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PROCEEDINGS 



an Jfklb ltib, 



EDITED BY 



Professor BUCKMAN, F.G.S., F.L.S., &c. 



PUBLISHED BY LOUIS HENRY RUEGG. 



70 




"-" 



9 8 4 6 G 4 



CONTENTS. 



List of Members . . . . . . . . . . . . v. 

Preface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ix. 

Memoir . . . . . . . . . . . . . . xi. 

The President's Address . . . . . . . . . . 1 

Some Account of the Courts of Law holden in Weymouth and Melcombe 

Regis in the 16th and 17th centuries, by T. B. Groves, Esq. .. 15 
Notes 011 some Cornbrash Sections in Dorset, by the Rev. H. H. Wood, 

F.G.S., &c. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 

Note on a G-avial Skull from the Cornbrash of Closworth, by J. C. 

Mansel-PleydeU, Esq., F.L.S., F.G.S ......... 28 

The Maples in Sherborne Park, by Edwin Lees, Esq., F.G.S., &c. 33 

A Note on the Dog Violet, by J. C. Mansel-PleydeU, Esq., F.G-.S., &c. 36 
On a Bracelet of supposed Saxon Workmanship, by James Buckman, 

F.G.S., fec. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 

On the Sparassis crispa, by Edwin Lees, Esq., F.L.S., &c. . . 40 

Notes on a Roman Villa at Thornford, by James Buckman, F.G.S., &c. 41 

Notes on the Antiquities of Abbotsbury, by the Rev. G. H. Penny, &c. 50 

The Lepidoptera of Portland, by C. W. Dale, Esq. . . . . . . 54 

On the Fossil Beds of Bradford Abbas and its Vicinity, by James 

Buckman, F.G.S., &o. . . . . . . . . . . . . 64 

On the Species of Brachiopoda from the Inferior Oolite of Bradford 

Abbas and its Vicinity, by Thomas Davidson, Esq., F.R.S., &e., &c. 73 

On some Old Glass Bottles from Thornford, by James Buckman . . 89 
Poem, by the Rev. W. Barnes .. .. .. .. ..93 

LIST OF PLATES. 

Frontispiece, to face page . . . . . . . . . . xi. 

Gavial Skull from Cornbrash.. .. .. .. .. 28 

Declining Maple . . . . . . . . . . 33 

Knotty Maple .. .. .. .. .. .. 34 

Viola sylvatica V. Rechenbachiana . . . . . . . . 36 

canina . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 

A Bracelet, Saxon or Roman . . . . . . . . . . 38 

Sparassis crispa . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 

Rhynchonella, &c. ,, IV. \ 
Waldheimia, &c. III. I 



Ditto II. ...... 88 

Terebratula, Plate I. / 
Marginal Woodcuts. 



THE DORSET NATURAL HISTORY AND 
ANTIQUARIAN FIELD CLUB. 



INAUGURATED 16TH OF MARCH, 1875.) 



J. C. MANSEL-PLEYDELL, ESQ., F.G.S., &c. 



EEV. H. H. WOOD, F.G.S. (Treasurer). 
JAMES BUCKMAN, ESQ., F.G.S., F.L.S. (Hon. Secretary). 

Jptfttotars Jtantes: 

Eev. M. J. BERKELEY, F.E.H.S.L., &c., Sibbertoft Vicarage, 

Notts. 

E. BRISTOW, Esq., F.E.S., F.G.S. , Ordnance Geological Survey. 
W. CARRUTHERS, Esq., F.E.S., F.G.S., F.L.S., British Museum. 

E. ETHERIDGDE, Esq., F.E.S., F.G.S., Ordnance Geological 
Survey. 

E. A. FREEMAN, Esq., D.C.L., Summerleaze, Wilts. 

E. LEES, Esq., F.L.S., F.G.S., Vice-President of the Worcester- 

shire Naturalists' Club. 
J. PARKER, Esq., C.B., Oxford. 

J. PRESTWICII, Esq., F.E.S., F.G.S., Professor of Geology, 
Oxford. 

H. C. WATSON, Esq., Thames Ditton, Surrey. 
G. B. WOLLASTON, Esq., Chiselhurst. 



0f 



of 



Jfielfr 



JANUARY 1, 1877. 



The Bight Hon. the EARL or SHAFTESBURY, K.G., St. Giles's 
House, Cranborne, Salisbury. 

The Bight Hon. LORD DIGBY, Minterne, Dorchester. 

The LORD BICHARD GROSVENOR, M.P., Brook-street, London. 



Acton, Bev. J 

Akers, Lieut. -Col. 
Aldridge, Dr. . . 
Austin-Gourlay, Bev. W. E. C. 
Baker, Sir E. B., Bart. . . 
Baker, Bev. Preb. 

Barnes, Bev. W 

Bartley, Dr 

BetheU, E., Esq 

Bingham, Bev. 0. W. 
Blanche, Bev. J. . . 
Blennerhassott, Bev. J. 

Bond, N., Esq 

Bond, T., Esq. 
Boucher, Bev. H. . . 

Brand, J. S., Esq 

Brown, Capt. Amyatt, F.G.S. 
Buckman, Prof., F.G.S. ( Vice- 
President and Hon. Secretary) 
Bullen, Capt. 
Bullen, Mrs. 
Burdon, Bev. B. . . 
Calcraft, J. H., Esq 



Iwerne Minster, Blandford 

Weymouth 

Yeovil. 

Stoke Abbot, Beaminster 

Banston House, Blandford 

Preston Vicarage, Weymouth 

Came Bectory, Dorchester 

Weymouth (Sur. M. 39th Begt.) 

London 

Melcombe Bingham, Dorchester 

Sherborne 

Byrne Bectory, Sherborne 

Holme Priory, Wareham 

Tynehain, Wareham 

ThornhiU House, Blandford 

N.P. Bank, Sherborne 

Weymouth 

Bradford Abbas, Sherborne 
Manor House, Charmouth 
Manor House, Charmouth 
Haselbury Bectory, Blandford 
Bempstone, Wareharn 



LIST OF MEMBERS CONTINUED. 



Cambridge, Eev. 0. P. 
Clapin, Eev. A. C. 
Cleminshaw, E., Esq. . . 

Codd, Eev. Preb 

Colfox, T., Esq. 

Colfox, W., Esq 

Cox, Lieut. -Col. 
Cunnington, Edward, Esq. 
Dale, C. W., Esq. 
Damon, E., Esq. 
Dayman, Eev. Preb. . . 

Digby, G. D. W., Esq. . . 
Douglas, Hon. & Eev. A. G. . 
Edwards, Eev. Z. J. 
Eliot, E. ff., Esq. 
Eyton, Eev. E. W. 
Falwasser, Major 

Ffooks, T., Esq 

Ffooks, Woodford, Esq. 
Filliter, Freeland, Esq. . . 
Fletcher, W., Esq. 
Floyer, J., Esq., M.P., F.G.S. 

Fyler, J.W., Esq 

Galpin, G., Esq. 
Glyn, Sir E., Bart. 
Goodden, J. E. P., Esq. 
Green, M. H., Esq. 
Griffiths, Eev. J. 

Groves, Mr. T. B 

Guest, Sir Ivor, Bart. . . 
Hambro, C. J. T., Esq. . . 
Harper, Eev. Preb. 

Herford, Capt 

Hetherington, W. L., Esq. 
Highmore, W., Esq., M.D. . 
Hodges, Eev. F. P., D.C.L. 



Bloxworth, Blandford. 
Sherborne 
Sherborne 
Beaminster 
Eax House, Bridport 
Westmead, Bridport 
Manor House, Beaminster 
Dorchester 
Sherborne 
Weymouth 

Shillingstone Eectory, Bland- 
ford 

Sherborne Castle 
Shapwick Eectory, Blandford 
Misterton Vicarage, Crewkerne 
Eadipole 

Cattistock, Dorchester 
Sherborne 
Totnel, Sherborne 
Sherborne 
Wareham 
Wimborne 
Stafford, Dorchester 
Heffleton 

Tarrant Keynstone, Blandford 
Leweston, Sherborne 
Compton House, Sherborno 
Lincoln College, Oxford 
Haddon House, Sherborne 
Weymouth 
Canford, Wimborne 
Milton Abbey, Blandford 
Sherborne 
Wimborne 
Sherborne 
Sherborne 
Lynie Eegis 



LIST OF MEMBERS CONTINUED. 



Holland, Eev. W. L 

Hosegood, Eev. J. . . 
Kindersley, E. L., Esq. 
Lee-Warner, Eev. J. 
Littlehales, B., Esq. . . 

Lyon, Eev.W. H 

Maggs, T. 0., Esq. . . 
Malan, Eev. Preb. 
Mansel-Pleydell, J. C., Esq., 
F.G.S. f President} 

Mayo, Eev. 0. H 

Medlycott, Sir W. C., Bart. . . 
Middleton, H. B., Esq. . . 
Middleton, H. N., Esq. 

MiUer, Eev. J 

Moorhead, Dr. 
Parsons, F. J., Esq. 
Payne, Miss 
Penny, Eev. G. H. 

Phillips, Eev. G. E 

Pope, A., Esq 

Portman, Hon. Miss 
Portman, Hon. W. H. B., M.P. 
Eavenhill, Eev. H. E. 
Eaymond, W., Esq. 
Eaymond, F., Esq. 
Eeynolds, A., Esq. 
Eeynolds, E., Esq. 
Eeynolds, E., Esq. 

Eoberts, Eev. E 

Eooke, Eev. Preb. 

Euegg, L. H., Esq 

Sanctuary, Yen. Archdeacon 
Serrel, H. D., Esq 

Smith, Mrs. 
Smith, Eev. J. . 



Stalbridge 

Cerne Abbas 

Clyffe, Dorchester 

Tarrant Gunville, Blandford 

Buckshaw House, Sherborne 

Sherborne 

Yeovil 

Broadwinsor, Bridport 

Longthorns, Blandford 

Longburton Eectory, Sherborne 

Yen, Sherborne 

Bradford Peverell, Dorchester 

Bradford Peverell, Dorchester 

Weymouth 

Weymouth 

Portland 

Weymouth 

Abbotsbury 

Stalbridge Eectory, Blandford 

Dorchester 

Langton Lodge, Blandford 

Bucldand Yicarage, Dorchester 

Yicarage Street, Yeovil 

Church House, Yeovil 

Bridport 

Bridport 

Haselbury, Crewkerne 

Milton Abbas, Blandford 

Eampisham Eectory, Dorchester 

Sherborne 

Powerstock, Bridport 

Haddon Lodge, Stourton 

Caundle, Blandford 
Stafford Eectory, Dorchester 
Kington Magna Eectory, Gil- 

lingham 



Vlll. 



LIST OF MEMBERS CONTINUED. 



, D., Esq. 



Crewkerne 



Stephens, E.Darell, Esq., F.G.S. St. Stephen's, Plympton 



Stephens, Miss 
Stuart, J. Morton, Esq. 

Surtees, N., Esq 

Tancock, Eev. 0. W. . . . 
Tregarthen, Eev. W. F. 
Thompson, Eev. G. 

Udal, J. S., Esq 

Warre, Eev. F. 
Watts, Eev. E. E. 
Williams, W. H., Esq., M.D. 
Wood, Eev. A 



Hill Side, Bridport 

Blandford 

Purse Caundle, Sherborne 

Sherborne 

Weymouth 

Leigh Vicarage, Sherborne 

12, Victoria Square, S.W. 

Melksham, Wilts 

Stourpaine, Blandford 

Sherborne 

Sherborne 



Wood, Eev. H. H., F.G.S. . . Holwell Eectory, Sherborne 

( Vice-President Sf Treasurer J 

Yeatman, M. S., Esq. . . Stock House, Sherborne 

Yeatman, Capt., E.N. . . West Lodge, Blandford 

* # * Please notify any errors or omissions to the Secretary. 




EDITOE'S PREFACE. 

In presenting to the Members the first volume of the Proceed- 
ings of our new Society it seems proper to address a few words 
to the reader upon the contents of the book. 

And, first, we would state, with regard to the papers, that for 
the most part they are upon the subjects which have occupied the 
attention of the Club, and when we say that we have promise of 
papers for a future volume of greater extent than the present 
we hope it will at once be seen how large and rich is the field 
we have so well set out to illustrate. The Natural History and 
Archaeology of the County of Dorset is indeed well worthy of 
extended observation in the field, and will doubtless tend to the 
collecting of rich stores for the study. The paper by our learned 
President will show how rich are the botanical treasures ; whilst 
the beautiful paper by Mr. Davidson is, we hope, only the 
beginning of illustrations of the varied Palasontological objects 
of the County, so many of which are still undescribed. 

The paper on the Cornbrash, by the Eev. H. H. Wood, and 
the rare Crocodile discovered by Darell Stephens, Esq., from this 
deposit, and so ably figured and described by Mr. Hulke and 
the President, offer us a cheering assurance of what is to be done 
in that direction. The list of Lepidoptera from the Island of 
Portland will serve to show the insect riches of a small part of 
the county, while a memoir on the spiders, which is promised by 
the Eev. 0. P. Cambridge, will, in itself, insure a lively looking 
forward to the appearance of a future volume ; and if to this be 
added the promise of a new Flora of the County, by the Presi- 
dent; a paper on the Fossils of the Cornbrash, by the Treasurer; 
and illustrations of the Fauna of the Inferior Oolite, by the 
Secretary, it will be seen that we are, at least, rich in promise. 
The few papers referring to Archaeological matters may serve 



X. 

to show the direction taken by the Society in these matters. 
Much delving and poking about in odd corners are found 
necessary to unearth the riches of antiquity, and our papers 
show that, at least, the society has commenced the work in an 
honest and liberal spirit ; and the editor thanks those who have 
so kindly assisted in these matters, while he also offers his best 
acknowledgments for the promises of future assistance. 

We cannot conclude without offering a few notes of congratu- 
tion on the illustrations of the present volume. It will at once 
be seen that they are of sterling merit. 

The frontispiece is a good specimen of photography, and was 
kindly allowed to be chosen by us (although in uniform*) as a 
faithful and elegant likeness of an accomplished and amiable 
naturalist. 

The four plates of the Brachiopoda are by Thomas Davidson, 
Esq., F.R.S., who, in the handsomest manner, and for the love 
of his subject, drew them on the stones with his own hands, and 
presented this work to our society. As this gentleman's reputa- 
tion both as an artist and a naturalist is world- wide, we not only 
thank him most heartily, but hope he will allow us to enrol his 
name in our list of Honorary Members. 

The expenses of some beautiful plates have been kindly con- 
tributed by the President, by Darell Stephens, Esq., and others, 
while some very good woodcuts have been lent by the Cotteswold 
Club, and by Mr. Baily, the publisher, of Cirencester, for all of 
which the best thanks of the society will be accorded. Before 
handing this, our first volume, to the members, we may be 
allowed to hope that its contents, general supervision, and 
getting up, will meet with approval ; but the editor would here 
state that as proofs have been in all instances sent to the different 
authors of papers he cannot hold himself responsible either for 
opinions or errors. 

With these few remarks the first volume is sent forth, with a 
promise of future improvement, while invoking forgiveness for 
shortcomings, by JAMES BUCKMAN, 

The Editor. 

* This is accounted for from the fact that the President was High Sheriff, &c., when 
it was taken, and we think it therefore of greater value. EDITOR. 



M E M I E . 



JOHN CLAVEL MANSEL-PLEYDELL, of Whatcouibe and Long- 
thorns, Esq., whose portrait so appropriately forms the frontis- 
piece of the first publication issued by the DORSET NATURAL 
HISTORY AND ANTIQUARIAN FIELD CLUB, is the son of Lieut. -Col. 
Mansel, of Smedmore, and grandson of the late Sir W. Mansel, 
Bart., of Iscoed, Carmarthenshire. Col. Mansel was a dis- 
tinguished officer who saw much service, especially in the 
Peninsular War, and was present at the sieges of Ciudad 
Hodrigo and Badajoz, and at the battle of Salamanca. By his 
wife Louisa, the daughter of E. Morton Pleydell, Esq., of 
Whatcombe, he was connected with the Clavels of Smedmore, 
one of the oldest families in Dorset, but now extinct in the male 
line. A member of that family appears in Domesday Book as 
the holder of five lordships in this county. The Mansels trace 
their pedigree to Philip Mansel, who probably came to England 
with the Conqueror. A note in the new edition of Hutchins' 
" History of Dorset" tells us " During the middle ages this 
branch of the family made some important alliances, whilst the 
ancient reputation of the name was sustained with increasing 
honour by its different members; but its founder at Margam 
in more modern times was Sir Rees Mansel, who purchased 
Margam Abbey at its dissolution, and erected a stately mansion 
on the site." 

The Pleydells, of whom our President is now the represent- 
ative, are descended from William Pleydell, of Coleshill, Berks, 
who was born in 1425. 

Mr. Mansel-Pleydell is well known from his ardent devotion 
to many branches of Natural History. When a country book- 
seller, the late Mr. Shipp, of Blandford, ventured on the bold 
experiment of issuing a new edition of "The History of Dorset" 



the former edition having become a very rare book a portion 
of it, which Hutchins described as "some remarkable particulars 
of Natural History," was entrusted to Mr. Mansel-Pleydell, 
who has most admirably performed his by no means easy task. 
A series of dredgings which he undertook many years ago 
enabled him to add considerably to our knowledge of the 
marine shells of the Dorset coast. But the most valuable 
portion of his work is that which has been also published 
separately, under the title of " The Flora of Dorsetshire," one 
of the best and most complete works on the botany of an 
English county that has ever appeared. He is, we have reason 
to believe, engaged on a new edition of this work, which is 
likely to be as valuable from a botanical as the present is from 
a topographical point of view. "When the Dorset Field Club 
was inaugurated in 1875 Mr. Mansel-Pleydell was unanimously 
selected by the members as their first President, and we doubt 
not but that the papers in the publications issued from time to 
time by the Club will prove the wisdom of their selection. 



AN ADDRESS 
BY J. 0. MANSEL-PLEYDELL, ESQ., PRESIDENT, 

Delivered at the Annual Meeting at Sherborne, May 30, 1876. 



The large and increasing list of members, together with the 
interest evinced last year at the Field Meetings, justify the 
assumption that if the Society does not gain a permanent footing 
in the County it will be the fault of the Directing Body. 

The ample means placed at our disposal for the reception of 
our treasures at the Sherborne Grammar School we gratefully 
acknowledge, and under the eegis of so accomplished a curator 
as Mr. Harper, we may hope to make the embryo Museum more 
attractive and useful than is usually the fate of local depositaries 
of art and natural objects. 

In arranging the Field Meetings, the Committee keep in 
view the importance of embracing as many and various objects 
of interest as can be brought within a day's work, and as the 
limits of the district afford. 

The Celtic Eggardon and Maiden Castles, with their subse- 
quent adaptations for the higher and more advanced art of 
warfare made use of by the Romans, the Danish Poundbury, 
the Roman Amphitheatre of ancient Dorchester and the medie- 
val Corfe Castle, the raised beach of Portland containing a 
marine recent fauna ; its neighbour the Chesil-Bank, caused by 
a subsequent alteration of the coast-line, and the interesting 
Oolitic beds of Powerstock, were the principal objects of 
examination and study at the four Field Meetings of 1875. 

The first was held at Weymouth on the 1st of June, when 
an expedition was organized to visit the Isle of Portland. On 
landing, the members started for the Bill, a bluff headland at 
the southern point of the Island, to examine the raised beach, 



which is composed of coarse sea-worn pebbles, partly of local 
and partly of foreign origin; its height varies from 24 feet 
to 53 foot, being lowest on the eastern side and highest on tho 
western. Tho larger portion of its material is chalk-flint and 
Greonsand Chert, some old gravel, angular flints, with a number 
of Eed-Sand and Quartzite pebbles from the Budleigh Salterton 
conglomerates of the New Hod Sandstone ; on its north-western 
side tho raised beach is covered by a loam, containing land and 
marsh shells, and is surmounted by a mass of debris, chiefly of local 
rocks ; on its eastern side it caps the cliff, and contains an abun- 
dance of marine shells similar to those now inhabiting the shore 
and rocks such as Littorince, Purpura, Trochi, Mytili, &c. Tho 
sands with which they are intermixed contain shells similar to 
those which frequent the present coast-line, such as Riesoa, 
Skenece, also the bivalve Cyanium minimum, now rare in the locality, 
but abundant in the north of Europe. Some of the pebbles of 
this bed are cemented together into a conglomerate by a mix- 
ture of carbonate of lime, there are also tufaceous deposits 
here and there, originating from springs, which at the time of 
deposition must have been more highly charged with lime than 
are the present neighbouring springs. Although the Middle 
Purbecks do not now exist in situ on the Island, there is an 
angular debris of this formation, which may be accounted for by 
their removal during the several changes of level to which the 
Island has been evidently subject, and which left the lower 
unfossiliferous beds of the series exposed. These changes have 
materially altered the coast-line, and aided by the powerful 
Atlantic wave extensive encroachments have been made ; the few 
existing raised beaches between Devonshire and Sussex point to 
this conclusion. A Mammaliferous drift-bed of red clay passing 
into a coarse loess south of the Ven is now almost entirely 
removed ; it is here the Portland stone and over-lying Pur- 
becks are extensively quarried. The Dirt-bed, from 12 to 18 
inches thick, forms the basement of tho latter formation, contain- 
ing a large per centage of earthy lignite, and is evidently an 
ancient vegetable soil. Silicified trunks of coniferous trees and 
the remains .of plants allied to Zamia and Cycas are buried in 
this Dirt-bed ; stumps of these trees stand erect, and thoir stems 
lie prostrate, partly sunk into the black earth and partly envel- 
oped by a calcareous shale, which covers tho Dirt-bed. During 
the walk the botanists collected several plants, including Trifolium 
maritimum, Trifolium scabrum, Vicia gracilis, Armcria, maritima, 
Borago ojficinalis (very abundant both among the rocks and in the 
fields), Phleum arenarium, Euphorbia Parah'as, also, the follow- 
ing throe, which are of especial interest, Valerianella eriocarpa, 
Spergularia rupestris, Muscari racesmosum. On thoir return to 
Weymouth the party repaired to tho Burdon Hotel, where dinner 
was provided, and to which about twenty members sat down. 



3 

Mr. Damon, the well-known naturalist, exhibited a living Penta- 
crinus from the Carribean Sea. It may not be out of place here 
to make a passing remark on the family of which this Crinoid is a 
member. Numbers of them made their appearance early in the 
earth's history, they were exceedingly abundant during the 
Silurian age, and some of the Carboniferous Limestones are 
almost entirely composed of them. During the Mesozoic age 
they diminished both in genera and species, and became gradually 
rarer in the succeeding geological periods down to the 
present day ; and, until the dredging cruises of the Porcu- 
pine and the Lightning in 1869, only two living stalked 
Crinoids were known, and these were confined to deep 
water in the seas of the Antilles ; both of which belong to the 
genus Pentacrinus, which is well represented in the lias of Lyme, 
and in the Oxford clays of Weymouth. Mr. Damon's specimen 
Pentacrinus aster i a (Lin,'] has a stem, bearing whorls of fine 
cirri, which possess the power of contracting themselves around 
the objects they touch. In 1869 Mr. Gwyn Jeffreys dredged up 
a new species from a depth of 1095 fathoms. With this inter- 
esting link of the chain which binds the Stone Lilies of past ages 
with their living congeners, we bid farewell to Weymouth, 
and proceed to an account of our next meeting, at Bridport, which 
took place on the 1 3th day of July ; here the members were hospit- 
ably received by their fellow associates, Mr. and Mrs. Coif ox, and 
proceeded by railway to Powerstock. The line passes through 
a fertile liassic valley as far as Loders, when the country 
becomes more picturesque and undulatory, the reddish tinge of 
the soil, and the surface strewed with fragmentary stone-brash, 
hinted to us that we had passed from the Lias to the Inferior 
Oolites. At Powerstock-Station the party alighted on the 
platform, and proceeded to examine the adjoining quarries, 
which expose a most interesting section of the Dorsetshire 
Cephalopoda beds of the Inferior Oolites, and upon which there 
has been some uncertainty as to their relative position with the 
series in other parts of England. These Cephalopoda beds are 
largely developed at Bradford Abbas, the residence of our 
esteemed associate, Professor Buckman, who has passed them 
through a critical comparison with the representative beds in 
Gloucestershire, with which he is well acquainted, as may 
be gathered from his " Geology of Cheltenham and the neigh- 
bourhood." I venture to think Professor Buckman's view will 
be generally adopted as to the actual horizon of the Powerstock, 
Burton Bradstock, and Bradford Abbas Cephalopoda beds, and 
their relative position with the Sands so largely developed at 
Burton Bradstock and the neighbourhood of Yeovil ; these were 
supposed to be identical with the Midford Sands, the basement 
beds of the Lias ; but the Professor tells me the paleontological 
evidences prove a much higher horizon, and he considers them 



tlio representative bods of Torobratula fimbria zone of tn,e 
Cottoswolds, and of the more compact Oolitic stone of the 
neighbouring Ham-hill, so well known in this county, as largely 
used for ecclesiastical and domestic architecture. Under this 
theory the Cephalopoda beds of Dorsetshire, instead of lying 
at the base as in Gloucestershire, will occupy a sub-section from 
the Trigonia-grit to the Ammonites Humphriosianus zone of Dr. 
Wright. An examination of the Bradford Abbas district will 
be made this year at one of our Meld Meetings, whose richness 
in paleontological remains may be inferred from Professor Buck- 
man's private collection, where the Ammonites alone may be 
counted by the scores. I consider a careful comparison of a 
series of apparently dissimilar forms will demand a fusion of 
several species into one, their differences arising from the. altered 
conditions of the Oolitic seas under which the diverging forms, 
when living, passed their existence. But to return to Powerstock, 
after an examination of the quarry, under the guidance of Profes- 
sor Buckman, which presented the characteristic Inferior Oolite 
fossils Ammonites Parkinsonu, Terebratula gphceroidalis, Terebratula 
Phillipsii, and Holectypus hemisphcericus, the party pocketed their 
hammers and prepared for the ascent of Eggardon Hill, whose 
fortified heights and commanding position were reached with 
snthusiastic admiration. The day was fine and the atmosphere 
clear, affording to the spectator a view unsurpassed in beauty. 
The Atlantic stretched out in wide expanse, a fertile valley 
intervening between the base of the hill and the shore, inter- 
spersed with isolated knolls, the Isle of Portland rising above 
the horizon like a stranded whale, the silvery streak of Chesil 
Bank in bold relief between the dark soil of the land and the 
azure blue of the ocean, the deeply indented coast far into 
Devonshire, adding beauty to the enchanting view. To the 
north was stretched the range upon which the fortifications of 
Lambert Castle, Pillesdon and Lewesdon stand. The centre of 
this panorama, Eggardon forms the south-western boundary of 
the extensive Chalk-district of the county, whose sinuous Green- 
gand fringe flanks the Oolitic vallies of the county. Near its 
summit a bed of highly fossiliferous Chalk-marl was reached, 
which was attacked by the geologists of the party who collected 
several good fossils characteristic of the formation, Scaphites, 
Ammonites, &c. The botanists gathered Genista tinctoria, Poly gala 
depressa, and Halenaria viridis, together with the more common 
plants. 

