The tunnel through the hill (near Malvern) has given me a better idea of the Woolhope beds than I ever had before. The quantity of fossils is extraordinary. Our own collector, Mr. Gibbs, of the Geological Survey, Dr. B. B. Grindrod of Malvern, and other friends have obtained a great many, and in the most perfect state of preservation. Of Corals there are only a few—the ordinary Wenlock species (for the Woolhope limestone is nothing else than a lower Wenlock rock). Of Cystideœ the little Echinoencrinus armatus is frequent enough, Trilobites are abundant. Illœnus Barriensis attained its full size here. The strawberry-headed Trilobites (Encrinurus) are in great perfection, also Cheirurus, Sphœrexochus mirus with its globular jiead, Acidaspis, Lichas, and four species of Phacops, including P. Downingiœ, the well-known Wenlock and Ludlow form.