© Simon Knell, all rights reserved. From Simon Knell, Immortal remains: fossil collections from the heroic age of geology (1820-1850), Ph.D. thesis, University of Keele, UK, 1997.
Allen, D.E. 1976. The Naturalist in Britain: A Social History, Penguin, London.
Allen, D.E. 1985. The early professionals in British natural history, in Wheeler, A. & Price, J.H. (eds.), From Linnaeus to Darwin: Commentaries on the History of Biology and Geology, Society for the History of Natural History, London, 1-11.
Allen, D.E. 1987. The natural history society in Britain through the years, Archives of Natural History, 14(3), 243-259.
Allen, D.E. 1993. Natural history in Britain in the eighteenth century, Archives of Natural History, 20(3), 333-347.
Altick, R.D. 1973. Victorian People and Ideas, Norton, New York.
Anon. 1821. Fossil elk, Philosophical Magazine, 58, 150.
Anon. 1822a. Royal Society, Philosophical Magazine, 60, 459-463.
Anon. 1822b. Fossil remains, Philosophical Magazine, 60, 154.
Anon. 1824a. Discovery of fossil bones at Banwell, Philosophical Magazine, 64, 389-90.
Anon. 1824b. Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society, Edinburgh Journal of Science, 1(1), 177.
Anon. 1825a. Fossil Crocodile, Whitby Repository, 1, 29.
Anon. 1825b. Report of meeting of Whitby Literary and Philosophical Society, Whitby Repository, 1(3), 19.
Anon. 1827a. Fifth anniversary meeting of Whitby Literary and Philosophical Society, Whitby Magazine, 1, 347.
Anon. 1827b. Discovery of fossil hyaenas in Kent, Philosophical Magazine, 2, 73-4.
Anon. 1827c. A new Kirkdale Cave, Whitby Panorama, 1, 223-4.
Anon. 1827d. Whitby Museum, Whitby Panorama, 1, 251-2.
Anon. 1827e. Whitby Literary and Philosophical Society, Whitby Magazine, 1, 320.
Anon. 1827f. Whitby Literary and Philosophical Society, Whitby Magazine, 1, 254.
Anon. 1828a. Scarborough Museum, Whitby Panorama, 2, 126.
Anon. 1828b. Natural history in London: British Museum, Magazine of Natural History, 1, 181-4.
Anon. 1829. Scarborough Museum, Magazine of Natural History, 2, 474-7.
Anon. 1830. Yorkshire Philosophical Society, Magazine of Natural History, 3, 437-8.
Anon. 1836. Bristol Museum & Philosophical Society, Magazine of Natural History, 9, 554-559.
Anon. 1839. Extracts from the Proceedings of the Geological Society of London, relating to the supposed mammiferous remains of the Stonesfield Oolitic strata (1838), Magazine of Natural History (New Series), 3, 201-13.
Anon. 1849. Plesiosaurus found near Whitby, The Illustrated London News, May 26, 367.
Anon. 1870. Eminent living geologists: John Phillips, Geological Magazine, 7, 310-306.
Anon. 1874a. Prof. John Phillips, The Athenaeum, 2427, May 2, 597-598.
Anon. 1874b. John Phillips, Nature, April 30, 510-515.
Anon. 1896. The Palaeontographical Society of London, Geological Magazine (Decade 4), 3, 385-8.
B., J.E. 1828a. Some remarks on natural history as a means of education, Magazine of Natural History, 1(1), 10-14.
B. 1828b. Observations on the causes that have retarded the progress of natural history in this country, and on the defective state of our public museums, Magazine of Natural History, 1(1), 14-17.
Bailey, E.B. 1952. Geological Survey of Great Britain, Murby, London.
Baker, J.B. 1882. The History of Scarborough, Longmans, Green, London.
Bakewell, R. 1830. A visit to the Mantellian Museum at Lewes, Magazine of Natural History, 3, 9-17.
Barnet, M.C. 1972. James Atkinson – Surgeon 1759-1839, Yorkshire Philosophical Society Annual Report for 1971, 48-9.
Bean, W. 1835 A short account of an interesting deposit of fossil shells at Burlington [a.k.a. Bridlington] Quay, Magazine of Natural History, 8, 355.
Bean, W. 1839. A catalogue of the fossils found in the Cornbrash Limestone of Scarborough: with figures and descriptions of some of the undescribed species, Magazine of Natural History (New Series), 3, 57-62.
Blainville, M. de. 1839a. Doubts respecting the class, family, and genus to which the fossil bones found at Stonesfield, and designated by the names of Didelphis Prevostii and Did. Bucklandi, should be referred, Magazine of Natural History (New Series), 2, 639-654.
Blainville, M. de. 1839b. New doubts relating to the supposed Didelphis of Stonesfield, Magazine of Natural History (New Series), 3, 49-57.
Blake, J.F. 1874. Additional remains of Pleistocene mammals in Yorkshire, Report of the British Association for the Advancement of Science for 1873, 75.
Boase, F. 1892. Modern English Biography, Netherton & Worth, London.
Bourdier, F. 1969. Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire versus Cuvier: the campaign for paleontological evolution (1825-1838), in Schneer, C.J. (ed.), Op. Cit., 36-61.
Bourne, J.M. 1986. Patronage and Society in Nineteenth Century England, Arnold, London.
