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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 May 2009
The fossil or sub-fossil remains to which I propose to devote this short paper were procured from a cave-deposit in East Crete by Miss Dorothea M. A. Bate, whose valuable work among the Pleistocene Mammalia in Crete is so well known.
page 354 note 1 Proceedings of the Malacological Society, vol. vi, p. 307.
page 354 note 2 Prestwich, , “ Evidences of the Submergence of Western Europe and the Mediterranean Coasts”: Phil.Trans., vol. 184 (1893), p. 969.Google Scholar
page 354 note 3 Spratt, : “ Travels and Researches in Crete,” vol. ii, p. 241Google Scholar (the district between Selino and Lissos).
page 354 note 4 Now Kutri.
page 354 note 5 Bate, : Geol. Mag., Dec. V, Vol. II (1905), p. 199 sqq.Google Scholar
page 355 note 1 Spratt: op. cit., vol. ii, pp. 230–2. See also ibid., vol. ii, pp. 135–6. (Evidence of successive uplifts indicated by wave-abrasion and the occurrence of boring molluscs in the cliffs; many shells still in sitû.)
page 355 note 2 Op. cit., vol. i, ad fin.
page 355 note 3 Ile de Crête: dessiné et heliogravé au Service Géographique de l' Armée.
page 355 note 4 The carob-tree, or St. John (the Baptist's) Bread, is found wild in all countries skirting the Mediterranean. At Malta it is almost the only tree. In Spain we get its Moorish name, algarroba.
page 356 note 1 Recorded by Pilsbry as a recent shell at Morca, Syra, and Rhodes. Its occurrence at Kharoumes is believed to be its first record from a Pleistocene deposit. From available evidence it appears not now extant in Crete.
page 356 note 2 Specimens now in Geological Department, British Museum.