P 155-P 166. 
60 
FOSSIL FORAMIXIFERA. 
< 
I 
Assilina obesa (?), Carter. 
Alveolina subpyrenaica, Leym. 
Nummulites biaritzensis, cl’ Arch. 
Operculina ammonea, Leym., and 0. granulosa, Leym. 
Dark grey Nummulitic limestone, yellowish externally, made up largely 
of the Assilina and Orbitoides, with Gasteropoda, Pecten , Polyzoa, See. 
Near Kirrind ; some from “Bed No. 6.” 
P 175. Orbitoides dispansa and 0. papyracea? No special loc. (Mun- 
gerrah or Kirrind). 
Assilina exponens (Sow.) \ 
Nm perforata (Montf.), small. } Mungerrah ’ near DizffiL 
f Assilina exponens. ~j Jn a waterwom pebble 
P. 169- Num/ biaritzensis. of Asst’ZiVm-limestone 
I Opercnlina. J from Mungerrah. 
34042. Assilina exponens. In a mass of Assilina- 
limestone. Mungerrah. 
35284. A. Leymeriei, d f A., and a small Xummulite, 
in a broken boulder of brown Xummulitic 
limestone. Mungerrah. 
P 183. Nnm. biaritzensis (of large growth). “ Zagros Limestone, 
Kirrind.” 
P 181. N. biaritzensis. Many loose. Kirrind. 
See Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc. xi. p. 275. 
Some of the blocks 
^ from the Gorge. 
See Qu. Journ. Geol. 
Soc. toI. xi. p. 273. 
P 171. I 
P 172. I 
P 173. J 
P 153. N. perforata (obtusa, Sow.). Kirrind. 
P 179. N. perforata, passing into N. Bellardii. Nuah Kuh (Nuah Range), 
near Kirrind, on the Turco-Persian frontier (Q. J. G. S. ix. 
p. 275). 
N. perforata (including obtusa). “ Xuwa Kuh, Kirrind, Persia.” 
Orbitoides Mantelli, with Alveolina subpyrenaica and a small 
Xummulite ; in grey compact limestone, or Orbitoidal Marble. 
Bed Xo. 7, Mungerrah. 
Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc. xi. p. 273. 
P 177. 1 Loftusia persica, H. B. Brady. Kellapstun Pass, Du Pulun, 
P 178. J Bakhtiyari Mountains, Persia. 
See Phil. Trans, for 1869, pp. 739-754, pis. 71-80. 
Several specimens and 2 microscopic slides. 
P 176. N. perforata. Kharput, in Turkish Armenia. 
P 174. 1 
P 182. J 
P 154. j 
P 168. 1 
To give these interesting and rare specimens from Persia and Turkey their 
full value as geological evidences, collected by an enthusiastic and enlightened 
traveller (unfortunately lost to science and his friends in the prime of life), we 
here add some particulars, from Mr. Loftus's memoir, and from notes on the 
specimens, as to the distribution of Foraminifera in the Nummulitic rocks of the 
Zagros, op. cit. p. 270 &c. 