Boylan, P.J. 1972. The scientific significance of the Kirkdale Cave hyaenas, Yorkshire Philosophical Society Annual Report for 1971, 38-47.
Boylan, P.J. 1981. A revision of the Pleistocene mammalian fauna of Kirkdale Cave, Proc. Yorkshire Geological Society, 43, 253-80.
Bridson, G.D.R., Phillips, V.C. & Harvey, A.P. 1980. Natural History Manuscript Resources in the British Isles, Mansell, London.
British Museum. 1904. The History of the Collections contained in the Natural History Departments of the British Museum, Volume 1, Trustees of the British Museum, London.
Broderip, W.J. 1828. Observations on the jaw of a fossil mammiferous animal, found in the Stonesfield Slate, Zoological Journal, 3, 408-412.
Brongniart, A. 1819. Concerning the method of collecting, labelling, and transmitting specimens of fossil organized bodies, and of the accompanying rocks, American Journal of Science 1, 71-4.
Browne, H.B. 1946. Chapters in Whitby History 1823-1946, Brown, Hull.
Browne, H.B. 1949. The Story of Whitby Museum, Whitby Literary and Philosophical Society, Whitby.
Browne, J. 1983. The Secular Ark: Studies in the History of Biogeography, Yale, New Haven.
Buckland, W. 1821. Instructions for conducting geological investigations and collecting specimens, American Journal of Science, 3, 249-51.
Buckland, W. 1822. An account of an assemblage of fossil teeth and bones discovered in a cave at Kirkdale, Phil. Trans. R. Soc. Lond., 122, 171-236.
Buckland, W. 1823. Reliquiae Diluvianae, Murray, London.
Buckland, W. 1824. Notice on the Megalosaurus or great fossil lizard of Stonesfield, Trans. Geol. Soc. Lond.(2nd series), 1(2), 390-6.
Buckland, W. 1837. Geology and Mineralogy Considered with Reference to Natural Theology, Bridgewater Treatise, Pickering, London.
Bunbury, C.J.F. 1851. On some fossil plants from the Jurassic strata of the Yorkshire coast, Quart. J. Geol. Soc. Lond., 7, 179-194.
Burkhardt, F. & Smith, S. 1986. The Correspondence of Charles Darwin, Volume 2, 1837-1843, Cambridge University, Cambridge.
Butler, E.M. 1929. The Tempestuous Prince: Herman Pückler-Muskau, Longmans, Green, London.
Cadée, G.C. 1991. The history of taphonomy, in Donovan, S.K. (ed.), The Processes of Fossilization, Belhaven, London, 3-21.
Challinor, J. 1948 The beginnings of scientific palaeontology in Britain, Annals of Science, 6, 46-53.
Challinor, J. 1970. The progress of British geology during the early part of the nineteenth century, Annals of Science, 26, 177-234.
Challinor, J. 1971. The History of Geology: A Bibliographical Study, David & Charles, Newton Abbot.
Chapman, W. & Wooller, J. 1758. Fossil skeleton found near Whitby, Phil. Trans. R. Soc. Lond., 50, 688-91, 786-90.
Charlesworth, E. 1835. On the Crag-formation and its organic remains, Philosophical Magazine, 7, 81-94.
Charlesworth, E. 1837. On the fallacies involved in Mr Lyell’s classification of Tertiary deposits according to the proportionate number of recent species of Mollusca they contain, Report of the British Association for the Advancement of Science for 1836, 86.
Charlesworth, E. 1839. Editorial remarks, Magazine of Natural History (New Series), 3, 253-4.
Charlesworth, E. 1844. Notice of the discovery of a large specimen of Plesiosaurus found at Kettleness, on the Yorkshire coast, Report of the British Association for the Advancement of Science for 1843, 49-50.
Charlesworth, E. 1847. Curious facts in the history of extinct Irish deer, London Geological Journal, 1, 87-95.
Clark, E.W. Kitson 1924. The Leeds Philosophical and Literary Society: A History of One Hundred Years 1819-1921, Leeds Literary and Philosophical Society, Leeds.
Cleevely, R.J. 1983. World Palaeontological Collections, British Museum (Natural History)/Mansell, London.
Cleevely, R.J. & Chapman, S.D. 1992. The accumulation and disposal of Gideon Mantell’s fossil collections and their role in the history of British palaeontology, Archives of Natural History, 19, 289-303.
Collinge, W.E. 1925. John Phillips, Yorkshire Philosophical Society Annual Report for 1924, 37-46.
Compton, W.B. 1930. History of the Comptons of Compton Wynyates, Lane, London.
Conybeare, W.D. 1822. Additional notices on the fossil genera Ichthyosaurus and Plesiosaurus, Trans. Geol. Soc. Lond. (2nd series), 1(1), 103-23.
Conybeare, W.D. 1824. On the discovery of an almost perfect skeleton of the Plesiosaurus, Trans. Geol. Soc. Lond. (2nd series), 1(2), 381-9.
Conybeare, W.D. 1825. On the discovery of an almost perfect skeleton of the Plesiosaurus, Philosophical Magazine, 65, 412-21.
Conybeare, W.D. & Phillips, W. 1822. Outlines of the Geology of England and Wales, Phillips, London.
