SUPPLEMENT 
MOLLUSCA FROM THE CRAG; 
DESCRIPTIONS OF ADDITIONAL SPECIKS, 
AND 
REMARKS ON SPECIES PREVIOUSLY DESCRIBED. 
CEPHALOPODA. 
In the first part of the ‘Crag Mollusca’ it was observed that no remains of an animal 
belonging to this class had been detected in any section of the Upper Tertiaries, or what 
was there called the periods of the Crag deposits. I am equally unable now to introduce 
the name of any Cephalopod which may be presumed to have lived during the time of the 
Crag or any of the succeeding periods, although I have searched zealously in the hope of 
obtaining the terminal portion of the bone of the “‘Cuttle Fish.” This bone is in some 
places left in great numbers on our own shores, and is an organic remain we might 
expect to find, but as yet I have not seen a vestige of such a fossil in the Upper Tertiaries 
of the East of England. The mucro of Belosepia, presumed to be similar to that of Sepia, 
is by no means rare in the sandy beds of Bracklesham or of Grignon. 
IL 
ac a ae 
