land immediately west of the wolds during the 

 Glacial Period ; (7) the information required with reference to the chalk 

 .of Yorkshire, its fossil-zones ; the thickness of its various beds, especially 

 on tin 1 western edge, etc.; (8) the beds which directly underlie the chalk 

 in different parts of the Riding ; (9) the Lower Cretaceous series, i.e., 

 Speeton Clay, etc.; (10) the Kimeridge Clay, etc.]. Trans. Hull Geol. 

 Soc, Vol. 4, 1896-8. pp. 24-36. 



G. W. Lampll gh. Isle of Man. 

 The Glacial Period and the Irish Fauna [refers to his work in the 



Isle of Man, which seems to indicate there was a connection with the 

 island and the mainland during the Ice Age, and that the animals most 

 probably crossed over on the ice]. Nature, 13th Jan. 1898, p. 245. 



C. Lapworth. Yorkshire, Lincolnshire, etc. 



Sketch of the Geology of the Birmingham District. With special 



reference to the Long Excursion [of the Geological Association] of 1898. 

 With Contributions by Professor W. W. Watts, M.A., Sec.G.S., and 

 W. Jerome Harrison, F.G.S. [YV. Jerome Harrison's remarks on the 

 Ancient Glaciers of the Midland Counties (pp. 400-408) contain references 

 to the effect of the North Sea Ice Sheet on Yorkshire, Lincolnshire, etc.]. 

 Proc. Geol. Assn., Aug-. 1898, pp. 313-416. 



J. Lomas. Cheshire. 

 On a Drift Section near Borough Road, Birkenhead. Proc. Liverp. 

 Geol. Soc, Vol. 8, 1898, pp. 294-295. 



Gavin Macdonald. York N.E., S.E. 



How we get our Weather [with illustrations of large hailstones 



that fell at York and hill torn by waterspout at LangtoftJ. Harmsworth's 

 Mag., July 1898, Vol. 1, pp. 55-60. 



H. E. Maddock. York S.E. and Linc. N. 

 Erratics on the Yorkshire and Lincolnshire Coast [pointing out 



that the boulders of the Yorkshire coast are continually being carried 

 southwards across the Humber and along the Lincolnshire coast]. 

 Naturalist, Aug. 1898, p. 245. 

 J. E. Marr. Isle of Man, York Mm YV. 



The Principles of | Stratigraphical Geology [with many allusions 

 to the North of England : e.g. the crush-conglomerates of the Isle of 

 Man (pp. 8c, 81 ) ; the Settle district specified as that best adapted for the 

 study of field-geologv (p. 95), etc.]. 8vo., 304 pp. ; Cambridge. 1898. 



John E. Marr. Lake District, York WW'.. Mm Y\\. S.W.. etc. 

 The Development of British Scenery [arguing in favour of the 



Tertiary age of the main Pennine axis and of the dome-like uplift of the 

 Lake District]. Science Progress, Julv 1898, Vol. 7 (N.S. Vol. 2), pp. 

 275-286. . 



Edward A. Martin. Cheshire. 

 The Elephant in Cheshire [giving various records of remains of 



Elephas from the ' Middle Sands ' of Cheshire, extracted from a paper by 

 G. H. Morton in Trans. Liverpool Biol. Soc, Vol. 12). Science Ciossip. 

 July 1898, p. 58. 



Edward A. Martin (not signed]. York Mid W. and S.W. 



Yorkshire Carboniferous Flora [review of the Sixth Report of the 



Fossil Flora Committee of the Yorkshire Naturalist's' Union ; names ot' 

 nine new records to the county are given |. Science Gossip, May 1S0S. 

 P- 357- 

 1901 October 1. 