Creese, M.R.S. & Creese, T.M. 1994. British women who contributed to research in the geological sciences in the nineteenth century, BJHS, 27, 23-54.
Cumberland, G. 1829. Some account of the order in which the fossil saurians were discovered, Quarterly Journal of Literature, Science & Arts, 27, 345-9.
Cumming, D.A. 1985. John MacCulloch, blackguard, thief and high priest, reassessed, in Wheeler, A. & Price, J.H. (eds.), From Linnaeus to Darwin: Commentaries on the History of Biology and Geology, Society for the History of Natural History, London, 77-88.
Curwen, E.C. 1940. The Journal of Gideon Mantell, Oxford University, London.
Davis, J.W. 1889. History of the Yorkshire Geological and Polytechnic Society 1837-1887, Whitley & Booth, Halifax.
Dawkins, W. Boyd. 1866. On the Pleistocene mammals of Yorkshire, Proc. Yorkshire Geological Society, 4, 502-12.
De Boer, G., Neale, J.W. & Penny, L.F. 1958. A guide to the geology of the area between Market Weighton and the Humber, Proc. Yorkshire Geological Society, 31, 157-209.
De la Beche, H.T. 1830. Notes on the geographical distribution of organic remains contained in the oolitic series of the Great London and Paris Basin, and in the same series of the South of France, Philosophical Magazine, 7, 81-95, 250-268, 334-351.
De la Beche, H.T. 1846. On the formation of the rocks of South Wales and South Western England. Mem. Geol. Surv. G.B., 1, 1-296.
De la Beche, H.T. 1848. Anniversary Address, Quart. J. Geol. Soc. Lond., 4, xxv-cxx.
De la Beche, H.T. & Conybeare, W.D. 1821. Notice of the discovery of a new fossil animal forming a link between the Ichthyosaurus and crocodile, together with general remarks on the osteology of the Ichthyosaurus, Trans. Geol. Soc. Lond., 5(2), 558-94.
Dean, D.R. 1986. Book review of Rudwick’s ‘The Great Devonian Controversy’, Annals of Science, 43, 504-7.
Defoe, D. 1759. A Tour through the whole island of Great Britain, 7th edition, (Ed. Richardson, S.), Dent, London.
Desmond, A. 1982. Archetypes and Ancestors: Palaeontology in Victorian London 1850-1875, Blond & Briggs, London.
Desmond, A. 1989. The Politics of Evolution: Morphology, Medicine and Reform in Radical London, University of Chicago, Chicago.
Desmond, R. 1994. Dictionary of British and Irish Botanists and Horticulturalists, Taylor & Francis/Natural History Museum, London.
Desmond, A. & Moore, J. 1991. Darwin, Penguin, London.
Donovan, D.T. & Crane, M.D. 1992. The type material of the Jurassic cephalopod Belemnoteuthis, Palaeontology, 35(2), 273-296.
Doughty, P.S. 1981. The State and Status of Geology in UK Museums, Geological Society Miscellaneous Paper 13, London.
Douglas, J.A. & Edmonds, J.M. 1950. John Phillips’s geological maps of the British Isles, Annals of Science, 6, 361-375.
Dowson, J. 1854. Reed’s Illustrated Guide to Whitby and Visitors Handbook, Reed, Whitby.
Duncan, P.M. 1878., Anniversary Address of the President, Quart. J. Geol. Soc. Lond., 34, 34-5.
Dunn, J. 1831. On a large species of Plesiosaurus in the Scarborough Museum, Proc. Geol. Soc. Lond., 1, 336-7.
Eagar, M. 1977. The Manchester Museum, Newsletter of the Geological Curators’ Group, 2(1), 12-40.
Edmonds, J.M. 1974. John Phillips, DNB, 10, 583-584.
Edmonds, J.M. 1975a. The geological lecture-courses given in Yorkshire by William Smith and John Phillips, 1824-1825, Proc. Yorkshire Geological Society, 40(3), 373-412.
Edmonds, J.M. 1975b. The first geological lecture coures at the University of London, 1831, Annals of Science, 32, 257-275.
Edmonds, J.M. 1977. The legend of John Phillips’s “lost fossil collection”, J. Soc. Biblio. Nat. Hist., 8(2), 169-175.
Edmonds, J.M. 1978. The fossil collection of the Misses Philpot of Lyme Regis, Proc. Dorset. Nat. Hist. & Arch. Soc., 98, 43-53.
Edmonds, J.M. 1982. The first ‘apprenticed’ geologist, Wilts. Arch. & Nat. Hist. Mag., 76, 141-154.
Edmonds, J.M. & Beardmore, P.A. 1955. John Phillips and the early meetings of the British Association, The Advancement of Science, 12, 97-104.
Eyles, J.M. 1967. William Smith: the sale of his collection to the British Museum, Annals of Science, 23, 177-212.
Eyles, J.M. 1985. William Smith, Sir Joseph Banks and the French Geologists, in Wheeler, A. & Price, J.H. (eds.), From Linnaeus to Darwin: Commentaries on the History of Biology and Geology, Society for the History of Natural History, London, 37-50.
Eyles, V.A. 1955. Science activity in the Bristol region in the past, in MacInnes, C.M. & Whittard, W.F. (eds.) Bristol and its Adjoining Counties, Arrowsmith, Bristol, 123-143.