The camp terminates a little north of the spur where the 
range bends eastward. There are visible proofs of its having 
been occupied, as well as its environs, by man previous to ita 
conversion into a fortification or place of refuge. Fosses, mounds, 
and pit-circles, occur both within and without. Mr. Barnes 
brought to our notice one remarkable pit-circle, which had two 



distinct depressions connected by a common entrance, which 
might possibly have been the mansion of a chief who enjoyed 
the privilege of occupying a two-roomed habitation. 

Tho camp and entrenchments, according to Hutchins, 
comprize about forty-seven and a half acres, the area within the 
ramparts twenty and a quarter acres. There are two entrances, 
one on the south-east, which is approached from the Down, and 
is protected by a ^trench or v allum arranged diagonally so as to 
give it additional strength ; the other on the north-west is 
defended naturally by the steep hill, and requires little artificial 
protection. Mr. Barnes gave an interesting and instructive 
explanation of the general features of the camp ; he attributed 
its original construction as a place of refuge or fort of the 
Durotriges, a British tribe which dwelt in that part of Dorset- 
shire at the time of the Eoman invasion. The conquerors seem 
to have appropriated it to the same purpose, conforming it to a 
more advanced style of defence by the additional ramparts and 
ditches which have no appearance of having belonged to the 
original plan, and do not resemble the usual peculiarities of 
British outworks. The philology of Eggardon is a vexed 
question, it may possibly be ecg. Anglo-Saxon, a corner or 
elbow, dun, a Down, corresponding exactly with the position of 
the camp in its relation to the range of hill on which it is con- 
structed. 

On their return to Bridport the party again enjoyed the 
hospitality of Mr. and Mrs. Coif ox. 

Miss Guilielma Stephens exhibited a rare collection of 
British Zoophytes, among them Caryophyllia Smithn, which 
differs from the common Sea Anemone in possessing a calcareous 
corallum. It has the power of secreting lime, by which a 
framework of laminated plates is formed, the softer tissues 
are translucent, the column being very extensile, with ten- 
tacles set in several rows, diminishing in size from the outer 
row to the inner, each consisting of a stem with a globular head. 
Parasmilia centralis, a fossil of the Upper-Chalk, is closely allied 
to this interesting living Zoophyte. 

The third meeting took place at Corf e Castle. The party was 
met by our associate, Mr. Thomas Bond, whose family and 
personal associations rendered him a fit exponent of its history, 
which he ably set forth, illustrating its architectural features by 
an exhaustive examination of the fabric and earthworks from 
their earliest date to the time when the Castle fell a victim to the 
assaults of Cromwell. 

One of the most important historical events connected with 
Corf e is the murder of Edward the Martyr, one of the last of 
our Saxon kings, before the Danish conquest by Sweyne. 
This son of Edgar by a former Queen was assassinated by, or at 
the instigation of his step-mother Elfrida, to secure the crown to 



6 

her own son, who ascended the throne as Ethelred II. Young 
Edward chanced to be hunting in the neighbourhood of Corf e, and 
without attendance, he unsuspiciously stopped at the Castle ; when 
the Queen mother came out to receive him, and while in the act 
of drinking a cup of mead, he was attacked from behind and 
stabbed. Finding himself wounded, he spurred his horse, and 
falling, was dragged by the stirrup ; his lifeless body was found 
lying on the adjoining heath. Probably the scene of the murder 
was not where the Castle now stands. 

The detention of Princess Eleanor, daughter of Geoffrey 
Duke of Brittany, and granddaughter of Henry II. of England, 
is another event worthy of notice in connection with the Castle's 
history. Here this Princess was imprisoned by her uncle King 
John, who had murdered her brother Arthur at Eouen in the year 
1200 ; twenty of his adherents were thrown into the dungeons of 
Corf e Castle, to be starved to death or stealthily got rid of. Princess 
Eleanor was happily not thus treated, but permitted to live com- 
paratively in luxury. She was joined by the two daughters of 
William, King of Scotland, who had been given up to the custody 
of King John in the year 1209 as hostages. The last historical 
notice of the Castle must be its gallant defence by Lady Bankes, 
in the absence of her husband, during the Parliamentary war, 
and its subsequent capture in February, 1645, by the Eepublican 
Party, when the Castle was reduced to its present ruined condi- 
tion. Corfe is not named in Doomsday Book, but there is 
evidence that it was known at that period as belonging to the 
Crown. In Eichard the Second's reign the Castle is stated to be 
an ancient royal demesne, and that a portion of the manor of 
Kingston to the extent of one hide had been given to the King 
by the Abbess in exchange for the church of Gillingham, and 
that on this hide of land the King had built the "Castle of 
Wareham," which Mr. Bond considers to be an erroneous 
transcript for Corfe. The Castle was probably built by William 
the Conqueror ; it was certainly in a complete state of defence in 
the reign of Henry II. Occasional notices of repairs are met 
with up to the time of Eichard II., but there are no details of 
any new building until Henry III. and Edward I., when great 
additions were made, and the fortifications of the outer ward 
appear to have been completed at this period. An action recorded 
in the Plea Eolls of 6, Edward I., is worthy of notice, as it 
proves the date of the tower called Batavant (BoutavantJ, and 
the external face of the walls of the south-western tower. The 
action was instituted against Elias de Eobyn, the constable of the 
Castle, by William Clavell, the possessor of a Quarry at Holme, 
for carrying away stones from thence. As the rest of the Castle 
is built of a different material, it is probable the tower and 
adjoining walls were built from the iron-sandstone of Mr. 
William Clavell's Quarries. 



The Castle is divided into four wards, its approach from the 
town is by a bridge of comparatively late date, and defended by 
a tower on each side, by which the first ward is reached, com- 
prising an area capable of holding a considerable body of man 
and horse on its western side ; it is abruptly bounded by a steep 
hill surmounted by the Castle and Keep, and which terminates 
the limits of the first ward. A one-arched bridge at its south- 
western angle gives access to the second ward, which is defended 
by a double portcullised gateway, the southern side of which is 
sunk several feet, and dissevered from the rest in a compact mass 
of masonry, so powerful was its cohesive capability to withstand the 
effects of the gunpowder employed to dismantle the Castle. The 
third ward, which is the principal one, and on which the King's 
tower stands, occupies the highest portion of the hill ; this impor- 
tant part of the fortress is small ; there are records of its having 
been repaired by Henry VII. for the reception of his mother, the 
Countess of Richmond. The fourth ward, which is also 
restricted in size, lies on the northern side of the hill. From 
thence the spectator may take a mental retrospective view of th& 
mouths of the Frome and Piddle, when the estuary waters of 
Poole-harbour, now intervened by salt-marshes, laved the 
ancient walls of Wareham, and upon which the Danish and Saxon 
rovers made their predatory descents with fire, rapine, and the 
sword. Wareham was then a port of which the north-men had 
possession in Alfred's reign. Fromouth (Frome-mouth) retains 
the name of an ancient nunnery, and Bestall (By Emt Wall) that 
of an important rampart of defence. 

On the return of the members to Wareham they partook of 
dinner at the Red Lion Inn, and, when the cloth was removed, 
the Rev. H. H. Wood read a paper on the Cornbrashes of the 
county; these and the Fuller's Earth are perhaps the only 
representatives of the great Oolite in Dorsetshire. I say perhaps, 
as. Professor Buckman thinks the great Oolite ( par excellence} does 
occur in the neighbourhood of Sherborne. I trust this Society 
may be the medium through which the doubt may be cleared up. 
The Cornbrashes of this county are very fossiliferous, but the 
tests of the shells are not preserved as they are in their repre- 
sentative beds of Leicestershire and Rutland. They have a 
wide extension here, and appear in patches in several places. In 
the Vale of Weymouth they stretch out from Langton Herring 
to Radipole. As Mr. Wood's paper will be published in our 
forthcoming number, I shall not venture to say more on this 
subject. 

The next and last meeting of the Society was held at 
Dorchester on the 28th of September. A hurried visit was first 
paid to the Museum, which contains archaeological and natural 
objects of interest. In the geological department there is a fine 
series of Chelonians and fish from the Purbeck beds of Swanage; 



8 

also a gigantic humerus and complete paddle of Pliosaurus grandi* 
(Owen) from the Kimmeridge clays of Kimmeridge, measuring 
more than six feet, comprising the ulna, radius, carpel, metacarpal 
and phalangial bones. 

The party then proceeded to the Eoman Amphitheatre, 
which is one of the most perfect of the kind in Great Britain. 
It is elliptical in shape, and occupies about two acres of ground ; 
there are two entrances, and the seats arranged in ascending 
tiers, intervened by a terrace about half-way, and terminated by 
another at the summit. 

The next object was Maiden Castle. This magnificent earth- 
work differs from the generality of camps, from its ramparts 
being to a great extent artificial. It occupies an area of a 
hundred-and-twenty acres ; it is a thousand yards long and five 
hundred broad. Its southern side rests upon a hill low in 
gradient and defended by three lines of defence only ; the other 
sides by five. Its eastern entrance is defended by ramparts over- 
lapping each other, and a complicated arrangement of artificial 
defences strengthen its western approach. Although British in 
origin, there are undoubted proofs that it has undergone con- 
siderable alterations to adapt it for Roman occupation. 

Poundbury, a Danish earthwork on the west side of the 
town, was the last object of attention ; it is a parallelogram in 
shape, with one vallum of defence. During the construction of 
the railway which exposed its base, several coins (now deposited 
in the Dorchester Museum) were found. As their dates ranged 
from Claudius to Constantius, it is obvious the Romans occupied 
Poundbury as late as the commencement of the third century. 

Having passed in review the leading features of our 
pleasant, and I hope instructive, meetings during the past year, 
I pass on first to local and then to more general subjects of 
interest which relate to objects which also come within the sphere 
of our work. 

Our County Flora has had several additions made to it 
during the past year, as well as the confirmation of others 
depending upon ancient records. I will take first those which 
have not, until now, been claimed as Dorsetshire plants. Sper- 
gularia rupestris (Mill), the Rock-rose Sandwort Spwrrey, a sub- 
species of Spergularia marina (CambassJ, a very rare plant, and 
only occurring in nine other English counties ; I found it 
growing among the rocks under Pennsylvania Castle, Portland. 
Trifolium hybridum (Lin.), AUike Clover, found by Mr. Darell 
Stephens in a lane at Beerhacket.* Although this plant has a 
wide geographical range, it can only be recognized as a casual 
or waif in Britain. It appears, however, to be naturalized at 
Saffron Waldon, in Essex. Valerianella eriocarpa (Desvj, Hairy- 

* Since found in quantity in a grass meadow at Bradford Abbas. Editor. 



fruited LamVs Lettuce, found only once before in England by Mr. 
E. Lees, in Worcestershire, in the year 1845, and supposed to 
have been brought with foreign seed ; but the wildness 
of Portland's rocky coast, on which I found it growing, leaves 
no doubt as to its claim to be a British subject. Like Valeria- 
nella dentata, the barren cells of the fruit are reduced to two 
narrow converging ridges enclosing an oval space ; but it is at 
once distinguishable by a persistent calyx-limb, nerved, 
denticulate, and obliquely truncate. Valerianella Auricula, D. C., 
Sharp-fruited LamVs Lettuce, rare, not truly British, but a 
colonist, growing usually in cultivated ground. Mr. Darell 
Stephens found it at Bradford Abbas. Crepis (BarkhausiaJ 
taraxacifolia Thuill, Small Rough Hawtts-leard, also a colonist, but it 
grows apparently wild from Yorkshire to Surrey. It is not 
found in Europe north of Belgium. The Rev. W. M. Rogers met 
with it at Woolland. Polypogon Monspeliensis (Lin.}, Annual 
Sear d-gr ass. This beautiful grass grows abundantly on the 
damp sands near Little Sea, between Studland and the mouth of 
Poole harbour. It is a rare British plant, growing only in Hamp- 
shire, Kent, Essex, and Norfolk. TJiere can be no doubt about 
its being indigenous here, as the wildness of the district, and the 
absence of anything like cultivation within a considerable radius, 
places its casual introduction out of the question. The most 
interesting restoration of a plant to our County Flora is that of 
Euphorbia Peplis (Lin.}, Purple Spurge. The only county record 
we have of it is in Dr. Maton's edition of Pulteney's Lists, 
" among sand at Bridport by Mr. T. Sims, " where it was 
found last year, after an interval of about seventy years, 
by Mrs. J. Clark, of Street, and by whom it was submitted to 
me for confirmation. There are only seven county records of this 

lant in Mr. Hewett Watson's Topographical Botany. Lycopodium 
elago (Lin.}, Fir Club-Moss, is another restoration to our county list. 
I found it last year on Bere Heath, between Black n ill and the 
village ; probably the same locality indicated by Doctor 
Pulteney. It is entered in his list as having been found " on the 
heath beyond Bere, on the road to Woolbridge." Muscari 
comosum (Mill.}, Panicum Crus-G alii (Lin.}, and Xanthium Struma- 
rium (Lin.}, undoubted aliens, were met with last year in this 
county. The first I gathered on a grassy launch on the southern 
side of Portland ; it was in a healthy condition, the erect abortive 
flowers on the summit, and the pendent fertile ones below, were 
as well developed as I have ever seen them in their most favourite 
resorts in Southern Europe. 

Two species of Volant Reptiles have been recently found 
in the Kimmeridge clays of Kimmeridge. The evidence of 
Pterosaurians from the Lias to the Great Oolite have been long 
since established. In 1851 their remains were discovered in the 

B 



10 

Upper Chalk, subsequently in the Upper Greensand of Cambridge- 
shire, and quite recently in the Gault and Hastings sands. The 
Kimmeridge fossils, Pterodactylus Manselii (Owen}, and Ptero- 
dactylus Pleydellii ( Owen), are fragmentary ; but sufficient to 
justify their separation by the distinguished palaeontologist into 
distinct species. The bones are hollow, with large air cavities 
to render the animal light and capable of flight. 

I must now invite your attention for a few moments to one 
or two subjects which, although they stand outside the border of 
the County, have a direct claim upon our attention as naturalists. 
I will first refer to the Wealden boring, the object of which 
has been to ascertain the depth of the secondary strata in the 
Wealden area of Sussex, and the underlying Palaeozoic forma- 
tions, which comprise the surface beds in Belgium, and which 
pass under the Chalk in the north of France, re-appearing in 
Somersetshire and South "Wales ; they must, therefore, occur 
beneath the beds of the south-east of England. The first 
attempt at boring was abandoned, but the second reached a depth 
of about 1871 feet, but touched only the Coral Eag, after passing 
through about 1,600 feet of Kimmeridge Clay. By this result 
one part of the problem has been solved namely, that at 
Netherfield the Palaeozoic rocks are considerably more than 2,000 
feet below the surface. 

The published rainfall investigations which Mr. GK J. 
Symons has undertaken for several years past have largely 
increased the number of observers, which now reach to more 
than a thousand. On the utility of reliable rainfall records and 
the maintenance of an efficient organization, such as Mr. Symons 
provides for verification and reference, it is needless to dwell. 
As the merchant is guided in his mercantile transactions 
by a keen observation of the signs of the times, political and 
social, so will the Agriculturist be collaterally guided by the 
scientific records of meteorological phenomena, and thus success- 
fully contend with the dangers which ignorance on the subject 
entails. During the past year more than one period of disastrous 
weather has occurred, attended with much damage to the farm- 
ing interest I refer to the months of July and October. In 
July the whole of England appeared to be under a belt of 
storms, these atmospheric disturbances shifted about; but where- 
ever the rain fell it had the same characteristic of persistency 
and unparalleled quantity. The damage to the hay crops was 
beyond description ; in the Yale of Blackmoor large quantities 
of hay were transported and stranded upon far distant meadows, 
spoiled, damaged, and a nuisance to the occupiers by this other- 
wise welcome visitor. On the 15th of July no less than 3*58 
inches of rain fell at Longthorns. England was visited by 
a still greater rainfall in October, although the greatest 



11 

daily amount of rain reached only I'Ol inch, the aggregate for 
the month was 8-32 inches. The rainfall at Longthorns last year 
exceeded that of the two preceding years by nearly six inches. 

Taking the whole of Dorsetshire as 988 square miles, we 
shall have a mean daily fall of rain of 950 million gallons. 

Scientific attention has been of late largely devoted to an 
exhaustive study of the geological structure of England with 
reference to the water-bearing formations, which are at com- 
paratively moderate depths, and to the possibility of making 
them accessible for man's use. It is remarkable how the 
physical structure in this respect influenced the early residents of 
a district in their choice of settlements, and determined the sites 
of many of our towns and villages. The removal of the rain- 
water from the earth's surface (omitting evaporation), is variously 
provided for by nature, either by drainage into streams and rivers, 
which cut through the impermeable clays, or by absorption into 
the strata, as in the chalk and limestone districts, whereby the 
water is conveyed through fissures. The springs at the foot of 
pur Chalk downs, which rest upon the Gault or Oolitic clays, 
intervened by a thin stratum of Greensand, are much stronger 
and more profuse than those which issue in the valleys which do 
not reach below the Chalk level, and which in many cases become 
dry during the summer, as at Houghton, Milton Abbas, &c. Here 
the streams rise from springs thrown off in the low valleys where 
the Chalk soil is less absorbent. 

The Chalk beneath the surface soil is usually fissured, allow- 
ing the rain to pass through freely for a few feet, but is arrested 
when it reaches the compact, undisturbed mass, and only obtains 
access to the lower levels by cracks and fissures ; after long-con- 
tinued rains the Chalk becomes fully saturated and even to 
overflow. That communications with the outer air occur at great 
depths may be inferred from a case which came under my notice 
last year when I was sinking a well at Clenston, the miner 
reached a region of disturbed chalk several feet in thickness, at 
dip of 45 in a north-westerly direction, and about 110 feet 
from the surface, where he encountered a blast of atmospheric 
air so strong that his candle was blown out, and he was obliged 
to complete his work in the dark ; he otherwise felt no inconve- 
nience, nor was his respiration affected. 

It is obvious from what has been said that while water lies 
at the higher and lower levels of the Chalk districts, the inter- 
mediate mass is usually dry, the springs, therefore, issuing from 
the valleys which rest only upon the Chalk must have an inter- 
mittent and uncertain supply of water. 

I have ventured to dwell upon this subject, because the capa- 
bilities of the Chalk as a source of deep water supply for large 
towns has been maintained by many, and has been the subject of 



12 

inquiry by Professor Prestwich in an interesting memoir 
published this year. 

The power of Chalk as an absorbent and retentive agent is 
probably the cause of the beautiful verdure of our downs in 
spite of their exposed position and altitude. 

The Challenger expedition, which returned to England last 
Thursday, after an absence of 3 years, under the command of 
Captain Thomson, who succeeded Captain Nares on his appoint- 
ment to the command of the Arctic expedition, has added to the in- 
formation of oceanic currents, and shown thattheseabottom consists 
of organisms whose remains have passed through more than one 
stage. In its southern cruise no less than four distinct kinds of 
sea-bottom were found, all apparently of purely organic matter, and 
chiefly resembling our Lower and Upper Chalk and Upper Green- 
Band formations. The most interesting of these is that of red- 
clay, which, in Mr. Wyville Thompson's opinion, consists of the 
insoluble portions of Forameniferse (Globigerina especially}, the 
soluble portions, amounting to 98 per cent., having been removed. 
This insoluble argillaceous matter must either have been a 
constituent part of the shell, or deposited in its chambers after 
death ; in the former case it is possible the carbonate of 
lime which composed the shells might not have been entirely 
free from iron, silica and alumina. At all events it is clear 
depositions are now in progress very far from land, due neither 
to denudation nor terrestrial debris. Some remarkable sound- 
ings were taken off the north-east of New Guinea, at depths of 
4,475 and 4,579 fathoms; the only one of the four thermometers 
which withstood the pressure of nearly six tons on the square 
inch recorded a bottom temperature of 34.5. A similar temper- 
ature was found at a depth of 1,500 fathoms, it is therefore 
clear a stratum of 3,000 fathoms in thickness occurs in these 
seas, which has a uniform temperature of 34.5. The Expedi- 
tion under the guidance of Mr. Mosely and other naturalists in 
the Challenger has very recently collected and forwarded to Kew 
seventy-nine species of ferns from Polynesia, of which eleven 
are new. The Admiralty, Aru, and Little Kei Islands offer an 
entirely new and untrodden ground for the study of Pteridology. 
The total distance run by the Challenger since 2 1st December, 1872, 
has been 68,184 miles, nearly 400 deep soundings were taken, of 
which two were over 4,000 fathoms, nine between 3,000 and 4,000 
fathoms, and serial temperatures were obtained at 250 stations. 

Since we last met, the Arctic Expedition has left our shores. 
Far away now, in a region of ice and snow, our brave fellow- 
countrymen are toiling in the vicinity of the Pole and pushing 
forward towards the goal, which, if attained, will crown them 
with honour and glory. The undertaking is one of deep interest 
to the student of the natural sciences. In these unknown regions 



13 

the mysteries of magnetism, the cause and nature of the Aurora, 
the influence the Polar ice exercises upon terrestrial climate may 
for the first time be explained ; in fine, the sciences of meteoro- 
logy, geodesy, geology, and botany must be materially 
advanced. The fossil flora of North Greenland shows that 
it once had a warmer climate than at present, by at least 
30. Evergreen oaks, magnolias, and other semi-tropical or 
temperate plants grew there during the Miocene age, the 
nearest living representatives of which are not to be found 
nearer than 10 or even 20 farther south. The cause of a 
change of climate so marked has been endeavoured to be 
accounted for in various ways ; it is a problem which will have 
to be solved by the astronomer a change in the eccentri- 
city of the earth's orbit and our hemisphere being either in 
aphelion during the winter solstice, when the summers 
would be too short to melt the winter ice, or in perihelion 
when a comparatively mild and brief winter would be succeeded 
by a long summer. The deflexion of ocean currents by 
a change in the relative position of sea and land are among 
the many reasons assigned for so obvious a change of 
climate between the past and the present. To return to the 
Expedition, of whose safe passage through the Middle Pack to 
the Gary Islands we have received authentic accounts. Captain 
Allen Young, the devoted, enthusiastic, and patriotic Arctic 
amateur explorer, who commenced his career in the discovery 
voyage of the Fox, to ascertain the fate of Sir John Frank- 
lin and his companions, turned aside from the object of 
his voyage to do the great public service of communi- 
cating with the Expedition, and brought home the last 
letters, dated July 26th, 1875. Ten months have elapsed 
since any news of the Expedition have been received, and 
it must be many more before the anxious friends of 
the brave men can have further tidings. Ere this they have 
commenced their spring travels ; but, during the dreary winter 
months the scientific men of the Expedition will not have been idle 
in working out the result of their meteorological, magnetic, and 
pendulum observations. Captain Allen Young left England last 
week, in his steam-yacht Pandora, with letters to be deposited at 
the depots, on the chance of Captain Nares being able to com- 
municate with the entrance of Smith's Sound by means of a 
small sledge party in the autumn of the present year. The 
voyage will be by no means devoid of danger. He will have to 
examine Littleton Island, Cape Isabella, and Point Gale, at one 
of which stations he expects to find notices and letters down to 
May. It is not beyond the bounds of possibility that he might 
meet the Alert and the Discovery coming out of Smith's Sound 
with their work completed. 



14 

I must not omit the remarkable achievement of Lieutenant 
Cameron, whose wonderful march across tropical Africa, from 
east to west, will place him in the foremost rank of practical 
geographers. Attended by two companions both of whom re- 
turned, one through the effects of the climate, the other, with the 
remains of the great traveller Livingstone, which were met at Uny- 
anyembe himself suffering from a serious fever of an intermit- 
tent type how alone and somewhat recovered, Cameron proceeded 
to Ujiji to recover an important map of Dr. Livingstone's, without 
which record this traveller's discoveries would have been incom- 
plete. It was handed over to him, and he dispatched it by a safe 
hand to Zanzibar. His first great exploit was the survey of Lake 
Tanganyika, which he ascertained to be 2,754 feet above the 
level of the sea, and discovered the great stream Lukuga flowing 
out of it on its western side. The gallant explorer returned to 
Ujiji ; on the 19th of May he sent off his last letter to Zanzibar, 
and started the next day on his lonely and chivalrous expedition. 
In August he reached Nyangwe on the Lualaba, the furthest 
point reached by Livingstone, Lieutenant Cameron found it 
to be only 1,400 feet above the level of the sea, which put an 
end to the idea that the Lualaba is connected with the Nile sys- 
tem. Here was the crisis of the undertaking. The chief of the 
neighbouring district refused him leave to cross his territory, and 
he was obliged to give up the idea of following the course of the 
Congo ; but, nothing daunted in his resolve to reach the Atlantic, 
his detour led to equally valuable geographical discoveries ; he 
touched the watershed of the Zambesi which flows eastward into 
the Indian Ocean. In October last he reached Benuela on the 
Atlantic, and proceeded from thence to Laonda. Lieutenant 
Cameron's discoveries, besides others of deepest importance, show 
that by a canal only 30 miles long, the Zambesi, which flows into 
the Indian Ocean, and the Congo, which flows into the Atlantic, one 
of the most magnificent water communications in the world, can be 
effected. During his search for the outflow of water from Lake 
Tanganyika, Lieutenant Cameron collected 100 species of flowers, 
of which 12 are new. If the Lakuga belongs, as it probably 
does, to the Congo river basin, these flowers will be found to be 
distinct from those of the Nile or off the Zambesi. 

