170 THE ESSEX NATURALIST. L. D. Stamp, Ibid., p. 386. 32. A. G. Tansley, Types of British Vegetation, 1911. A. G. Ogilvie, Great Britain, 1928. W. Boyd Dawkins (M. E. Baich, Wookey Hole, 1914, pp. 6-8). 33. C. Fox, The Archeology of the Cambridge Region, 1923, pp. 224, 234, 306. R. G. Collingwood, Antiquity, 1929, pp. 264-5. R. E. M. Wheeler, Antiquity, 1930, p. 92. H. Peake, op. cit., pp. 96, 136, 169. 34. Southend-on-Sea A.H.S.T., 1930, II, i, pp. 49, 74. 35. A. S. Kennard and B. B. Woodward, Pr. Malacological S., 1906-7, VII, 261. Ibid., Essex Nat., 1897, X, 100. (Milne and Prestwich Colls. ; B.M., Nat. Hist.) 36. Southend-on-Sea A.H.S.T., 1924, I, iii, 194, 196. Southend Mus. Rep. 1925-6, p. 15. (Southend Mus.) 37. J. Evans, Ancient Stone Implements, 1897, pp. 603-4. W. G. Smith, Man the Primeval Savage, 1894 ; Tr. Essex Field Club, 1882-3, III, p. 111. W. Pollitt, Southend A.H.S.T., 1923, I, ii, p. 133. Southend Mus. Rep., 1927-8, p. 14 ; 1928-9, pp. 15-16. (Southend and Essex Mus.) 38. A. G. Francis, Southend-on-Sea A.H.S.T., 1925, I, iv, 208-229 . 1930, II, i, 49-75. Essex A.ST., 1930, n.s., XX, i, p. 100. (Note.) Antiquaries J., 1931, XI, No. 4, pp. 410-418. (Colchester and Southend Mus.) H. Bancroft, Annals of Botany, 1931, XLV, No. CLXXVII, 207-10. 39. Southend Mus. Rep., 1929-30, p. 16. (Southend Mus.) 40. J. F. Nichols, Southend-on-Sea A.H.S.T., 1924, I, iii, 166. 41. Ibid, 1926-8, II, i, 39-40. 42. Repertorium, 1710, p. 534. 43. The History and Antiquities of Essex, 1740, p. 366. 44. B.M. Guide Early Iron Age Antiq., 1925, p. 87, Fig. 82. (British Mus.) 45. A. O. Curle, P.S.A. Scot., 1908, XLII, 308-319. 46. J. E. Cree, P.S.A. Scot., 1908, XLII, 270. 47. Pitt Rivers, Excavations in Cranborne Chase, 1887, I, 15, no. H. S. Toms, Sussex Arch. Coll., LXVII, 79. E. C. Curwen and R. P. R. Williamson, Antiquaries J., 1931, XI, 1, 31. A. G. Fraxcis, Southend-on-Sea A.H.S.T., 1925, I, iv, 208-229. Bittern at Lamarsh.—Mr. C E. Runnacles, of Earls Colne, records (in the Field for January) the finding by him at Lamarsh of a dead Bittern, somewhat too far gone for preserving.