Fitton, W.H. 1833. Notes on the Progress of Geology in England, Taylor, London.
Flessa, K.W., Cutler, A.H. & Meldahl, K.H. 1993. Time and taphonomy: quantitative estimates of time-averaging and stratigraphic disorder in a shallow marine habitat, Palaeobiology, 19(2), 266-286.
Flett, J.S. 1937. The First Hundred Years of the Geological Survey of Great Britain, HMSO, London.
Flower, W.H. 1889. Museum organisation: presidential address to the British Association for the Advancement of Science, reprinted in Flower, W.H. 1898. Op. Cit. 1-29.
Flower, W.H. 1898. Essays on Museums, MacMillan, London.
Forbes, E. 1844a. On the light thrown on geology by submarine researches; being the substance of a communication made to the Royal Institution of Great Britain, 23 February 1844, Edinburgh New Phil. J., 36, 318-27.
Forbes, E. 1844b. Report on the Mollusca and Radiata of the Aegean Sea, and on their distribution, considered as bearing on geology, Report of the British Assocation for the Advancement of Science for 1843, 130-93.
Forbes, E. 1846. On the connexion between the distribution of the existing flora and fauna of the British Isles, and the geological changes which have affected their area, especially during the epoch of the Northern Drift, Mem. Geol. Surv. G.B., 1, 336-432.
Fox-Strangways, C. 1904. The Geology of the Oolitic and Cretaceous Rocks South of Scarborough, Mem. Geol. Surv., HMSO, London.
Gaunt, G.D., Fletcher, T.P. & Walsh, C.J. 1992. Geology of the Country around Kingston Upon Hull and Brigg, Mem. Geol. Surv., Keyworth.
Geikie, A. 1895. Memoir of Sir Andrew Crombie Ramsey, Macmillan, London.
Geikie, A. 1905. Founders of Geology, Macmillan, London.
Gilbertson, W. 1831. Preston depot for the sale and exchange of objects of natural history, Magazine of Natural History, 4, 72-3.
Gill, M.A.V. & Knell, S.J. 1988. Tunbridge Wells Museum: Geology and George Abbott (1844-1925), Geological Curator, 5, 3-16.
Grayson, D.K. 1983. The Establishment of Human Antiquity, Academic, New York.
Greenwood, J. 1835. Greenwood’s Picture of Hull, Greenwood, Hull.
Hailstone, E. 1869. Portraits of Yorkshire Worthies, Cundall & Fleming, London.
Harrison, J.F.C. 1988. Early Victorian Britain, 1832-51, Fontana, London.
Hartley, M. & Ingilby, J. 1961. Yorkshire Portraits, Dent, London.
Hemingway, J.E. 1946. Martin Simpson – geologist and curator, 1800-1892, in Browne, H.B., Op. Cit.., 93-105.
Hemingway, J.E. 1958. The geology of Whitby, in Daysh, G.H.J. (ed.), A Survey of Whitby and Surrounding Area, Shakespeare Head, Windsor, 1-48.
Herries Davies, G.L. 1983. Sheets of Many Colours: The Mapping of Ireland’s Rocks, 1750-1890, Royal Dublin Society, Dublin.
Herries Davies, G.L. 1995. North from the Hook: 150 years of the Geological Survey of Ireland, Geological Survey of Ireland, Dublin.
Hey, W. 1881. Sketch of the York founders of the British Association, York.
Hibbert, S. 1825. Account of the circumstances connected with the discovery of fossil elk on the Isle of Man, which prove that this animal is not antediluvian, as many naturalists and antiquaries have supposed (including article on the above relating to Oswald, Buckland and others), Edinburgh J. Science, 3, 15-31 & 129-135.
Hibbert, S. 1826. Proceedings of the Royal Society of Edinburgh meeting (Monday 5 December 1825), Edinburgh J. Science, 3, 174.
Hinderwell, T. 1811. The History and Antiquities of Scarborough and the Vicinity, 2nd Edition, Longman, Wilson, London, York.
Home, E. 1817. An account of some fossil remains of the rhinoceras, discovered by Mr Whitby in a cavern inclosed in the lime-stone rock from which he is forming the breakwater at Plymouth, Phil Trans. R. Soc. Lond., 176-182.
Howarth, O.J.R. 1931. The British Association for the Advancement of Science: A Retrospect 1831-1931, British Association for the Advancement of Science, London.
Howe, S.R., Sharpe, T. & Torrens, H.S. 1981. Ichthyosaurs: A History of Fossil ‘Sea-Dragons’, National Museum of Wales, Cardiff.
Inkster, I. & Morrell, J.B. (eds.) 1981. Metropolis and Province: Science in British Culture 1780-1850, Hutchinson, London.
K. 1829. Hints for improvements: a natural history society, Magazine of Natural History, 2, 286-287.
Kendall, F. 1816. Mineralogy and Rocks including Organic Remains of Scarborough, T. Coultas, Scarborough.
Kennard, A.S. 1945. The early digs in Kent’s Hole, Torquay, Proc. Geologists Association, 56, 153-213.
Kenrick, J. 1873. A retrospect of the early history of the YPS, Yorkshire Philosophical Society Annual Report for 1872, 34-44.
Kent, P. 1980. Eastern England from the Tees to Wash, British Regional Geology, 2nd Edition, Institute of Geological Sciences, HMSO, London.
