188 
THE WEALD CLAY. 
the ironstone surrounding it contained the remains 
of sliells of the genera cyclas and paludina in great 
abundance ; the scales and bones of small fishes ; 
and myriads of the shelly coverings of the Cypris 
faba. 
ORGANIC REMAINS OF THE WEALD CLAY. 
Scales andbonesof fishes, 
apparently of a very 
small species 
Bones of saurians. 
Tooth of Crocodile 
Cypris faba 
Paludina fluviorum 
extensa - 
elongata - 
Cardium turgidum 
Melania attenuata 
tricarinata 
Cyclas membranacea, 
Min. Conch, tab. 527- 
Pinna - 
Venus 
Potamides ? - - 
Resting-oak Hill. 
Swanage Bay, Isle of 
Wight.* 
in the marble, and sep- 
taria. 
in the marble. 
Resting-oak Hill. 
Swanage Bay. 
Resting-oak Hill. 
Swanage Bay. 
Shipley, near Cowfold. 
* It is to the discrimination of Dr. Fitton that we are indebted for 
the first correct list of the characteristic fossils of the Weald clay. 
(Annals of Philosophy, November, 1824.) Those from the Isle of 
Wight, enumerated in the text, are on the authority of his masterly 
paper on the geological relations of the beds between the chalk and 
Purbeck limestone. 
