MEMOIR OF CALEB B. ROSE. 
401 
at that period, the difficulties of travel and of communication, the 
few workers, the trouble in getting hooks or in visiting museums ; 
and then to realise how much they did. The field, it is true, was 
comparatively clear, and there was no vast amount of literature to 
be studied ; but while it is one thing to go into the field now 
with the benefit of the training and experience of others, it was 
quite another thing to start in a country about which little was 
known, and at a time when geology was quite in its infancy. 
The annals of Norfolk naturalists have indeed been enriched by 
the labours of Caleb 15. Rose. 
The accompanying portrait is from a negative taken by the late 
Mr. Hugh Rump, of Wells, during a visit which Mr. Rose paid 
him about the year 1SG8, and which was kindly lent by Lady Made, 
of Norwich. 
List of Geological Papers by C. 15. Pose. 
1828. 
1. On the Organic Remains of the Diluvium in Norfolk (Quart. 
Journ. Sci. Lit. and Art, part 2, July to Dec. pp. 308 — 314). 
1829. 
2. On the Anatomy of the Ventriculites of Mantell (Mag. Nat. 
Hist. vol. ii. pp. 332 — 341). 
1835—36. 
3. A Sketch of the Geology of West Norfolk (Phil. Mag. 
ser. 3. vol. vii. pp. 171 — 182, 274 — 279, 370 — 376 ; and vol. viii. 
pp. 28—42). 
1840. 
4. On the Brickearth Deposit of the Valley of the Nar (Proc. 
Sci. Soc. Lond. vol. ii. pp. 61 — 63). 
1842. 
5. Notice of Bones of the Ox. found in Clay at Gay ton Thorpe, 
Norfolk (‘ Moxon’s Geologist,’ voL i. pp. 36, 37). 
