TERTIARY : EOCENE. 47 
P 1011. N. gizensis and N. curvispira. Weathered (polished) piece of 
Rummulitic limestone. Egypt ? 
P 890. N. gizensis and N. cnrvispira (variably granulate). In very hard 
Nummulitic limestone. Egypt ? 
P 889. N. gizensis and N. curvispira. In a much-weathered piece of hard 
Kummulitie limestone, with fragments of Pecten &c. Egypt? 
„ N. gizensis and N. cnrvispira (slightly or not at all granulated). 
In a piece of ISummulitic limestone, partly weathered, with 
fragments of Pecten ? Egypt ? 
38559. N. gizensis and N. Ramondi, Defr. (some with large primordial 
chamber). In brownish ISummulitic limestone. Alexandria. 
(Some specimens of N. JRamondi= curvispira without granula- 
tion.) Presented by Miss E. Warne. 
13578. N. gizensis and N. curvispira. In cream-coloured ISummulitic 
limestone. “ Red Mountain, near Cairo.” 
Presented by Sir J. G. Wilkinson. 
13587. A polished specimen of the same kind of rock as 13578; from the 
same locality. 
P 888. Nummulites gizensis, N. curvispira, and N. Beaumonti. (AT. 
curvispira here has granules on the septal lines in some cases, 
between them in others, and with both conditions present in a 
few ; hut the granules are chiefly on the septal lines.) One 
N. Beaumonti is visible, near the fish-bone, in this weathered 
piece of somewhat ferruginous ISummulitic limestone, probably 
from Egypt. 
55102. N. gizensis, N. curvispira, and N. Beaumonti. The exposed 
interiors are interesting. Fragment of ISummulitic limestone, 
with acicular saline efflorescence. 
55102. N. gizensis, N. curvispira (with variable granulation), and N. 
Beaumonti. The last has the appearance of a young N. gizensis , 
with small primordial chamber and the normally small chambers 
in the early whorls. ISummulitic limestone. Cairo. 
38559. N. gizensis, N. curvispira, and N. Beaumonti (including some 
horizontal sections with a small primordial chamber and small 
early chambers). Easily-broken Nummulitic limestone. Alex- 
andria. Presented by Miss E. Warne. 
P 890. N. gizensis and thinner var. (?), N. curvispira, and some few sec- 
tions of small gizensis, or small Beaumonti in flat section, or 
Ramondi (?) in transverse section. Piece of ISummulitic lime- 
stone broken off a weathered point. Probably Egypt. 
From the Museum of Practical Geology. 
38557. N. Beaumonti. In white and rather friable Rummulitic lime- 
stone. Alexandria. Presented by Miss E. Warne. 
55479. N. Beaumonti ? Few ; in a soft, granular, fossiliferous, yellowish 
limestone. “ Moccatam quarries.” 
P 883. N. Beaumonti. Soft whitish ISummulitic limestone. Red Hills, 
Cairo. Presented by John Milne, F.G.S. 
