40 
JOURNAL OF THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF DUBLIN. 
lies on the north side of Donegal Bay. The cliffs along the sea- 
coast here are very finely exposed—they are all black shale. 
This is a good locality for fossils. Pleurotomaria canaliculate* 
is found here, and is a very scarce fossil elsewhere. 
Downs, in Armagh, is a quarter of a mile S.W. of the town of Ar¬ 
magh. The limestone of this locality is of reddish-gray colour, 
and contains palates, teeth, and spines of fishes. 
Dromard, in Londonderry, is two miles east of Draperstown, and 
about five miles S.W. of Maghera. A stream which flows north¬ 
ward from Slievegallion along the east boundary of this townland 
gives a good section of the rocks. The usual Modiola and Nu- 
cula of the lower black shale are found here, and Murchisonia 
elongata is plentiful. 
Drumbrick, in Fermanagh, is four miles N.E. of Kesh, and one and 
a half north of Ederny. 
Drumcurren, in Fermanagh, is two miles N.E. of Kesh. 
Drumdoe, in Roscommon, is four miles north of Boyle, on the S.E. 
shore of Lough Arrow. The lower part of the limestone here 
is fossiliferous, and has a good variety. 
Drumgowna, in Fermanagh, is three miles N.W. of Kesh, in the 
calcareous slaty division. 
Drumkeeran, in Fermanagh, is two miles N.E. of Kesh. These loca¬ 
lities about Kesh are all in the shales, limestone, and sandstones, 
which alternate in this part of the country, and lie on the red 
base of the Old Red Sandstone. 
Drumlattery, in the county of Dublin, is on the sea-shore, two 
miles south of Skerries. The rock here is limestone, and fossi¬ 
liferous. 
Drummanmore, in Armagh, is one mile N.E. of the town of Armagh. 
The limestone here contains a good variety of fossils. 
Drumnagroagh, in Donegal, is one mile S.E. of Ballyshannon. The 
limestone here is at the surface, and fossiliferous. 
Drumod, in the county of Leitrim, is a village about twelve miles 
north of Longford, on the mail-coach road. A few perches north 
of the town, on the Mohill road-side, calcareous slate is found, 
containing abundance of fossils; and one mile N.W. of Drumod, 
on the Shannon shore, is yellow sandstone, and black shale, the 
latter containing Modiola, and other fossils usually found in that 
position. 
