Classified Index. 



435 



YORKSHIRE— coM^iMMerf. 



Mason, 213-216 ; Report of Meet- 

 ing of Plant Gall Committee held 

 at Leeds in May, W. Falconer, 

 269-272 ; September meeting held 

 at same place, W. Falconer, 

 405-408 ; Yorkshire Naturalists' 

 tjnion at Dent, W. H. Pearsall and 

 F. A. Mason, 273-281 ; Yorkshire 

 Naturalists' Union at Wentworth, 

 W. H. Pearsall and F. A. Mason, 

 307-309 ; Yorkshire Naturalists' 

 Union at Redcar, F. A. Mason, 

 310-312 ; Yorkshire Naturalists' 

 Union at York, F. A. Mason and 

 W. H. Pearsall, 347-351. 376-378; 



Annual Meeting of Geological Sec- 

 tion at Huddersfield in October, 

 J. Holmes, 381 ; Meeting of Marine 

 Biology Committee at Robin Hood's 

 Bay and Scarborough in September, 

 J. Irving, 381-382 ; Annual meeting 

 of Botanical Section held at Leeds 

 in October, C. A. Cheetham, 408 



Vermes. — Species occurring in the 

 neighbourhood of Leeds, E. Percival 

 no 



Zoocecidia. — List of Midge Galls 

 observed in various Yorkshire lo- 

 calities, R. S. Bagnall and J. W. 

 H. Harrison, 337-341 



MISCELLANA. 



Birds. — Robin removing young from 

 danger, H. E. Forrest, 62 ; Note 

 on the Behaviour of the Hobby in 

 Kent, G. F. Welch, 79-80 ; Feeding 

 Habit of the Great Spotted Wood- 

 pecker, B. Stracey, 106 ; Is the 

 Ring Ouzel a British Resident ? E. 

 P. Butterfield, with footnote by R. 

 Fortune, 117 ; Sex Habits of the 

 Great Crested Grebe, E. Selous, 

 173-176, 197-200, 301-305 ; Is the 

 Curlew a Resident British Bird ? 

 196 ; Cock Blackbird feeding Young 

 Robins, with footnote by R. For- 

 tune, E. W. Maule Cole, 255 ; 

 Note on the Scarcity of Swallows in 

 the British Isles, from 19 18 to 

 1921, 295-296 ; Fulmar Petrels at 

 the Fame Islands, R. Fortune, 317 ; 

 Territory in Bird Life, E. W. 

 Wade, 418 



Botany . — Foxgloves in Folkington 

 Wood, Eastbourne, noted, 325 ; 

 Plants in the Scilly Isles, W. B. 

 Haley, 328 ; Further Note thereon, 

 A. Bennett, 375 ; Vegetation of 

 Drying Mud and Retarded Germina- 

 tion, E. J. Salisbury, 329-332; 

 365-366 ; Distribution of certain 

 Elements of the British Flora 

 (abstract of a paper read to the 

 British Association at Edinburgh), 

 J. R. Matthews, 370-371 



Correspondence. — Is the Ring Ouzel 

 a British Resident? E. P. Butter- 

 field, with footnote by R. Fortune, 

 117 ; Quoting References, C. D. 

 Sherborn, 150 ; Sparrows and Cro- 

 cuses, W. Bagshaw, with footnote by 

 R. Fortune, 150 ; Feeding Habit of 



1921 Dec. 1 



the Great Spotted Woodpecker, 

 E. P. Butterfield, 222 ; Cock 

 Blackbird feeding young Robins, 

 E. W. Maule Cole, 255 ; Damage 

 by Wild Rabbits and Hares, F. D. 

 Welch, 342 ; Picture Houses and 

 Bird Life, R. Fortune, 342 ; Pro- 

 tection from Flies, A. E. Boycott, 

 342 ; Arenaria gothica Fr., A. 

 Bennett, 382 ; Territory in Bird 

 Life, E. W. Wade, 418 ; Old 

 Paving Stones from Iceland ? A 

 Question for Hull Geologists, G. W. 

 Lamplugh, 418-419 

 Diptera. — The parasite of Chiron - 

 omus plumosus and its Apparent 

 Effects, J. H. Ashworth, 15-16; 

 Food of Boreus, C. L. Withycombe, 



234 



Entomology . — Insect Associations , 

 H. H. Wallis, 99-101 



Geology and Palaeontology. — Geol- 

 ogical Notes and News, 96 ; Notes 

 on ' Moorlog,' a peaty deposit from 

 the Dogger Bank, 153-154 ; Note 

 on the ' Geology of Mesopotamia 

 and its Borderlands,' published by 

 the Admiralty, 156 ; Gault For- 

 aminifera from Ford, Bucks, E. 

 HoUis and E. Neaverson, 235-240 ; 

 Further Finds in Grimes Graves, 

 with illustration, 257-259 ; Note 

 on the ' Glaciation of the South 

 Downs,' 319 



Magazine Notes. — 87, 96, 118, 119, 

 151, 158, 180, 184, 187, 204, 224, 

 255. 288, 351, 375, 380. 382, 383, 



384. 404 

 Mammalia. — Hedgehog in a strange 

 locality, R. Fortune, 77 ; Habits 



