INDEX. 





ACA 



A CANTHOCERAS mammillatum 

 •£*- and Hoplites interriiptus Zones 



at Okeford Fitzpaine, 198. 

 Accessory Shocks of the Great Japanese 



Earthquake of 1891, 565. 

 Acidaspis, The British Silurian Species, 



45. 

 Additions to the Geological Department 



of the British Museum, 384. 

 Address to the Geological Section, British 



Association, 464. 

 Address to the Geological Society of 



London, 185. 

 Affinities of the English Wealden Fish- 

 Fauna, 69. 

 Africa, Occurrence of Nummulitic Lime- 

 stone in S.E. Africa, 487. 

 Agamennone, G., On Earthquakes in 



the South-East of Europe, 524. 

 Alatyr, Oligocene Saudstone in the Neo- 



comian Clays at, 49. 

 Aletsch, Glacier, 97. 

 Alpine Nickel -bearing Serpentine with 



Fulgurites, 235. 

 Altered Clastic Rocks of the Southern 



Highlands, 167, 211. 

 American Museum of Natural History, 



84. 

 Ammonites mammillatum in the Isle of 



Wight, 287. 

 Ammonites, Note on Jurassic, 420. 

 Analysis of the Molluscan Fauna of the 



Coralline Crag, 27- 



• a Spherulite, 365. 



Ancient Bocks of Charnwood Forest, 



485. 

 Andrews, C. W., On the Pelvis of 



Cryptoclidus Oxoniensis, 145 ; Ou the 



Structure of the Plesiosaurian Skull, 



233 ; On a nearly complete Skeleton 



of Aptornis defossor, 241 ; Note on the 



Skeleton of Diaphorapteryx Hawkinsi, 



337. 

 Anglesey, Crush -Conglomerates in, 481, 



569. 

 Occurrence of Sillimanite 



Gneisses in, 494. 

 ■ The Geology of the Eastern 



Corner of, 333. 



On Quartzite Lenticles in 



S.E., 551. 

 Anniversary Meeting of the Geological 

 Society, 178. 



DECADE IV. 



-TOL. III. — NO. XII. 



BOL 



Appendages of Trilohites, 142, 567. 



Aptornis defossor, Skeleton of, 241. 



Aptychi from the Upper Chalk, 529. 



Arekceodiadema, a New Genus of Lias 

 Echinoidea, 317. 



Thompsons, sp. nov., 319. 



Argentina, Discovery of Fossil Plants in, 

 446. 



Arnold-Bemrose, H. H., Mammalian 

 Remains in Old River-gravels of the 

 Derwent, Part I, 282. 



Arran, Old Red Sandstone and Car- 

 boniferous Rocks in, 155, 222. 



Aston and Bonuey, Alpine Nickel-bearing 

 Serpentine with Fulgurites, 235. 



BADEN District, Mineral Springs of 

 the, 149. 



Barron, T., A new British Rock contain- 

 ing Nepheline and Riebeckite, 371. 



Bather, F. A., Zones of the Carbon- 

 iferous, 46 ; On Mcrocrinns Salopice, 

 sp. nov., and another Crinoid, 71 ; 

 Uintacrinus socialis, 85 ; The Naming 

 of New Species, 143 ; Mr. Jukes- 

 Browne on the Genitive, 188 ; Search 

 for Uintacrinus in England and West- 

 phalia, 443 ; Jubilee of the Palasonto- 

 graphical Society, 572. 



Beclard, F., The Devonian Spirifers of 

 Belgium, 431. 



Beecher, C. E., The Morphology of 

 Triarthrus, 194. 



Beesley, Thomas, Obituary of, 336. 



Belemnites from Somali-land, 296. 



Bell, Dugald, Notes on Prof. Bonney's 

 "Ice -Work," 319; The Ayrshire 

 " Shell - beds," 335; Prof. Bonney 

 and the "Parallel Roads," 432. 



Bincombe, Dorset, Vertical Tertiaries 

 at, 246. 



Blackmore, H. P., On Aptychi from the 

 Upper Chalk, 529. 



Blake, J. F., OnAngleseyConglomerates, 

 569. 



Blanford, W. T., Discoveries of Fossil 

 Plants in Argentina, 446. 



Bolderian, The true meaning of the 

 term, 90. 



Bollettino della Societa Sismologica, 379. 



Bolton, H., Occurrence of the genus 

 Listracanthus in the English Coal- 

 measures, 424. 



37 