Knell, S.J. 1987. Geology curators get on their bikes, Geology Today, 3, 136-138.
Knell, S.J. 1994a. Palaeontological excavation: historical perspectives, Geological Curator, 6(2), 57-69.
Knell, S.J. 1994b. Collecting and excavation in palaeontology, Geological Curator, 6(2), 49-56.
Knell, S.J. 1996. The roller-coaster of museum geology, in Pearce, S.M. (ed.), Exploring Science in Museums, New Research in Museum Studies, Athlone, London, 29-56.
Knell, S.J. (in press) What’s important?, in Pettitt, C.W. & Nudds, J.R. (eds.), The Value and Valuation of Natural Science Collections, Geological Society, London.
Lambrecht, K., Quenstedt, W. & Quenstedt A. 1938. Palaeontologi, Junk, Gravenshage (reprinted 1978 by Arno, New York).
Lee, J.E. 1881. Notebook of an Amateur Geologist, Longman, London.
Lindley, J. & Hutton, W. 1831-7. The Fossil Flora of Great Britain, 3 volumes, J. Ridway, London.
Loudon, J.C. 1828. Introduction, Magazine of Natural History, 1, 1-9.
Loudon, J.C. 1835. Preface [on the role of women and clergy in natural history], Magazine of Natural History, 8, iii-iv.
Lydekker, R. 1888. Catalogue of Fossil Reptilia and Amphibia in the British Museum (Natural History), Trustees of the British Museum, London.
Lyell, C. 1826. Scientific institutions, Quarterly Review, 34, 153-179.
Lyell, C. 1830-3. Principles of Geology, Murray, London.
Lyell, K.M. 1881 Life, Letters and Journals of Sir Charles Lyell, 2 volumes, Murray, London.
Mantell, G.A. 1825. On the teeth of the Iguanodon, a newly-discovered fossil herbivorous reptile, Phil. Trans. R. Soc. Lond., 115, 179-86.
McCartney, P.J. 1977. Henry De la Beche: Observations on an Observer, National Museum of Wales, Cardiff.
McClellan, J.E. 1985. Science Reorganised: Scientific Societies in the Eighteenth Century, Columbia University, New York.
McCoy, F. 1859. Contributions to British Palaeontology, MacMillan, Cambridge.
McEnery, J. 1859. Cavern Researches, Discoveries of Organic Remains, and of British and Roman Reliques, in the Caves of Kent’s Hole, Anstis Cove, Chudleigh and Berry Head (Ed. E. Vivien), Simpkin, Marshall & Co, London.
McMillan, N.F. & Greenwood, E.F. 1972. The Beans of Scarborough; a family of naturalists, J. Soc. Biblio. Nat. Hist., 6, 152-161.
Melmore, S. 1942. Letters in the possession of the Yorkshire Philosophical Society, North Western Naturalist, 17, 317-332.
Melmore, S. 1943a. Letters in the possession of the Yorkshire Philosophical Society, North Western Naturalist, 18, 21-29.
Melmore, S. 1943b. Letters in the possession of the Yorkshire Philosophical Society, North Western Naturalist, 18, 148-160.
Miller, J.S. 1821. A Natural History of the Crinoidea, C. Frost, Bristol.
Mills, E.L. 1984. A view of Edward Forbes, naturalist, Archives of Natural History, 11(3), 365-393.
Moore, D.T. 1982. Geological collectors and collections of the India Museum, London 1801-79, Archives of Natural History, 10(3), 399-428.
Moore, D.T., Thackray, J.C. & Morgan, D.L. 1991. A short history of the Museum of the Geological Society of London 1807-1911, with a catalogue of the British and Irish accessions, and notes on surviving collections, Bull. Br. Mus. Nat. Hist. (Hist. Ser.), 19(1), 51-160.
Morley, J. 1971. Death, Heaven and the Victorians, Studio Vista, London.
Morrell, J. 1983. Economic and ornamental geology: the Geological and Polytechnic Society of the West Riding of Yorkshire 1837-53, in Inkster, I. & Morrell, J.B. (eds.), Op.cit., 231-256.
Morrell, J. 1988a. Science and government: John Phillips and the early Ordnance Geological Survey of Great Britain, in Rupke, N. (ed.), Science and the Public Good, 7-35.
Morrell, J. 1988b. The early Yorkshire Geological and Polytechnic Society: a reconsideration, Annals of Science, 45, 153-167.
Morrell, J. 1989. The legacy of William Smith: John Phillips in the 1820s, Archives of Natural History, 16, 319-35.
Morrell, J. 1994. Perpetual excitement: the heroic age of British geology, Geological Curator, 5(8), 311-7.
Morrell, J. & Thackray, A. 1981. Gentlemen of Science: Early Years of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, Clarendon, Oxford.
Morrell, J. & Thackray, A. 1984. Gentlemen of Science: Early Correspondence of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, Camden 4th Series, Royal Historical Society, London.
Murray, P. 1828. Account of a deposite of fossil plants, discovered in the coal formation of the third secondary limestone, near Scarborough, Edinburgh New Philosophical Journal, 5, 311-7.
North, F.J. 1934. From the geological map to the geological survey: Glamorgan and the pioneers of Geology, Trans. Cardiff Naturalists’ Soc., 65 (for 1932), 41-115.
