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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 May 2009
In the opening article of the Geological Magazine (Vol. I, p. 5, 1864) Mr. J. W. Salter remarks: “An obscure but novel group of organic remains comes to light in some well-worked district for which we have as yet no fixed geological place,” and this description may well apply to the fauna dealt with in the following pages.
page 407 note 1 “The Age of the Chief Intrusions of the Lake District”: Proc. Geol. Assoc., xxviii, pp. 17–25, 1917Google Scholar.
page 407 note 2 Ibid., plate ii.
page 407 note 3 An interesting and important paper dealing with the petrology of the Suffolk “Boxstones” (Crag), by Dr. P. G. H. Boswell, D.I.C., F.G.S. (now Professor of Geology in the University of Liverpool), appeared in the Geological Magazine for June, 1915 (pp. 250–9, Plate X, and Figs. 1–3) and may be consulted with advantage by readers of the present paper.
page 408 note 1 “Petrology of the Suffolk Boxstones”: op. cit.
page 408 note 2 “Sub-Crag Detritus”: Proc. Prehistoric Soc. East Anglia, 1915, vol. xi, pp. 139–48Google Scholar.
page 408 note 3 Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc., vol. xxvi, pp. 493–513, 1870Google Scholar.
page 408 note 4 Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc., vol. viii, p. 282, 1852Google Scholar.
page 408 note 5 Mém. Acad. R. Sci. Bruxelles. vol. xi, 1837Google Scholar.
page 408 note 6 Bull. Soc. Belge Géol., vol. vii, p. 299, 1893Google Scholar.
page 408 note 7 Ann. Nat. Hist. (2), vol. viii, pp. 206–11, 1851Google Scholar.
page 409 note 1 Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc., vol. xii, 1856Google Scholar.
page 409 note 2 Crag Moll., pt. ii, 1851Google Scholar.
page 409 note 3 Geol. Mag., Vol. II, pp. 103–49, 1865; Vol. V, p. 254, 1868Google Scholar.