vaughan : a note on carboniferous sequence. 83 
Summary and Thanks. 
I am painfully conscious that this note, lengthy as it has 
no right to be, sets forth few fresh facts ; but should it induce 
one Yorkshire geologist to examine with minute care the faunal 
sequence in the Angram Section, it will, in my opinion, have 
amply justified its pubUcation. 
To Dr. Hind, the President of the excursion, I am under 
perennial obUgation, and to the Rev. W. Lower Carter I am 
indebted for a welcome and kindness which has no equivalent 
in desert. My thanks are also heartily rendered to the members 
of the Yorkshire Geological Society, who devoted so keen an 
attention to a subject which must seem petty when compared 
wdth the brilliant research initiated by Professor Kendall. To 
Lim I am much indebted for many specimens which have 
materially strengthened the conclusions set forth in this paper. 
To Mr. Cosmo Johns, I offer my congratulations on the 
important and successful work which he is carrying out so 
carefully in the Ingleborough and Yoredale Area, and it is 
upon the general trend of his work that I have based some of 
:the speculations in this note. 