North, F.J. 1935. Dean Conybeare, Geologist, Trans. Cardiff Naturalists’ Soc., 66 (for 1933), 15-68.
North, F.J. 1936. Further chapters in the history of geology in south Wales; Sir H.T. de la Beche and the Geological Survey, Trans. Cardiff Naturalists’ Soc., 67 (for 1934), 31-103.
North, F.J. 1956. W.D. Conybeare, his geological contemporaries and Bristol associations, Proc. Bristol Naturalists’ Soc., 29(2), 133-146.
O’Connor, J.G. & Meadows, A.J. 1976. Specialisation and professionalism in British geology, Social Studies of Science, 6, 77-89.
Oldroyd, D.R. 1990. The Highlands Controversy: Constructing Geological Knowledge through Fieldwork in Nineteenth Century Britain, University of Chicago, Chicago.
Oldroyd, D.R. & McKenna, G. 1995. A note on Andrew Ramsay’s unpublished report on the St Davids area, recently discovered, Annals of Science, 52, 193-6.
Orange, A.D. 1973. Philosophers and Provincials: The Yorkshire Philosophical Society from 1822 to 1844, Yorkshire Philosophical Society, York.
Owen, A. 1972. Biographical notes on William Venables Vernon Harcourt (1789-1871), Yorkshire Philosophical Society Annual Report for 1971, 50-1.
Owen, R. 1842. Report on British fossil reptiles, part 2, Report of the British Association for Advancement of Science for 1841, 60-204.
Owen, R. 1874-89. A Monograph on the Fossil Reptilia of the Mesozoic Formations, Palaeontographical Society, London.
Park, G.R. 1886. Parliamentary Representation of Yorkshire, Barnwell, Hull.
Parkinson, J. 1804-1811. Organic Remains of a Former World, Sherwood, Neely & Jones, London.
Pengelly, W. 1869. The literature of Kent’s Cavern. Part II including the whole of the Rev. J. McEnery’s manuscript, Rep. & Trans. Devonshire Assoc., 3, 191-482.
Phillips, J. 1827. On the direction of the diluvial currents in Yorkshire, Philosophical Magazine (Series 2), 2, 138-141.
Phillips, J. 1829. Illustrations of the Geology of Yorkshire or, a Description of the Strata and Organic Remains of the Yorkshire Coast accompanied by a Geological Map, Sections, and Plates of the Fossil Plants and Animals, Wilson, York.
Phillips, J. 1830. On the geology of Havre, Philosophical Magazine (Series 2), 7, 195-198.
Phillips, J. 1834. A Guide to Geology, Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, Green & Longman, London.
Phillips, J. 1835. Illustrations of the Geology of Yorkshire, or a Description of the Strata and Organic Remains: Part 1 The Yorkshire Coast, 2nd Edition, Murray, London.
Phillips, J. 1836. Illustrations of the Geology of Yorkshire, or a Description of the Strata and Organic Remains: Part 2 The Mountain Limestone District, Murray, London.
Phillips, J. 1839. Biographical notice of William Smith, Magazine of Natural History (New Series), 3, 213-220.
Phillips, J. 1840a. Organic remains, Penny Cyclopedia, 16, 487-491.
Phillips, J. 1840b. Palaeozoic series, Penny Cyclopedia, 17, 153-154.
Phillips, J. 1841. Figures and Descriptions of the Palaeozoic Fossils of Cornwall, Devon and West Somerset, Longman, Brown & Green, London.
Phillips, J. 1842. On a fossiliferous conglomerate, adherent to the Trap of the Malvern Hills, Philosophical Magazine, 21, 288-293.
Phillips, J. 1843. On the occurence of trilobites and Agnosti in the lowest shales of the Palaeozoic series, on the flanks of the Malvern Hills, Philosophical Magazine 22, 384–385.
Phillips, J. 1844. Memoirs of William Smith, Murray, London.
Phillips, J. 1848. The Malvern Hills compared with the Palaeozoic districts of Abberley, Woolhope, May Hill, Tortworth and Usk, Mem. Geol. Surv. G.B., 2(1), 1-330.
Phillips, J. 1849. Geology, in Smedley, E., Rose, H.J. & Rose, H.J. (eds.), Encyclopedia Metropolitana, 4, Griffin, London, 529-800.
Phillips, J. 1854. On a new Plesiosaurus in the York Museum, Report of the British Association for the Advancement of Science for 1853, 54.
Phillips, J. 1859.Anniversary address of the President, Quart. J. Geol. Soc. Lond., 15, 25-61.
Phillips, J. 1860. Anniversary address of the President, Quart. J. Geol. Soc. Lond., 16, xlii, 27-55.
Phillips, J. 1871. Rev. William Venables Vernon Harcourt, Proc. Roy. Soc. Lond., 20, xiii-xv.
Phillips, J. 1873. Sedgwick, Nature, 7, 257-259.
Phillips, J. 1874. Address delivered before the Geological Section of the British Association, Report of the British Association for the Advancement of Science for 1873, 70-75.
Phillips, J. 1875. Illustrations of the Geology of Yorkshire, or a Description of the Strata and Organic Remains: Part 1 The Yorkshire Coast. 3rd Edition, (Ed. R. Etheridge), Murray, London.
