498 DR. HENRY WOODWARD ON EAST ANGLIAN GEOLOGY. 
by Mr. Frere at Hoxne on the Waveney (in 1800), where Palaeo- 
lithic flint implements lay in great numbers at a depth of twelve 
feet in stratified soil which was dug into for making bricks. These 
implements were associated with Ehinoceros, Deer, Horse and 
Elephant, and with shells of Cyclas, Pisidium, Unio, Bithynia, 
Helix, Limncea, Planorbis, Succinea, and Valvata. 
Since then numerous other discoveries have been made, more 
especially in the last forty years, in different parts of England, 
revealing similar types of Prehistoric remains. At Mildenhall, 
at Thetford, Livermere, in the valley of the Little Ouse, &c., &c., 
such evidence has been obtained, whilst attempts have been made 
by Mr. S. B. J. Skertchley and the late Dr. J. E. Taylor to 
prove the existence of Man even in the Crag Period ! 
In conclusion, I have only to add that those of my hearers who 
have been sufficiently interested by this brief sketch of East Anglian 
Geology to desire to read a fuller account of the physical conditions 
existing in this area in later Tertiary times may consult with advan- 
tage the admirable series of papers published by the late Mr. Searles 
Y. Wood, Jun., and Mr. F. W Harmer, and subsequently by 
Mr. Harmer alone, on the Geology and Climate of Eastern England 
and its later Tertiary History. * 
My thanks are also due to Mr. Harmer, who, in my unavoidable 
absence, kindly undertook the reading of this paper for me, and 
superintended the exhibition of the series of lantern slides with 
which it was illustrated. 
* S. V. Wood. Jun., and F. W. Harmer 
“An Outline of the Geology of the Upper Tertiaries of East Anglia,” 
with Map and Sections. Pal. Soc., Supp. Crag Mollusca, pp. 2-31, 1872. 
“ Later Tertiary Geology of East Anglia.” Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc., 
vol. xxxiii. pp. 74-119, 1877. 
F. W. Harmer 
“ A third Boulder Clay in Norfolk.” Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc., vol. xxiii. 
pp. 87-90, 1866. 
“The Kessingland Cliff Section.” Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc., vol. xxxiii. 
pp. 134-140, 1877. 
“The Pliocene Deposits of Holland, and their Relation to the English 
and Belgian Crags.” Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc., vol. lii. pp. 748-781, 1896. 
“ The Lenham Beds and the Coralline Crag.” Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc., 
vol. liv. pp. 308-354, 1898. 
“The Crag of Essex, Waltonian.” Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc., vol. lvi. 
pp. 705-743, 1900. 
“ The Influence of the Winds upon Climate during the Pleistocene Epoch.” 
Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc. vol. lvii. p.405-476, 1901. 
“ A Sketch of the Later Tertiary History of East Anglia.” Proc. Geol. 
Assoc., vol. xvii. pp. 416-479, 1902. 
