. Geological magazine. 4^ Banded Gneisses ? 491 Geological Map of Coast near Landewednack 492 Diagram sketch of band of pseudo-agglomerate 502 Diagram of Bursting Rock at Dent Head 511 Piloceras invaginatum ?, Salter 542 Sections of siphuncle of Piloceras, sp 543 LIST OF PLATES. PLATE PAGE I. Carboniferous Myriapods * I II. British Palaeozoic Cockroaches 49 III. Ophmrella nereidea, Wright 97 IV. Vertebrate Fauna of the Norfolk Forest Bed 145 V. New British Liassic Gasteropoda I93 VI. American Jurassic Mammals—Allodon 241 VII. „ ,, ,, Ctenacodon 241 VIII. „ „ „ 289 IX. ,, „ „ 289 X. Pholidophor


. Geological magazine. 4^ Banded Gneisses ? 491 Geological Map of Coast near Landewednack 492 Diagram sketch of band of pseudo-agglomerate 502 Diagram of Bursting Rock at Dent Head 511 Piloceras invaginatum ?, Salter 542 Sections of siphuncle of Piloceras, sp 543 LIST OF PLATES. PLATE PAGE I. Carboniferous Myriapods * I II. British Palaeozoic Cockroaches 49 III. Ophmrella nereidea, Wright 97 IV. Vertebrate Fauna of the Norfolk Forest Bed 145 V. New British Liassic Gasteropoda I93 VI. American Jurassic Mammals—Allodon 241 VII. „ ,, ,, Ctenacodon 241 VIII. „ „ „ 289 IX. ,, „ „ 289 X. Pholidophorus, Purbeck, Dorsetshire 337 XL Ostracoda from the London Clay 3^S XII. Carboniferous Cockroaches 433 XIII. Eurypteriis scah-osus, H. Woodw. Carboniferous, Eskdale . 482 fFig. I, Granite Veins in Diorite, Pen Voose, the Lizard . . ) XIV. I . \ 484(Fig. 2, Banded Gneissic series, Pen Voose, the Lizard ) XV. Solaster Miirchisoni, Willmson., Lias, Yorkshire S^Q Geo! Masj. 1887. Decade in .Vol. I,. del et liA. West,Newman & C° . Garbonifero-us Myriapods. THE GEOLOGICAL MAGAZINE NEW SERIES. DECADE III. VOL. IV. No. I.—JANUARY, 1887. OS-IC3-IISrJ^Ij J^IiTIGXjEJS. I.—On S03IE Spined Mtriapods from the Carboniferous Series OF England. By Henry Woodward, , , (PLATE I.) PALEONTOLOGISTS are largely indebted to Messrs. Meek andWorthen for their very careful researches in the Coal-Measuresof Illinois, which have resulted in such large and valuable accessionsto the fauna and flora of the Carboniferous formation. Not the leastinteresting of these has been the discovery of numerous organisms,which were first recognized and correctly described by them in 1868 ^as the remains of spined Myriapods. The earliest record of the discovery of one of these curious terres-trial Arthropods in England will be found in A History of FossilInsects, etc., by the Rev. P. B. Brodie, , , 8vo. 1845,in the Introductory Observations to which P


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