Phillips, J. & Salter, J.W. 1848. Palaeontological appendix to Professor Phillips’ memoir on the Malvern Hills compared with the Palaeozoic districts of Abberley, & c. Mem. Geol.Surv. G.B., 2(1), 331-386.
Porter, R. 1978. Gentlemen and geology: the emergence of a scientific career 1660-1920, Historical Journal, 21, 809-836.
Porter, R. & Poulton, K. 1977. Research in British geology 1660-1800: a survey and thematic bibliography, Annals of Science, 34, 33-42.
Porter, W.S. 1922. Sheffield Literary & Philosophical Society, A Centenary Retrospect 1822-1922, Northend, Sheffield.
Purcell, R.W. & Gould, S.J. 1992. Finders, Keepers: Eight Collectors, Pimlico, London.
Pyrah, B. 1974. Yorkshire Museum, Newsletter of the Geological Curators’ Group, 1(2), 52-55.
Pyrah, B. 1988. The History of the Yorkshire Museum and its Geological Collections, Sessions, York.
Rehbock, R.F. 1983. The Philosophical Naturalists: Themes in Early Nineteenth Century British Biology, University of Wisconsin, Madison.
Rudler, F.W. 1877. On natural history museums, Y Cymmrodor, 1, 17-36.
Rudwick, M.J.S. 1972. The Meaning of Fossils: Episodes in the History of Palaeontology, Macdonald, London.
Rudwick, M.J.S. 1975. Caricature as a source for the history of science: De la Beche’s anti-Lyellian sketches of 1831, Isis, 66, 534-560.
Rudwick, M.J.S. 1978. Charles Lyell’s dream of a statistical palaeontology, Palaeontology, 21, 225-244.
Rudwick, M.J.S. 1985. The Great Devonian Controversy, University of Chicago, Chicago.
Rudwick, M.J.S. 1988. A year in the life of Adam Sedgwick and company, geologists, Archives of Natural History, 15(3), 243-268.
Rudwick, M.J.S. 1992. Scenes from Deep Time, University of Chicago, Chicago.
Rupke N.A. 1983a. The study of fossils in the romantic philosophy and history of nature, History of Science, 21, 389-413.
Rupke, N.A. 1983b. The Great Chain of History: William Buckland and the English School of Geology, Clarendon, Oxford.
Russell Goddard, T. 1929. History of the Natural History Society of Northumberland, Durham and Newcastle upon Tyne 1829-1929, Reid, Newcastle.
Sarjeant, W.A.S. 1980. Geologists and the History of Geology, Macmillan, London.
Schneer, C.J. (ed.). 1969. Towards a History of Geology, MIT, Massachussetts.
Secord, J.A. 1985. John W. Salter: The rise and fall of a Victorian palaeontological career, in Wheeler, A. & Price, J.H. (eds.) From Linnaeus to Darwin: Commentaries on the History of Biology and Geology, Society for the History of Natural History, London, 61-75.
Secord, J.A. 1986a. Controversy in Victorian Geology: The Cambrian – Silurian Dispute, Princeton University, New Jersey.
Secord, J.A. 1986b. The Geological Survey of Great Britain as a research school 1839-1855, History of Science, 24(3), 223-275.
Sheahan, J.J. 1866. History of the Town and Port of Kingston Upon Hull, Green, Beverley.
Sheppard, T. 1916. Yorkshire’s Contribution to Science, Brown, London.
Sheppard, T. 1932. John Phillips, Proc. Yorkshire Geological Society, 22, 153-187.
Sheppard, T. 1904. Remains of lion in East Yorkshire, Naturalist, 9, 102-4.
Sheppard, T. 1944. John Phillips and his lectures, North Western Naturalist, 19, 152-153.
Sherborn, C.D. 1940. Where is the _______ Collection? Cambridge University, Cambridge.
Smales, G. 1867. Whitby Authors and their Publications, Horne, Whitby.
Sowerby, J. & Sowerby, J. de C. 1812-1826. The Mineral Conchology of Great Britain, London.
Spamer, E.E., Bogan, A.E. & Torrens, H.S. 1989. Recovery of the Etheldred Benett collection of fossils mostly from Jurassic-Cretaceous strata of Wiltshire, England, analysis of the taxonomic nomenclature of Benett (1831), and notes and figures of type specimens contained in the collection, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, 141, 115-180.
Stather, J.W. et al. 1908. Investigation of the fossiliferous drift deposts at Kirmington, Lincolnshire, and at various localities in the East Riding of Yorkshire, Report of the British Association for the Advancement of Science for 1907, 325-8.
Stather, J.W. et al. 1910. Investigation of the fossiliferous drift deposts at Kirmington, Lincolnshire, and at various localities in the East Riding of Yorkshire, Report of the British Association for the Advancement of Science for 1909, 177-80
Stearn, W.T. 1981. The Natural History Museum at South Kensington, Heinemann, London.
Strickland, H.E. 1837. On the errors which may arise in computing the relative antiquity of deposits from the characters of their embedded fossils, Magazine of Natural History (New Series), 1, 234-239.
Stukeley, W. 1719. An account of the impression of the almost entire sceleton of a large animal in a very hard stone, Phil. Trans. R. Soc. Lond., 30, 963-8.
