252 
REPORTS OP MEETINGS 
BOTANICAL SECTION, 
REPORT FOR 190a. 
A FEW facts of interest to local botanists have been 
lately made known to members of the Section. 
Barharea intermedia, a rare species, although probably not 
native, was gathered on waste ground near Portisfiead ; 
and the Fritillary (plants wuth white and coloured flowers) 
is recorded from a private policy near Frenchay, and from 
a meadow at Barrow Gourney, where it was pointed out 
by children of the village. 
JAS. W. WHITE, F.L.S. 
GEOLOGICAL SECTION. 
REPORT FOR 1903. 
HIS Section commenced the year with flfty members, 
I and during the twelve months three resigned and 
three new members joined the Section. 
Prof. S. H. Reynolds, M.A., F.G.S., was re-elected 
President, and Mr. B. A. Baker Hon. Sec. 
The following subjects were brought before the [ Sec- 
tion on the nine occasions on which it met : — 
Jan. 28. — “Some notes on the Jurassic Brachiopoda of 
Dundry Hill,” by J. W. D. Marshall. 
Feb. 17. — “ The Volcanic Rocks Associated with the 
Carboniferous Beds of the Bristol District,” by Professors 
C. Lloyd Morgan, F.R.S., F.G.S., and S. H. Reynolds, 
M.A., F.G.S. 
March 19. — “ The Story of a Pacific Island,” by Dr. 
H. B. Guppy. 
April 30. — “ Notes on the Inferior Oolite of the Dis- 
trict,” by J. W. Tutcher. 
