456 



Classified Index. 



SPECIES AND VARIETIES NEW TO SC1E:<^CB— continued. 



Flou'erixg Plants. 



Discovery of Carex sylvatica var. 

 capillariformis at Heybeck, near 

 ^^'oodkirk, P. F. Lee, 349-350 ; 

 Further note and full description of 

 same Sedge, F. A. Lees, 350-351 



Fl'xgi. 



Coprinus cheesmani found in South 

 Africa, noted, 161 



Coprinus cordisporus Gibbs, further 



note, C. Crossland, 178 

 Flammula carnosa Massee at Castle 



Howard, C. Crossland, 419 



MOLLUSCA. 



Notes on ]\Iytilus cloacinus sp. nov. 

 found in Rhaetic Bone Bed, Aust 

 CUff, 369-370 



NOTES AND COMMENTS. 



January. — Lincolnshire Naturalists — ■ 

 Dr. \V. E. Hoyle — Norwich Museum 

 Association — 5luseum Conference at 

 Rochdale — Liverpool Biologists — 

 ' Cancer ' — ' Granny ' Crabs — Cum- 

 berland Intrusive Rocks — Eskdale 

 and Wasdale Granite — Geology of 

 Harrogate — Yorkshire Zoologists — 

 Our Dumb Friends — 1-5 



February.— The Palseontographical 

 Society — The South Eastern Nat- 

 uralist — Hornets — Ray Society's 

 Publications — British Marine Anne- 

 lids and their Colour — A Lanca- 

 shire and Cheshire Naturalists' 

 Union — Liverpool Geologists — 

 Labels showing Geographical Dis- 

 tribution, 33-37 



March. — Large Larch Sawfiy in the 

 Lake District — A Poisonous Fungus 

 — The Food of Birds — A Thousand 

 Cheshire records — New Botanical 

 Finds — New Spiders — Derbyshire 

 Glaciers — A Geographical Observa- 

 tion — Glaciers and Place-names — 

 The National Trust — How to tell the 

 Birds from the Flowers, 65-70 



April. — Important Work on Diatoms — 

 Evolution of Diatoms — Plankton 

 — Degraded Diatoms — Origin of 

 Diatoms — The Doncaster Museum, 

 129-130 



May. — Speeton and South Africa — 

 African Fungi — Seeds from Peat, 161 

 162 



June. — The Flamborough Peregrines — - 

 Swings — The Girls' Realm extended 

 — Eggs as Tops — The Descent of 

 Darwin — The British Association 

 Report — The Solitary Ant — A Primi- 

 tive Dreadnought — 209-212 



July. — Memories : Francis Galton — 

 Croton Oil — A Boot Story — A Seal 

 Story — An Impression — The Darwin 

 Celebrations at Cambridge — The 

 Boulders of the Cambridge Drift — 

 Boulder Clays, 241-243 



August. — Salmon Scales — A Pre- 

 historic Man Hunt— A Case of 

 Courtesy — Stone Memorials and 

 Jacob — Prof. G. S. West, 273-274 



September. — Charles Darwin as Geolo- 

 gist — A Useful Hammer — Interest- 

 ing Find at Huddersfield — A 

 National Folk-Lore Museum, 305- 

 306 



October. — The Cambridge Natural 

 History — Crustacea and Arachnids — 

 The Volcanic Origin of Coal — Marble 

 as a Volcanic Rock — Between Pat- 

 rington and Easington : August — 

 Glacial and Post-Glacial Features — 

 Coast Changes in Yorkshire, 337-339 



November. — Non-Glacial Striae — 

 Mytilus cloacinus in the Rhaetics — 

 A New^ Species — Professor P. F. 

 Kendall, 369-370 



December. — The late Dr. W. H. Dallin- 

 ger, F.R.S. — A Chmbing Snapdragon 

 — The Bielsbeck Deposit — Migration 

 of Terns, etc., 401-402 



CHESHIRE. 



Arachnida : Ischnothyreus velox Jack- 

 son (new to Science) from Chester ; 

 Erigone arctica from Cheshire, 

 Hahnia pusilla L. Koch, Theridion 

 impressum L. Koch, Maro falconerii, 

 Entelecara jacksonii Camb., from 

 Delamere Forest, noted, 67 



Birds : Comments on ]\Ir. Robert New- 



stead's paper on ' The Food of some 

 British Birds,' 65-66 



Coleoptera : Comments on Mr. W. E. 

 Sharp's 'Coleoptera of Lancashire and 

 Cheshire,' by E. G. Bayford, 108-110 



Societies : Lancashire and Cheshire 

 Entomological Society, Proceedings 



of> 335 " 



Naturalist.. 