And now ladies and gentlemen let me express to you the 
sense I entertain of the honour you conferred upon me last year 
in electing me to be your President, and for the kindness and 
courtesy I have received from you during my tenure of the office. 
If I have been in any way successful in the discharge of my 
duties, that success is mainly owing to the valuable assistance I 
have received from Professor Buckman, the Rev. H. H. Wood, 
and from your kindness in looking over my deficiencies. 



SOME ACCOUNT OF THE COURTS OF LAW HOLDEN IN 
WEYMOUTH AND MELCOMBE REGIS, DORSET, IN 16-ra 
AND 17TH CENTURIES. 

(BY T. B. GROVES, ESQ.) 

Although the records of the two ancient towns now known as the united 
Borough of Weymouth and Melcombe Regis have suffered greatly from the 
carelessness and ignorance of those responsible for their safe custody 
there still remains sufficient to afford both amusement and instruction to 
those who, if not altogether laudatores temporis acti, feel an interest attach- 
ing to all that concerns the life and doings of our forefathers. 

The records of the higher Courts of Law and of Parliament furnish 
the historian with materials for his grander works, but for truthful informa- 
tion concerning the private lifje of the people recourse must be had to other 
and humbler sources. Of these the records of the small courts of various kinds 
held in more or less obscure places are not the least fruitful of facts which 
might perhaps be characterised as trivial, but which, nevertheless, help to 
fill up the outline picture presented by documents of greater importance and 
solemnity. 

The clerk of the courts of which I write was indeed a " chronicler of small 
beer," and, unlesawne were somewhat of an enthusiast, it would be painful as 
well as laborious to have to wade through his puzzling manuscript in order 
to pick up here and there a fact or two that seemed worth calling attention 
to. It must also be entered as a justification in my case that the entries are 
strictly local, a fact which gives them a significance and importance they 
would not otherwise possess and which will, I fear, limit their interest to those 
connected with the locality. 

Weymouth proper (the southern part of the present Parliamentary 
borough) was not anciently incorporated, but was a Royal borough, 
the private property of the Sovereign. The courts held in it were 
manorial courts, and in that respect differed from those held in Melcombe 
Regis. A book is extant containing the Records of the courts of certain Royal 
manors in Dorset for the year 1582, and amongst them is Weymouth. The 
entries are almost always in Latin, and generally contracted. The contractions 
served the double purpose of economising space and of doing away with the 
necessity of furnishing those troublesome things, correct terminations. One 
would not perhaps be wide of the mark if a third reason were 
added a desire to render them inaccessible to the vulgar, and there- 
fore to render more important the office of Clerk of the Court. Not 
that the clerk was at all particular to avoid the appearance of inefficiency, 
hie mistakes were often amusing, and the way he eked out his scanty Latin 



16 

with English, producing a singular literary mosaic, very much so. As to 
my mind the quaintness of the entries is very much mixed up with the 
actual form, I shall, as a rule, reproduce them with their verbal and 
literal peculiarities, leaving my readers the not difficult task of supplying 
for themselves the deficiencies and noting the grammatical errors where 
they occur. 

However, it is not my intention at present to do more than transcribe such 
specimens of the entries as will perhaps suffice to give some idea of how Court 
was kept " tempore Elizabeth!." A line drawn over a word or syllable will 
indicate the omission of one or more letters. In the original the precise 
letters omitted are generally indicated by the shape and position of the 
flourish, but here it will not be possible to do more than employ one 
general form, a straight line to serve for all. 

The form of the heading of the record of the law day for Weymouth in 
the year 1582 was as follows : 

Weymouth ) Curia legalis cum visu ffranc pleg unacu cur Manii dome 

Regine ibm tent viij die octobris, &c., coram Robto Keyte generos jeputat sen, 
nobillo viro henrico com penbroch preclar ordinis garter mil capitall Sene^call 
Rine burg pd Tempore hugonis Rendall et willim dotterell adtunc Balli burgi 
pd elect. 

The entries then follow, but before attending to them it would be well to 
reproduce a very curious " Charge to the jury " to be found in one of the 
Town books of about this date, devoted to the insertion, for the use 
of the Court, of numerous common forms of procedure, indictments, 
indentures, oaths, &c., as well as the proceedings of the Corporation after 
the union. 

FOB KEPINGE OP COURTE. 

SEWTERS. Inprimis ye shall enquire for all thoes psones which owe sute to 
this Lawe day, whether they be here or not. And ye shall understand that 
theire is twoo sewtes. Sewte royall which is intendant to this lete, and weste 
service which is intendant to the Korte baron to the sewte Royal, that is to say 
to Appeare and attende here at this lete, all and every such psone is bounden as 
is resident within the ffranchise and the Jurisdiction of this Lawe daie and hath 

byn uprising and downe Lying there by the space of mj* daies and iiij nights 
and passeth the age of xij yeres and here he ought to be sworne to the kinge if 
he be nott alreddy sworne, and as it is very expedient and necessarie that ye 
that are ancient and wise men shold do your attendance here for the redress and 
punishment of suche enormyties and misdemynors as ye shalbe charged to 
enquire of and also as ye by your discrete wisedomes shold thinke mete to be 
redressed, so it is very mete that the yonge men shold be here also as well 
to take theire othe of allegyance to the kings highenes if they be not alreddy 
sworne, as also to here suche things as shalbe gyven you in charge to thentent 
that they may evidently see and pcey ve what things be punysheable, and that 
the punishment of malefactors maybe such a terror to the youthe that they 
shall be affrayde to offend in the like, and then no doute that feare of the Lawe 
and the transgressing thereof so planted in them in youthe muste nedes con- 



17 

tynewe with them in theire age muche to theire owne honesties and the quietnes 
of the hole lordship in tyme to come, wherefore if they be not here presentlie 
at this day ye shall present theire names and with where they dwell." 

The remainder of the document "For Kepinge of Courte" would not 
apply to the monorial court, but to courts of higher degree, and define for 
enlightenment of the jury -what are Treasons and so on. Some of these 
definitions are, I venture to think, sufficiently curious to justify my repro- 
ducing them. 

" MA.NNACINGE. Also ye shall enquyre of such as do make bills comanding 
some certine psone or psones thereby to ley some certaine some of money in 
some place certaine or els if he do not that they will burn his house or do hym 
some grete vengeaunce." 

" FFELLONY. Ye shall also enquyre of sache as of any malyce prepense and 
of a purpose do cut the tongs of any the Kinges Subiects or put out theire 
yeies. This is ffellonie." 

"BURGLAKY. Ye shall also enquyre of Burglary. Burglars be those that 
ffeloniosly in the night do breke open the house wall or gate of any man 
although he enter not, nor take nothing away yet is this broking burglary and 
he shall suffer dethe for it." 

The other definations are headed Rape, Voluntarie Escape, Receyvors of 
ffellons, Abettars. The first is hardly suitable, the rest are not of sufficient 
interest for insertion. 

To return to the manorial Court. 

" The presentments of "Sewters " for non-attendance number 50, commenc- 
ing with Johes Wyllams arm who was fined twelve pence, the highest amoun* 
levied, and ending with "duo fli willmi ledoze " who pay 6d. The majority 
pay 3d. each. The names include Trerberfylde gen, Hardye gen, Pytt, Jur- 
degne, Hawkyns, G-ylbert, Wade, Hennynge, Phezarde, &c. 

The jury, sixteen in number, are styled " Jurator impanulat pro dom 
Regina," and were sworn, apparently, in batches of four. Their first pre- 
sentment is as follows : " Qui Jurator pd supra saerm suum present quod 
onia pantea psensat p official- in cur psedent fore vera et hec affirmat onia." 
Then follow 27 other presentments of not much interest. One, however, 
referring to the Butts for the practice of " artillerie," may be quoted : 
" Et quod mete burgi non adhuc sunt sufficient facte. ieo currit pena statut 
viz. pro quibuslibet treseptimanibus xxa." The Court was held every 
three weeks. 

It seems that in later years the holding of it every three weeks was not 
adhered to. In fact, after the Union, it was a main cause of complains 
against the alleged usurpations of the Melcombe Regis people, that this 
Court had been practically abolished. At a Court held in Weymouth, 
October 7th, 1633, the following presentment is recorded : 

" Itemprntant quod Cur opportet esse servat in tribus Seplimanis fnfra hanc 
Burgum et Villam de "VVaymouth Secundum ville consuetudinesn a utehac usit 
at." 

In consequence of the.se complaints, which istmed in litigation in the 
superior Courts, it was ordered that three persons should be nominated to 



18 

assist the Mayor in the execution of Justice on the "Weymouth side. The 
three nominated were Christopher Percie.gen., Christopher Anketell, gent., 
and Mr. Chaffyn, arm. These, however, having probably refused to accept 
office, the following names were afterwards substituted : 

Thos. Howarde } This note is appended : - 

George Trenchard V armig, " Md yt there was no 

John Willms amercement." 

In the following reign (4th, Jas. 1st) 1607, the Court for the united Borough 
was described as follows : 

" Villa de Waymouth et Melcombe Regis." " Cur dmi Regis ville pdce tent 
apud guihald ibm coram Maiore, Aldis. Eallivis, Burgeusibus et Coitate vile 
pdc scdm coss ville pdce a tpe cuius contrarii memoria homin non existit usitat 
et appbat in eaclen die martis scilt nono die Septembris Anno Regni dni nri 
Jacobi dei grae Anglie &c. Regis nunc quarto et Scotie quadragessimo." 

These Courts were held alternately in Weymouth and Melcombe Regis 
apparently every week, and were occupied solely in providing for the 
security of the Borough, the removal of obstructions, nuisances, &c. 
The vast number of presentments of " sterquilinia " would lead one to 
suppose that the height of every ones ambition was to plant a dung- 
mixen before his neighbour's door. Other great causes of complaint were 
the obstruction of water courses, ruinous quays, dangerous chimneys and 
mantels, and encroachments on the public lands. I might, perhaps, refer 
to these more particularly at a future time. 

The personeloi these courts being obviously unadapted for deciding questions 
of law, there were other courts held before the Mayor, Baillives, 
and Recorder. The latter functionary, however, was not always present, 
which probably led to the postponement of the purely legal business. 

An entry of the appointment of a Recorder occurs October 14th, 1594 : 

" Upon this psent daye Richard Swayne Esquier by a generall consent of the 
Maior &c is elected and chosen to be Recorder of the said towne And it is 
therefore agreed upon by the said Maior &c that a patent thereof shalbe made 
unto him with a ffee of iii li, vi s, vuid. yearly to be paid unto him, and that 
Mr. Maior shall seal the same patent with the Seales of the towne in that 
behalf used 

Such a Court was held September 21st, 1663, of which the following is 
the heading : 



" Generalis Sessip pads pBurgo et Villa pdca tent apud Guildall ibm xxi die 
Septembris Anno Dm mi Caroli secundi nunc Rs Ang &c decimo quinto &c, 
coram Thoma Hide Majore, Samuel Bond Recordatore Henrico Rose et 
Georgio Pitt Balliis &c." 

Entries of the fining of Jurors for non-attendance are not unfrequent, 
and contempt of Court is severely dealt with. Of the latter the following 
are instances : 

" January 19th, 1617. Att the Sessions of the peace Mathewe Allin speak- 
ing openly in the Courte that the Coarse which Mr. Mayor did take would 
drive all men oute of the Towne the Corte did graunte the good behavior 
againste him and required him to find suretyes for the same and thereupon a 
warrant was directed unto Srients att the Mace ad capiend." 



19 

The Allin family seems to have been an unruly one, for in October of the 
previous year we find the following 1 : 

" Att this Sessions of the peace Richard Allin alias Belpitt the younger for 
that he being returned for one of the Grand Jury and being psent in the Courte 
refused to bee sworne of the same Jury in contempte of the same Courte is 
fined by the Courte at x li." 

" Item pntantTqcl Rogerus Chipp publice dixit in plena. Cur haec scandalosa 
Anglicana verba The Towne hath wronged me et ideo amerciabat p Cur adiij. s, 
sed affer ad iiijd." 

A Juror is also presented for revealing the secrets of the prison house. 
" Item presentant Joheni Senior quia consilium sociorum Juratorum non vela- 
vit sed revelavit, v s." 

The way in which the titles of the Jurors vary according to the changes 
of Government is worth noting. During the reigns of Elizabeth and 
James the juratores are described as " Pro Domino Rege (or Regina) ;" 
during the greater part of the first year of Cromwell's usurpation we find 
instead " Pro Re-publica ;" but in October of that year the records are kept 
in English, and then we have the translation " for the Commonwealth." 
During the interval between the demission of Richard Cromwell, and the 
Restoration, the Jurors are " for the keepers of the Libertie of England ;" 
but on October 1st, 1660 we find the entries again in Latin, and the phrase 
"pro domino Rege." 

There exists in a book of Records of the 18th, Eliz, so complete an 
account of an action on plea of debt that it is, I think, qTiite worth insert- 
ing here. It commences June 26th, 1876, with this entry : 

" Owinus Raynolds de Waymouth et Melcombe regis in comitat Dorset yeo- 
man queritur de Thoma Cliff de villa et eom pd mercatore de plito convencois 
&c etde plito quod reddat>i]quadraginta et quinque solidos et quatuor denarios 
quos ei debet etinjuste detinet &c." 

There was also a second action against him for a larger amount. It was 
the custom of the Court to allow four defaults of appearance. These 
having been in his case exhausted a fifth was allowed him, "ex gratia Cur." 
This leniency was doubtless due to the fact that Owen Raynolds was 
Mayor at the time, but it was of no avail ; the unhappy Thomas could not 
face his creditors. We next find the following entry : - 

" Thomas Cliff quamvis exactus non venit nee compuit^nec aliquid dicit in 
Barram accois debi pd Owini Raynolds. Super quo dcua Owinus prsestitit 
sacrum suum corporale qd dcus Thomas debet pfato Owino debitu pd. Ideo 
considerat est qcl dcus Owinus recupet versus dcum Thorn debitusm suum pd 
ad xlv s iiii d st ex misis et custag ad s.s. x s ijd. Ideo fiat executio pro levari 
facias &c." 

On the 21st August the action of the Sergeants at Mace is reported as 
follows : 

Ad hanc cur servient ad clavam returnaverunt pcept de levari faciend ei s 
direct viz, quod ipsi virtute pcepti qd levari f ecerint de bonis et catallis 
infranominati Thomaoe Cliff. . . . "una measam vocat a Table Bord, una cista 
vocat an Hand cheste, una cathedra, una calcitra plumaria vocat a pillowe, una 



20 

vetus calcitra vocat an olcle fether-bedde with a fewe fethers in him, un 
sperimentu vocat a coverlet of yarne, duas ledices laneas vocat a paire of 
blankets, una pare stentaculor ferreor vocat a payre of fflaunders Andyrons, et 
unrTaliud par stentaculor ferreor vocat a payre of Iron Rackes, et una area vocat 
a Roane cheste plated valoris sex librar trium solidor et quatuor denarior que 
quidem bona sua p bonos appreciator appreciatviz p Thoma Newton et Willium 
pitt &c." 

This not sufficing a second levy was made which produced : 
unu Abacu vocat a cupporde et una carcella vestrariam vocat a presse for clothes 
valoris quinquajinta et sex solidor et octo denar." 

A third levy secured the debtors' stock-in-trade, viz. : 

"quinque saccos glasti vocat sixe bagges of Tullos wodes, sexcent libras 
piperis, duodecium mensuras serici villosi vocat twelve fares of velvet. Tres 
pecias panni lintei vocat powle davies, &c. " 

To complete the story I insert a copy, so far as it can be deciphered by 
me, of the lawyer's bill which was found pinned to a leaf of the Record. It 
is written in a scribbling and scarcely legible hand, and is doubtless the 
actual bill presented to the plaintiffs : 

" billa custag Rogeri Keat in causa The Cliffe " 
ye Myttimus (?) vi d 
ye declar xij d 

ye executio (?) xij d 

ye attorneys fe iij s iiij d 

ye levare viij d 

(other items which I cannot even guess, make up the total of ten 

shillings) 

consimilis pro Owino Raynolds versus patuni Thomam ad x s. 
The forms of indictment are in some cases very curious ; so are the oaths 
of the various parish and Borough officials, but I have probably already 
quoted enough on so unattractive a subject as the Law courts. 

Perhaps a few entries taken at random as specimens, of bad Latinity and 
absurd jumbles of Latin and English will serve to mitigate the dulness of 
this paper, and, at the same time, give occasion for reflection on the state of 
general education in days when such could, without question, be inserted in 
public documents. 

" Et ordinat et decret estqd carnifices burgi non vendebant vulgo "le tallow" 
extra burg ita ut inhabitante burgi habere poterant candeleos sub pena cuius 
libet faciens rlefalt Vs." (John George was shortly after so fined). 

" I tern putand qd le Mantell of the Chimney in domo mansionali Joheu 
Bagg est valde piculos ad faciend ignem in eodem le Chimney et ideo prept ei 
reformare &c." 

" Item pntant qd Hugo Martin, &c. , Kent retia vocat reame nette ad capiend 
pisces cum minor le Mesch qm pmis est p statut, &c." 

" Item pntant qd le pynnion end domus apud Love lane end nuper emp~t""e 
Thoma jjovelis est in decasu ad ma?n picul transeunt et ideo ordinat est p~Cur 
qoT dcus Thomas aut accpiet illud deorsu (take it down !) aut faciat ilia parte ad 
svand transeuntes in securitate, &c. " 



21 

" Item putant qd~Matthew Allen erexit unum le ffurse reeke in terra sua 
ppe vicum et pcepFest ei amovere idem le ffurse ryke, &c 

"Item putant qdRicus Brooke subversit regia via Anglice hath torne down 
the highwaye in vico vocat St. Nicholas Street etposuit ibm qucedam lez stakes 
ad magnu piculu homin et equor eandem viam trans, &c. 

"Item, &c., qd Wiiius Bondfield posuit pisces suos et fecit forreg (?) pp 
adiacent doms Robti White fratris sui que mult nocent dom ipsiusRobti White 
ad admod mala funigatone Anglice with a very ill stincke, &c." 

Item, &c., qd Johes Pitt posiut Novem le Milstones super le Townne ground 

et Barnardus Mechell posuit ibm dua__Tormenta Anglice two peeces of 

ordinance et Lucus Edwards posuit ibm unum le Boate ad commune 

nocumentum, &c. 

Item, &c., Barnardus Michel posuit quatuor Tormenta Anglice three peeces 

of ordinance and one Murderer super, &c. " 

" Item~qcf omnes Inhabitantes in le hope a domo Kici Martin usque domum 
Johis Case ejicere consueverunt le sweepings et alia le ffilth domor suor 
portu et superin hoc &c." 

Entries such as these, many of them too coarse for insertion, abound in 
these documents. 

The long accounts in English of the examination of persons suspected of 
Popery, Treason, &c., or concerned in Broils, Roysterings, Gaming, &c., are 
very amusing, and afford a correct and minutely finished picture of the life of 
the Burgesses of Weymouth during the reigns of James 1st, Charles 1st, the 
Commonwealth, and Charles 2nd, They would perhaps furnish materials 
for a future paper. 




NOTES ON SOME COENBEASH SECTIONS IN DOESET 
(By THE EEV. H. H. WOOD, F.G.S., &c., &c.) 

One of the results we hope to obtain from our new Field Club is 
that many of our members all of them if possible may be induced 
to examine their own neighbourhoods very carefully and bring us 
the results of such examination, whether antiquarian or scientific- 
What will be thus contributed to the general stock of knowledge 
may be in some instances of no great importance in itself ; but that, 
I trust, will be no discouragement to the discoverer. In an orchestra 
you may find occasionally an instrument which does not contribute 
more than a note or two to the general effect, but however insignifi- 
cant its part would be if taken alone, it is yet indispensable for the 
perfection of the harmony. These and such like reasons have been 
my inducement, as they must be my apology, for bringing to your 
notice a series of Geological Beds, which are found under somewhat 
more favourable conditions than usual in my own neighbourhood. 

The Beds I propose to take under my special protection as part of 
the work I hope to do for our Club are Beds which have a good 
many difficulties to contend with. Few persons probably take up 
any special formation without fancying that their protege has 
not received from geologists the attention it deserves ; but hardly 
anybody, I think, would doubt this being the case with the Corn- 
brash. In more than one treatise on geology that I could name, the 
formation is not even mentioned, and in most of the rest it is dis- 
missed very summarily, as if it were too unimportant a matter to 
waste time over. 

There are many reasons which have led to this neglect. First of 
all, it must be confessed that in itself it is an unimportant member 
of the Stratified rocks in England. At Weymouth there is claimed 
for it a thickness of 40 feet, but it is very seldom that it attains to 
any such proportions. Near Sherborne its greatest thickness does 
not much, if at all, exceed twenty feet, whilst in other parts of 
England where it occurs it dwindles to five or six feet, or even yet 
more insignificant dimensions, 



23 

Secondly, the fossils are to blame. If you had been collecting the 
Tertiary shells of Barton Cliff, or the Isle of Wight, as I have been 
doing myself for many years ; or if you had the good luck to fall in 
with such a bed of inferior oolite as Professor Buckman has close at 
his very door, you would probably be inclined to empty into the 
nearest gutter a hamper of fossils from a Cornbrash quarry : poor- 
looking specimens in themselves generally in the state of casts, and 
these too often far from perfect they certainly are very unattractive' 
if not contemptible. Probably I should never have condescended to 
have noticed them myself but for a visit of my dear friend Pro- 
fessor Phillips, whose surprise at the number of forms we discovered 
in a single quarry first induced me to see how large a series could be 
brought together. 

Again, there are sections in which even these poor specimens 
almost entirely disappear. Amongst these I fear I must reckon the 
Wey mouth section. For some reason or other I had imagined it to 
be very rich in forms, and great was my disappointment when on a 
visit to Radipole, just before our pleasant meeting at Weymouth, to 
find that three miserably imperfect specimens one of them, of 
course, being a valve of Avicula echinata were all I had to remem- 
ber my visit by, in addition to a severe drenching. 

Again, in some of its economical aspects the Cornbrash is not of 
much consequence. The lime made from it, though largely used, is 
of inferior quality, and when I add to this that roads I won't say 
mended, but covered by it are roads it is as well, if possible, to 
avoid, I feel I have confessed to an awkward number of reasons for 
despising my protege. 

Yet on all these points there is much to be said in defence of the 
Cornbrash. The lands in which it crops to the surface are of very 
considerable importance in corn-growing districts, and acres of such 
soil are of higher value than 'those on its more aristocratic neigh- 
bour forest marble. The multitude of rubbly stones covering the 
entire surface of a field when ploughed, and suggesting at first the 
impossibility of anything growing there except a few ill-natured and 
intrusive weeds, really do very good service, and if a farmer, having 
such lands, tried to clear his fields of such nuisances, he would have 
to learn a lesson I once heard of as learnt at Cumberland. At great 
expense a farmer cleared some acres of myriads of fragments of new 
red sandstone to find that at equal expense he had to cart them all 
back again. 



24 

Again, if it is an insignificant member of the oolite series in one 
respect, in another it is of considerab'e value. Professor Phillips 
says of it, " Though so unimportant a rock in other respects, it is 
probably more continuous and more uniform in character from 
Dorsetshire to the Humber than any other member of the oolite 
formation, except the sands of the inferior oolite." (Manual, p. 300). 
These two landmarks, then one at the top, the other at the bottom 
of the Bath oolite are of great use in determining the sequence of 
beds in particular localities. 

Again, if its fossils are generally in poor condition they have a 
peculiar interest of their own. First of all I would remind you of a 
circumstance to which our Secretary was, I believe, the first to call 
attention. He pointed out that its fossils have far more affinity to 
those of the inferior than to those of the great oolite, which lies 
between them. Of 71 Gloucestershire species, 45 were found to be 
common to the inferior oolite. Of course, we can easily conceive it 
possible that a series of forms of life in some particular locality, 
having been obliged to emigrate through a change of surrounding 
conditions, might, if the disturbing influences were removed, return 
to their former quarters. This is what Professor Buckman believes 
to be the case here, and, if so, it is a case which is almost, if not 
quite, unique, In chemical composition the Cornbrash is certainly 
more akin to the inferior than to the great oolite. I would not 
venture to say of the fossils that the assertion so ingeniously made 
about them is quite as proven as the place of the beds in geological 
sequence ; and I am inclined to agree with Professor Phillips, who 
used always to tell his classes about some beds on the top of Shot- 
over, that it was well that some geological problems should remain 
as open questions, because then every young student would have an 
opportunity of trying his " prentice hand " and head in suggesting a 
solution of the riddle. 

Again, if the Cornbrash is of small thickness, the number of 
fossils it contains is comparatively large. I have already mentioned 
that Professor Buckman's paper in 1857 gives 71 species from Glou- 
cestershire. He adds some details about the Cephalopods and 
J'rachiopods, and promises in a future paper to give us a complete 
list. AVliitravos in |si;o .u'a \ < a list of 7'* s])c<-ics from thr neigh- 
bourhood of Oxt'urd : whilst Livkriiby rolle-i-trd as many as \ '',() 
from a thin but ru-h bed not more than live IVrt tliirk at Scar- 



25 

borough, which is now either worked out or covered up. I hope 
to show you some day that Dorset is even richer than this. I do not 
like to speak very positively, but I think I have nearly 180 species 
of Mollusca alone from my own neighbourhood, and I am sure the 
list can be still further increased. I may take this opportunity of 
saying that I should be thankful for specimens from Puncknowle 
and other Dorsetshire sections, to add to the collection I am forming 
for the museum at the King's School, Sherborne. 

The fossils themselves have some curious points of interest. As 
regards the flora of that period our information is very limited. 
Some curio us-looking branched but otherwise shapeless bodies may 
have been the stems of large seaweeds, and pieces of drifted wood 
I suppose coniferous are interesting, from the boring shells they 
contain, sometimes in large quantities. A good specimen is to be 
seen in the Sherborne Museum. 

Annelids and Zoophytes occur in small numbers j but there is a 
considerable number of Echinodermata, which are better preserved, 
however, in other parts of England especially in Wilts and North- 
hampton, than they are near Sherborne. "Wright mentions as many 
as 21 species in his beautiful monograph, issued by the Palseonto- 
graphical Society. Another family of Echinodermata the first 
order in the group (I mean the Crinoids) I merely mention, because 
we had the opportunity, thanks to Mr. Damon, of seeing so magnifi- 
cent a specimen of a recent species at Weymouth the Pentacrinus 
Asteria. This genus, or other allied ones, existed in enormous abund- 
ance in Silurian and Carboniferous ages. They are plentiful in the 
Lias, as, for instance, the P. Briareus, of which splendid specimens 
have been obtained at Lyme Regis. They became scarce in the chalks ; 
scarcer still in the Tertiaries j and for a long time they were not 
known as recent in any seas. Two species (P. Asteria and Mulleri) 
were found in the last century in the seas of the Antilles, and about 
20 specimens sent to Europe, but there were only two good ones 
among them. Recently, one of our members, Mr. Damon, whose 
name is so well known in connection with Natural Science, has suc- 
ceeded in obtaining several very fine specimens from Guadeloupe. 

