320 Bibliography : Geology and Palaeontology, 1898. 

 S. H. Reynolds. See ' C. I. Gardiner.' 



W. D. R[oebuck]. York N.W. 



[Review of] Romantic Richmondshire, by Harry Speight. Naturalist, 

 Jan. 1898, pp. 29-32. 



Wm. Denison Roebuck. York S.E. 



Bibliography : Papers and records published with respect to the 



Natural History and Physical Features of the North of England. Land 

 and Freshwater Mollusca, 1892 and 1893 [includes record of Limncea 

 stagnalis in old lacustrine deposit near Withernsea, etc.]. Naturalist, 

 June 1898, pp. 189-192, and July, 193-199. 



Wm. Denison Roebuck. Lancashire, Lake District, etc. 



Bibliography : Papers and records published with respect to the 



Natural History and Physical Features of the North of England. 

 Mammalia, 1892 [includes references to notes recording remains of deer, 

 etc., in peat deposits]. Naturalist, Feb. 1898, pp. 61-64; and March, pp. 

 65-7 1 - 



Harold Sales. York S.E. 



Section in the Chalk at Willerby [brief abstract of notes read to 



the Hull Geol. Soc. ]. Trans. Hull Geol. Soc, Vol. 4, 1896-8, pp. 21-22. 



R. F. Scharff. Isle of Man. 



The Glacial Period and the Irish Fauna [criticism of Q. W. 



Lamplugh's letter in Nature, p. 245]. Nature, Toth Feb. 1898, pp. 341-342. 



A. C. Seward. North of England. 



Fossil Plants. For Students of Botany and Geology. Vol. 1, 8vo., 



pp. xviii. — 452, with in illustrations. Cambridge, 1898 [not Seen]. 

 Reviewed in Geol. Mag., May 1898, pp. 228-232, and by Henry C. Cowles 

 in Journal of Geologv (Chicago), Vol. 6, No. 4, Mav-June 1898, pp. 436- 

 438. 



Thomas Sheppard. York S.E. 



The Hessle Chalk Quarries [a general description of the fossils, 



etc.. to be obtained from the chalk quarries near Hull]. 1898 (reprint of 

 8 pp.). 



Thomas Sheppard. York S.E. 



Notes on a large Pair of Antlers of the Red Deer (Cervus elaphus) 



from the Peat at Hornsea [describing a skull and antlers and other remains 

 found by Messrs. Morfitt, of Atwick ; measurements given]. Trans. 

 Hull Scientific and F.N. Club, Vol. 1, No. 1, 1898, pp. 22-23. anc ^ plate I. 

 (frontispiece). 



Thomas Sheppard. York S.E. 



Origin of the Number Mud [considers that the whole of the mud 



in the Humber estuary and on its banks has not been carried down the 

 rivers flowing into the estuary, but that part has been derived from the 

 waste of the Holderness cliffs]. Science Gossip, June 1898, pp. 7-9: see 

 also editorial headed "Humber Mud" in Natural Science, Aug. 1898, 

 • pp. 82-83. 



Thomas Sheppard. York S.E. 



Traces of an Ancient Lake-Dwelling at Sand-le-Mere, near 



Withernsea, East Yorkshire [refers to previous accounts of Holderness 

 Pile Dwellings, and describes some artificially pointed piles, etc., found 

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Thomas Sheppard. York S.E. 



Remains of the Red Deer, from the Peat Bed at Withernsea 



[describing a skull and vertebra? found by T. Pygas]. Naturalist, Oct. 

 1898, p. 304. 



Naturalist. 



