66 Moll. 
VII. MOLLUSCA. 
fossils from Provence ; Steinmann, Centrbl. Mineral. 1901, pp. 449-463._ 
Occurrence of Beneckeia buchi in the Muschelkalk near Sandebeck, Prussia • 
Stille (567).—Upper Triassic fossils from Niederschonthal, Switzerland ; 
Strubin (571).—Few Muschelkalk fossils from Bihar, Hungary ; Szoxtagh, 
Jahresber. Ungarn geol. Anstalt 1898, p. 251.—Few Keuprian fossils 
from S. Germany ; Thurach, Geognost. Jahresh. xiii, pp. 7-53.—Fossils 
from ‘Valle del Dezzo’; Tommasi (599). — Fossils from Sardinia; 
Tornquist (601).—Few Pelecypods from the Lettenkohle of Neuewelt^ 
Switzerland ; Leuthardt, Eclog. geol. Helvet. vii, p. 128.—Fossils from a 
well-boring at Gross-Zollnig, Silesia; Zimmermann, v Zeitschr. Deutsch. 
geol. Ges. liii, pp. 22-28.—Few fossils from 8ervia ; Zgjovi6 , Ann. geol. 
Balkan, v, p. 73. 
Asia :—Few Cephalopoda from the Himalayan Muschelkalk ; Krafft, 
Verh. geol. Reichsanst. 1901, pp. 52 & 53.—Occurrence of Turbonilla 
gracilior in the Salt Range ; Noetling, Centrbl. Mineral. 1901, p. 111. 
America :—Fossils of the Palaeozoic border-line in Western America; 
Smith, J. Geol. ix, pp. 512-521. 
4. Primary. 
Palaeozoic:— 
Europe Fossils from the Alps ; D’Ossat (163).—Few Silurian or 
Devonian fossils from Lievin, N. France ; Gosselet, Ann. Soc. geol. Nord 
xxix, pp. 22-24.—Fossils from Galicia; Lomnicki (324).—Palaeogene 
fossils from the district of Balta; Mikhailovsky, Bull. Com. geol. 
St. Petersb. xx, pp. 321, 343.—Fauna of the district of Tomsk, Russia; 
Polenoff (454).—Derived fossils in the Miocene of Sylt I.; Stolley 
(568). 
America :— Orthoceras in the Oreonta Beds of the Chenango Valley, 
N. Y.; Clarke (100).—Fossils from South Dakota and Wyoming; Darton, 
Rep. U. S. Geol. Surv. xxi, Pt. iv, pp. 489-599.—Lists of Cambro-Silurian 
fossils from Lake Winnipeg, Canada; Dowling (164).—Lists of fossils 
from the province of Quebec, Canada; Ells, Rep. Geol. Surv. Canada xi, 
pp. 14J-19J.— Palaeozoic fossils from New Jersey ; Kummel & Weller 
(310).—Fauna of the Middle Palaeozoic (Marshall & Coldwater) of Huron 
County, Michigan, with n. spp. of Aviculopecten and Nuculites ; Lane & 
Cooper (312).— Cyrtolites bennetti , n. sp. from the Lower Burlington Lime¬ 
stone of Louisiana, Mo.; Rowley (488).—Fossils from the ‘Rico’ forma¬ 
tions, Colorado ; Spencer, Rep. U. S. Geol. Surv. xxi, Pt. ii, p. 66.— 
Palaeozoic faunas of Maine ; Williams (658). 
AustraliaFossils from White Cliffs, N. S. Wales ; Gurich (229). 
Permian :—Ammonites of the ‘ Bellerophon-Kalk’; Diener (160). 
Europe:—Occurrence of Myalina hausmanni near Mellrichstadt, Bavaria; 
Ammon, Geognost. Jahresh. xiii, p. 169.—Few fossils from the district of 
Orenburg, Russia; Netchaiew, Bull. Com. geol. St. Petersb. xx, pp. 173— 
i97. 
Asia:—Notes on the Cephalopoda of the Otocercts Series of the Hima¬ 
layas; Diener, Centrbl. Mineral. 1901, pp. 513-518, 655-657.—Few fossils 
from the Salt Range; Koken, t. c. p. 227.—Notes on the Cephalopoda of 
the Otoceras Series of the Himalayas; Krafft, t. c. pp. 275-279, 3 figg. 
America:—New species of Pelecypoda from Nebraska; Beede (34).— 
Occurrence of Aviculopecten occidental is (Schum.) in the Kansas-Oklahama 
Red-Beds; Beede, Amer. Geol. xxviii, p. 46.—Fossils of the Mesozoic 
border-line in Western America; Smith, J. Geol. ix, pp. 512-521. 
Carboniferous 
British Isles: Occurrence of Cyrtoceras cornubovis de Kon. at Marsden; 
Barnes & Holroyd (30).—Monograph continued of the Cephalopoda of 
