Proceedings. ex 



Selecta Fungiorum Carpologia, 3 vols. — Tulasne 



Illustrations of the Genus Carex, 4 vols. — Boot 



Publications of the Palasontographical Society ; a complete set 



Withering's Botany, 4 vols. 



Royal Society — Abstracts of Proceedings, 1801 to 1872, 20 vols. 



Lent by Mr. Mennell. 



Transactions Tyneside Naturalists' Field Club, vols, i to 6 



Nat. Hist. Trans. Northumberland and Durham, vols, i to 7 



Daniel's Meteorology, 2 vols. 



The Letters of Rusticus, 1849 



Handbook of the Yorkshire Vertebrata 



Natural History Reviews, 3 vols. 



British Poisonous Plants. — Sowcrby & Johnson 



The Common Frog. — St. George Miv 



Origin and Metamorphoses of Insect 



British Ferns. — Newman 



Flora of Essex. — Gibson 



Ordinary Meeting, i^th February, 1883. 

 John Berney, Esq., F.R.M.S., President, in the Chair. 



Before calling upon the Secretary to read the minutes, Mr. 

 Berney thanked the Club for the honour which they had done 

 him in electing him President. 



The minutes of the Annual Meeting, held on the loth 

 January, were then read and signed. 



Mr. Hermann Moore was duly elected a member of the 

 Club. 



The following donations were announced : — " Science 

 Gossip " from the publishers ; the Weather of 18S2, as 

 observed in 1882 in the neighbourhood of London, and the 

 Rosarian's Year Book for 1883, presented by Mr. Edward 

 Mawley ; Proces Verbaux Soc. Malacologique de Belgique, 

 1882 ; and of the Belgian Microsc. Soc. ; List of Foreign 

 Correspondents of the Smithsonian Institution, January, 

 1882 ; Annual Report of the Brighton and Sussex Natural 

 History Society, 1882 ; Notes and Observations on British 

 Stalk-eyed Crustacea, from Mr. Edward Lovett. 



The President called the attention of the members to the 

 conversational meetings which are held on the fourth Wednes- 

 day in each month. 



The President announced that, in response to a very 

 generally expressed wish, the Committee had decided that in 

 future the meetings would begin at eight o'clock instead of 

 at 8.30. 



A 10 



