458 Notices of Memoirs—The British Association. 
A, Bell. Report on the “ Manure Gravels”’ of Wexford. 
T’.. W. Shore-—Beds exposed in the Southampton New Dock Excava- 
tion. 
Clement Reid and H. N. Ridley.—Fossil Arctic Plants from the 
Lacustrine Deposit at Hoxne. (Printed in full, see supra p. 441.) 
G. W. Lamplugh.— Report on an Ancient Sea Beach near Bridlington. 
Professor H. G. Seeley.—On the Origin of Oolitic Structure in Lime- 
stone Rock. 
Professor F. Bassani.—Notes of some Researches on the Fossil Fishes 
of Chiavon, Vicentino. 
Professor T. Rupert Jones.—Report upon the Fossil Phyllopoda of 
the Paleozoic Rocks. 
Professor W. C. Williamson.—Report on the Flora of the Carboni- 
ferous Rocks of Lancashire and West Yorkshire. 
Professor H. G. Seeley.—On an Ichthyosaurus from Mombasa; with 
observations on the Vertebral Characters of the Genus. 
A. Smith Woodward.—A comparison of the Cretaceous Fish-fauna of 
Mount Lebanon with that of the English Chalk. (See infra p. 471.) 
A. Smith Woodward.—On Buck Jandium diluvii, Konig, a Siluroid Fish 
from the London Clay of Sheppey. (See infra p. 471.) 
Rev. Dr. A. Irving.—On the Origin of Graphite in the Archzan 
Rocks, with a review of the alleged evidence of Life on the Earth 
in Archean Time. 
Rev. G. F. Whidborne.—On some Devonian Cephalopods and Gastero- 
pods. 
Rev. G. F. Whidborne.—On some Devonian Crustaceans. 
Rev. G. F. Whidborne.—On some Fossils of the Limestones of South 
Devon. 
T. Sterry Hunt.—Mineralogical Evolution. 
Professor J. F. Blake.—Report upon the Microscopic Structure of 
the Older Rocks of Anglesey. 
Dr. C. Ricketts—On a Probable Cause of Contortions of Strata. 
J. Joly.—On the Temperature at which Beryl is Decolorized. 
J. Joly.—On the Occurrence of Iolite in the Granite of Co. Dublin. 
W. W. Watts.—An Igneous Succession in Shropshire. 
C. E. De Rance.— Report on the Circulation of Underground Waters 
in the Permeable Formations of England. 
W. H. Dalton.—A List of Works referring to British Mineral and 
Thermal Waters. 
TirLes or Papers Reap serore Srction D. (BioLoGy) BEARING 
UPON GEOLOGY. 
Professor O. C. Marsh.—Restoration of Brontops robustus, from the 
Miocene of America. 
Dr. 8S. J. Hickson and G. C. Bourne.— Discussion on Coral-Reefs. 
Dr. H. Gadow.—The Nature of the Geological terrain as an important 
factor in the Geographical Disputes of Animals. 
C. A. Barber.—On Pachytheca, a Silurian Alga of doubtful Britiese 
