. Bulletin of the Buffalo Society of Natural Sciences. Natural history; Science. (Fig. Pis. 21.) {Cluf'tetf^s XXXYIl. and of the In-aiiches: calices of nioutieules larger than those on remainder of branches; tal)- iilfe remote, except near the surface, where they are nu- merous. Found in tlie ^Ioscoav shale, three to five feet above the Encrinal lime- stone, at Section ."i; also in the Demissa bed of Section 5; between ten and fifteen feet below the Encrinal lime- stone, at Section 7, and in ,1 T-vT T i 11 i- Fig. M. Monofn/pa fraticaMt. A specimen the Jr^leurOaiCtVUm beds OI of the natur


. Bulletin of the Buffalo Society of Natural Sciences. Natural history; Science. (Fig. Pis. 21.) {Cluf'tetf^s XXXYIl. and of the In-aiiches: calices of nioutieules larger than those on remainder of branches; tal)- iilfe remote, except near the surface, where they are nu- merous. Found in tlie ^Ioscoav shale, three to five feet above the Encrinal lime- stone, at Section ."i; also in the Demissa bed of Section 5; between ten and fifteen feet below the Encrinal lime- stone, at Section 7, and in ,1 T-vT T i 11 i- Fig. M. Monofn/pa fraticaMt. A specimen the Jr^leurOaiCtVUm beds OI of the natural size, "andaportiun of the surface , ) n 1 ,' J 1 \ enlarged (after Hall). Avery s (^reek (rather rare). MOXOTRYPA (?) FURCATA. (Hall.) fiirratus. Hall. 111. Dev. Foss., XXXYHI.) Distinguishing Chnracters.—Branch- ing form similar to the preceding, from which it differs chiefi}' in the absence of the monticules, and in the transversely-ridged a})pearance of the corallites. (On a number of speci- mens, apparently of tliis species, spines or acanthopores occur at the angle of junjction of the corallites, a feature which would demand the fig. 21. Monotnjpa {.-!) fur- . , cnta. A specimen of the natural removal 01 the species to another size, and a portion of the ^ surface enlarged (after Hall). genus. See Ulrich, Paleozoic Bryozoa, Palaeontology of Illinois, Vol. VIII., Part II., Section (>, 1890.) Found in the Demissa bed, at Section 5, and two to four feet below the Trilobite beds, at Avery's Creek. MoXOTIiYPA AMPLECTEXS. S]). IIOV. (Fig. 22.) Distinguishing Clianicters.— Encrusting habit; uniform, rather large, and regularly distributed monticules, the calices of which are larger than those of the main mass; small, new. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Buffalo Society of Natural


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