In 1823 Mr. J. S. Thompson thought he had discovered a Pentacri- 
nite in our own seas, and called it P. Europeus. It was afterwards 
found to be only the young form of a well-known star fish the 
Comatula rosea, the rosy feather star, which at first is attached to a 



26 

base, which afterwards becomes absorbed, and the creature is free. 
But since then actual specimens of allied genera have been dis- 
covered in European seas. The first was found in 1864 by a son of 
Professor Sars, off the Loffoten Islands, and was described by the 
Professor as Rhizocrinus Loffotensis. It represents in a very 
debased form the well known Pear Encrinite, of which such 
beautiful specimens are found at Bradford, in Wilts. Finally, in 
1870, a real Pentacrinite was taken during the Porcupine expedition, 
off the coast of Portugal, in 1,095 fathoms, by Mr. Gwyn Jeffreys, 
and called by him P. Wyville-Thomsoni. The stem has at the base 
five arms, which can be used as grapplers, and the animal can pro- 
bably move from place to place j so that it holds an intermediate 
place between the genus of Crinoids which is free (Antedon), and 
those which are fixed permanently. 

A third genus was added also by the deep sea dredging expedi- 
tion. This is called Bathycrinus, and was brought up from a depth 
of 2,435 fathoms, off the Bay of Biscay, about 200 miles south of 
Cape Clear. 

Of the Mollusca, I must only call your attention to one genus 
that of the Belemnites. Their distribution is very puzzling. 
Plentiful in the Oxford clay and Kelloway rock, they are ex- 
tremely rare in the Cornbrash. Professor Phillips mentions a 
specimen from Yorkshire; our President has just been showing 
me the phragmacone of another example from Puncknowle, and I 
saw one in the rich Wiltshire collection of Mr. Cunnington, now, I 
am afraid, dispersed. They are rare in forest marble, Bradford 
clay, great oolite (though some specimens are found at Stonesfield), 
and Fuller's earth. In the inferior oolite, on the other hand, they are 
extremely abundant, and still more so in the Lias, until a particular 
zone is reached that of Ammonites Bucklandi. No specimens are 
known from the Tertiaries (the little Belemnosis, belonging to the 
Sepiadse), and there are none now living. Why should they be so 
common both above and below the Cornbrash, and in the Cornbrash 
itself should scarcely be found at all ? No doubt the Belemnites 
.were not littoral, but deep sea creatures, and if the Cornbrash was 
not deposited in quite such shallow water as the Forest Marble, in 
which ripple marks are still so commonly to be met with, yet it was 
a shallow water deposit nevertheless. But then the Ammonites and 
the Nautili were both deep sea forms, and with shells far more 



brittle 



27 



brittle than the Belemnites, and both of these Cephalopoda are 
found in the Cornbrash commonly enough. I confess, therefore, 
that the absence of Belemnites is at present a puzzle to me, for 
which I can suggest no explanation. 

It is possible that eventually all the great divisions of vertebrate 
life may be discovered in the formation in question, but at present 
the evidence of the existence of such life is very scanty. Occasion- 
ally you can meet with a specimen or two of the flat grinding palatal 
teeth of some fish allied to our sharks, and a portion of a Ganoid 
fish (of which our sturgeon is a remotely connected relation) was 
found in Ireland. Of the existence of reptiles at that period you 
will find no evidence in Morris's list of British fossils, of which a 
second edition appeared in 1854 ; but I possess a few bones, and Mr. 
Darell Stephens a very fine example of part of the jaw, of what I 
suppose is a Steneosaurus a species found in the Lias, the great 
oolite of Stonesfield and the Kimmeridge clay, and which was allied 
to the modern Gavial of the Ganges. Of the existence of birds and 
mammals in this period, we have, I believe, at present no evidence. 




NOTE ON A GAVIAL SKULL FEOM THE COENBEASH 
OF CLOSWOETH. 

(By J. C. MANSEL-PLEYDELL, B.A., F.L.S., F.GKS.) 

The Order Crocodilia, of which, this fossil is a member, is 
divided by Professor Owen into three sub-orders distinguished 
by the different forms of their vertebrae. It is characterized by 
teeth in distinct sockets, and the skin protected by bony plates. 
The African crocodile, the Asiatic gavial, and the American 
alligator, are its only living representatives ; Europe possesses 
none. Each of them belongs to the Proccelian sub-order, the 
centrum of the vertebra concave being in front and convex behind ; 
with few exceptions the modern reptiles of the order Lacertilia 
possess a similar vertebral arrangement. The extinct members 
of this sub-order lived principally during the tertiary period, 
but some appeared as early as the end of the secondary. 
The only known members of the Crocodilian order, with verte- 
brae articulated by ball and socket joints, with the surface of the 
centrum the reverse of the modern Crocodile that is to say, the 
convex end in front, and the concave behind is termed Opistho- 
ccelian ; all of this family lived antecedent to the cretaceous 
period. The third and last sub-order, termed Amphiccelian, 
having both surfaces of the centrum concave, is largely repre- 
sented by the family Teleosaurus, which is sub-divided 
into Teleosaurus proper and Steneosaurus. It is the most 
prevalent of the order, and ranges from the Lias to the Chalk 
inclusive. Steneosaurus is distinguished from the Teleosaurus 
by the teeth and palatines ; the teeth of the former are carina- 
ated before and behind, and striated longitudinally through- 
out, the palatines large ; whereas the latter are not carinated, 
striated only towards the base, long and sharp, and the pala- 
tines very small. 



P1.I. 




oc 



C.L. Driest acHF.&.S. 



Mintem Bros imp . 



STETSTEOSAURUS STEPHANI. 



29 

The snout of the Steneosaurus varies much in length ; some 
are very long, others relatively short, becoming, in every case, 
more and more flattened as it approaches the frontal region. 
The alveolar borders are straight, and the orbits, unlike Teleo- 
saurus, have, more or less, an oblique direction. M. E. Des- 
longchamps, in his exhaustive memoir on the Teleosaurians of 
Calvados, describes eight species of Steneosaurus, in a compari- 
son of which with our Cornbrash fossil, J. W. Hulke, Esq., 
F.R.S. (who has devoted much time to the study of the com- 
parative anatomy of the Saurian family), says : " The up- 
ward direction of the orbits and small size of the prefrontals 
(P.P.) place this fossil in the same division as Steneosaurus 
Boutilieri (which M. Deslongchamps regards as the mature 
form of Steneosaurus Oxoniensis), Steneosaurus Larteti, and 
Steneosaurus megistorhynchus ; and they separate it from the 
Teleosaurians with stouter snouts and with larger prefrontals 
(P.F.), and lachrymals (L.) overhanging the front and upper 
borders of the more obliquely laterally-directed orbits. From 
Steneosaurus Oxoniensis, Boutilieri, and Larteti this fossil 
differs in the less attenuated front end of the principal frontal. 
The orbit of this fossil has a straighter outer, and a more 
curved inner, border than in Steneosaurus Larteti, in which 
respects it resembles Steneosaurus megistorhynchus ; but the 
relative proportions of the orbits and temporal fossee resemble 
more those of Steneosaurus Larteti. The temporal fossae, how- 
ever, are wider than those of the last species, with the same 
length (18 centimetres), and nearly their width in front ; in 
Steneosaurus Larteti it is 7 centimetres, and in this fossil 8 
centimetres, and behind, 9 and 1 1 centimetres. The maximum 
breadth of the principal frontal (F.), taken at the distance be- 
tween its articulation with the two prefrontals (P.P.), is greater 
than in either Steneosaurus Larteti or Steneosaurus megisto- 
rhyncus. I am unable to refer this Steneosaurus to any already 
described species, and propose to specifically distinguish it by 
the name of its fortunate discoverer, Mr. Darell Stephens 
"Steneosaurus Stephani 



30 

The greater portion of the skull and lower jaw have fortun- 
ately been preserved, also a small portion of the upper maxilla 
and other portions of the jaw, but too fragmentary either for 
restoration or identification. The upper surface of the head is 
fairly preserved, the right temporal fossa being nearly perfect ; 
but not so the left temporal, neither the left orbit, which are 
much mutilated. The fossae differ considerably from those of 
the living Crocodilia, both in size and shape, being quad- 
rangular instead of orbicular, six inches and three-quarters long, 
by three and three-quarters broad. The parietal ridge (P.) 
divides them on their two inner borders ; the upper portion of 
the principal frontal (F.) and the pref rentals (P.F.) intervene 
between these and the orbits. The principal frontal (F.) is very 
narrow at its anterior end, but expands widely upwards toward 
the temporal region, where it measures five inches ; it forms the 
inner and upper borders of the orbits, being articulated to the 
postfrontals (Po. F.), prefrontals (P.F.) and nasals (N.) ; its 
surface is flat, deeply and roughly pitted, some of the pits being 
confluent. The prefrontals are very small, triangular in shape, 
with a rough, pitted surface, articulated to the principal frontals, 
lachrymals, and nasals. The lachrymals are also triangular, but 
twice the size of the prefrontals ; their base forms the anterior 
border of the orbit, and a sharp, narrow process of the outer border 
of the nasals thrusts itself about half-way between the lachrymals 
and prefrontals. The orbits have an oblique outward direc- 
tion, not being placed on the summit of the head, nor parallel 
with the plane of the skull, as is the case with many of the 
Teleosaurs. Their inner borders are formed by the principal 
frontal and the anterior frontals ; their anterior borders by the 
lachrymals and prefrontals ; their outer borders by the jugals, 
partly ; and their posterior borders by the principal frontal and 
posterior frontals. 

The sudden contraction of the cranium into a prolonged upper 
jaw confirms its gavial character. Its mutilation is most un- 
fortunate, cutting off, as it does, the anterior portion of the 
nasals ; the posterior portion is, however, retained, showing their 
articulation with the lachrymals, prefrontals and principal frontal. 



31 

The fragment of the upper jaw which has escaped destruction is 
about six inches and three-quarters long-, showing a raised, arched 
palate, with the alveolar borders, which are somewhat depressed 
outwardly ; the alveoli on each side are exposed, one containing 
the base of the tooth, showing its pulpous centre. Of the two 
portions of the lower jaw which have been rescued, one is thir- 
teen inches long, with thirty-four alveoli, eighteen on one side 
and sixteen on the other, the alveolar region being slightly in- 
clined outwards. The palatal surface is flat ; the other portion is 
nine inches and three-quarters long, and appears to be broken away 
above the symphysis; the non-bearing portion of the ramus is 
eight inches long, and two-and-half inches at its greatest depth, 
The only other fragment of the lower jaw is its articulare, about 
four-and-half inches long, and, unlike the modern members of 
the order, is not anchylosed to the jaw. The skull, as has been 
already mentioned, is flat ; it is ten-and-half inches wide, and 
four-and-half inches deep, including the horizontal paroccipital 
ridges ; its posterior end shows a hemispheroid condyle, two-and- 
half inches in basal diameter; the foramen magnum is transversely 
elliptic, one and two-eighths of an inch across. Like the rest of 
the genus, the parietal bone forms a narrow longitudinal ridge, 
surmounting the mastoideum, of which much is lost ; below it is 
the orifice for the passage of the auditory nerves ; the tympani- 
cum, with which the pterygoideum combines in the formation of 
this passage, is lost, and only a portion of the latter remains. 
The quadrangular upper occipital is united on its upper part to 
the parietal, and on each side by the two strong lateral occipitals. 
The skull has the characteristic narrowness of the temporal 
region, and the lateral orbit (which marks Geoffrey St. Hilaire's 
sub-genus Steneosaurus), peculiarities, with some others, remarked 
by Cuvier at the commencement of the present century, in two 
species from the Oxford clay at Honfleur, and the Kimmeridge 
clay at Caen, and differing from the usual crocodilian type, one 
with a long snout " Tete a museau plus alonge;" the other with 
a shorter snout, "Tete a museau plus court," the former of 
which M. Deslongchamps identifies as Steneosaurus Edwardsii. 
Cuvier saw their gavial affinity in the symphysis of the lower 



32 

jaw and the restriction of the teeth to that part of the dentary 
bone, but differing in the relatively greater length of the 
ramus, in the more regular tapering of the head, and in the 
absence of the oval hole in the outer surface of all known living 
Crocodiles. The teeth he describes as being conical and striated, 
having deux aretes tranchantes an unvarying character of the 
Steneosaurus family. 

This is not the first Steneosaur which this county has pro- 
duced. One was exhumed from the Kimmeridge clays at Kim- 
meridge, which is described by Mr. Hulke in the Geological 
Journal, vol. xxv., p. 290, and xxvi., p. 167. It differs widely 
from the Cornbrash fossil, its snout being stouter than even 
Cuvier's tete d museau plus court. The proportions of the skull 
differ as well as in the number and distribution of the teeth, 
which are not more than fifteen on each side. From the same 
locality and formation I obtained, in the year 1870, a portion of 
the snout of a Teleosaurus proper ; it is seventeen inches long, and 
represents a very long and slender snout, tapering gradually to 
behind the external nostril, where the premaxillce suddenly and 
largely expand. Each maxilla has a series of twenty-five 
alveoli in the space of 15-5 inches, and each premaxilla five. 
The presence of these Crocodilian reptiles with remains of other 
reptiles and shells which are decidedly marine, leads to the 
conclusion that the clays in which they are entombed was de- 
posited in the neighbourhood of dry land. 




TllK MATLES IN SHEEBOENE PAEK. 
(BY EDWIN LEES, F.L.S., F.G.S., &o., VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE 

WORCESTERSHIRE NATURALISTS 5 CLUB.) 

The physiognomy of vegetation is made up in a great degree of 
shrubs and trees, and without these a country, however decorated 
with lloral tints, has a bare and unpicturesque aspect. Trees, as 
Baron Uumboldt has well remarked, "impress us by their magni- 
tude and stability," and a sylvan monarch, with its widely-spreading 
branches, the growth of centuries, commands admiration from 
whoever contemplates it. or seeks its friendly shade. 

A mere catalogue of the plants of a district gives but an incom- 
plete idea of the prevalent vegetation that gives a feature to it, or 
the nature of the woods that may cover a considerable extent of 
country. In England most of the original forests have been so cur- 
tailed by the axe that but few patrician trees of venerable age can 
be now referred to as existing in forest purlieus ; but in the parks 
of noblemen and gentlemen that have been long enclosed 
" The stately homes of England, 

How beautiful they stand 
Amidst their old ancestral trees, 
The glory of the land !" 

There are few parks that have preserved more picturesque sylvan 
veterans than that of Sherborne, adjacent to the fine castellated 
residence of G. D. Wingfield Digby, Esq., and the Oaks, Maples, and 
tortuous Hawthorns scattered about the undulating ground are 
especially remarkable. While on a visit to my esteemed friend 
Professor Buckman. I had several opportunities of roaming over 
Sherborue Park, and luxuriating in its sylvan coverts. 

I was especially struck with the numerous Maples growing there 
more abundant than in any other park that I have seen, and the size 
of some of them and their curious knotted appearance, induced me 
to make sketches, two of which have been engraved, and illustrate 
this paper. One of them has an especially rugged aspect, and by 
inartistic persons might be deemed ugly; and yet, as Gilpin has 



34 

remarked in his " Forest Scenery," " What is more beautiful, for 
instance, in a rugged foreground than an old tree with a hollow- 
trunk, or with a dead arm, a drooping bough, or a dying branch P" 
in fact, grotesque, knotted, blasted, and weather-beaten trees are 
the charm of forest scenery, and give it a peculiar character. 

Though the Maple is now not so esteemed and regarded as it was 
in olden times, and is thought little of as a timber tree, yet it well 
deserves preservation in parks where it has grown unmutilated, and 
there makes a respectable, if not dignified figure, as a low bushy 
tree, while its branches contribute to give it a rugged character on 
close inspection. It is called the common or field Maple (Acer 
campestre, Linn.) to distinguish it from the great Maple, or Syca- 
more, and is now chiefly observable in the bounding hedges of old 
lanes and hollow-ways, where, however, it seldom escapes hacking 
and thus becomes a deformed object. As Selby observes in hia 
" History of British Forest Trees,"" In the south of England the 
Maple is very rarely planted or treated as a tree, and, therefore, 
seldom to be seen in that form, for, growing principally in hedges or 
copse woods, it is regularly cut over and treated as a bush, like other 
shrubs of inferior growth, such as the hazel, blackthorn, &c. 
Though indigenous in the south and midland counties, it does not 
extend to the most northern, or to Scotland, neither has it been found 
in Ireland." 

The Maples in Sherborne Park present specimens of many fine 
large trees, evidently of considerable age, for the Maple is a slow- 
growing tree, of great endurance. One of these, hollow and par- 
tially despoiled by tempestuous winds, measures twelve feet in 
girth at three feet from the ground, and two others have attained 
the dimensions of ten feet in girth. I have depicted Csee woodcut) 
a very remarkable half-up-rooted and declining Maple, with very 
knobby and tortuous arms, that measures fifteen feet round its base, 
having a mass of roots that have been forced out of the ground, 
though with suflicient persistence to prevent the tree from becoming 
prostrate. I measured this very curious Maple in company with Mr. 
Darell Stephens, who lay at its base while my sketch was made. 
There are many other Maples in Sherborne Park, forming masses of 
dense foliage, and some of them rising to a height of between forty 
and fifty feet. One very antique-looking tree that I have here 
figured makes a singularly grotesque object from its half denuded 
state, very knotty trunk, and bare, extended, tortuous arms. This is 





KNOTTY MAPLE, SHERBORNE PARK. 



35 

nine feet in girth at a yard from the base, and must have borne the 
brunt of a great number of storms, in all probability for not less than 
fire centuries, if not more, and is likely to endure a century longer. 

Very few Maples of large size have been mentioned by writers on 
forest trees, and it has been stated by the Rev. 0. A. Johns, in his 
" Forest Trees of Britain," that " the largest Maple now existing in 
England, and the only one to which any particular interest attaches 
itself, is that over-shadowing the grave of Gilpin, the author of 
" Forest Scenery," in Boldre churchyard, Hampshire. This is ten 
feet in circumference at the ground, and at four feet from the ground 
is seven feet six inches. Several of the Sherborne Maples, however, 
exceed these dimensions, and, as now brought to the notice of Dorset 
Naturalists, may perhaps deserve as much attention and remark as 
that venerated tree in Boldre churchyard. 

The Maple was much honoured and prized in ancient times, for 
Virgil represents Evander, who was a provincial king, as receiving 
^Eneas seated on a Maple throne Solique invitat acerno and 
Chaucer makes the Maple as forming a bower for the fair Rosamond. 
The wood was much esteemed among the Romans for making tables 
from the closeness of its grain, and Maple bowls were formerly not 
very uncommon. Even in Evelyn's time, the author of "Sylva," he 
says that the wood of the Maple was much esteemed for all kinds of 
turnery ware ; but the crockery of Wedgwood and the Potteries has 
consigned nearly all wooden ware to the memory of old-fashioned 
times, and the "piggins" once seen in all farmhouse kitchens can no 
longer be met with. This change of performance may be favour- 
able to the continuance of the Maple in its sylvan haunts, for the 
bread-plates of the present day are formed from wood easier to 
fashion and carve than the hard and close grain of the Maple would 
be, even if it could be met with in greater abundance than it now is. 




A NOTE ON THE DOG VIOLET. 
(BY J. C. MANSEL-PLEYDELL, ESQ., F.G.S., &c., &c.) 

Until the publication of the third edition of Sowerby's 
" English Botany," about twelve years ago, there was much 
confusion about the identity of the true Dog Violet. The name 
had been applied in the former editions of that work, and 
in all previous Manuals, to the plant with a root-stock 
terminating in a primary, barren, leafy stem, with very short 
internodes, and giving off, from axillary buds, lateral flowering 
stems. Q-erarde's Viola canina sylvestris, 1597; Parkinson's Viola 
sylvestris, 1640 ; J. Bauhin's Viola carulea Martia inodora sylvatica 
in cacumine semen ferens, 1650 ; C. Bauhin's Viola Martia inodora 
sylvestris, 1671; and Hudson's Viola canina are doubtless its 
synonyms. The polymorphous forms of the Dog Violet did not 
escape, however, their acute observation ; for instance, Gerarde 
describes a variety having the leaves longer, narrower, and 
sharper pointed, and of which he gives a figure. Dillenius, in 
the third edition of Eay's Synopsis, mentions a variety, noticed 
by Du Bois, much smaller, with a yellow spur. Hudson mentions 
three varieties, including Dillenius' s ; and Smith gives two in his 
English Flora, 1823, adding two new species Viola lactea (the 
V. canina, var. 3, of Withering, and V. Euppia, of C. Allioni), 
and Viola flavicornis (Dillenius' small variety). Mr. Hewett C- 
Watson, who was the first botanist to call attention to the diffi- 
culty of identifying the true Dog Violets, says (Phytologist, vol. 
3, p. 638, 1849), "the apparent species are the following: 
Gerarde' s Violet V. canina, of Gerarde and Smith ; Dillenius' 
Violet V. flavicornis, of Smith in English Flora; and Smith's 
Violet V. lactea, of Smith in English Flora." 

The modern continental botanists, on the authority of Fries, 
have given the name of Viola sykatica to the Dog Violet which 




V. Riviniana, Ruch&ib. 

WI^T A crvTVATTnA 











/icornis, 3m,. 
VIOLA CAN1NA, 



': - .. 



37 

bears a barren primary stem, and is divided by Syme, under the 
name of Gerarde's Dog Violet, into two sub-species Viola 
Riviniana and Viola ReicJienlachiana, the new Viola canina, 
having no barren primary stem, but bearing pedunculated 
elongated stems from the axils of the numerous leaves. This is 
also divided into, two sub-species Viola flavicornis, Dillenius's 
Dog Violet, and Viola lactea, Smith's Dog Violet. The leaves 
of the former are narrower and less cordate at the base than those 
of V. sylvatica ; the leaves of the V. lactea are ovate lanceolate, 
with a sharply rounded base ; the flowers, too, are paler, and in 
some cases almost white ; the capsules are shorter and more 
obtuse than those of Viola sylvatica, the two sub-species of which 
may be distinguished the one from the other by the sepals and 
spurs. V. Riviniana having a yellowish furrowed spur, fruiting 
sepals with prominent notched auricles. V. Reichenlachiana a red- 
dish purple clavate spur, not furrowed, fruiting sepals with incon- 
spicuous appendages. In conclusion, Gerarde's Violet is abund- 
antly common in Dorsetshire, especially the sub-species Riviniana; 
the other, Reichenbachiana, is more local, and less generally 
distributed. Dillenius's and Smith's have a more restricted 
range, being found for the most part on the heath lands of the 
county. 




ON A BEACELET (ARMILLA) OF SUPPOSED SAXON 
WOEKMANSHIP. 

(BY JAS. BUCKMAN, ESQ., F.G.S., F.L.S., &c.) 

As Armilla (Armlets or Bracelets) have even been highly valued 
by most peoples, it will be understood that these ornaments will 
have been worked in various ways, and indifferent patterns, accord- 
ing to the taste and genius of the race by whom they were 
fashioned. 

In all Roman sites especially, the bracelet will be constantly met 
with, and, indeed, the Latin races seem to have been particularly 
fond of this ornament, and we may here note that in our excavations 
at Corinium' (modern Cirencester), we found no less than six on one 
arm of a young girl, and the specimens and drawings before you 
will show that although they were mostly made of bronze, yet that 
they differed in form, size, and weight, and while some were simply 
plain rings, others were most elaborately ornamented. We have not 
found any examples fashioned out of the precious metals, though we 
have met with evidences of armlets in bronze being both gold and 
silver gilt. 

With respect to ornament it will be seen that while in some the 
whole circle was covered with a single pattern yet that more 
frequently some three or four patterns found their places on the out- 
side of the circle. 

These notes may, perhaps, be taken for a general description of 
Roman and Romano-British Armilla, and, perhaps, they may tend to 
show that although bronze was a highly valued metal at the period 
in which it was so much used, yet these ornaments were probably 
more valued for their tasteful ornamental details, and thus the most 
ornato forms contained a less weight of metal than the plainer ones. 

We come now to the examination of a very curious form of armlet 
obtained from Dorchester, which I am able to introduce to your 
notice through the kindness of Mr. E. Cunnington, of that place. 
This example, unlike the Roman forms already mentioned, 
is composed of two metals, namely, a central core of lead, which is 




ARMILLA (BRACELET), DORCHESTER. 



39 

covered over by a fascia, which may be a bronze, or more probably 
of copper. This fascia is elegantly and variously ornamented, it 
would appear, with stamped patterns, and then simply made to fit 
round the lead as closely as possible. 

Now, we would here point out that this was introduced to our 
notice as of Eoman work, but in as far as we know this people did 
not work in this fashion ; but we do know that the Saxons excelled 
in this fascia work, of which examples are common. Here it would 
appear that Copper was held in high esteem, and so this rather 
large brooch was made of thin metal plates fastened together by 
some kind of cement, and the whole kept in place by a thin ring of 
metal, which we may see in examples from Fairford Graves. Most 
elaborately wrought Saxon Fibulsa are formed upon this plan, and, 
though it must be confessed that the Fibula, as an ornament with 
the Saxon, seemed to be as important as the Armillse with the 
Eoman, and we find the principal ornaments of the former to be 
Fibulae, whilst, if not the principal, at least a most important portion 
of the personal ornaments of the Roman seem to have been Armillse. 
(Our drawing will explain the mode of workmanship.) 

It will occur to some that the Saxon was considered as a boor to 
whom higher manufacturing skill has been denied; but they were 
exceedingly crafty in metal work, and we claim it for the early as 
for the modern Saxon that he was exceedingly clever in adopting a 
new style or work to produce what was required ; in fact, the Saxon 
has ever been one to appreciate the inventions of others, which he 
has never been slow to improve upon, and we take it that the armlet 
before us is an evidence not only of the skilful workmanship of this 
people, but of the readiness which they have always displayed in 
accommodating themselves to old forms by new processes. 



