64 
with an appendage like a tail at the end opposite the septal 
orifice. He specially called attention to his mode of mounting 
the specimens in many small cells upon a single glass slip, 
by which much room is saved, and other advantages are 
gained ; in those shown, ten small cells were punched out of 
an oblong piece of card, in two rows of five each, and the 
whole covered with a single glass He remarked on the 
extraordinary assemblage of species found in this Connemara 
sand, which, Mr. Dancer suggested, might be due to the 
influence of the Gulf Stream. 
PHOT OORAPHI CAL SECTION. 
Ordinary Meeting, Nov. 3, 1864. 
Professor W. C. Williamson, F.R.S., &c. &c., Vice- 
President of the Section, in the Chair. 
The following gentlemen were elected associates, viz.— 
Messrs. William Pegg, T. D. Thorpe, George Wardley, E. G. 
Hughes, William Lockett, Thos. Heywood, G. W. Mosley, 
F. C. Tobler, A. Lees, and W. G. Coote. 
In the absence of the President, the Lord Bishop of Man- 
chester, the Chairman delivered an inaugural address, in 
the course of which he referred to the three aspects in which 
photography naturally presents itself to our notice — as an 
amusement, as a science, and as an art. 
