324 Bibliography: Geology and 'Palaeontology , 1898. 



F. F. Walton. York S.E. 



Echinoderms of the Yorkshire Chalk [brief abstract of notes read 



to the Hull Geological Society]. Trans. Hull Geol. Soc, Vol. 4, 1896-8, 

 pp. 22-23. 



W. W. Watts. Northern Counties and Isle of Man. 



Geology I for Beginners I by I W. W. Watts, M. A., F.Q.S. I . . . | 



. . . I ... I ... I ... I London. Macmillan & Co. Ltd. f 

 . . . I 1898 I . . . [contains numerous illustrations from photographs 

 of geological features in the northern counties and the Isle of Man ; and 

 explanations in the text]. Pages xvii. +352. 



Arthur Smith Woodward. York N.E. 



On the Fossil Fishes of the Upper Lias of Whitby. Part III. 



[describes and figures various examples of Lepidotus semiserratus Agassiz, 

 all of which are in the British Museum]. Proc. Yorks. Geol. and Polyt. 

 Soc, 1898, pp. 325-337. 



Arthur Smith Woodward. ? Yorkshire. 



Outlines of Vertebrate Palaeontology for Students of Zoology. 



8vo., pp. xxiv., 470, with 228 illustrations in the text. Cambridge : at the 

 University Press, 1898 [not seen]. Reviewed in Geol. Mag., Aug. 1898, 

 PP- 367-373- 



A. Smith Woodward. Yorkshire, etc. 



The History of the Mammalia in Europe and North America [refers 



to the Pleistocene deposits of Yorkshire and their contents]. Natural 

 Science, May 1898, pp. 328-336. 



Henry Woodward. Derbyshire. 

 Note on the Antlers of a Red-Deer (Cervus elaphus, Linn.) from 



Alport, Youlgreave, near Bakewell, Derbyshire — now in the British 

 Museum (Natural History), Cromwell Road, London [a specimen of 

 unusually large size which has recently been rehabilitated and exhibited 

 in the Geological Gallery ; they were originally described in Phil. Trans. 

 Royal Soc. for 1875 (p. 353)]. Geol. Mag., Feb. 1898, pp. 49-51, with 

 plate. 



Henry Woodward. See ' T. Rupert Jones.' 



H. B. Woodward [edited by]. Linc. S., York S.W., Durham. 



Memoranda chiefly on the Drift Deposits in various parts of 



England and Wales ; being extracts from the Notebooks and other 

 MSS. of the late Sir Joseph Prestwich, M.A., D.C.L., F.R.S., etc. [refers 

 (p. 405) to the fresh-water deposit at Casewick in Lincolnshire ; the 

 Hippopotamus remains from Wortley, near Leeds ^(pp. 416-417); the 

 glacial beds near Newcastle (p. 417), etc.]. Geol. Mag., Sep. 1898, pp. 

 404-417. 



H. B. Woodward. Linc. N. 



Boulders of Spilsby Sandstone [a letter giving additional particulars 



of transported masses of this rock in Eastern England]. Geol. Mag., 

 July 1898, pp. 334-335- 



D. W t oolacott. Durham. 

 An Explanation of the Claxheugh Section (Co. Durham) [abstract; 



describing a peculiar section in the Permian Yellow Sands]. Quart. 

 Journ. Geol. Soc, Vol. 54, Feb. 189S, p. 14 ; and Geol. Mag., 1897, p. 377. 



D. Woolacott. b Durham. 

 On a Portion of a Raised-Beach on the Fulwell Hills, near 



Sunderland [140 feet above sea-level, consisting of coarse gravel passing 

 up into sand]. Nat. Hist. Trans. Northumb., Durham, and Newc, 

 Vol. 13, pp. 165-170, pi. 6. 



Naturalist, 



