tse 
HH 
i) 
Classified Index. 
NOTES AND COMMENTS—continued. 
dress—Prof. C. G. Seligman’s Ad- 
dress — Museums — The Place of 
Museums in General Education— 
Scheme of Arrangement—Local 
Museums — And Their Duty — 
National and Provincial — Local 
Museums’ Duty — Introductory 
Collections — ‘ Discussion !* — 
Provincial Societies—German and 
English Methods—A Danger—Lon- 
don v. Provinces—The Amateur 
Naturalist—The Antiquity of Man— 
Geological Evidence in Britain— 
Piltdow 
the Continent—Early Man—In East 
Anglia—Distribution of Bronze Age 
Implements—Classification of Ter- 
tiary Strata by Means of Eutherian 
Mammals—Glacial Geology of the 
Western Slopes of the Southern Pen- 
nines—Erratics — One Glaciation— 
The Carboniferous Limestone Zones 
—Of N.E. Lancashire—An Old 
Battle Fought Over Again—Origin 
of Reef Knolls—The Middle Tees and 
Its Tributaries—A Study in River 
Development—Tertiary Elevation— 
— The Avonian Shore Line — The 
Classification of Land Forms, 309-333 
November.—The Micrologist — Meso- 
zoic Plants — Paleontographical 
Society—Survival and Extinction of 
Insects—Scillies’ Seals—Insects at 
Lighthouses—Dasypolia Templi — 
Wilberforce Museum, Hull—A Brad- 
ford Museum—Preserving Plants— 
Earth Movements in Sheffield—The 
Vasculum—A Curious Helix—The 
South Eastern Naturalist — The 
Essex Naturalist—Mr. C. Cross- 
land’s Collection—Of Halifax Mosses 
—Leyland’s Mosses—The Use of 
Fossil Fishes in Stratigraphical 
Geology—Grime’s Graves—Fauna of 
the Limestone Beds—At Treak 
Cliffs and Peakshill, Castleton, Der- 
byshire—Zonal Determination—The 
Tsolation of the Directions-Image— 
Of a Mineral Rock-Slice—Norweg- 
ian Granite—The Heterangiums of 
the British Coal Measures—Heter- 
angium lomaxii—Polydesmic Heter- 
1] Fossil Fungi and Fossil 
Bacteria—The Aptian Flora of Brit- 
in—Early Angiosperms and Their 
Contemporaries— Boys and the War, 
341-357 
December.—Watsonian Vice-Counties 
-—Sheffield Archzologists — Liver- 
pool Geologists—Apes to Modern 
Man— Fossi] Reptilia—Flint ‘Bones’ 
—Another View—A Reply—Former 
Leeds Professor Honoured—A Skele- 
ton of Elephas antiquus—373-378 
CHESHIRE: 
Geology and Palzwontology: Biblio- 
graphy with respect to the Geology | 
and Paleontology of the North “of 
England (Yorkshire excepted), during 
1914, I. Sheppard, 271-274, 303-306 
Societies: Lancashire and Cheshire 
Entomological Society, Proceedings 
| of, 53; Exhibits at 406; Chester 
Society of Natura! Science, ete., 
| Proceedings of, 404 
CUMBERLAND. 
Birds: List of Birds Seen in Kingmoor 
Nature Reserve, 1914, 189-190 
Coleoptera: List of Species noted in 
Kingmoor Nature Reserve, 238-240 ; 
Sermyia halensis var. cuprina Weise 
at Carlisle, J. Murray, 300 
Flowering Plants: List of Species noted 
in Kingmoor Nature Keserve, T. 
Scott Johnstone, 240-243: Notes 
on the Flora of Eskdale and Wasdale, 
J. F. Pickard, 382-384 
Geology and Paleontology: Biblio- 
graphy with respect to the Geology 
and Palxontology of the North ‘of 
England (Yorkshire excepted),during 
1914, IT. Sheppard, 271-274 ; 303-306 
Lepidoptera: List of Lepidoptera noted 
in Kingmoor Nature Reserve, F. H. 
Day, 190-191 
Mammalia: List of Species noted in 
Kingmoor Nature Reserve, 190 
Mosses and Hepaties: Seligeria recur- 
vata B. and S. found near Gilsland, J. 
Murray, 175; List of Species noted 
in Kingmoor Nature Reserve, 243 
Rhizopoda: Paulinella chromatophora 
(Lauterborn) tound in Sprinkling 
Tarn, J. M. Brown, 157-159 
Scientific History: Report of the 
Cumberland Nature Reserve Associa- 
tion, L. E. Hope, 187-191, 238-243 
Societies: Cumberland and Westmor- 
land Antiquarian, etc., Society, 
Trans. of, Vol. XV., 399 
Naturalist, 
