90 Mr. Cumberland’s Descriptions of 
• • ' ■ . , . f 
Plate 2, Fig. 8. 
Found at Burrmgton Combe, in 1817. This drawing is a little 
larger than the specimen, which is filled with white calcareous spar. 
The specimen first found, as mentioned page 88, was nearly allied 
to this, though not of the same species. 
Plate 3, Fig. 1. 
This fine encrinus was found by Mr. W. Morgan, in Clevedoii 
Bay, near Walton Castle, Somersetshire, in the autumn of 1817. 
It is, I believe, of an entirely new species, and shews both the stem 
and the branching arms in connexion, the arms being nearly closed 
together. The lower edges of the first plates are crenated in a 
manner different from any I have hitherto seen. 
It was discovered in one of the sandy beds that alternate with the 
limestone at Clevedon Bay, and when first discovered, only three 
or four joints of the stem were visible, the rest being concealed 
by the sandstone. By care and perseverance it has been cleared to 
the extent represented in the drawing, which is a very little larger 
than the specimen. 
Plate 3, Fig. 2. 
This remarkably large specimen was found by Mr. John Morgan, 
partially exposed and attached to the underside of a bed in the sand- 
stone. Considerable difficulty occurred in obtaining it, as we were 
obliged to break away more than a ton weight of stone before it 
could be safely removed from the rock. Parts of stems of this 
species are common in this rock, but it is the first instance I am 
aware of in which the upper part has been found; it is therefoie 
highly interesting, as adding to the history of this species. 
