334 
HUGHES : INGLEBOROUGH. 
planes. These represent part of the Coniston Limestone. From 
this point the basement bed of the Mountain Limestone runs 
nearly east for about ^ mile. If we leave it here where it 
turns to the north and cross the field in a south-westerly 
direction, a distance of about 150 yards, to where the road to 
Crummack takes the corresponding turn to the north, we find 
a road-cutting in the shale from which during several excursions 
my part}^ have collected a large number of well-preserved fossils. 
It was here — about the middle of the cutting — that Mrs. Hughes 
found the first specimen of Dindymene recorded from this district. 
The fossils'^ found in this cutting, which we will refer to as 
the Norber Road Section, are: — 
Diplograptus (like pristis His.). 
Diplograptus truncatus Lapw. 
Dicellograptus anceps ISIch. 
Stenopora [Favosites) fibrosa. 
Tentaculites anglicus Salt. 
Ateleocystites sp. 
Agnostus trinodus Salt. 
Ampyx nudus Murch. 
A. rostratus Sars. 
Staurocephalus [Sphcerocoryphe] unicus Thom. 
Trinucleus seticoimis His. 
Dindymene Hughesice Roberts. 
Cyhele Loveni Linnrs. 
Lichas laxatus M'Coy. 
Turrilepas sp. 
Fhacops [Pterygometopus) sp. 
Phillipsinella parabola Barr, 
Leptcena transversalis Wahl. 
Leptoena sericea Sow. 
Orthisina sp. 
*Cf. Marr, Rept. Brit. Assoc., 1881, p. 650; Proc. Yorkshire Geol. 
Poly tec. Soc, N.S., Vol. VII., p. 397 ; Geol. Mag., Dec. IIL, Vol. IV., 
No. 1, 1887, p. 35; ib., Vol. IX., No. 333, p. 97. Reynolds, Geol. Mag., 
Dec. IV., Vol. I., p. 108. 