DESCRIPTION OF A EARE FUNGUS*, SPARASSIS 
CRISPA FRIES, FOUND AT BRADFORD ABBAS IN 
SEPTEMBER, 1875. 

(BY E. LEES, ESQ., F.L.S., F.G.S.) 

My friend, Professor Buckman, sent me in September last a very 
remarkable Fungus, which he had gathered under some trees near 
his residence. It proved on examination to be a specimen of the 
very rare Sparassis crispa, which has only recently been observed in 
England, and Dr. Cooke, in his " Handbook of British Fungus," has 
only named two places where it has been found. A specimen was, 
however, exhibited at Hereford in 1874, gathered near the Wrekin 
in Shropshire. 

The Sparassis crispa may be described as forming a roundish mass 
of crisp, pale, yellowish, intricate, fleshy, but brittle, branches, rather 
broader and serrate at the extremities, curled and folded, variously 
tubed, the whole springing from a thick rooting stem, the greater 
part of which is concealed in the soil. From 4 to about 12 inches in 
diameter. 

Mr. M. J. Berkeley states that " the hymenium is more or less un- 
even, and rather wrinkled or rough, with wart-like elevations." The 
fungus becomes first yellowish, then brown, and though persistent 
for a fortnight or three weeks, resolves itself finally into a liquid, 
loathsome mass. 

There is only one species of the genus Sparassis that has hitherto 
been found in Britain, and this is of very rare occurrence, so that it 
has been a fortunate find for the Cryptogamic Flora of Dorset. It 
is said to be esculent, but being so rare in England it is not likely to 
displace more mycological delicacies. But perhaps should it turn 
up another season at Bradford Abbas, the worthy Professor, near 
whose residence it was found, will give it the benefit of " pot-luck " 
for I presume it would have to be stewed. 

The plate shows it the natural size, with an enlarged section of the 
stem, and the sporules magnified 200 diameters. 

* This rare example of Fungus was found by my youngest son, Percy W. J. 
Buckman, at Potter's Lease, a famous fox covert. ED. 




SPARASSIS CRISPA FRIES 



NOTES ON A EOMAN VILLA AT THORNFOED. 
(By J. BUCKMAN, F.L.S., F.G.S., &c.) 

The opening of the villa at Thornford on October 3rd, 1876, though 
it only exposed a second-class dwelling, yet presented matters of 
sufficient importance to deserve some notice in the Proceedings of 
the Club. 

The field in which the opening was made is situate on a slightly 
rising meadow to the north of the village of Thornford, having the 
winding river Yeo meandering on its eastern border. The field was 
drained some few years since, and it was the finding of tesserae, bits 
of Roman pottery, &c;. f in the disturbed earth that determined us 
to seek an opportunity to make further enquiries ; this the meeting 
at Bradford seemed to afford, and, with the permission of Mr. Digby 
and the consent of the tenant, the works were commenced a few 
days before the meeting of the Club. The few first trial holes 
though they showed that the ground had been mostly made up of 
ancient materials, were yet disappointing, but a little perseverance 
brought us to a pavement and ultimately to walls, the remains of 
which bounded four distinct rooms, each of which had a pavement 
of a different pattern. 

EOMAN FLOORS. 

These floors were of very simple construction, consisting of tesserae 
of about an inch and a half square, which were made from the 
white lias, obtained probably from Sparkford, and broken potsherds, 
seemingly formed from ancient clay tiles. These, which were of a 
grey stone and red brick, were arranged in simple patterns. 

The involved fret was a little more complicated, but there was 
only a little of this, and all the four pavements just mentioned were 
made of the two simple substances named, and cemented upon the 
clay flooring. 



42 



These floors and the walls having 1 been cleared out, exposed the 
outline of four rooms, besides passages with broken bits of work 
showing a somewhat extensive range of buildings which, though 
confessedly plain, were not without some interesting points of detail. 

In two of the passages were rude pavements made of slabs of 
various sizes, of the same kind of stone as those of the smaller liassic 
tesserae. They are fitted together as neatly as may be, considering 
they are not squared. We notice these as being the first of the kind 
we have met with. The truth seems to be that this ingenious people 
seem to have used the materials which came nearest to hand in the 
best possible fashion. 

ROMAN ROOF TILES. 

Upon digging down to the floors the first objects that struck 
one's attention, besides occasional portions of carved stones, giving 
a notion of artistic taste, were the roof tiles. These, which were 
composed of fissile slabs of the lias limestones the same as the bits 
of paving stones, seem to have been first split into slabs of about an 
inch thick ; they were 16 in. long and 10 in. wide, and fashioned in 
a highly ingenious manner, which will be best made out from the 
following diagrams. 

If quadrangular tiles had been used, as with ourselves, the arrange- 
ment of them would have been as follows : 



FIG. A. ROOFIXG WITH COMMON SLABS. 



Here the tiles wrap over each other, and so prevent the wet get- 
ting into the roof j but it is obvious that when each tile weighs as 




43 



much as lolb. the whole would be an immense weight for the low- 
pitched framework to support. The tiles at Thornford and those on 
our own farm seem to have been cut and arranged as follow : 





FIG. B. ROMAN ROOF TILES. 



Now this plan, we find, lessens the weight somewhere about 30 
per cent., or nearly one-third, and, besides, the scalloped ends are 
highly ornamental. 

This seems to have been noticed by modern architects, and so 
they, in adopting this plan, merely scalloped the ends, thus only 
effecting a small reduction : 




FIG. C. ENGLISH STONE TILE ROOFING, IN IMITATION OF THE ROMAN METHOD. 



44 

They might have gone a little farther and cut off the angles at the 
top as well as at the bottom : 




FIG. D. TILES SCALLOPED OR ANGULATED TOP AXD BOTTOM. 1 



This latter seems to be a further development of Figure C, but 
none is so perfect, or so economic as regards weight, as Figure B. 

The tiles, then, so formed are in some instances thickly strewn 
upon the floors of Roman dwellings. Many of them have the nails 
still left in the hole made for that purpose, and it seems, from the 
manner in which they are disposed, that, the Roman dwelling being 
abandoned, the timbers of the roof gave way, and the tiles thus fell 
upon the floors, where they became intermixed with whatever 
articles might have been left in the rooms, some of which we would 
notice here. 

WALL PAINTING. 

Among the tiles, and still adhering to the portion of the wall left 
intact, will usually be found and it was at Thornford in a great 
degree of profusion a quantity of wall decorations, and, as the 
plaster and colouring are still very fresh and perfect, we ventured to 
ask Professor Church how he considered these colourings to have 
been formed; and we have much pleasure in transcribing the follow- 
ing interesting letter : 

* We beg to offer our thanks to the Cotteswold Field Club for the loan of the cuts 
p., c, and I), which were made by us to illustrate some roof tiles dug up at Bradford 
Abl.a.-. Ki>. 



45 

MY DEAE SIR, Cirencester, November 15, 1876. 

I know your interesting coloured plates well.* Of course I have 
seen and handled many a piece of Eoman wall decoration since I have been 
here. I am convinced that the method of fixing colours to wall plaster was 
really a true kind of fresco. Over the very thick, rough plaster, or rather 
concrete, of the wall was laid a coat of cream of lime that is, caustic lime 
slaked in water and rubbed smooth. When this had set, the pigments 
(often mixed with a little lime themselves) were laid on, with brushes of 
hogs' bristles in some cases, for I have found these bristles lying parallel 
with the direction of the coloured band of black, buff, or white, or the 
maroon ground of the plastered wall. Generally, I believe that no size was 
used, and the idea of employing soluble glass that is an alkaline silicate is 
wholly modern. I have analyzed two colours only at present, but the 
results are not compatible with the soluble glass theory, for then I should 
have found more than traces of silica, with coloured surfaces.! 

Yours truly, 

A. H. CHURCH. 

The colours here mentioned were found in lumps with the pave- 
ment, and some still adherent to the wall ; and from their manner 
of disposal it could be seen that the Eomans did not keep to one 
colour even in a single wall, but the colours consisted of bands of 
greater or less width and stripes, apparently of the following kinds : 
Vermilion, red (oxide of iron), maroon, rose-colour, blue (cobalt), 
lavender, black, and white ; and different tints of these were made 
by laying a thin wash of one colour over another. Occasionally one 
meets with traces of leaves, as though some more artistic decoration 
than simple colouring was attempted ; and here also was met with 
a portion of wall of a rose tint, spurtled over with spots of maroon. 
Even in this plainer villa there is evidence of great diversity in 
ornamenting so simple a matter as a flat wall. 

FICTILIA. 

Intermixed with the matters just described, we have portions of 
flat clay or pottery tiles, and also some semicircular red pottery 
tiles, which were probably used as drains, either the half as a 
gutter, or two halves joined together to form a sort of pipe drain, of 
which there seem to have been traces, partly of tiles and partly of 
semicircles of oolitic stone, leading from the house to the river. 

* See "Remains of Roman Art," by J. Buckman and C. Newmarch. 
t This last paragraph was written in reply to a suggestion of ours that, from the 
freshness of the colouring, it might be that it had been preserved by silica. ED. 



46 

Among other pottery was found the top of a wine jar of brown 
ware. These ' Amphorae " were usually of the capacity of about 
four gallons j they tapered towards the bottom into a rounded, top- 
like base, by which the jars were placed in hollowed stands or 
tables of wood, for the convenience of pouring. The following cut 
will well illustrate this form : 




FIG. E. ROMAN AMl'HOUA, OR WINE JAR. 

Sometimes the maker's name is stamped on one of the handles, but 
the example found at Thornford was not sufficiently perfect to 
determine this point. It will, however, serve to illustrate the fact 
that the dwellers at this second-rate villa were not without their 
comforts. Pottery of various kinds is found intermixed with 
Roman debris, such as vessels of red, grey, black, or other common 
clay forms, of which the many different lips will show their variety 
of pattern ; while their colour is due to a different method of treat- 
ment, or of baking the clay. 



47 

The prevalence of this commoner ware might serve to indicate a 
more humble abode, but even here there were not wanting signs 
of at least a taste for more expensive ware, as the following cut 
representing a bit of the so-called Samian of a somewhat prevailing 
pattern will show : 




FIG. P. PORTION OF SAMIAN WITH THE GREEK HONEYSUCKLE ORNAMENT. 

Another portion, of a like character, with the egg-and-tongue 
moulding, and with the figure of a cock, was also found. Various 
kinds of birds and animals were sometimes represented in this kind 
of ware : 




J.M WILLIAMS 



FIG G. PORTION OF SAMIAN WARE WITH BIRD, ETC. 

These vases, dishes, &c., were often elaborately ornamented, but, 
as a rule, without much order as to the scenes. The ware itself is 
of a bright coral colour, with a sort of vitreous fracture ; and, as we 



48 

have, before now, found fragments most carefully rivetted, we may 
conclude that this kind of foreign (?) ware was the " China " of the 
period.* 

MORTAUIA. 

A portion of a mortarium of red ware was found with the debris 
of one of the rooms. Such vessels are supposed to have been used 
to triturate soft vegetables, from the fact that their interiors were 
thickly studded with small angular bits of quartz, which, of course, 
aided the process. 

CARVED STONES. 

Besides the ashlared stones of which the walls were built a few- 
portions of carved stones were found which seemed to show that 
this, though not a first-class dwelling, was not without evidence of 
architectural taste, but as all we found was below the surface of the 
present field we may conclude that tin rest of the ruined pile had 
been carried away previously to the whole being smoothed over to 
form the perfectly level field ; the wonder is therefore great that we 
should find so much as we do rather than that so little should 
remain. 

It is so far fortunate that the lines of wall should be so well pre- 
served. These are sometimes so near the surface that in seasons of 
drought their direction can be made out by the more withered and 
dried turf. The tops of these lines are but a few inches below the 
surface, and generally about two feet of the height of the wall 
remains, much of which was here covered with wall-plaster. 

The interior of the rooms so marked only such varied objects as 
has been left behind, perhaps, after even centuries of exposure. 
ROMAN MOLARS. 

The Roman molar or hand millstone was represented by portions 
of three examples found in the Thornford villa, all of which were 
upper stones, the " nether millstone" not having been met with 
here. Our specimens were made of the following materials 
(1) Millstone grit, probably from the Forest of Dean ; (2) inferior 
oolite, from Ham Hill ; and (3) great oolite, from the Bath district. 

The occurrence of the former we can well understand, as it is a 
hard silicious grit-stone, and we have found at Bradford the remains 
of a molar which was imported from Andernach on the Rhine, and 
was composed of a volcanic grit. We have also seen at Bradford 
portions of molars made of the hard silicious rock sometimes met 
with in the upper green-sain I and also one of Sarsen stone. 

* The last three drawings were kindly lent us by Mr. Baily, of Circncester, as they 
truly represent our rinds at Thornford. ED. 



49 

These are intelligible, as even at the present day these harder 
stones are used for mill work j but that the softer oolites should be 
so employed is uncommon, and shows that the distance at which our 
native grit stones are from Dorset, to say nothing of the foreign 
examples, must have made them difficulty to obtain. 

ARTICLES IN METAL. 

The most noticeable of these consisted of a couple of third brass 
coins, with the " image and superscription " illegible. 

Portions of knives, tools, &c., in iron, and some nails of various 
sizes, the commonest of which had been used to fasten the roof 
tiles abounded. 

ANIMAL REMAINS. 

As usual, the different diggings exposed a quantity of bones, 
teeth, &c., of the Ox, Hog, and Sheep. Bones of birds are not 
uncommon. These may tend to show the nature of the animal food 
the occupants of the villa indulged in. A mass of the bones of mice 
was found in one corner, bur, as usual, the indulgence in Mollusca 
was evidenced by the presence of a large quantity of Oyster shells, 
and these, too, of the true " native " variety j an evidence that the 
occupier of the villa not only possessed good taste, but also had the 
means of gratifying it. 

CONCLUSIONS. 

This is the first opening of the kind we have made in this 
county. We have, however, heard of others such, for instance, as 
the one at Lenthay Common, and we have marked down spots for 
^vestigation when time permits, and we sincerely hope that the 
members of our Club, neighbours, and Mends will keep an eye upon 
such matters, so that as time and opportunity offer they may be 
duly investigated. 

We hope, too, that soon there will be a museum to which such 
finds as have been here described may be sent for safe custody. 
Such an institution, well cared for, would be a great boon to the 
county. 




NOTES ON THE ANTIQUITIES OF ABBOTSBUEY. 
(BY THE EEV. G-. H. PEionr.) 

DEAR PROFESS on BUCKMAN, * 

These are busy days, and multiplied engagements occupy the 
time even of those country clergy who were wont to be considered 
men of leisure. 

I hope these may plead in my own case an excuse for my 
addressing to you, in the shape of a letter 'currente calamo] what 
observations I have to make about the antiquities of Abbotsbury. 

You saw that there was much to interest the lover of Nature in 
this parish. Up to a time within my own connection with it visitors 
were few, and the inhabitants and their surroundings had, to a great 
extent, escaped assimilating influences. " Portisham out of the 
world and Abbotsbury round the corner," was hardly too broad a 
saying to express the facts. 

Very often I wished that someone versed in antiquarian lore, or 
geological science, were at hand to lead on a willing disciple in such 
matters. Hence, among other reasons, my readiness to welcome 
your co-partners and yourself when the Field Club came to us last 
Midsummer. 

The neighbourhood has, to begin with, not a few reminders of 
the old inhabitants in the shape of cromlechs, stone-circles, and 
barrows. One of these last was opened lately at New Barn, and 
contained several interments of persons differing in age, and 
apparently also in the period of their burial. Most of these had 
been laid in cists of flag-stone set on end; and in some instances the 
interments were curiously huddled together, as if the burials had 
been effected without due regard to the former occupants of the 
tomb. Several urns of rude construction were found in fragments 
close beneath the turf around the barrow, only one being sufficiently 

* These Notes have been kindly sent at our request, and we are much pleased with 
them, as they call to mind a most pleasant day, much of which was spent in ex- 
amining antiquities specially exposed for us by Mr. Penny's kind exertions : and for 
these latter and the Notes upon them the Editor begs to tender his heartiest thanks. 



51 

entire at its base to show the original contents of calcined bones. It 
was singular to notice how the cists were packed with clay, through 
the continued action of worms and weather, even the long bones of 
the skeletons being completely filled up with hardened mud inside. 
Some objects of interest rewarded careful search. Of iron, some 
arrow heads and a knife j whilst stains of rust on both the humeri of 
one skeleton showed that a weapon had been laid across the chest, 
but this had disappeared. Of copper, the chief matters were a lady's 
case for nick-nacks, two dress pins, and a ring ; there were several 
rough flint scrapers, and perhaps a couple of dozen small, smooth 
pebbles from the beach, together with a curiously wrought piece of 
chalk, the size of two fists, shaped somewhat like an hour-glass, with 
a shallow saucer at one end, the ornamentation consisting of Vandyke 
incisions all round the surface. Some of these specimens have been 
placed by the Earl of Ilchester in his Museum of Curiosities at 
Melbury. It might be worth the while of Archaeologists, could 
permission be obtained from the owner of the soil, to explore the 
mound connected with the Cromlech, at Gorwell, about a mile and a 
half from Abbotsbury. 

I need not dwell upon the well known facts relating to the 
Benedictine Monastery founded here in 1044, but may pass on to 
state what is less widely known, that diggings undertaken during 
the last few years have laid bare sufficient traces, of the Abbey 
Church especially, to inform us of the size and style of that building. 
Through the kindness of Lord Ilchester these remains will be pre- 
served for the inspection of the public, as will also such as exist in 
the Churchyard. Here the southern wall was raised upon the lower 
courses of the north wall of the Abbey Church, and vestiges of at 
least two side chapels are still observable, the encaustic pavement 
being yet upon the floor. The new piece of ground given a year or 
two ago by Lord Ilchester for an additional burying place turns out 
to have been an ancient graveyard. Interments are numerously 
found uncoffined at from three to six feet below the surface, 
generally in cists of rough stones laid side by side on edge, and 
covered with similar slabs. The leaden pipe that conveyed water to 
the Monastery runs athwart the plot, and in one case the feet of a 
skeleton had been removed to make room for this to pass. Some of 
the skulls, I have remarked, are singularly low in the frontal develop- 
ment. In digging a grave lately, no fewer than 16 skeletons were 
found within those various precincts, possibly the remains of some 



52 

of the soldiers who were slain in the siege of the Abbey House, 
October, 1644. Turning for a brief space to other matters, I would 
mention for the interest of your Natural History Section that the 
badger is still occasionally found within our borders, as the otter is 
over the hill. Many species of wild fowl visit the swanery in winter, 
and the wild swan sometimes joins its twelve hundred congeners on 
the Fleet. 

Our immediate neighbourhood is not so highly favoured, 
botanically, as some places are, notwithstanding there is enough to 
interest the collector. I may instance the Henbane as a plant that 
was abundant here twenty years ago, but has been almost extirpated 
by the agriculturists. The Elecampane (Inula Helenium) grows 
freely both at Gorwell and Ashley. And now, dear Professor 
Buckman, I close these hasty lucubrations with the expression of a 
hope that we shall some day see our friends of the Field Club again 
at Abbotsbury, possibly (if all is true one hears) by railway ! though 
for my own part I say, " absit omen? 

Whether or not we meet each other in this changing world, I trust 
that we shall enjoy a happy re-union, through mercy, by and by 
" in fairer scenes than these." 

Ever yours, 

G. H. P. 

Abbotsbury, January, 1877. 




THE LEPIDOPTEEA OF POETLAND. 
(BY C. "W. DALE, ESQ.) 

DlNENI. 

1. Pieris brassicse, Linn. Large Cabbage White Butterfly ; 
common. 

2. Pieris Eapse, Linn. Small Cabbage White Butterfly. Abund- 
ant. In hot seasons the yellowish variety predominates. 

3. Pieris napi, Linn. Green-veined White Butterfly ; common. 

4. Anthocharis, cardamines, Linn. Orange-tip Butterfly. Some- 
times common on the north side of the island. 

5. Gonepteryx rhanmi, Linn. Brimstone Butterfly. Not so 
common as in other parts of Dorset. 

6. Colias Edusa, Fab. Clouded Yellow Butterfly. Of general 
occurrence, but irregular in its appearance. Var. Helice Hub. A 
beautiful specimen of this variety was seen by myself on August 6th, 
1876. 

7. Arge Galathea, Linn. Marbled White Butterfly ; rare. 

8. Satyrus ^Egeria, Linn. Speckled Wood Butterfly. Common 
in the grounds of Pennsylvania Castle. 

9. Satyrus Megseria, Linn. The Wall Butterfly 5 common. 

10. Satyrus Semcle, Linn. Black-eyed Marble Butterfly. Com- 
mon towards the Bill. It is chiefly found on heaths. 

11. Satyrus Janira, Linn. Meadow Brown Butterfly. Abundant. 
Occasionally whitish varieties occur. 

12. Satyrus pamphilus, Linn. The Little Gate-keeper Butter- 
fly. Sometimes common. 

13. Vanessa polychloros, Linn. Large Tortoiseshell Butterfly. 
A single specimen was taken by myself July 30, 1875. 

14. Vanessa urticse, Linn. Small Tortoiseshell Butterfly j com- 
mon. 

15. Vanessa lo, Linn. Peacock Butterfly ; of general occurrence. 

16. Vanessa Atalanta. Eed Admiral Butterfly ; common. 

17. Vanessa cardui, Linn. Painted Lady Butterfly. Generally 
common, but irregular in its appearance. 



54 

18. Polyommatus Phlaeas, Linn. Small Copper Butterfly ; com- 
mon. 

19. Lycasna Aegon, Buck. The Heath Blue Butterfly. Common 
towards the Bill. It is generally found on heaths. 

20. Lycsena Agestis Schiff. The Brown Argus Butterfly. Rather 
uncommon. 

21. Lycsena Alexis, Hub. Common Blue Butterfly ; common. 

22. Lycsena Adonis, Fab. Clifden Blue Butterfly. Rather un- 
common. It is generally found on chalk. 

23. Lycsena Corydon, Fab. Chalk Hill Blue. Rare. It is 
generally found on chalk. 

24. Lycsena Alsus, Fab. Little Blue Butterfly. Rather un- 
common. 

25. Lycsena Argiolus, Linn. Azure Blue Butterfly. A single 
specimen was taken by myself July 25th, 1876. 

26. Hesperia Sylvanus. Large Skipper Butterfly ; common. 

SPHEGINA. 

1. Zygaena filipendulse, Linn. Large Buenet Hawk Moth. 
Common. I took one specimen this year, as late as August 6th. 

2. Macroglossum stellatarum, Linn. Humming Bird Hawk 
Moth. Of frequent occurrence. 

3. Sesia Ichneumoniformis, W. v. Six-belted Clear-wing Hawk 
Moth. A few specimens were taken by my father. 

BOMBYCES. 

1. Fumea radiella, Curt. Black Chimney-sweeper's-Boy Moth 
Rare. The first specimen was taken by my father June 17th, 1829. 

2. Hepialus lupulinus, Linn. Silver Swift Moth ; common. 

3. Cerula Vinula, Linn. Puss Moth ; rare. 

4. Odonestis potatoria, Linn. Timber Moth ; common. 

5. Lasiocampa callunse, Palmer. Heath Egger Moth ; common. 

6. Lasiocampa rubi, Linn. Fox Moth ; common. 

7. Chelonia Villica, Linn. Cream-spot Tiger Moth ; common. 

8. Chelonia Caja, Linn. Large Tiger Moth ; common. 

9. Euchalia Jacobaea, Linn. Pink under- wing Moth; occasionally 
common. 

10. Lithnosia complanula. B. vd. Common Footman Moth ; 
common. 

11. Nudaria mundana, Linn. Common Muslin Moth ; common. 



55 

NOCTUINA. 

1. Acronycta rumicis, Linn. Bramble Moth ; common. 

2. Bryophila glandifera. W. Rare. 

3. Bryophila perla. Marbled Beauty Moth ; common. 

4. Mythimna conigera. W.V. Rather rare. 

5. Leucania littoralis. A few specimens of this Wainscot Moth 
were taken by the Rev. 0. P. Cambridge on the Chesil beach. 

6. Miana furuncula, W.v. Common. 

7. Miana literosa. Han. Common, 

8. Miana strigilis, Linn. Abundant. 

9. Apamea ceulea, Linn. Abundant. 

10. Lupernia Dumerilae B. Very rare. Two specimens by 
Sealy. 

11. Luperina cespitis, W.v. Very rare. A few specimens by 
Farn. 

12. Lupernia basilinea, W.v. Common. 

13. Mamestra brassica, Linn. Cabbage Moth ; common. 

14. Xylophasia polyodon, Linn. Brown Anches Moth ; common. 

15. Heliophobus hispidus, Fr. Rare. On the north side of the 
island, by A. Pretor, Esq., and the Rev. 0. A. Cambridge. 

16. Triphoena pronuba, Linn. Large yellow Underwing Moth ; 
common. 

17. Triphoena lanthina, Hub. Common. 

18. Triphoena interjecta, Hub. Common. 

19. Aponophyla Australia, B.vd. Rare. A few specimen shave 
been taken by the Rev. 0. P. Cambridge. 

20. Agrotis segetum, Oct. Abundant. 

21. Agrotis exclamationis, Linn. Abundant. 

22. Agrotis valligera, W.v. Rare. On the Chesil beach, by my 
father, August 12th, 1829, and also by the Rev. 0. P. Cambridge. 

23. Agrotis cursoria, Hub. Very rare. A few specimens have 
been taken on the Chesil beach by Mr. Bentley and Professor 
Heslow. 

24. Noctua xanthographa, Hub. Common. 

25. Haplia proecox, Linn. Portland Moth ; very rare. It was 
first taken by the Duchess of Portland, and afterwards by Mr. 
Curtis and my father in 1843. 

26. Cerastis Vaccinii, Linn. Common. 

27. Cerastis spadicea, Hub. Common. 



56 

28. Euperia trapezina, Linn. A single specimen by myself on 
July 25th, 1876 j in other parts of the county it is very common. 

29. Epunda lichenia, Hub. Rare. By the Rev. O. P. Cambridge. 

30. Hadena chenopodii, W.v. Very rare. By Mr. Lighten. 

31. Phlogophora meticulosa, Linn. Angleshades moth; common. 

32. Cucullia chamomillae, W.v. A few were taken by my 
father. 

33. Plusia gamma, Linn. Common. 

34. Acontia lactuosa, W.v. A single specimen, was taken by my- 
self near Southtown on July 8th, 1875. 

GEOMETRIVA. 

