Index. 



565 



■Origin of some Land-forms in Caer- 

 narvonshire, 145. 



Osborn, Henry Fairfield, American 

 Fossil Horses, 518. 



•Ossiferous Caves, Torquay, 548. 



Outlier in Valley of Eakaia, New 

 Zealand, 551. 



PAL^ONTOGKAPHICAL Society, 

 416. 

 Park, Professor James, Pleistocene 



Glaciation of New Zealand, 394. 

 Parker, William A., Obituary of, 95. 

 Parsons, L. M., Dolomitization and 



the Leicestershire Dolomites, 246 ; 



Productus humerosus, 559. 

 Patagonian Geology, 376. 

 Pebbles in their Geological Associa- 

 tion, 5. 

 Pecten-like Shell-fragments, 168. 

 Pelecypod Shell-fragments (described 



as Cirripedes), 168. 

 Permian of the Midlands, 232. 

 Petrography of the Pacific Islands, 



281. ' 



of South Georgia, 483. 



Phosphates of Saldanha Bay, 133. 

 Phylogeny and Classification of 



Eeptiles, 374. 

 Physiographic Significance of Laterite 



in W. Australia, 385. 

 Pigeon Point, Minnesota, 282. 

 Pleistocene Glaciation of New Zealand , 



394. 

 Pliocene Mollusca, 416. 

 Polyzoa, Cretaceous, Notes on, 1. 



New Chalk, 97. 



Potash Felspar, British Supplies of, 



475. 

 Pre-Thanetian Erosion of Chalk in 



the London Basin, 296. 

 Productus humerostis, Caninia- 



Seminula Horizon of, 480. 



I) ADIO ACTIVITY of Canadian 

 i Mineral Springs, 222. 

 Radnorshire, Basic Intrusions, 500. 

 Rastall, R. H., The Genesis of the 



Tungsten Ores, 194, 241, 293, 367 ; 



Iron-fields of Lorraine, 481, 543. 

 Reed, F. R. Cowper, Notes on the 



genus Homalonotus , 263, 314 ; 



Fossils from Yun-nan, 330. 

 Report of Mines Branch, Department 



of Mines, Canada, 371. 

 Reports on Mineral Resources of Great 



Britain, 377. 

 Ripple-marks, Recent and Fossil, 33. 

 Rock Analyses, Diagrams of, 422. 



Rock-boring Organisms, Agents in 



Coast Erosion, 520. 

 Rock-Cliffs and Floors of "Dry" 



Lakes in W. Australia, 305. 

 Royal Society of London, 41, 283. 

 Ruitor Glacier Lakes, 551. 



SALONICA, Fossil Mammals from, 

 540. 

 Salts as Agents of Rock Weathering, 



W. Australia, 521. 

 Sands used in Manufactures, 131. 

 Scharff, R. F., Exploration of Irish 



Caves, 127. 

 Scrivenor, J. B. , The Kaolin Veins, 



79 ; Origin of Clays and Boulder- 

 clays, 157. 

 Seymour, H. J. , Exploration of Irish 



Caves, 127. 

 Seymour, M., Obituary of, 560. 

 Shand, Professor S. H. , The Norite of 



the Sierra Leone, 21. 

 Sherlock, R. L. , Datum - lines in 



English Keuper, 121. 

 & Smith, Reports on Mineral 



Resources of Great Britain, 377. 

 Sibly, T.Franklin, Geological Structure 



of the Forest of Dean, 23. 

 Sierra Leone, the Norite of the, 21. 

 Simpson, Martin, a Yorkshire 



Geologist, 82. 

 Sinocystis, Species of, 532. 

 Smith, H. G., Basic Intrusions, 



Radnorshire, 500. 

 Societies and Museums, Work of 



Local, 474. 

 South Staffordshire Fire-clays, 56. 

 Speight, R., Geology of Banks 



Peninsula, 523 ; Structural and 



Glacial Features of the Hurunui 



Valley, 523. 

 Spencer, W. K., Paleozoic Asterozoa, 



416. 

 Spitsbergen Coal, 529. 

 Stopes, M. C, Bennettitean Cones, 



546. 

 Stratigraphical Position of the Coral- 

 line Crag, 409. 

 Submedullary Casts of Coal-measure 



Calamites, 212. 

 Subsidence Theorv of Coral Reefs, a 



New Test of, 178. 

 Suffolk Boxstones, 15. 

 Swiney Lectures, 560. 



TAZIN and Taltson Rivers, N.W. 

 Territories, 478. 

 Terebratula Grayi, Davidson, 479. 

 Tertiary Beds of Castle Hill or Tre- 

 lissick Basin, New Zealand, 551. 



