I 



328 HtBCELLANEOVS. 



A lecture at Glasgow. The chief features of the cavern and its 

 deposits are described ; man's weapons of various types according to the 

 deposit they come from are noticed, with illustrative figures. Palaeo- 

 lithic man is held to have arrived there in inter-glacial or pre-glacial 

 times. E. B. T, 



Penning, W. Henry. Field Geology. With a Section on Palseonto- 

 logy, by A. J. Jukes-Brown. Pp. x, 228. 



Part 1 relates to Geological Mapping ; Part 2 to Sections ; Part 3 

 to Lithology ; Part 4 to Palaeontology ; and Part 5 to Geological Gene- 

 ralization, Water-supply, &c. T. W. N. 



. Waste of Insular Land by the Sea. Geol. Mag. dec. 2, vol. iii^ 



pp. 282-284. 



Apparent and True Dip. Geol. Mag. dec. 2, vol. iii. pp. 236^ 



237. 

 A geometrical method of finding the true dip from two apparent dips, 



Pfaflf, Dr. Fr. Grundriss der Geologic. [Outlines of Geology.] Pp. 

 399 ; 345 woodcuts. 8vo. Leipzig. 



Part 1. Physical Geology, pp. 1-104 : treats of the form, internal 

 temperature, density, &c. of the world ; next the air, sea, and land ; 

 composition and classification of rocks. 2. Dynamical Geology, pp. 105- 

 216 : volcanic and earthquake phenomena, rising, &c. of lands ; water- 

 action, mechanical and chemical ; influence of these agents on rock- 

 forming ; metamorphism. 3. Historical Geology, pp. 217-392 : a con- 

 densed account of the formations in order, noticing a few characteristic 

 fossils and the eruptive rocks of each period. E. B. T. 



. Die Theorie Darwin's nnd die Thatsachen der Geologie. 



[The Darwinian Theory and Geological Facts.] Frankfort. 



' Pommerol, — . L'epoque du Renne dans la Limagne d'Auvergne. 

 [Age of the Reindeer in Limagne.] Bull. Soc. Anthrop. Paris^ 

 2 ser. t. xi. p. 20. 



Prestwich, Prof. J. Tables of Temperature of the Sea at different 



Depths beneath the Surface, reduced and collated from the various 



observations made between the years 1749 and 1868, discussed. 



With Map and Sections. Phil. Trans, vol. 165, pt. 2, pp. 587-674. 



Geological considerations referred to on p. 673. Local changes of 



climate may result from movements of the land, influencing the course 



of the under- currents of cold water flowing from the Poles. W. T. 



. The Past and Future of Geology. Eep. Smithson. Inst, pp, 



175-195. [A reprint, see Geological Recoed for 1875, p. 378.] 



Beach, T. M. The Moon and the Earth. Proc. Liverpool Geol. Soc. 



vol. iii. pt. ii. pp. 59-89. Noticed in Iron, n. s. vol. vii. p. 492. 

 Presidential address. On the inferences to be drawn, as to the for- 

 mation and history of the moon, from a comparison of her surface con- 