1. Rumia Cratsegaria, Linn. Brimston moth j common. 

2. Venilia macularia, Linn. Rare. Near the Breakwater. 

3. Cleora lichenaria, W.v. Rather rare. 

4. Boarmia rependaria, Linn. Not common. 

5. Gnophos pullaria, Hub. Occasionally common on rocks. 

6. Acidalia seutellata, W.v. Common. 

7. Acidalia Bistorta, Buk. Common. 

8. Acidalia interjectaria, B.dv. Abundant. 

9. Acidalia rusticata, W.v. Rare. Amongst ivy in the grounds 
of Pennsylvania Castle. 

10. Acidalia bilineata, Hub. Rather rare. 

11. Acidalia promutata, Gr. Not common. 

12. Acidalia subsuiceata, Haw. A single specimen by myself on 
June 10th, 1875. 

13. Acidalia degeneraria, Hub. Rare, and not found elsewhere 
in the British Isles. The first specimen was taken by Mr. Curtis, on 
June 24th, 1831. It is a very difficult species to capture, owing to 
its flying out of brambles amidst a host of bileneata. 

14. Acidalia marginata, Linn. Rather rare. 

15. Acidalia imitaria, Hub. Rather rare. 

16. Aspilates citraria, Hub. Not common, On the Chesil Beach. 

17. Abraxas grossulariata, Linn. Magpie Moth. Common. 

18. Zerene adustata, W.v. Common. 

19. Larentia olivata, W.v. Abundant, but not found elsewhere 
in the county. 

20. Larentia pectinitaria, Fuess. Common. 

21. Emmelesia bifasciata, Haw. One specimen by myself on 
July 19th, 1875, and another on July 12th, 1876. 



57 

22. Eupithecia centaureata, "W.v. One specimen by myself on 
June 28th, 1876, and another on August 6th, 1876. 

23. Eupithecia castigata, Haw. Common. 

24. Eupithecia vulgata, Haw. Abundant. 

25. Eupithecia satyrata, Hub. Common. 

26. Eupithecia isogrammata, Je. Common amongst Clematis. 

27. Eupithecia pimpinellata, Hub. Common. 

28. Eupithecia constrictata, Gn. j abundant. By Rev. 0. P. 
Cambridge, in July, 1854-5. 

29. Eupithecia absynthiata, Linn. Rather rare. 

30, Eupithecia tenuiata, Hub. Common. 

31. Eupithecia pumilata, Hub. Common. 

32. Ypsipetes elutata, W.v. Common. 

33. Coremia ferrugata, Linn. Common. 

34. Camptogramma bilineata, Linn. Yellow shell moth. The 
most abundant insect in Portland. 

35. Phibalapteryx tersata, W.v. Common amongst Clematis. 

36. Melanippe procellata, W.v. Common amongst Clematis. 

37. Melanippe subtristata, Haw. Common. 

38. Melanippe fluctuata, Linn. Common. 

39. Melanippe galiata, W. v. Very common. 

40. Melanthia ocellata, Linn. Common. 

41. Cidaria prunata, Linn. One specimen only was taken by 
myself on July 12th, 1876. 

42. Cidaria russata, W.v. Common. 

43. Cidaria fulvata, Fest. Common. 

44. Cidaria pyraliata, Buch. Common. 

45. Cidaria testa ta, Linn. Common. 

46. Eubolia bipunctaria, W.v. Abundant. 

47. Eubolia mensuraria, W.v. Common. 
PYRALIDINA. 

1. Hypena proboscidalis, Linn. Snout Moth. Abundant. 

2. Hypenodes costsestrigalis, 'Step. Rare. The last specimen 
was taken by myself on June 30th, 1874. 

3. Cledeobia anguinalis, W.v. Abundant. 

4. Pyrausta punicealis, W.v. Rare. It is generally found on 
chalk. 

5. Pyrausta coespitalis, W.v. Common. 

6. Herbula cingulalis, Linn. Rare. A few specimens were 
taken by my father. 
H 



58 

7. Simsethis Fabriciana, Linn. Nettle-tap Moth. Common. 

8. Asopia panealis, W.v. Very rare. A single specimen was 
captured by Mr. Paul j one was also taken by my father in July 
12th, 1836. 

9. Stenia punctalis, W.v. Common. 

10. Botys verticalis, W.v. Rare. A few specimens were taken 
by my father and the Rev. 0. P. Cambridge. 

11. Botys urticalis, W.v. Abundant. 

12. Botys asinalis, Hub. Common. 

13. Ebulea sambucalis, W. V. Common. 

14. Ebulea crocealis, Tr. Common. 

15. Scopula ferrugalis, W. V. Common. 

16. Stenopteryx hybridalis, Hub. Not common. 
CRAMBINA. 

1. Eudorea cembrse, Haw. Not common. 

2. Eudorea ambigualis, Tr. Common. 

3. Eudorea pyralalis, W. V. Abundant. 

4. Eudorea phsDoleuca, Zell. Rare. The first specimen of this 
moth, which is not found elsewhere in the British Isles, was taken 
by my father on August 4th, 1824 j and abundantly by Rev. 0. P. 
Cambridge, in July and August, 1854-5. 

5. Eudorea cratsegella, Hub. Abundant. 

6. Eudorea mercurella, Linn. Common. Var. Concinella Curt. 
A few specimens were taken by my father. 

7. Eudorea resinella, Haw. ; common. 

8. Eudorea angustea, Curt. ; common. 

9. Crambus cerussellus, W.V. j abundant. 

10. Crambus pratellus, Clh. ; common. 

11. Crambus tristellus, W.V. ; common. 

12. Crambus inquinatellus, W.V. ; common towards the Bill. 

13. Crambus geniculellus, Haw. ; common. 

14. Crambus culmellus, Linn. ; common. 

15. Crambus hortuellus, Hub. ; -common. 

16. Ilithyria canella, Linn, j rare. A few specimens were taken 
by my father. 

17. Homseosoma sinuella, Fab. ; very rare. A single specimen 
was taken by the Rev. 0. P. Cambridge, in May, 1875, on the Chesil 
Beach. 

18. Homseosoma nimbclla, Dup. ; not common. 

19. Homseosoma eluviella, Gn. ; common. 




59 

20. Nyctegretes artemisiella, Steph. Several examples by Eev. 
0. P. Cambridge, in 1855. 

21. Nyctegretes semirufella, Haw. Two specimens by Eev. 0. 
P. Cambridge, in 1855. 

22. Cryptoblabes bistrigella, Haw. One specimen by Eev. O. P. 
Cambridge, in 1856. 

23. Pempelia dilutella, Hub. ; common. 

24. Pempelia ornatella, W.V. ; not common. 

25. Phycita abietella, W. v. A single specimen was taken by 
myself on the western side of the Bill, on June 28th, 1876, although 
there is not a fir tree in the island. 

26. Phycita marmorea, Haw. A single specimen was taken by 
my father on June 20th, 1829. 

27. Hypochalica ahenella, W. v. A single specimen was taken 
by my father on June 17th, 1829. 

28. Aphomia sociella, Linn. Not common. 

TORTRICTNA. 

1. Tortrix pyrastrana, Hub. Not common. 

2. Tortrix xylosteana, Linn. ; common. 

3. Tortrix rosana, Linn. ; common. 

4. Tortrix heparana, W.v. j common. 

5. Tortrix vibrana, Hub. ; common. 

6. Tortrix unifasciana, Dub. ; common. 

7. Tortrix adjunctana, Te. ; not common. 

8. Peronea variegana, W.v. ; common. 

9. Peronea Schalleriana, Linn. ; not common. 

10. Peronea ferrugana, W.v. ; common. 

11. Dictyopterex Holmiana, Linn, j common. 

12. Dictyopterex ciliana, Hub. ; common. 

13. Dictyopterex Bergmanniana, Linn. ; common. 

14. Penthina pruniana, Hub. ; common. 

15. Penthina f uligana, Hub. ; common. 

16. Penthina, cynosbana, Linn. ; not common. 

17. Penthina, gentiana, Hub. ; not common. 

18. Spilonota ocellana, W.v. j common. 

19. Spilonota suffusana, W.V. ; common. 

20. Spilonota rosoecolana, 1)1!. j common. 

21. Pardia tripunctana, W.v. ; common. 

22. Sericoris conchana, Hub. ; common. 



60 

23. Sericoris lacunana, W.v. ; common. 

24. Sericoris urticana, Hub. ; common. 

25. Orthotoonia striana, W.v. By myself, on June 28th, 1876. 

2G. Cnephasia subjectana, Gn. ; common. 

27. Cnephasia virgaureana, Tr. ; common. 

28. Sphaleroptera ictericana, Haw. By myself, on June 28, 1876. 

29. Grapholita trimaculana, Don. ; common. 

30. Halonota nigricostana, Haw. j common. 

31. Halonota trigeminana, Step. ; not common. 

32. Semasia spiniana, Fink. ; common. 

33. Stigmonota interruptana H. Sch. Very rare. A single 
specimen was taken by my father on May 30th, 1852. 

34. Stigmonota composana, Fab. j not common. 

35. Stigmonota redimitana, Gn. ; common. 

36. Dicrorampha petiverana, Linn, j common. 

37. Catoptria Hohenwarthiana, Wv. ; common. 

38. Catoptria coecimaculana, Hub. Very rare. A single speci- 
men only was taken by myself on June 23rd, 1874. 

39. Catoptria pupillana, Linn. Occasionally common. 

40. Eupoecilia sodaliana Haw. Hare. The last specimen of 
this pretty moth was taken by myself on July 30th, 1875. 

41. Eupoecilia affinitana, Doug. Rare. The first specimen was 
taken by my father on June 17th, 1875. 

42. Eupoecilia ruficola, Curt. Rare. The first specimen was 
taken by my father on August 4th, 1828. 

43. Eupoecilia roseana, Haw. ; common. 

44. Eupoecilia subroseana, Haw. ; not common. 

45. Xanthosetia zoegana, Linn. ; not common. 

46. Xanthosetia hamana, Linn. ; common. 

47. Chrosis tesserana, W.v. This variable species is very abund- 
ant all over the island and the Chesil Beach. 

48. Argyrolepia dubrisana, Curt. By myself, on June 10, 1875. 

49. Cochylis Francillana, Fab. ; very rare. A single specimen 
only was taken by myself on July 19th, 1875. 

50. Cochylis siramineana, Haw. ; rare. The last specimen was 
taken by myself on September llth, 1875. 

TlNEINA. 

1. Psychoides verhuellella, Heyd. j not common, 
2. Tinea rustirella, Hub. ; common in houses. 



61 

3. Tinea tapetzlella, Sinn. ; common in houses. 

4. Tinea pellionella, Linn. ; common in houses. 

5. Tinea biselliella, Hum. ; common in houses. 

6. Micropteryx sepella, Fab. ; common. 

7. Plutella xylostella, Linn. ; common. 

8. Plutella-aurulotella, Curt. ; very rare. A few specimens were 
taken by the Rev. A. Pickard. 

9. Cerostoma vittella, Linn. ; not common. 

10. Cerostoma variella, Hub. ; common. 

11. Depressaria nanatella, Stn. Two specimens were taken by 
myself near Bow and Arrow Castle on July 19th, 1875. 

12. Depressaria subpropinquella, Stn. Not common. 

13. Depressaria, rhodochrella, H. S. A single specimen was 
taken by myself on August 6th, 1876. 

14. Depressaria rotundella, Doug. Rare. The first specimen 
of this moth was taken by my father May 10th, 1837. 

15. Depressaria arenella, Fab. : common. 

16. Gelechia cinarella, Linn. A single specimen'only was taken 
by myself on July 30th, 1875 j also by my father on July 9th, 1845. 

17. Gelechia terrella, W.v. ; common. 

18. Gelechia rufescentella, Haw. A single specimen only was 
taken by myself on June 12th, 1876. 

19. Gelechia desertella, Doug. Common on the Chesil Beach. 

20. Gelechia mundella, Doug. Not common. On the Chesil 
Beach. 

21 Gelechia distinctella, Zell. ; common in the grounds of Penn- 
sylvania Castle. 

22. Gelechia costella, Step. Not common. Near the Break- 
water. 

23. Gelechia fraternella, Doug. On the Chesil Beach, by myself, 
May, 1875. 

24. Gelechia marmorea, Haw. Not common. On the Chesil 
Beach. 

25. Gelechia obsoletella, Fisch. Abundant on the Chesil Beach. 

26. Gelechia tenebrosella, Zell. A single specimen only was 
taken by myself on July 2nd, 1875. 

27. Parasia lapella, Linn. A single specimen only was taken by 
my father on July llth, 1829. 

28. Endrosis pseudospretella, Stn. ; common in houses. 

29. Endrosis fenestrella, Scop. ; common in houses. 



62 

30. Butalis senescens, Stn. Not common. 

31. Butalis variella, Steph. Rare. Some very small specimens 
of this moth were taken by myself on the Chesil Beach June 30th, 
1874. 

32. Acrolepia granitella, Tr. Rare. A few specimens were 
taken by myself on the north side of the island on April 22nd, 18G5. 

33. Glyphipterex fischeriella, Zell. ; common. 

34. Argyresthia pygmasella, Hub. ; common. 

35. Argyresthia nitidella, Fab. ; common. 

36. Argyresthia albistria, Haw. ; common. 

37. Ornix anglicella, Stn. ; common. 

38. Gracillaria swederella, Thumb ; common. 

39. Gracillaria stigmatella, Fab. ; common. 

40. Gracillaria semifasciella, Haw. ; common. 

41, Gracillaria syringella, Fab. ; common. 

42. Coleophora Frischella, Linn. ; very rare. A few specimens 
only were taken by my father on July llth, 1831. 

43. Coleophora lixella, Zell. ; very rare. A few specimens only 
were taken by my father on July 27th, 1843. 

44. Coleophora troglodytella, Stn. ; not common. 

45. Chauliodus daucellus, Peyh. A single specimen only of this 
variety (the name of it being unknown until 1872) was taken by my 
father on May 31st, 1842. 

46. Laverna epilobiella, Schr ; not common. 

47. Chrysocoris festaliella, Hub. ; common. 

48. Elachista serricornis, Logn ; rare. A few specimens were 
taken by myself on September llth, 1875. 

49. Elachista collitella, Fisch. ; common. 

50. Elachista biatomella, Stn. ; rare. The last specimen was 
taken by myself on September llth, 1875. 

51. Elachista cyngipennella, Hub.; abundant on the Chesil Beach. 

52. Antispila, Pfeifferella, Fab. A single specimen of this ex- 
ceedingly beautiful little moth was taken by my father on May 14th, 

1829. 

PTEROPHORINA. 

1. Pterophorus acanthodactylus, Hub. ; not common. 

2. Pterophorus phseodactylus, Hub. ; not common. 

3. Pterophorus bipunctidactylus, Haw. ; common. 

4. Pterophorus fuscodactylus, Vill. ; common. 

5. Pterophoruspterodactylus, Lin. j common Plume Moth ; common^ 






63 



6. Pterophorus microdactylus, Hub. A single specimen only was 
taken by myself, near the Breakwater, on June 10th, 1875. 
7. Pterophorus baliodactylus, Zell. ; common. 
8. Pterophorus pentadactylus, Linn. ; White Plum Moth; common. 
9. Alucita polydactyla (Hub.), Twenty-Plum Moth ; common. 

After writing the foregoing pages I find that the following six 
moths were unfortunately omitted viz., Orthosia macilenta, one 
specimen of it being taken by father on September 9th, 1837 ; 
Botys cinctalis, common; Aspis udmanuiana, common; Dicrorhampha 
politana, common ; Pyrausta purpuralis, common ; and Micropteryx 
calthella, common. 

The following summary of the Lepidoptera of Portland, along 
with that of Folkestone, and that of the whole of the British Islands, 
may be interesting : 





Portland. 


Folkestone. 


British Isles. 


Dineni 


25 


41 


64 


Sphingina 


3 


20 


42 


Bombycina 


12 


40 


120 


Noctuina 


35 


112 


312 


Geometrma 


47 


111 


278 


Pyralydina 


16 


35 


68 


Crambina 


28 





72 


Tortricina 


52 





348 


Tineina 


53 





700 


Pterophorina 


9 


18 


31 


/ 


280 


377 


2035 



ON THE FOSSIL BEDS OF BEADFOED ABBAS 
AND ITS VICINITY. 

BY JAMES BUCKMAN, F.Gr.S., F.L.S. 

As Mr. Davidson has been so good as to furnish me with a 
beautifully-illustrated paper on the Brachiopoda of this district, I 
have much pleasure in yielding to his request that I should pen a 
few remarks upon the stratum from whence these interesting fossils 
were obtained. 

Soon after I came to reside at Bradford Abbas I became aware of 
the richness of the oolitic strata of the district in fossil remains, and 
from a quarry on my own farm, mostly worked for parish roads' 
and from another on the farm adjoining, I was not long in procuring 
a large number of species, many of which were then new to me. 
The railway cuttings through the parish and the celebrated Half- 
way House quarries, all within a mile, were next examined, when it 
was found that a band of rather rough, ferruginous oolite was so 
thickly charged with organic remains as to have got for it the general 
name of " the fossil bed." 

The most conspicuous among the fossils were the Cephalopoda, 
Ammonites, Nautili, Belemnites; then came the Brachiopoda, which 
were found to be abundant both in species and individuals; and, 
lastly, more careful observation brought to light a large series of 
Gesteropoda, among which are found a large series of small but 
elegant species requiring patient labour to develop them, and hence 
the knowledge of their presence in such numbers has been obtained 
comparatively recently. 

Of course the geologist, on examining a stratum containing such 
a striking mass of fossils, all occurring in a bed not three feet in 
thickness, would at once be anxious to determine its horizon. 

At first this seemed very easy of accomplishment, as at Bradford 
we have the oolitic stone replete with Cephalopoda resting on a 
thick deposit of sand. 



65 

Just so is it in Gloucestershire. A ferruginous oolitic stone 
resting on a thick bed of sand there forms the base of the oolitic 
rock, and, as in the so-named Cephalopoda bed at Frocester, some 
liassic forms of Ammonites were found, it was even proposed by 
Dr. Wright to allocate this bed with the Lias. 

Now although these two beds, the one in Dorsetshire and the 
other in Gloucestershire, are both charged with Ammonites of 
which several species are common to both, I hope to show that they 
are upwards of a hundred feet apart, the former being near the top 
of the Inferior Oolite, and the latter so close upon the Lias as to be 
classed with it. 

So strong, however, was the belief in the identity of these two 
Cephalopoda beds that up to a certain period all writers described 
them as situate on the same horizon, and they are so mapped by 
the Ordnance Survey. Nay, further, we have examined collections 
of fossils from Bradford Abbas labelled as from Lias. 

To show how confidently geologists spoke upon this matter we 
extract the following notes from the Journal of the Geological 
Society for February, 1877 : 

" Every student of the geology of the Cotteswolds has recognised 
a band at the base of the Inferior Oolite under the name of the 
'Cephalopoda bed,' so named from the important list of Ammonites, 
Nautili, and Belemnites which it has been found to contain. 

"To quote from Mr. Hull's 'Memoir on the Geology of the 
Country around Cheltenham,' l This bed had been long known to 
geologists as " the ammonite bed ; " but the ammonites were sup- 
posed characteristic of the Inferior Oolite, and its true importance 
was overlooked. Dr. Wright, however, found that the species were 
identical with specimens from the Upper Lias of Whitby, in York- 
shire. About the same time the work of M. D'Orbigny made its 
appearance, wherein nearly all the cephalopoda from the ammonite 
bed are figured and described as " Toarcien? or Upper Lias forms* 
while even in our own district several of the species were known 
to be characteristic of the Upper Lias Shale ' (p. 26). 

" Mr. Hull refers to a paper by Dr. Wright in the ' Proceedings of 
the Geological Society,' vol. xii., in support of the view that the 
Cotteswold Cephalopoda bed belongs to the Upper Lias and not to 
the Inferior Oolite, and, further, that the learned Doctor had traced 
it to the Dorsetshire coast ; and, indeed, in this very paper we find 
the following remarks upon sections at Half-way House and Brad- 
I 



66 

"ord Abbas, which we quote, as showing that Dr. Wright had at 
.nis time identified the Dorset Cephalopoda bed with the one in 
Gloucestershire : 

"'Between Yeovil and Sherborne ^ the 1 Cephalopoda bed is well 
developed and extensively exposed; and at the Half-way House its 
relations to the Sands below, and the Limestone of the Inferior 
Oolite above, may be satisfactorily made out. Here it contains a 
great many large Ammonites, Nautili, and Belemnites, as 

Ammonites dorsetensis, Wright. Belemnites breviformis, Voltz. 

jurensis, Zieten. compressus, Voltz. 

Nautilus inornatus, If Orb. 

' Section VI. At Bradford Abbas, near Yeovil, Dorsetshire. 

1 Inferior Oolite. 

ft. in. 
' A. Coarse, hard, brown ragstone, slightly oolitic, very irregularly 

bedded, and containing few fossils ; about 2 

B and c. Absent. 

' Cephalopoda-bed. 

1 D. A coarse, brown, oolitic ragstone, composed in part of hard, 
calcareous, sandy layers, grey and brown, and having softer 
marly sandy seams running through the rock ; it breaks 
with an uncertain fracture, and sometimes has a flinty hard- 
ness : the ragstones are speckled with dark brown flattened 
oolitic grains of hydrate of iron, and contain many fossils : 
about 2 6 '* 

It was then clearly Dr. Wright's view (in which he was, indeed, 
both preceded and followed by other geologists) that the Dorset 
Cephalopoda-bed was identical with that of Gloucestershire; and 
indeed we have seen fossils from the Bradford bed just described 
labelled as from Upper Lias. 

Mr. Strickland, in 1850, considered the ironshot oolite of Dundry 
the equivalent of the Cephalopoda-bed of the Haresfield Hill. He 
says, " A few miles to the south the Pisolite disappears and is re- 
placed near Pains wick and at Haresford Hill by strata containing 
ferruginous oolitic grains in a brown paste. This is the precise 
equivalent of the well-known oolite of Dundry, near Bristol, which 
may be recognised as far off as Bridport, on the Dorset coast."t 

Now this view was quoted by Dr. Wright in a paper published 
in the " Quarterly Journal " for 1860, only to be dissented from ; for 

* Quart. Journ. GeoL Soc., voL xiL (1856), p. 302. t Ibid., voL vi, p. 250. 



67 

he says of the above, " A comparison, however, of the species of 
Ammonites and other shells collected in these different localities 
shows that, besides a similarity in lithological structure, there is 
nothing in common between the strata ;"* and he accounts for the 
appearances by supposing that the Ammonites Murchisona zone, by 
thinning out, has brought the zone of Ammonites Humphresianus 
into close relation with the sands of the Upper Lias.* 

As, however, the shells of the 2 feet 6 inches bed, described as 
the Cephalopoda-bed at Bradford and other places in Dorset, are 
identical with those at Dundry, and at both Bradford and Dundry 
it contains with others 

Ammonites Parkinson!, Sow. (A. Ammonites Murchisonae, Sow. 

dorsetensis, Wr.J jurensis, Ziet. 
Humphresianus, Sow. 

we conclude that the Cephalopoda-beds at Bradford and Dundry 
are on the same horizon, and, further, that neither the one nor the 
other has the slightest connexion with the Cephalopoda-bed of 
Gloucestershire ; and, if this be so, the fact that the four Ammonites 
just quoted have been made representatives of the four distinct 
zones, will be a difficult problem to solve for those who implicitly 
believe in zones. 

One of the more recent papers, "On the Correlation of the 
several sub-divisions of the Inferior Oolite in the middle and south 
of England," is by Dr. Holl, who concludes that the true position of 
our Dorset and Somerset beds is higher in the series than is stated 
by the geologists just quoted, and "that they are, in fact, the 
southern extensions of the Upper and Lower Ragstones of Mr. Hull, 
the uppermost of which is not represented in the typical section at 
Leckhampton, having risen above the level of the country, and 
cropped out before reaching the brow of the hills."t 

We agree with this view, except that we consider the Dorset 
Cephalopoda-bed the equivalent of the Gryphite Grit at Leck- 
hampton, and that the roughly bedded stone above is the repre- 
sentative of the Trigonia Grit of Cold Comfort. The constant 
presence of the same typical Ammonites on the top of Leck- 
hampton Hill and in the Bradford Abbas quarries seems to prove 
this assertion, such as 

* Quart. Journ. GeoL Soc., vol. xvi., p. 18. } Ibid., vol. xix. (1863), p. 307. 



68 

Ammonites Sowerbyi, Miller. Ammonites concavus, Sow., M.G. 

Brocchii, Sow., M.C. subradiatus, Sow., M.C. 

Humphresianus, Sow., M.C. Murchisonse, Sow., M.C. 

Parkinsoni, Sow., M.C. 

and others. 

From this, then, it follows that, while the Gloucestershire 
Cephalopoda-bed is at the base of the Inferior Oolite or top of the 
Upper Lias, the Dorset Cephalopoda-bed is near the top of the 
former ; and yet they have not only been confounded the one with 
the other, but this position has been supported by the similarity, 
not the identity, of the Cephalopods, which, indeed, have been held 
to point to Lias rather than to Oolite. 

Dr. Roll's view of the case seems to be^that, while we have thus 
the Upper Bagstones, the lower members of the Inferior Oolite are 
deemed to be absent ; for he says : 

"On the southern side of the Mendips the Inferior Ooolite no- 
where exceeds 28 or 30 feet in thickness, of which from 8 to 10 feet 
belong to the lower subdivision. The upper subdivision immedi- 
ately underlies the Fuller's Earth ; and its light colour, lithological 
structure, and general poverty in organic remains readily dis- 
tinguish it from the hard, brown, more or less massive or rubbly 
limestone beneath, which is everywhere very fossiliferous." 

Now we take it that, although the learned Dr. Holl is right as 
regards the position of the Dorset Cephalopoda-bed, he is not so in 
supposing that the lower members of the Inferior Ooolite all thin 
out in Dorset, our view being that quite 100 feet of the sands, with 
its occasional bands of shelly oolite, as these occur at Bradford 
Abbas, really represent the lower oolitic mass of Leckhampton and 
Crickley in Gloucestershire ; and, in fact, our Dorset sands repre- 
sent the lower freestones of Gloucestershire. 

At Ham Hill the equivalent of the sand-bed at Babylon Hill is a 
reddish brown freestone, apparently made up of comminuted shells. 
At Babylon Hill the brown sandy beds present occasional courses of 
comminuted shelly oolites. 