Taylor, M.A. 1992. Taxonomy and taphonomy of Rhomaleosaurus zetlandicus (Plesiosauria, Reptilia) from the Toarcian (Lower Jurassic), Proc. Yorkshire Geological Society, 49(1), 49-55.
Taylor, M.A. 1994. The plesiosaur’s birthplace: the Bristol Institution and its contribution to vertebrate palaeontology, Zool. J. Linn. Soc., 112, 179-96.
Taylor, M.A. (in press) Before the dinosaur: the historical significance of the fossil marine reptiles, in Callaway, J.M. & Nicholls, E.L. (eds.), Ancient Marine Reptiles, Academic, London.
Taylor, M.A. & Torrens, H.S. 1987. Saleswoman to a new science: Mary Anning and the fossil fish Squaloraja from the Lias of Lyme Regis, Proc. Dorset Nat. Hist. & Arch. Soc., 108, 135-148.
Taylor, M.A. & Torrens, H.S. 1995. Fossils by the sea, Natural History, 104(10), 66-71.
Taylor, R. 1822. Fossil bones on the coast of East Norfolk, Philosophical Magazine, 60, 132-135.
Taylor, R.C. 1829. An attempt to form a table of the geological arrangement of British fossil shells, Magazine of Natural History, 2, 26-41.
Taylor, R.C. 1830. Introduction to geology, Magazine of Natural History, 3, 62-78.
Taylor, R.V. 1865. Biographica Leodiensis: Leeds Worthies, Simpkin, Marshall, London.
Torrens, H.S. 1974. Lichfield museums (pre 1850), Newsletter of the Geological Curators’ Group, 1(1), 5-10.
Torrens, H.S. 1975. Geological collections and collectors of note: the Bath geological collections, Newsletter of the Geological Curators’ Group, 1, 88-124.
Torrens, H.S. 1990a. The four Bath philosophical societies, 1779-1959, in Rolls, R., Guy, J. & Guy, J.R. (eds.), A Pox on the Provinces, Bath University, 181-188.
Torrens, H.S. 1990b. The transmission of ideas on the use of fossils in stratigraphic analysis from England to America, 1800-1840, Earth Sci. Hist., 9, 108-117.
Torrens, H.S. 1990c. Under royal patronage: the early work of John Mawe (1766-1829) in geology and the background of his travel in Brazil in 1807-10, in Lopes, M.M. & Figeuiroa, S.F. de M. (eds.), O Conchecimento Geologico na America Latina: Questoes de Historia e Teoria, Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Brazil, 103-13.
Torrens, H.S. 1990d. The scientific ancestry and historiography of the Silurian System, J. Geol. Soc. Lond., 147, 657-62.
Torrens, H.S. 1993. The dinosaurs and dinomania over 150 years, Modern Geology, 18, 257-86.
Torrens, H.S. 1995. Mary Anning (1799-1847) of Lyme; ‘the greatest fossilist the world ever knew’, BJHS, 28, 257-84.
Torrens, H.S. & Cooper, J.A. 1986. George Fleming Richardson (1796-1848) – man of letters, lecturer and geological curator, Geological Curator, 4, 249-72.
Torrens, H.S. & Getty, T.A. 1984. Louis Hunton (1814-1838) – English pioneer in ammonite biostratigraphy, Earth Sci. Hist., 3, 58-68.
Torrens, H.S. & Taylor, M.A. 1990. Geological collectors and museums in Cheltenham 1810-1988: a case history and its lessons, Geological Curator, 5(5), 175-213.
Valenciennes, A. 1839. Observations upon the fossil jaws from the Oolitic beds at Stonesfield, named Didelphis Prevostii and Did. Bucklandi, Magazine of Natural History (New Series), 3, 49-57.
Vernon, W.V. 1830. Further examination of the deposit of fossil bones at North Cliff in the county of York, Philosophical Magazine (series 2), 7, 1-9.
Vernon, W.V., Salmond. W., & Phillips, J. 1829. On the discovery of fossil bones in a marl-pit near North Cliff. Philosophical Magazine (series 2), 6, 225- 232.
Ward, L.F. 1885. Sketch of Palaeobotany, extracts from the 5th Annual Report of the Director, U.S. Geological Survey, Washington.
Williamson, W.C. 1896. Reminiscences of a Yorkshire Naturalist, facsimile edition (1985), J.Watson & B.A. Thomas, University of Manchester.
Wilson, H.E. 1985. Down to Earth: One Hundred and Fifty Years of the British Geological Survey, Scottish Academic, Edinburgh.
Witham. H. 1839. On the vegetation of the first period of the ancient world, that is from the first deposit of the Transition Series to the top of the Coalfield, Philosophical Magazine, 7, 23-71.
Woodward, H.B. 1885. Robert Alfred Cloyne Godwin-Austen, Geol. Mag. (Decade 3), 2(1), 1-10.
Woodward, H.B. 1907. The History of the Geological Society of London, Geological Society, London.
Yeo, R. 1983. An idol of the market place: Baconianism in nineteenth century Britain, History of Science, 21, 251-298.
Young, G. & Bird, J. 1822. A Geological Survey of the Yorkshire Coast, Clark, Whitby.
Zittel, K.A. von. 1901. History of Geology and Palaeontology, (trans. M.M. Ogilvie Gordon), Walter Scott, London.