Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 May 2009
In addition to the valves from Lüneburg herein mentioned, it has been possible to examine the more important of the material described by previous authors, namely: (1) the valve figured by H. Woodward (1868) as Pyrgoma cretacea, and subsequently (1901) as Brachylepas cretacea, now in the British Museum (Natural History), registered I. 14029; (2) the nearly complete capitulum figured as B. oretacea by H. Woodward (1901), in the collection of Dr. A. W. Rowe, of Margate; (3) the valve figured by Marsson (1880) as Pollicipes cancellatus, together with other valves studied by him, now in the Geologisches Landesmuseum of Berlin; (4) the valve figured by Quenstedt (1883) as P. Iœvissimus, now in the University of Tübingen; (5) the valve mentioned by Boehm(1906), in the Geologisches Landesmuseum of Berlin; and (6) a large number of more or less broken carinæ and rostra, with several scuta and terga, obtained from the Chalk of Rügen by Mrs. Agnes Laur, and acquired by the British Museum (Natural History).