The sections here placed in juxtaposition are remarkable for 
their dissimilarity at first sight ; but if the brown sands were a little 
more indurated (and the presence of a few more shells or a little 
more lime might well bring that about) there would not be much 
difference between the Ham Hill section and several other sections 
near Sherborne, as well as the one of the Cotteswold Hills. 



69 



w 

H 

M 

^ 


o 

tf 
O 

M 

PH 
W 
FH 

fc 
M 


GLOUCESTERSHIRE. 

(Cottesivolds.) 


SOMERSETSHIRE. 
(Bradford Abbas.) 


DORSETSHIRE. 

(Ham Hill.) 


S 

EH 
1 i 
A 
O 
O 

PS 
O 

M 

PH 
H 
^ 
fc 

M 


Trigonia Grit. 


Trigonia Grit. 


Absent. 


Gryphite Grit 
Ceplialopoda-bed. 


Cephalopoda Gry- 
phite Grit bed. 






Oolite Freestone. 




"Ochre-beds," a 
soft-bedded, sandy 
Oolite ; not the 
best building stone, 
Freestone. 


Stone. 


Sands. 


Stone. 


Ooolite Marl. 


Brown Sands. 


Yellow and 
Ochreous beds besl 
building stone, 
Roestone. 


Roestone. 


Stone. 


Brown Sands. 


Stone. 


Sands in hardened 
blocks. 


Ferruginous Beds 
Sands. 


A grey, harder 
Oolite. 


Midford Sands 
(ferruginous). 


Midford Sands 
(ferruginous). 


Cephalopoda-bed. 


Indications of 
Cephalopoda-bed. 


Indications of 
Cephalopoda-bed. 


Liassic Sands and 
Shales. 


Liassic Sands and 
Shales. 


Liassic Sands and 
Shales. 



70 

Now these three sections show that the sands of Dorset are, 
considered the equivalents of the Inferior Oolite of the Cotteswolds 
on the one hand, and of Ham Hill, Somerset, on the other. 

Ham Hill has always been a puzzle to the geologist ; but if we 
place it on the same horizon as the so-called " Lias Sands " at Brad- 
ford, the difficulty is at once cleared up. 

Mr. Moore, in his paper " On the Middle and Upper Lias of the 
South-west of England," speaking of II am Hill, says : 

The workable freestone at this spot is 58 feet thick, and almost 
entirely composed of comminuted shells, united by an irony cement, 
and is a remarkable deposit ; for, although attaining so considerable 
a thickness, it does not appear to be represented in any other 
locality. It has been largely worked for centuries, and yields a 
very excellent stone, of a light-brown colour, due to the presence of 
carbonate of iron, an analysis of the deposit proving it to contain 14 
per cent, of metallic iron."* 

The best Gloucestershire equivalent of this bed is to be seen in 
the straight wall of rock at Crickley Hill, near Cheltenham, which 
latter section we consider the equivalent of the freestone-beds at 
Ham Hill, and the sands with shelly oolite interpolated in slabs at 
Bradford Abbas, Babylon Hill, and the adjacent district. 

The following list of fossils from the freestone at Ham Hill and 
the shelly oolites of Dorset can nearly all be matched in the lower 
beds of the Inferior Oolite of Gloucestershire : 
Belemnites compressus, Blainv. Pecten lens, Sow. 

tricanaliculatus, Ziet. annulatus, Sow. 

subtenuis, Simp. discites, Goldf. 

abbreviatus, Mill. , other species. 

Nautilus latidorsatus, D'Orb. Gervillia Hartmanni, Goldf. 

inornatus, D' Orb. Pinna Hartmanni, Ziet. 

Ammonites jurensis, Ziet. Avicula complicata, BucJcm. 

Moorei, Lycett. Astarte elegans, Sow. 

opalinus, Rein. pullus, Rom. 

Edouardianus, D'Orb. obliqua, Desk. 

Murchisonse, Sow. , other species. 

, other species. Trigonia, costated species. 

Ostrea bullata (?) clavellated species. 

Buckmanni, Lye. (?) (Grypheea). Lucina bellona, If Orb. 

* Proceedings of the Somersetshire Archaeological and Natural History Society, 
vol. xiii. 1865-Gb 1 . 






71 

Ostrea subloba, Desk. Ceromya (Isocardia) concentrica, 
Marshii, Sow., = flabelloides, Sow. 

Lam. Tancredia donaciformis, Lye. 

Lima densipunctata, Rom. t. 14 f. 3. Spines of Cidarides. 

grandis, Rom. t. 13 f. 10. Ossicula of Apiocrinus. 

rigida. Sow. Serpulae, &c., &c. 

Now this list of fossils is sufficient to mark the oolitic nature of 
these thick beds below the Cephalopoda-bed of Dorset, and if this 
new reading of the matter be correct, our sands are not the equiva- 
lents of the Gloucester sands, or rather the Cotteswold sands, but 
the representatives of the lower beds of the Inferior Oolite, which at 
Ham Hill is a good freestone, from containing so much lime, while 
at Bradford it is hard, in bands consisting of a shelly oolite, with 
thick beds of sand between, not sufficiently indurated to be used as 
stone. 

If this be so then it is clear that the name of "Upper Lias 
Sands " cannot be retained for these sand-beds. 

Professor Phillips has lately proposed to call the sands, as they 
occur in the neighbourhood of Bath, "Midford Sands," from the 
village of that name ; but, if they be really the equivalent of the 
oolite series, this term can only apply to the lower part of the 
series. 

Our Bradford Abbas Cephalopoda-bed occupies the top, and not 
the bottom, of the Inferior Oolite series, as will be seen from the 
following : 

Section of Bradford Abbas (East Hill) Quarry. 

ft. in. \ Trigonia Grit of 

* Soil ( *> Buckman, Geol. 

2 White oolite with irregular cleavage 6 Oj of Cheltenh 

3. Band of marl, with Astarte and Lima, elem- 

nites, &c 3 

4. Hard ironshot rock, with Ammonites, Belem- 

nites, &c 10 

K-DJCI i_ i rnr Cephalopoda - bed 

5. >and or brownish stone, marly at top, lull or 

1- =GryphiteGrit 

Univalves and Ammonites (Jo 

* T i x. i-i r /-( 1. i j of Buckman. 

6. Ironsnot oolite, a mass 01 Cephalopoda 1 

7. Marl with Astarte trigonalis 3 

8. Bed with Ammonites aalensis and Univalves 9 

9. Blue-centred oolite, with Isocardia concentrica... 1 2 

10. Eeddish sands, commencing the lower freestone system of the Cotteswolds. 
(These latter are from 100 to 150 feet in thickness, occasionally interpolated 
with bands of oolitic stones, with numerous fossils of that rock.) 



72 

That this fossil bed of Dorset deserves the name it has received 
may be gathered from the fact that iu some places the stone con-- 
sists of cemented masses of Ammonites, Nautili, &c., upwards of 
sixty species having already been tabulated. 

Parts of this fossil-bearing series are no less rich in Gasteropoda, 
whilst the Monomyaria and Dimyaria also abound, and no less so the 
Brachiopoda, as the species figured by Mr. Davidson so fully testify. 
Indeed we seem to have, in less than a yard in thickness of rough 
oolite, over 300 forms, most of which are found scattered through 
150 or 200 feet of the oolitic beds of the Co ttes wolds. Some forms 
of the Cotteswold series are absent here, but they are replaced by 
others which have not been observed as Cotteswoldians. 

As regards the Brachiopods, we miss the Terebratula simplex* 
T. plicata, Buck., and T. fimbria, Sow. j but the grand T. perovalis 
var ampla, Buck. ; T. Stephens!, Dav. ; T. decipiens, E. Desl. ; and 
T. cranese, Dav., fully make up for their absence. 

Taken altogether, this grand series of fossils seems to well repay the 
time that has been spent upon it, and, now that we have made so 
good a start through Mr. Davidson's kindness and liberality, by his 
exquisite figures and lucid description of the Brachiopods, we sin- 
cerely hope, in a future volume, to be able to do as much for some 
other group of these interesting and well-preserved specimens. 

THE EDITOR. 



ON THE SPECIES OF BRACHIOPODA THAT OCCUE 
IN THE INFEEIOE OOLITE AT BEADFOED ABBAS 
AND ITS VICINITY. 

(BY THOMAS DAVIDSON, ESQ., F.E.S., F.G.S., &c.) 

At the request of Professor Buckman and Mr. Darell Stephens 
I have studied with all possible attention between eight and 
nine hundred specimens of Brachiopoda from the Inferior Oolite 
that had been collected by them and Mr. J. F. Walker at 
Bradford Abbas, Halfway House, Crewkerne Station, Milborne 
Wick, Haselbury, Broadwinsor and Bridport ; localities situated 
partly in Dorsetshire, and partly in Somersetshire, at distances 
varying from four to sixteen miles from Bradford Abbas. 
Several of these localities are immensely rich in species and 
specimens, which are met with in an excellent state of preserva- 
tion. Mr. Darell Stephens alone forwarded for my inspection 
upwards of seven hundred specimens. I have much pleasure in 
laying before the Society the results of my examination, as well 
as figures of each of the species that have been obtained from 
the above-named localities. Yeovil is situated at about two 
miles distance from Bradford Abbas, and has often been quoted 
as a spot whence Inferior Oolite Brachiopoda have been obtained, 
but I am informed by both Professor Buckman and Mr. Darell 
Stephens that there is no Inferior Oolite at Yeovil itself, the Yeo, 
thence to Bridgwater, running along a bed of Lower Lias shale. 
Therefore, instead of Yeovil, Professor Morris, myself, and 
others should have said, near Yeovil, the Inferior Oolite occur- 
ring at Bradford Abbas, Dorset, a locality not far distant. 

It will not be necessary in this communication to give com- 
plete descriptions of all th.3 species, as they will be found in my 
monograph on British Fossil Brachiopoda, to which the reader 
is referred. 
J 



74 

Geologists still differ slightly with, respect to the number of 
divisions into which the Oolitic and Liassic deposits should be 
separated; thus, for example, the Fuller's earth, Stonesfield 
slate, Bradford clay, Forest marble, and perhaps one or two 
others, are local and unimportant divisions when compared with 
such divisions as the Inferior Oolite, Great Oolite, Oxford Clay 
and Kimmeridge. Some geologists desire to omit these minor 
divisions; others, on the contrary, would subdivide the whole 
system into a great number of zones characterised by the 
presence of certain species of Ammonites, and although this 
mode of proceeding may have its advantages as a matter of 
detail, our knowledge as to the real value of all these zones is 
not yet so far advanced as to warrant us following them in the 
general grouping of the Brachiopoda scattered throughout the 
system. In nature we find no hard lines of demarcation between 
the divisions which we are obliged to adopt in order to be able 
to define their respective positions. Thus the Rhaotic would 
connect the Triassic series with the Liassic ; the Midford sands, 
E. cynocephala bed, &c., form the passage connecting the 
Liassic with the Oolitic series of deposits. 

It was during the deposition of the Middle Lias and Inferior 
Oolite that both species and specimens of Brachiopoda abounded 
in the Jurassic rocks of Great Britain. As many as fifty-nine 
species and named varieties have been recorded from the Middle 
Lias, and about sixty-five from the Inferior Oolite. 

No. 1. TEREBRATULA PEROVALIS, Sow. Min. Con., Plate I., fig. 
1, 2; Plate III., fig. 1. 

TEBEBBATULA PEEOVALIS, Sow. Min. Con., vol. v., p. 51, tab. 436, 
fig. 2, 3; and Var. Ampla (Buckman), pi. i., fig. 1, 2, Pro- 
ceedings of the Somersetshire Archceological and Natural History 
Society, vol. xx., 1874. 

This is -the largest species of Brachiopoda with which we are 
acquainted from the Oolite rocks of Great Britain, some speci- 
mens having exceeded three inches in length by two inches, and 
three or four lines in breadth, 






75 

Young examples, similar to the one figured by Sowerby as tha 
type of his species, are elongated and moderately biplicated near 
the front, but with age the shell becomes broader, and is often, 
although not always so, so much thickened that the biplication 
disappears. In this last condition we have the variety ampla of 
Buckman. Sometimes, again, as is the case with some specimens 
from Cheltenham, the shell, when adult, and of large size, 
retains the biplication of its valves, and in this state constitutes 
the variety Kleinii of Lamarck. But when we have before us a 
large number of specimens we find that these varieties merge 
one into the other and constitute a single very variable species. 
The beak is rounded, and truncated by a rather oval-shaped 
foramen, nearly touching and even sometimes overlying the 
umbone of the opposite valve. T. perovalis occurs at Bradford 
Abbas, near Sherborne, Half-way House, and other places. 

No. 2. TEREBRATTJLA STEPHANI, n. sp. Plate I., fig. 3. 

The shells composing this species are more or less sub-pent- 
agonal, and longer than wide. It does not usually exceed one 
inch nine lines in length by one inch four lines in breadth. The 
dorsal or smaller valve is moderately convex, with two prominent 
folds on the posterior half of the valve. These rounded folds are 
more or less wide apart, leaving between them a sinus of greater 
or lesser depth. The larger or ventral valve is a little more con- 
vex than the dorsal one, with a central longitudinal more or less 
prominent fold ; the beak is incurved and the foramen but 
slightly separated from the hinge-line. This is the most abund- 
ant fossil at Bradford Abbas, Half-way House, Broadwinsor, 
near Sherborne, and Crewkerne Station. It is intermediate in 
shape between Ter. Phillipsii and Ter. perovalis, and does not 
attain to half the size of either of those species. 

No. 3. TEREBRATULA PHILLIPSII, Morris. Plate III., fig. 2, 2a. 

TEREBRATULA PHILLIPSII, Morris. Annals and Mag. of Nat. 
Hist., vol. xx., p. 255, pi. xviii., fig. 9, 1847. 

Shell elongated, sub-pentagonal, posterior half of the shell 
tapering ; the beak is perforated by an oval-shaped foramen 



76 

posteriorly. The dorsal valve is strongly biplicated with a 
deepish median sinus, and two lateral ones. This species has 
sometimes attained three inches and eight lines in length, by 
two inches and ten lines in breadth. Some examples are shorter 
and broader than others. It occurs in the same localities with 
T. Stephani, and is not a rare fossil at Bradford Abbas. 

No. 4. TEREBRATULA FERRYI, E. Desl. Plate II., fig. 5. 

TEBEBBATTJLA FEBBYI, E. Desl. Brachiopodes Jtirassiqucs, pi. xcvi., 

1874. 

Shell somewhat sub-pentagonal, longer than wide, valves 
almost equally convex. Dorsal valve strongly and sharply 
biplicated at its anterior half, a deep angular sulcus existing 
between the two projecting folds. Ventral valve with a deep, 
central, angular rib and sulcus on either side ; beak tapering, 
incurved, and truncated by a circular foramen, separated from 
the hinge-line by a narrow deltidium in two pieces. In size this 
shell does not seem to have much exceeded 12 or 14 lines in 
length by about 10 in width. It occurs at Bradford Abbas, 
Half-way House, and in one or two other places. 

No. 5. TEREBRATTJLA GLOBATA, Sow. Plate II., fig. 7. 

TEBIBEATULA GXOBATA, Sow. Min. Con., pi. 436, fig. 1, 1823. 

Sub-globose and sub-pentagonal, longer than wide, moder- 
ately biplicated near the frontal margin, fold not extending to 
any considerable length, so that the larger portion of the valves 
are uniformly convex. Beak rounded, incurved, and truncated 
at its extremity by a small circular foramen. At Bradford 
Abbas the shell does not appear to have much exceeded an inch 
in length, by ten lines in breadth. It is not so abundant as 
T. Eudesei, a closely-allied species. 

No. 6. TEREBRATULA EUDESEI, Oppel. Plate III., fig. 4. 

TEEEBEATULA EUDESEI, Oppcl. Die Jtira Formation, p. 428, 1856 

This is a common shell in the Bradford Abbas district, where 
it has sometimes attained one inch three lines in length by one 



77 

inch in breadth, and about the same in depth. It is sub-pent- 
agonal, slightly longer than wide, and, posteriorly, almost gib- 
bous. There exists in the smaller valve two rounded folds, situ- 
ated near the front, and rather close together, but separated by a 
narrow sulcus. The beak is large, closely curved over that of 
the opposite valve, and truncated by a small circular foramen. 

No. 7. TEEEBEATULA SPHOIEOIDALIS, Sow. Plate II., fig. 6. 

TEEEBEATULA SPEKEKOIDALIS, Sow. Min. Con., vol. v., p. 49, tab. 
435, fig. 3, 1823. 

This shell is almost circular, spheroidal, and uniformly convex. 
Some specimens from Bradford Abbas measure fourteen lines 
in length by thirteen in breadth and twelve in depth. In 
other places, and especially upon the Continent, they have some- 
times attained to nearly the dimensions of a billiard ball. The 
beak is much incurved, and the foramen small. 

No. 8. TEEEBEATULA DECIPIENS, E. DesL Plate II., fig, 1, and 
Plate III., fig. 3. 

TEEEBEATULA DECIPIENS, E. DesL BracMopodes Jurassiques, 
p. 285, pi. 83, 1873. 

Shell oval, longer than wide, smooth ; valves uniformly 
convex, without fold or sinus, front line nearly straight or slightly 
bisinuated ; beak closely incurved over the umbone of the 
smaller valve, and truncated by an oval-shaped foramen. Two 
specimens measured the first, two inches four lines in length, 
one inch nine lines in width, and one inch seven lines in depth ; 
the second, one inch four lines in length, one inch two lines in 
width, and eleven lines in depth. This species is very nearly 
allied to Ter. splicer oidalis ; but, according to Mr. E. Deslong- 
champs, is distinguishable by its greater length, compared with 
its width, and lesser degree of convexity. The specimens from 
Bradford Abbas and Crewkerne Station were identified by Mr. 
Deslongchamps as full-grown examples of his species, and finer 
than any he had found in France. It varies considerably in 
shape, and in the convexity of its valves. 



78 
No. 9. TEEEBRATULA CEANE^E, n. sp. Plate II., fig. 2, 3. 

Shell elongated oval, broad anteriorly, tapering posteriorly, 
nearly straight in front, sides gently convex. Dorsal valve 
moderately deep, with a very wide fold scarcely rising above the 
regular convexity of the valve, but defined by two faint diverg- 
ing lines. Ventral valve twice as deep as the opposite one, and 
longitudinally flattened from near the extremity of the beak to 
the front ; the lateral portions of the valve are also flattened, 
sloping rapidly from the edge of the mesial space ; beak very 
short, rather straight, and truncated by a small circular fora- 
men ; lateral margins presenting a convex curve ; loop not 
known, probably short ; surface smooth, and marked by con- 
centric lines of growth. Two specimens measured the first, two 
inches three lines in length, one inch five lines in width, and 
one inch three lines in depth ; the second, two inches one line 
in length, one inch four lines in width, and one inch two lines in 
depth. Ols. This remarkable species is at once distinguishable 
from all its British congeners by its peculiar shape and char- 
acter. Mr. Walton, of Bath, gave me a specimen of it some 
years ago (fig. 2), which had been obtained from the Inferior 
Oolite near Sherborne. I found another, a rather larger ex- 
ample, but exactly similar to it, among some specimens from 
near Sherborne, forwarded to me by Mr. Darell Stephens. I 
have named it after Miss Agnes Crane, a talented young palae- 
ontologist, to whom science is indebted for several excellent 
papers. 

No. 10. TEEEBEATULA WEIGHT::, Dav. Plate II., fig. 4. 

TEEEBEATULA WEIGHTH, Dav. Appendix to vol. i. of British 
Fossil Brachiapoda, p. 20 (two woodcut figures). 

In shape this species is longer than wide, and ovate ; its valves 
are equally globose, with the greatest depth near the centre of 
the shell ; margin sinuous, the front line in the smaller valve 
presenting a concave curve, and a convex one in the opposite 
valve. No regular fold in the smaller valves, but there exists 
a depression or sinus near the front in the larger one. The 






79 

beak is short, incurved ; foramen small, circular, and separated 
from the hinge-line by a deltidium in two lines length, eight 
lines with seven ; depth, five. 

Mr. Darell Stephens has found two or three examples near 
Sherborne ; it does not, however, appear to be a common 'species 
in the district. 

No. 11. WALDHEIMIA ANGLICA, Oppel. Plate IV., fig. 1, 2, 3. 
WALDHEIMIA ANCJLICA, Oppel. Die Jura, Formation, p. 425, 1856. 

Shell small, almost circular, smooth, without fold or sinus, 
and much thickened at the margin. Some species are slightly 
longer than wide, and somewhat laterally pinched in at the 
posterior half of the shell. The beak is small, much incurved, 
and truncated by a minute foramen; beak ridges sharply de- 
fined ; loop not known, but probably that of the genus Wald- 
heimia ; length of a large example eight lines, by seven in 
breadth and five in depth. It is usually smaller. 

Mr. Darell Stephens obtained a number of specimens at 
Crewkerne Station, and it has been found in considerable 
quantity in the railway cutting at Bradford Abbas. 

No. 12. WALDHEIMIA WALTONI, Dm. Plate III., fig. 5. 

TEEEBEATULA WALTONI, Dav. British Foss. Brack., oolitic species, 
p. 36, pi. v., fig. 1-3. 

Shell longitudinally oval or sub-pentagonal, rounded or 
straight in front, very much thickened marginally. Smaller 
valve slightly convex, and often very much flattened, without 
fold or sinus ; large or dorsal valve more convex, and deeper 
than the opposite one ; front line straight or slightly curved ; 
beak rather large, incurved, and truncated by a small circular 
foramen widely separated from the hinge-line by a deltidium in 
one piece. Surface smooth ; length, one inch seven lines ; 
width, one inch ; depth, nine lines. This species varies much in 
shape, some examples being regularly oval, others pinched in 
laterally and posteriorly, some straight in front, others slightly 
indentated. In some specimens the smaller valve is almost flat. 



80 

It occurs at several places in the Bradford Abbas district, but 
principally at Broadwinsor. 

No. 13. WALDHEIMIA EMAKGINATA, Sow. Plate III., fig. 10-11. 

TEBEBBATULA EMABGINATA, Sow. Min. Con., vol. v., p. 50, pi. 
435, fig. 5, 1825. 

Shell sub -pentagonal, longer than wide, more or less indented 
in front, sometimes slightly biplicated, without fold or sinus; 
both valves convex, the ventral one being the deepest; beak 
incurved, and truncated by a small circular foramen, separated 
from the hinge-line by a deltidium in one piece ; beak ridges 
strongly defined ; margins thickened ; surface smooth ; length 
one inch, by ten lines in breadth. This species varys very much 
in shape, some specimens simulating so nearly W. carinata as to 
be hardly distinguishable. 

It is found at Broadwinsor, Crewkerne Station, and in other 
places. 

No. 14. WALDHEIMIA CABINATA, Lamarck. Plate III., fig. 6, 
7, 8 ; and Plate IV., fig. 5-6. 

TEEEBEATULA CABINATA, Lamarck. Anim. Sans, vect., vol. vi., 
p. 25. 

Shell elongated oval, or sub-pentagonal; dorsal valve longi- 
tudinally concave along the middle ; ventral valve convex ; 
keeled ; beak incurved, and truncated by a small circular fora- 
men, separated from the hinge-line by a deltidium ; beak ridges 
sharply defined ; surface smooth ; margins thickened ; length, 
fourteen lines ; width, eleven lines ; depth, six lines. 

This is a very interesting and variable species ; it occurs at 
Bradford Abbas, Broadwinsor, and other places. The name of 
Mandelslohi has been given to a broad variety of this species, an 
example of which, from Bradford Abbas, is figured plate iii., 
fig. 5. This variety has been named by Quenstedt T. carinata 
alveata. Another small variety (plate iv., fig. 5-6), which may 
perhaps be a young condition of the shell under description, 
occurs at Bradford Abbas. 



81 

No. 15. WALDHEIMIA MARIANI, Oppel. Plate III., fig. 9. 

TEREBRATULA MARIANI, Oppel. Die Jura, Formation, p. 424, 
1857. 

Shell sub-oval, as wide or a little longer than wide, broadest 
posteriorly, tapering anteriorly, and slightly indented in front; 
ventral valve deep and keeled ; beak much incurved and trun- 
cated by a small circular foramen lying close to the.umbo of the 
smaller valve ; beak ridges sharply defined ; dorsal valve slightly 
concave, especially posteriorly, and divided into two portions by 
a deepish median groove, to which the lateral portions of the 
valve converge on either side ; length twelve, width ten, depth 
eight lines. W. Mariani was found by Professor Buckman at 
Bradford Abbas. 

No. 16. WALDHEIMIA ORNITHOCEPHALA, Sow. Plate III., fig. 
12-13. 

TEREBRATULA ORNITHOCEPHALA, Sow. Mm. Con., tab. 101, fig 1. 

Shell ovate-rhomboidal, longer than wide, broadly rounded 
posteriorly, laterally, and anteriorly, more or less pinched in 
and nearly straight in front; valves moderately convex, with- 
out fold or sinus, flattened along the middle and somewhat 
abruptly sloping away laterally, so as to leave two more or less 
defined diverging lines on the surface of each valve. The beak 
is much incurved, the small circular foramen slightly overlying 
the umbo of the opposite valve, but usually leaving between it 
and the hinge-line a small space for the deltidium. Length, 
sixteen lines ; width, twelve lines. 

I am assured by Mr. Darell Stephens that this species has 
been found by himself in the Inferior Oolite at Milborne Wick, 
the station next before Sherborne, and there can be no doubt 
that the specimens he forwarded to me are referable to that 
species. W. ornitliocephala is generally met with in the Fuller's 
Earth near Bath and in other places, and I had not noticed it 
previously so far down in the series, 
K 



82 

No. 17. WALDHEIMIA, Sp. (?). Plate III., fig. 14-15. 

Among the Brachiopoda forwarded to me by Mr. Darell 
Stephens, from Bradford Abbas, were two or three specimens of 
a very elongated WaUlicimia whicli I could not refer, with any 
degree of certainty, to the other species of the genus from the 
Inferior Oolite. I have figured it in the hope that more ex- 
amples of the shell may be collected. 

