'JG
Topographic Britannia.
Robert Plot.
The natural history of Oxfordshire.
The second edition. Oxford, 1705. fol.
Pagg. 366. tabb. aeneae 16.
T. Nash.
Collections for the history of Worcestershire.
Vol. 1. pagg. xcii et 609. tabb. aeneae 40.
London, 1781. fol.
Vol. z. pagg. 484et clxviii. tabb. aeneae 35. 1782.
John Morton.
The natural history of Northamptonshire, with some ac-count of the antiquities.
Pagg- 551 et46. tabb. aeneae 14. ib. 1712. fol.
John Mastin.
The history and antiquities of Naseby, in the county ofNorthampton.
Pagg. 206. tab. aenea 1. Cambridge, 1792. 8.
James Pilkington.
A view of the present state of Derbyshire.
Derby, 1789. 8.
Vol. 1. pagg. 496 ; cum mappa geographica. Vol. 2.pagg. 464. tabb. aeneae 2.
Robert Plot.
The natural history of Stafford-shire.
Pagg. 450. tabb. aeneae 37. Oxford, 1686. fol.
Charles Leigh.
The natural history of Lancashire, Cheshire, and thePeak, in Derbyshire, with an account of the antiquitiesin those parts. Oxford, 1700. fol.
Pagg. 196, 97 et 112; cum tabb. aeueis.
Thomas Hurtley.
A concise account of some natural curiosities in the en-virons of Malbam, in Craven, Yorkshire.
Pagg. 68 et 199. tabb. sneae 3. London, 1786. 8.
John Wallis.
The natural history and antiquities of Northumberland.
London, 1769. 4.
Vol. i. pagg. 438. htijus loci. Vol. 2. de antiquitatibus.
Edward Lh wyd.
Letters containing several observations in natural history,made in his travels through Wales and Scotland.Philosoph. Transact. Vol 27. n. 334. p. 462—469.
335. p. 500—503.Vol. 28. n. 337, p. 93—101,et p. 275, 276.