NAUTILIDJi;. 
255 
Palaeoiit. Indica — i. Cretaceous Cephalopoda of Southern India, 
p. 210, pi. xciii. f. 3. 
1868. Xaidilus pseudoelegans, Gosselet, Etudes Pal^ontolog'iques sur le 
Departement du Xord (extrait des Mem. de la Societd Imp. des 
Sciences, de 1’ Agriculture et des Arts de Lille), pp. 5, 11. 
1871. Nautilus pseudoelegans. Phillips, Geology of Oxford and the 
Valley of the Thames, p. 441. 
1873. Nautilus pseudoelega7is, Falsan et Dumortier, Ann. Soc. Agric. 
Lyon — Note sur les Terrains du Bas-Bugey, p. 73. 
1876. Nautilus pseudoelegans, Barrois, Recherches sur le Terrain Cr4- 
tace Sup^rienr de I’Angleterre et de I’lrlaude (M^m. Soc. Geol. 
du Nord), vol. i. pp. 60, 81. 
1877. Nautilus pseudoelegans, Price, On the Beds between the Gault 
and Upper Chalk near Folkestone, Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc. 
vol. xxxiii. p. 444. 
1881. Nautilus pseudoelegans, Etheridge, in Penning and Jukes- 
Browne’s Geology of the Neighbourhood of Cambridge (Mem. 
Geol. Surv. of Great Britain), Appendix A, p. 137. 
1883. Nautilus pseudoelegans^ lieenhardt, Etude Gdologique de la 
Rdgion du Mont Ventoux, p. 56. 
Fig. 59. 
Nautilus pseudoelegans. — a, lateral view, showing three of the septa, and the 
cast of the body-chamber, partly covered by the test; h, peripheral view, 
showing the curvature of the septa in the median line. Drawn from 
d’Orbigny’s type, which forms part of the d’Orbigny Collection in the 
Museum of Natural History, Paris. About one third natural size. 
8p. Oha7\ Shell much inflated, very broad, with somewhat 