No. 18. WALDHEIMIA CARDIUM (?), Lamarck. Plate IT., fig. 4. 
TEEEBEATTJLA CABDITJM, Lam. Anim. Sans. Vert., vol. vi., 1819 t 

One small ventral valve of this species (?) was sent to me by 
Mr. J. F. "Walker as having been obtained from the Inferior 
Oolite at Bradford Abbas. The usual stratigraphical position of 
W. Cardium is in the Great Oolite, and, as I did not find a 
single other example of the shell among upwards of one thou- 
sand- specimens kindly lent for examination from the district 
named, I think that it will be preferable to wait for the dis- 
covery of other examples before positively asserting that it 
belongs to the district and formation. 

No. 19. EHYNCHONELLA PLICATELLA, Sow. Plate IV., fig. 9-10. 

TEBEBBA.TTTLA PLICATELLA, Sow. Min. Con., vol. v., p. 167. 
tab. 503. 

Shell sub-trigonal, sub-globose, longer than wide ; dorsal 
valve much more convex than the ventral one, forming in profile 
an almost half -circle, uniformly convex, without fold ; ventral 
valve moderately convex, with a wide, shallow sinus ; front line 
semi-circular ; beak acute, incurved ; foramen small and en- 
tirely surrounded by small deltidial plates ; beak ridges sharply 
defined ; lateral portions of the valves, near the beak, flattened 
or pinched in ; surface of valves ornamented by a variable 
number of ribs, from twenty-six to fifty in each valve ; length 
eighteen, width seventeen, depth fifteen lines. 

This fine species varies considerably in shape according to 
age. Some young specimens are of an elongated triangular 



83 

* shape, as may be seen in fig. 10, while adult individuals are 
almost globose. It occurs at Bradford Abbas, Half-way House, 
Crewkerne Station, and in other places. 

No. 20. RHYNCHONELLA SUBTETRAEDRA, Dav. Plate IV., fig. 

7-8. 

RHYNCHONELLA SUBTETEAEDBA, Dav. Ool. JBrach. Pal. Soc., pi. 
xvi., fig. 9-12. 

Shell generally wider than long, transversely oval or sub-, 
pentagonal, sometimes slightly longer than wide ; valves nearly 
equally convex ; a wide mesial fold of moderate elevation oc- 
cupies about a third of the breadth of the dorsal valve, and a 
sinus of variable width that of the ventral one ; beak incurved ; 
foramen small, surrounded by deltidial plates ; surface orna- 
mented by a variable number of angular plaits, from twenty to 
thirty on each valve ; length sixteen, width eighteen lines. 

This species varies very much in shape, and is sometimes 
irregular, from the fold being twisted more to one side than 
another, as is seen in JRh. inconstans and other species. It is a 
common shell in the Bradford Abbas district. 

No. 21. RHYNCHONELLA SUB-ANGULATA, Dav. Plate IV., fig. 
11-12. 

Shell more or less sub-pentagonal, and generally a little wider 
than long ; dorsal valve more convex than the ventral one, and 
divided into three portions, of which the central one forms the 
mesial fold ; ventral valve moderately convex, with a wide 
mesial sinus ; beak much incurved ; foramen small, margined 
by deltidial plates ; valves ornamented by a variable number of 
angular plaits, of which from ten to twenty -five may be counted 
on each valve ; of these, five or six occupy the fold or sinus ; 
length about nine lines, by ten in breadth. 

This has not been a w r ell-understood species. I believe it to 
be a variety of Sowerby's figure, if I am to judge from the 
specimens I have seen from the Inferior Oolite of Cheltenham, 
Bradford Abbas, and some other places, and which have been 
referred, by myself and others, to Sowerby's species. 



84 

No. 22. BHYNCHONELLA FORBESEI, Dav. Plato IV., fig. 15, 
Ida, b, c. 

RHYNCHONELLA FOEBESEI, Dav. Ool. Hon., Pal. Soc., p. 84, pi. 
xvii., fig. 19. 

Shell small, globular, nearly circular ; beak small, incurved ; 
foramen minute, margined by a narrow deltidium ; fold and 
sinus very slightly denned ; surface ornamented by about 
twenty small ribs on each valve ; length four, breadth three- 
and-half, depth three lines. 

In 1852 I had only seen some specimens of this species lent to 
me by Professor Edward Forbes. I was consequently very 
pleased to find, among Mr. Darell Stephens' s specimens, several 
examples which he had obtained at Bradford Abbas. It is 
probable that the specimens communicated to me by Professor 
Forbes, from "the Inferior Oolite of Somersetshire," had been 
obtained in the Bradford Abbas district. 

No. 23. KHYNCHOKELLA SPINOSA, Schloth. Plate IV., fig. 19. 

TEREBEATULITES SPINOSUS, Schlothcim. Mm. Taachcnbach, vol. 
vii., 1813. 

Shell transverse, sub -pentagonal, wider than long, more or 
less spherical ; smaller or dorsal valve sometimes very convex ; 
mesial fold not rising very much above the regular convexity of 
the valve ; ventral valve slightly less deep than the dorsal one ; 
sinus of moderate depth ; beak very much incurved, acute ; 
foramen small, front-line forming a convex curve; surface of 
valves ornamented by a variable number of angular ribs which 
sometimes bifurcate. From distance to distance along the ridge 
of each plait rise long, slender, tubular spines, which sometimes 
attain six or nine lines in length. Their number is variable, as 
well as the regularity of their disposition. Length ten-and-half, 
breadth twelve, depth eight lines. 

This is well-known fossil which was figured (but not named) 
by Knorr as far back as the year 1755. It varies very much in 
the number, width, and depth of its ribs ; I have counted as 
many as forty-six on each valve. It is a common fossil near 




85 

Sherborne and at Crewkerne Station, and has also been met 
with, although less abundantly, at Bradford Abbas and some 
other places. 

No. 24. BHYNCHONELLA SENTICOSA, Von Buck. Plate IV., fig. 
20. 

TEKEBBATULA SENTICOSA, Var. Von Jluch., Tiber Tereb., 183-i. 

Shell transversely oval, wider than long; valves convex, no 
fold in dorsal one, but a shallow sinus is present in the posterior 
portion of the ventral valve ; beak small, acute, incurved ; fora- 
men small ; margin line curved in front ; valves ornamented by 
a very great number of minute longitudinal ridges, from which 
rise a vast number of fine delicate tubular spines, covering the 
whole surface of the shell; length ten, width eleven, depth 
seven lines. This species does not appear to be as abundant as 
the preceding one in the Bradford Abbas district. A few good 
examples were found by Mr. Darell Stephens at Bradford Abbas, 
Crewkerne Station, and near Sherborne. None of the specimens 
of this shell, or of Rh. spinosa, had their spines preserved. 
They usually remain in the matrix from which the specimens are 
knocked out. 

No. 25. EHYNCHONELLA RINGENS, Herault. Plate IV., fig. 

17-18. 

TEREBRATULA RINGENS., Tiber. Von. Buck. Teiebratufa, 1834. 

Shell somewhat subpentagonal, about as wide as long, the 
depth exceeding the length and width; the smaller or dorsal 
valve rises abruptly from the umbo to the front, being an almost 
perpendicular convex curve, forming a large rounded central 
mesial fold, bent downwards at its extremity; on each of the 
lateral portions of the valve are two, three, or four short ribs, 
but these do not extend over the anterior half of the valve ; in 
the larger valve the beak is small, acute, and incurved ; foramen 
small; the mesial sinus begins to appear at a short distance 
from the extremity of the beak, its central portion being occu- 






86 

pied by a wide, longitudinal, convex or grooved fold. T\vo 
specimens from the Bradford Abbas district measured the first, 
six lines in length, seven in breadth, and seven in depth ; the 
second, five lines in length, five-and-half in breadth, and five in 
depth. 

The British examples of this species, which are much smaller 
than those found in Normandy, are a 'mall variety of Herault's 
species. In 1852 I received some specnii r,s from near Sher- 
borne, and, since then, many more have been met with by Mr. 
Darell Stephens at Halfway House. 

No. 26. KHYNCHOKELLA CYNOCEPHALA, Richard. Plate IV., 
fig. 16. 

TEEEBEATULA CYNOCEPHALA, Rich. Still. Soc. GeoL de France, 
vol. xi., p. 263, pi. iii., fig. 5., 1840. 

Shell sub -pentagonal, nearly as wide as long ; the smaller or 
dorsal valve is convex at the umbo, and continues to rise rapidly 
to the extremity of the margin, with a slight inward curve, 
forming a pinch^d-in, elevated and bidentated or tridentated 
mesial fold ; three or four ribs only are present on the lateral 
portions of each valve, which do not quite extend to the 
front. In the ventral valve the sinus is rather deep, with one 
or two ribs along its middle. Length six, width six, depth five 
lines. 

This appears to be an uncommon species in the Inferior Oolite 
of the Bradford Abbas district, for I found only one example of 
it among upwards of a thousand specimens I had under ex- 
amination. It was found by Mr. Darell Stephens at Crew- 
kerne Station. Rh. Cynocepliala is a common fossil in the 
passage bed or Inferior Oolite sands of some localities, and it 
was met with by the Eev. F. Smithe, in an earthy, ferruginous 
band between the two cephalopoda beds reposing on the Am. 
jurensis zone at Huresfield Beacon in Gloucestershire; but this 
latter bod is at least one hundred feet lower in position than the 
Bradford Abbas Dossil bed 



87 

No. 27. EIIYNCHONELLA PARVULA, E. Desl. Plate IV., fig. 14, 
140, J, c. 

EHYNCHONBLLA PAEVTTLA, E. Desl. M. Ferry, Mem. Soc. Linn de 
Normandie, t. xii. ; Note sur Te.tage JBajocien des environs de 
Macon, p. 22, 1860 ; and Etudes critiques stir des Brachiopodes 
nouveaux oupeu connus, t. 1 and 2, p. 29, pi. v., fig. 5-6, 1862. 

Shell small, sub-pentagonal, wider than long; dorsal valve 
flattened and very slightly convex, divided into three almost 
equal lobes, of which the central one forms a wide, flattened, 
and sharply-defined mesial fold. The surface of this valve is 
ornamented with about nine radiating, rather str'ong projecting 
ribs, of these three occupy the fold. Ventral valve deeper and 
more convex than the opposite one, with a wide shallow sinus, 
and of which the central portion is occupied by two longitudinal, 
angular ribs, four being present likewise on each of the lateral 
portions of the same valve. Beak small, prominent, with a rather 
large circular foramen, margined and slightly separated from 
the hinge-line by a well-defined deltidium. The beak ridges 
are sharply defined, leaving between them and the hinge-line a 
flattened space. Length four, width five, depth two lines. 

Obs. This small, elegant shell exactly resembles the figure 
given by Mr. E. Deslongchamps of his JRk. parvula. A few 
specimens of it were obtained by Mr. Darell Stephens at Brad- 
ford Abbas in Dorsetshire, where it does not seem to have 
much exceeded the dimensions above given. It was found by 
Mr. E. Deslongchamps in the Inferior Oolite at Milly (Soane et 
Loire), also at Conlies (Sarthe), and at Argentin (Indre). 

No 28. KHYNCHONELLA STEPHANT, n. sp. Plate IV., fig. 13, 
13fl, 5. 

Shell small, transversely oval, broadest posteriorly ; valves 
almost equally deep ; dorsal valve smooth and uniformly convex 
to about two-thirds of its length, when a wide, biplicated fold 
is produced along with two or three wide but short ribs on each 
of the lateral sub-marginal portions of the valve. In the dorsal 
valve a wide and deep sinus extends from the middle of the 



88 

valve to the front, with one central rib ; two or three also occupy 
the lateral portions of this valve. Beak small, incurved ; fora- 
men minute ; length four, width five, depth two-and-half lines. 

Obs. Mr. Darell Stephens has found only one example, at 
Crewkerne Station, of this small but well-marked species. It 
bears some resemblance to one or two species of Rhynchonellas 
described by Messrs. Chapuis and Duwalque, from the Lias of 
Luxembourg, but differs from them in size and some other 
respects, as well as in stratigraphical position. As I could find 
no named species from the Inferior Oolite with which to identify 
it, I have thought it preferable to give it a separate designation. 

Since the above was written and the plates completed I found f 
among another lot of specimens sent for my examination by 
Mr. Darell Stephens, 

TEREBRATULA BTJCKMANI, Dar. Ool. Hon. Pal. Soc., p. 44, pi. vii., 
fig. 15-16. 

Shell oval, longer than wide; valves convex, smooth; dorsal 
valve with a central longitudinal elevation extending from the 
umbone to the front, and sometimes very slightly biplicated 
near the front ; 110 regular sinus in ventral valve ; beak small, 
incurved, and truncated by a circular foramen almost touching 
the umbone of the opposite valve ; length eighteen, breadth 
eleven, depth eight lines. 

Three examples of this species were found by Mr. Stephens in 
the Inferior Oolite of Bradford Abbas. 




EXPLANATION OF PLATES. 

[The drawings are made from specimens for the most part con- 
tributed by Professor Buckman and Darell Stephens, Esq. They 
are drawn on stone, and are kindly contributed by T. Davidson, Esq., 
F.R.S., who is not only a good naturalist, but an accomplished artist. 

Each species has been drawn of the size of nature, and in such 
different positions that it would be next to impossible to mistake 
the species intended. EDITOE.] 



PLATE I. 

Fig. 
1, 2. Terebratula perovalis, (var. Ampla Buck.} ; Bradford 

Abbas (p. 74). 
3. Terebratula Stephani (Dciv.} ; Broadwinsor, collection of 

Mr. D. Stephens (p. 74). 




Tho s Davidson del. et 



M&, N . Hanhart imp. 



PLATE H. 

Fig. 

1. Terebratula decipiens (E. Desl.} j a very large example 

from Bradford Abbas, collection of Professor Buckman 
(p. 77). 

2. Terebratula Cranese (Dav.) ; from near Sherborne ; col- 

lection of Mr. Davidson (p. 77). 

3. Terebratula Cranese (Dav.), collection of Mr. Darell 

Stephens (p. 77). 

4. Terebratula Wrightii (Dav.} ; near Sherborne ; collection 

of Mr. Stephens (p. 78). 

6. Terebratula Ferryi (E. Dest.) ; Bradford Abbas, collection 

of Mr. J. F. Walker (p. 76). 

6. Terebratula sphoeroidalis (Sow.} ; Bradford Abbas, collec- 

tion of Professor Buckman (p. 77). 

7. Terebratula globata (Sow.*)-, Bradford Abbaa, collection 

of Mr. Darell Stephens (p. 77). 



PLATE III. 

Fig. 

1. Terebratula perovalis (Sow.). Half-way House ; collec- 

tion of Mr. D. Stephens (p. 74). 

2. Terebratula Phillipsii (Morris). Bradford Abbas j collec- 

tion of Professor Buckman (p. 75). 

3. Terebratula decipiens (E. Desl.). Bradford Abbas ; col- 

lection of Mr. D. Stephens (p. 77). 

4. Terebratula Eudesei (Oppel.). Bradford Abbas, collec- 

tion of Mr. D. Stephens (p. 76). 

5. Waldheimia Waltoni (Dav.); Broadwinsor ; collection of 

Mr. J. F. Walker (p. 79). 

6. Waldheimia carinata (Lam.)] Bradford Abbas; collec- 

tion of Mr. D. Stephens (p. 80). 

7. Waldheimia carinata; Broadwinsor; collection of Pro- 

fessor Buckman (p. 80). 

8. Waldheimia carinata (var. Mandelslohi) ; Bradford 

Abbas ; collection of Professor Buckman (p. 80). 

9. Waldheimia Mariani (Oppel.) ; Bradford Abbas; collec- 

tion of Professor Buckman (p. 81). 

10, 11. Waldheimia emarginata (Sow.); Broadwinsor; collection 
of Mr. J. F. Walker (p. 80). 

12. Waldheimia ornithocephala (Sow.) j Milborne Wick (p. 

81). 

13. Waldheimia ornithocephala ; Crewkerne Station ; collec- 

tion of Mr. D. Stephens (p. 81). 

14. 15. Waldheimia sp. (?) ; Bradford Abbas; collection of Mr, 

D. Stephens (p. 82). 



PI. III. 




Tho s Davidson del.et litk. 



PLATE IV. 

Fig. 

1. Waldheimia Anglica (Oppel); Bradford Abbas ; collec- 

tion of Mr. J. F. Walker (p. 79). 

2, 3. Waldheimia Anglica ; Crewkerne Station ;] collection of 

Mr. D. Stephens (p. 79). 

4. Waldheimia cardium (?) (Lam.); Bradford Abbas ; collec- 

tion of Mr. J. F. Walker (p. 82). 

5, 6. Waldheimia carinata (var. Mandelslohi) ; Bradford 

Abbas ; collection of Mr. D. Stephens (p. 80). 
7, 8. Rhynchonella subtetraedra (Dav.) ; Bradford Abbas ; 

collection of Mr. D. Stephens (p. 83). 
9,10. | Rhynchonella plicatella (Sow.); Bradford Abbas and 

Crewkerne Station; collection of Mr. D. Stephens, (p. 

82). 



11, 12. Rhynchonella angalata (); Bradford Abbas ; collec- 

A 

tion of Mr. D. Stephens (p. 83). 
13. Rhynchonella Stephani (n. sp.), Crewkerne Station, col- 

lection of Mr. D. Stephens (p. 87). 
13/z, b. The same, enlarged (p. .87). 

15. Rhynchonella Forbesei (Dav.); Bradford Abbas (p. 84). 
15rt, b, c. The same, enlarged : collection of Mr. Davidson. 

16. Rhynchonella cynocephala (Richard.); Crewkerne Sta- 

tion; collection of Mr. D. Stephens (p. 86). 

17. 18. Rhynchonella ringens (Herault) ; near Sherborne ; collec- 

tion of Mr. D. Stephens (p. 85), 

19. Rhynchonella spinosa (Schloth^ near Sherborne, collec- 

tion of Mr. D. Stephens (p. 84). 

20. Rhynchonella senticosa (v. Buck.) ; near Sherborne, col- 

lection of Mr. D. Stephens (p. 85). 



/ * </* 



PL IV. 




Tho s Davidson del.et litk 



MO.H.a.nh&rt imp. 



ON SOME GLASS BOTTLES FEOM THOENFOED, 






DOESET. 
BY JAS. BUCKMAN, F.L.S., F.G.S., &c. 



The next parish to the south of our own of Bradford Abbas is 
separated from us by the river Yeo, and is the much-improved 
and improving village of Thornford ; and in a corner of a field 
to the north of that from which the Eoman remains were ob- 
tained, described at page 41, were found, at about a foot 
beneath the surface, the bottles now to be described. The 
occasion of the digging was to turn up a small plot of ground in 
the corner of an old pasture for the formation of a potato 
garden, and it was in digging this not more than a "spit" 
deep that the labourers came upon a row of five bottles, of one 
of which the annexed cut is a representation, being a bottle or 
flask of about the capacity of a pint, drawn half the actual size: 





FIG. 1. A GLASS BOTTLE (HALF THE ACTUAL SIZE). 



90 

These bottles were of a dark-green or black glass, very thick 
and heavy, all alike in size, and three of them being quarts and 
two of them pints. 

When found they were arranged in a row on their sides, the 
mouth of one bottle being placed in the hollow base of the other. 
These bottles were all alike in shape, which was globular, and 
were remarkable for being impressed with a crest raised on the 
side of each bottle in the form of a label. The crest was that 
of a falcon on a cap of maintenance, surmounted by a baron's 
coronet, of which the following is a figure of the actual size : 




FIG. 2. STAMP FROM BOTTLE (ACTUAL SIZE). 

All the impressions were of the same kind and size both on 
the large and small bottles, but they had evidently been made 
with two different stamps. Now as these bottles appeared to us 
to present a most interesting archaic aspect, and from their 
being stamped in the manner described, with which, until then, 
we were not acquainted, we sent both a quart and a pint bottle 
to the late Albert Way, Esq., and we quote the following re- 
marks from one of his most interesting letters : 

" The glass flasks are curious. I have seen a few such 
objects marked with some heraldic insignia and initials. 
Whether they contained sack or Ehenish I cannot pretend to 
say, or when the fashion came in of placing some personal 
decorations on such wine bottles tlie prototypes oj 



91 

"The form is, I imagine, Dutch or North German; but I fancy 
it was probably followed in our glass works, and is not obsolete 
in these days. I should imagine yours to be about 1700, 
perhaps earlier. The flying falcon recalls the crests of the 
Paulets, but the coronet is that of a Baron. 

"There is a glass bottle (amongst others) in the Museum of 
the Eoyal Irish Academy, with a raised stamp 
<J. Swift, Dean, 

1727,' 

probably referable to the time of his popularity, as many others 
bear his name. I have seen, however, several bottles with 
heraldic stamp, certainly referring to the noble family for whom 
they were made ; and I regard the circumstance as of interest, 
showing the first idea of decorating this class of social appli- 
ances." 

Since the discovery of the five bottles described we have met 
with two other impressed stamps, evidently broken from bottles 
of a like kind, but belonging to other families. 




FIG. 3. STAMP FROM BRADFORD ABBAS (ACTUAL SIZE). 

This is the impression of a crest found at Clifton Maybank, 
now united, for ecclesiastic purposes, with Bradford Abbas. It 
is of the Harvey family, who held Clifton Maybank and also 
Wyke. There are monuments to several of the Harveys in 
Bradford Church, one to Sir Thomas Harvey, on which is the 
same crest. 

These examples are from Dorset, but our next figure repre- 
sents a bottle impression which was found by our kind friend, 



92 

Robert Donne, Esq., who gave it to us at Odcornbe, Somerset- 
shire. This is a shield or coat of arms, evidently from a bottle 
like those previously described. It, too, is of the actual size, 
and doubtless belonged to the same kind of stamped bottles as 
those from Thornford and Clifton May bank. 




FIG. 4. COAT OF ARMS FROM ODCOMBE (ACTUAL SIZE). 

This differs from the others in depicting not merely the crest 
but the coat, and we would say, with regard to this and the 
previous examples, that, having sent copies of them to W. J. 
Bernhard Smith, Esq., of the Temple, we have much pleasure in 
quoting his remarks upon them. He says, with regard to figs. 
1 and 2 : " The crest you sent me, a falcon on a cap of main- 
tenance, is borne by the Earl of Roscommon. I do not know 
the arms No. 4. They appear to be an inescutcJieon, between 
three animals that look like lambs, two and one*. The custom 
of impressing heraldic bearings on the glass of wine bottles still 
exists. The Middle Temple have their badge of the Agnus Dei 
on their port bottles, and the Inner Temple still, I believe, sport 
their Pegasus. I fancy some of the city corporations do the 
same." 

Now, although we have not determined the heraldry of Nos. 
1 and 4, we yet know, with regard to No. 3, to whom it be- 
longed, and from them collectively we infer that it was the 

* Since the above was in print \vc have received the following communication from 
Mr. Smith : " I think the bearings of No. 2 may be three Holy Lambs ; these argent 
on a field gules are those of Rowc, of Launceston, Devon. The inescutcheon, if it 
be one, would be from marriage with an heiress. B.S." 



93 

custom in former times to affix some sign of ownership to one's 
bottles of sherry, sack, Ehenish, and perhaps other wines. 

Mr. Smith's notes show that this custom is still kept up in the 
Temple, and it may be so in some of the city guilds. 

We have before us a modern claret bottle with two shields on 
one label, side by side, each surmounted by a different coronet. 
From these examples we have no doubt that the custom of 
stamping bottle mettle itself was common, not only at home but 
on the Continent ; and we therefore ask our readers to kindly 
preserve such specimens when they meet with them, as it is by 
such evidence that the history of the past can be fully illustrated. 





A BEITISH EAETHWOEK. 

\_An Arcluzologist speak s.~\ 

The grassy downs of Dorset, 

Eising o'er our homes of peace, 
E'er teem with life and riches 

In the sheep and precious fleece ; 
And charm the thoughtful roamer 

When, like us, he climbs to scan 
Their high-cast mounds of war the works 

Of Britain's early man, 
Whose speech, although here lingers yet 

His mighty works of hand, 
Has ceased a thousand years to sound 

In air of this green land, 
And startled may it be to hear 

The words of British kin 
An gwalioio war an meneth* 
An caer war an bryn.] 

Their breastworks now are fallen, 

And their banks are sunken low ; 
The gateway yawns ungated, 

And unsought by friend or foe. 
No war-hornj calls for warriors, 

And no clear-eyed watchmen spy 
For tokens of the foe, around 

The quarters of the sky. 

* "The ramparts on the mountain." t "The stronghold on the hill." This is 
in the old Cornoak or Cornish-British, that of our West of England. The modern 

Welsh would be 

" Y gwaliaie ar y mynydd, 

Y au caer ar y bryn." 

Au pronounced aee ; y like e in Ic, French ; " mynydd," munneethe. 
J Cadgorn. The bugle-horn was used for hunting, war, find drinking. 




95 

No band, with shout and singing,* 

Sally forth with spear and sword, 
Staying foes at wood or hill, 

Or at the waded river ford ; 
Or else to take the hill, and fight 

To win, or die within 

An gwaliow war an meneth, 
An caer war an Iryn. 
There were lowings of the cattle 

By the rattling spears and swords ; 
There were wails of weeping women 

And grim warriors' angry words 
"Be every Briton fearless, or 

For ever live in fear ; 
And bring his ready weapons out 

His bow, and sword, and spear !f 
For what have we to fight the foe ? 

Our children and our wives ! 
For whom have we to fight ? For those 

Far dearer than our lives ! 
And we, to shield them all, will die, 

Or else the battle win, 

Yn\ an gwaliow war an meneth, 
Yn an caer war an Iryn ! " 
But now, in sweet, unbroken peace, 

May Dorset land-folks sleep ; 
In peace may speed the gliding plough, 

In peace may graze the sheep ; 
In peace may smoke our village tuns, 

And all our children play ; 

* By the laws of Hoel Dda, when the Welsh marched to battle the bards were to 
go before them singing a national song, now lost, called "Unbenaeth Prydain" ("The 
Monarchy of Britain "). This, however, was later than the time of the upcasting of 
our earthworks. 

t A law triad gives, as law-bidden weapons which every man was to keep ready for 
battle, a sword, a spear, and a bow with twelve arrows, 

\ In. 



96 

And may we never need high banks 

To keep the foe at bay ! 
And blest be lord or farmer 

Of the land, who wins our thanks 
By sparing from the spade and sull 

These olden British banks, 
And not destroying, for a crown 
Or pound that he might win, 
An gwaliow war an meneth, 
A.n caer war an Iryn. 

W. BAENES. 



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