56 Moll 
VII. MOLLUSCA. 
18. Transatlantic Province. 
Eastern Canada :—Fauna ; Whiteaves (647). 
E. United States :—Review of Lucinacea with new species of Phacoides • 
Dall (146). 
New England :—List of nineteen species ; Howe (258). 
Rhode Island :—On some Pelecyiioda ; Carpenter (89). 
Bermuda :— Phacoides bermudensis , n. sp.; Dall (146): Tomatina 
bermudensis , n. sp.; Vanatta (611). 
GEOLOGICAL. 
N.B.—The remarks given at the beginning of the preceding section, p. 45, also 
apply here. 
On fossils characteristic of certain formations; Bourgeat (68): Many 
changes in nomenclature proposed and a few Gastropods described; 
Cossmann (123): Critical notes on nomenclature, with new names; Coss- 
mann (125): Note on Ctenostreon pectiniformis ; Etheridge (180): Notes 
on Limidce ; Philippi (427): On the relationships of Aucella and Pseudo- 
monotis; Pompeckj (458): Should it be Stefanella or Distefanella , etc.?; 
Vinassa de Regny, Rev. paleozool. v, p. 219: The group of Oxytoma 
incequivalvis Sby., with n. varr.; Waagen (627). 
British Isles:—List of extinct non-marine Mollusca; Newton (390).— 
Few derived fossils in the Boulder Clay of Dallinghoo, Suffolk; Bullen, 
Quart. J. Geol. Soc. lvii, p. 285. 
France :—Many notes on fauna of French Alps; Kilian & Lory (291). 
—Few fossils from vicinity of Argenteuil; Janet, C.R. Congr. Geol. viii, 
pp. 974 & 975.—Studies on fauna of Diois, etc., with n. spp. of Cephalopods, 
etc.; Paquier (404 & 405). 
Italy:—Fossils from the vicinity of Lake Iseo; Baltzer (29). 
Servia:—Lists of fossils; PAVLOVib (412). 
Asia:—Japanese Trigonidoe ; Anon. (18).—Apparently new genera, 
Cicatidtes , Japonites , and Parahoplites , of Ammonea from Japan; Anon. 
(16).—Fossils from Persia; Douville, C.R. Congr. Geol. viii, pp. 439—146. 
—Fossils from the Salt Range, Punjab; Noetling (391).—India: Few 
fossils from the Baluchistan Desert; Vredenburg, Mem. geol. Surv. 
India xxxi, p. 261.—Apparently n. sp. of Ammonite from Japan; Yabe 
(673). 
North America:— JYassa beaumontensis , n. sp., from Texas; Aldrich 
(3).—Palaeontology of Niagara Falls district; Grabau (207).—Palaeont¬ 
ology of Eighteen Mile Creek and Lake Shore sections of Erie Co., N. Y.; 
Grabau (206).—U.S.A.: Notes on fossils; Orcutt, W. Amer. Seient. 
xii, pp. 11-13.—Fossils from the Rio Grande Coal-Fields; Vaughan 
(614). 
1. Post-Tertiary. 
Fauna of the l Leda pernvda Clay’ of Selbjergaard, W. Hanherred; 
Madsen, Medd. Dansk Geol. For. No. 6, pp. 2-7, and 17 & 18.— 
Quaternary fossils from Zarravecchia-Stretto; Schubert, Yerli. geol. 
Reichsanst. 1901, p. 236. 
British Isles:—Post-glacial shells from Rothesay; Ballantyne (28).— 
Occurrence of Helix hortensis (?) in a cave deposit on the River Wye; 
Bate, Geol. Mag. 1901, p. 100.—Fossils from the Alexandra Dock Ex¬ 
tension, Hull; Crofts, P. Yorksh. geol. Soc. xiv, p. 250.—Shells from 
rubble-drift at Portland Bill; Bullen (79).—Pleistocene fossils from the 
Thames Valley; Hinton & Kennard (254).—Fossils from the shell- 
