466 — Reports and Proceedings. 
W. M. Wiiliams.—Some Vegetable Deposits in the Achensee, North 
Tyrol. 
Ooi vant Von- Dechen and Professor F. Rémer.—On the large 
Prussian Geological Map of the Rhenish Provinces and West- 
phalia. 
W. Pengelly.—First Report of the Committee for the Exploration 
of Kent’s Cavern. 
Professor Harkness.—On the Metamorphic Rocks and Serpentine 
Marbles of Connemara and Joyce’s County. 
Professor Tennant.—On the Agates found in England, with speci- 
mens from different countries. 
S. Bailey.—The Economic Value of the various Measures of Coal 
and Ironstone in the South Staffordshire Coal-field. 
H. Johnson.—The Extent and Duration of the South Staffordshire 
Coal-field. 
W. M. Williams.—The Ancient Glaciers of the North and Hast of 
Llangollen, and more particularly in the neighbourhood of the 
Hope Mountain. 
Principal Dawson.—The Successive Paleozoic Floras in Eastern 
North America. 
C. Moore.—On the Presence of a Greenstone Dyke in the Mendip 
Hills. 
Rev. H,. Housman.—Fossil Foor t in the New Red Sandstone at 
Brewood, near Wolverhampton. 
R. A. Peacock.—On extensive and deep Sinkings of Lands in the 
Channel Islands’ Seas, and on some Changes of the French 
Coast off the Bay of Biscay within the Historical period. 
R. A. Peacock.—On Steam as the active Agent in Earthquakes. 
D. Mackintosh.—The relative Extent of Atmospheric and Oceanic 
Denudation, with a particular reference to certain rocks and 
valleys in Yorkshire and Derbyshire. . 
Rev. A. M. M‘Kay.—The Red Sandstone of Nova Scotia. 
J. E. Taylor.—On Contortions in the Chalk at Whitlingham, near 
Norwich. (See GroLocicaL MaGazine, July 1865, p. 324.) 
J. W. Salter.—Explanation of a Map of the Faults in the Gold 
District of Dolgelly. 
T. A. Readwin.—On the recent Discovery of Gold at Gwynfynydd, 
North Wales. 
H, Hicks and J. W. Salter Denon on Further Researches in the 
Lingula Flags of South Wales. 
D. Forbes.—First Report on the Igneous Rocks of Staffordshire. 
W. Molyneux.—Further Report on the Distribution of the Organic 
Remains of the North Staffordshire Coal-field. 
C. Twomley.—On the Faults in the South Staffordshire Coal-field, 
and their relation to the Igneous Rocks of the District. 
W. Ness——On the Coal-measures in Mold Valley, and their Products. 
Rev. P. B. Brodie.-—On the Fossiliferous Beds of the New Red 
Sandstone (Upper and Lower Keuper) in Warwickshire. 
Professor Harkness and H. Nicholson.—On the Silurian Rocks of 
the Isle of Man, 
