GEOLOGY. 
Moll. 57 
bearing clay in Kintyre ; Jessen (270).—Fauna of West Wittering, Sussex; 
Johnson (273).—Molluscs from river-drift in Essex; Johnson & White 
( 274).—Few fossils, including Neritina Jiuviatilis, from the High Terrace 
gravel of Swanscombe; Kennard & Salter, P. Geol. Ass. xvii, p. 138.— 
Occurrence of Tellina balthica near Hull; T. S. [Sheppard] & J. W. S. 
[Stather], Tr. Hull. Geol. Soc. v, p. 36.—Non-marine fauna of the South 
of England; Kennard & Woodward (286).—Occurrence of Planorbis 
stroemii West, in Holocene of the Thames Valley; Kennard & Wood¬ 
ward (284).—Holocene fauna of peat and forest-bed at Westbury-on- 
Severn; Kennard & Woodward (285). 
Belgium: — Fossils from Wuestwezel; Ertborn, Ann. Soc. malac. 
Belgique xxxvi, Bull. p. xxi. 
Holland:—Few Alluvial fossils; Six, Ann. Soc. geol. Nord xxix, p. 167. 
Denmark:—Lists of fossils; Davis (154).—Lists of marine Diluvial 
fossils; Harder (232).—Marine Mollusca; Madsen, Medd. Dansk Geol. 
For. No. 5, pp. 1-22.—Bogense district, fauna; Madsen (331).—Alleroed, 
fauna; Hartz & Milthers (233).—Few marine shells; Milthers, Medd. 
Dansk Geol. For. No. 6, p. 39.—Gudbjerg, fresh-water Mollusca, with 
JYematurella stenostoma, n. sp.; Nordmann in Madsen & Nordmann 
( 332).—Lists of Quaternary fossils; R0 rdam & Milthers (481). 
Norway:—Late- and Post-glacial molluscan faunas of the Christiania 
region, with n. spp. of Neptunea and Sipho ; Br0gger (73). 
Germany:—Mecklenburg, few Post-glacial fossils; Geinitz, Centrbl. 
Mineral. 1901, pp. 582-584.—Diluvial Mollusca from Swabia; Koken 
( 304). — Few Pleistocene Mollusca from Schleswig-Holstein; Madsen, 
Medd. Dansk Geol. For. No. 6, p. 5 Q.—Helix banatica near Bilzingsleben; 
Wust (670).—Molluscs from near Weissenfels; Wust (669).—Fossils from 
Thuringia; Wust (668). 
France:—Fauna of Lower Provence; Fournier & Repelin (187).— 
Fossils from Dunkerque; Gosselet, Ann. Soc. geol. Nord xxix, pp. 128- 
134. 
Portugal:—Shells from kitchen middens at Carvalhal d’Aljubarrota; 
Delgado, Commun. geol. Portugal iv, p. 167. 
Italy:—Marine and non-marine Mollusca deposited by inundations of 
the Tiber; Clerici, Boll. Soc. geol. Ital. xx, pp. 131-136. — Marine 
Mollusca from Otranto, with Gadinia nitida , n. sp.; Dainelli (135).— 
Non-marine Mollusca in travertine from the province of Siena; Del- 
Zanna, Boll. Soc. geol. Ital. xx, p. 32.—Revision of Post-pliocene fauna of 
Nizzetti (Catania); Scalia (497). 
Austro-Hungary :—Few Diluvial fossils from Nagy-Maros; Bockh (56). 
—Few Loess fossils from Hungary; Horusitzky, Mt. Ungar. geol. Anstalt 
xii, p. 242.—Few Diluvial fossils from Buda-Pesth; Horusitzky, t. c. 
p. 347.—Non-marine Mollusca from Komorn; Horusitzky, op. cit. xiii, 
pp. 118 & 119 [1900].—Lists of fossils from Galicia; Lomnicki (324).— 
Occurrence of Loess shells near Medlowitz, Moravia; Rzehak (489).— 
Few Diluvial Mollusca from Hungary; Telegd (590). 
Arctic:—Fauna of the White Sea district; Knipowitsch (300).—Post¬ 
pliocene Mollusca from Spitzbergen; Knipowitsch (298).—Introduction 
of Yoldia arctica into White Sea; Ramsay (466). 
Siberia:—Few non-marine Mollusca from Kurgan; Ricci, Boll. Soc. 
geol. Ital. xx, p. 369. 
Africa: Occurrence of Murex tenuispinatus in Egypt; Barron & Hume, 
C.R. Congr. Geol. viii, p. 871.—Mollusca from raised beach on Perim 
Island; Bullen (77).—Few fossils from Egypt; Hume, C.R. Congr. Geol. 
viii, pp. 919-927.—Pleistocene non-marine fauna of Algeria, with appa¬ 
rently new forms; Pallary (403).—Quaternary fossils from German East 
Africa, with Pecten werthii and Ostrea hyotiformis. n. spp.; Philippi in 
Werth (639). 
1901. [Vol. xxxviii.] 
c 17 
