I 



159 



Annalen <Ier Physik untl Clieinie. Heraiisgegebcii zu Berlin, von 

 J. C. Poggendoiff. 1836. Nos. 10, 11, 12 By the Editor. 



On the Arenarius of Arcliiniodes. By S. P. Rigaud, M. A., Savi- 

 lian Professor of Astronomy. — By the Author. 



A Catalogue of the Collection of British Quadrupeds in the Museum 

 of the Cambridge Philosophical Society. 



Transactions of the Cambridge Philosophical Society. Vol. vi. 

 Part I.— By the Society. 



Supplement to the Account of the Rev. John Flamsteed, the first 



Astronomer- Royal. By Francis Baily, Esq. F.R.S., &c Sy 



the Author. 



On the Theory of the Moon, and on the Perturbations of the Planets. 

 By .J. W. Lubbock, Esq., F. R. R. A. and L. S. S.—By the 

 Author. 



Report of the Fifth Meeting of the British Association for the Ad- 

 vancement of Science, held at Dublin in 1835 By the British 



Association. 



Discussion of the Magnetical Observations made by Captain Back, 

 R. N., during his late Arctic Expedition. By S. Hunter 

 Christie, Esq., M. A., F. R S., &c. — By the Author. 



List of the Fellows of the Royal Society (1836). 



Addresses delivered at the Anniversary .Meetings of the Royal So- 

 ciety on Saturday, November 30. 1833, and on Wednesday, 

 November 30. 1836, by His Royal Highness, the Duke of 

 Sussex, K. G., &c. &c. &c., the President. 



Proceedings of the Royal Society. Nos. 19 to 27. 



Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London for the 

 year 1836. Part 2. — By the Society. 



Astronomical Observations made at the Royal Observatory at 

 Greenwich, 1834, Parts 4 and 5, and 1835, Parts 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 



under the direction of John Pond, Esq., Astronomer-Royal. 



JBy the Royal Society. 



The following communications were read — 



1. Geological Observations on Binny-Crag in West-Lothian, 

 by Charles Maclaren, Esq. 



Binny Crag in West Lothian is of compact greenstone, about half 

 a mile in length, and from twenty to one hundred and forty feet in 

 breadth. It extends south and north, and has a small ravine on its 

 west side, above which the highes-t part of the crag rises about two 



