HASTINGS CLIFFS. 
201 
Ttihs of saurian animals. 
Bones of birds. 
Bones of turtles. 
lladii offish allied to silurus. 
Jaw of an unknown fish. 
'Tilgate coarse grit^ and shalcj ^c.* 
Bricuspid teeth of fishes. 
Molar teeth of fishes. 
Lozenge-shaped scales. 
Rolled fragments of hones. 
Paludina carinifera. Min. Conch. 
Tab. 509. 
Paludina lenta\ ; and P. elongata. 
Mmcula ? verij thin shells^ apparently 
of this genus. 
Cyclas media y Min. Conch. Tab. 527- 
Cj/pris faba.f 
Endogenites erosa. 
T) 'aces of carbonized vegetables. 
TEorth sandstone, S^c. 
Three or more species of ferns. 
Stems of arundinaceous plants. 
Ashburnham beds. 
Lignite and carbonized vegetables. 
At Rye, and Winchelsea, beds of the Tilgate 
stone occur in sand of the same character as that 
* From the coarse grit and shale, exposed by the removal of the face 
of the cliffs, behind the new town of Saint Leonard’s, I have obtained, 
through the liberality, of the Marquess of Northampton, numerous speci- 
mens of Paludinm, Cyclades, teeth, and minute bones of several species 
of fish, &c. 
t Found in calcareous grit, at Ilollington, near Hastings, by Dr. 
Fitton. 
