'628 



Index. 



OLI 



■Oligocene of Poland, 519. 



'Oolitic and Liassic Floras of England, 



615. 

 Ophite of Biarritz, 22. 

 OpisthocoBlian Dinosaur in tlie Cretaceous 



Beds of South Africa, 445.^ 

 Origin of certain Pegmatite Veins, 308. 

 Origin of tlie ISIarine (Halolimuic) Fauna 



of Lake Tanganyika, .'537. 

 Ossiferous Cave-Diepositsof Cyprus, 324. 



PALEOLITHIC Floor at Prah Sands, 

 in Cornwall, 138. 

 Talaomastodon, 113. 

 Palajontographical Society, 34, 331. 

 PaliBontology, Text-book of, 17S. 

 Palicontology in the last Forty Years, 



49, 97, 145. 

 PaliBontology in the National Museum, 



Melbourne, 215. 

 Palaeozoic Arachnida, 471. 

 Palffiozoic Cypridina from Canada, 438. 

 Parkinson, J. H., Zoning of the Culm in 



South Germany, 272. 

 Peach & Home, The Canoubie Coalfield, 



82. 

 Peat Moors of the Pennines, 555. 

 Pegmatite Veins, Origin of certain, 308. 

 Peuziince Earthquake of March 3rd, 1904, 



487. 

 Perlcyclus faacieulatus, M'Coy, sp., 27. 

 Persimmon Creek Meteorite, 520. 

 J'hacops Eobertsi, Eeed, sp. uov., 106. 

 Phenomena bearing upon the Age of the 

 Lake of Geneva, 328. 



Phlegrffian Fields, History of Volcanic 

 Action in the, 281. 



Photographs of Geological Interest, 608. 



Pigmy Elephant in the Pleistocene of 

 Cyprus, 325. 



Pillow-lava in Cornwall, 447. 



Plant Petrifactions from Devonshire, 553. 



Flesiolampas Sahara, Bather, sp. uov., 

 293. 



Flesiosaurus Skeleton from the White 

 Lias of "Westhury-on- Severn, 428. 



Purosplmra, Structure and Affinities of 

 the genus, 41. 



Position of Old Eed Sandstone in Geo- 

 logical Succession, 84. 



Prestwichia signata, Beecher, 521. 



Prior, G. T., Sulphostanuite of Lead 

 from Bolivia, 142; A Pillow-lava 

 forming a continuous horizon from 

 MuUion Island to Gorran Haven, 447. 



Pterodactyls, Fingers of, 59. 



Ptcrodon mac rng with us, Andrews, sp. 

 uov., 211. 



Ptychodus, Jaws from the Chalk, 139. 



Q 



SCO 



UARTZITE Dykes in Mountain 

 Limestone, Snelstone, 328. 



RAISED Beaches of the Xortheru 

 Hemisphere, 135. 

 Rastall, R. 11., Basic Patches on the 

 Mount Sorrel Granite, 501 ; Boulders 

 from the Cambridge Drift, 542. 

 Reade, T. M., Evolution of Earth 

 Structure, 79. 



Records of the Geological Survey of 

 India, 520. 



Reed, F. R. C, Xew Fossils from 

 Haverfordwest District, 106; Trilo- 

 bites from Haverfordwest, 343 ; 

 Annals of the South African Museum, 

 426. 



Reid, C, Marine Tertiary Fauna of 

 America and Europe, 136; Palasolithic 

 Floor at Prah Sands, Cornwall, 138 ; 

 Eocene Outlier off the Cornish Coast, 

 190 ; Najas marina in the Peat of 

 liough Gur, Ireland, 555. 



Reid, Lamplugh, and Jukes-Browne, 

 Geology of the Country near Chichester, 

 35. 



Reptilia, Recbissitication of the, 517. 



Retrospect of Geology, 1 ; of Palaeon- 

 tology, 49, 97, 145." 



Reynolds, S. II., Rhretic Beds of the 

 South Wales Direct Line, 141. 



Re)Tiolds i!c Morgan, Carboniferous 

 Limestone of the Bristol District, 87. 



Rhajtic Beds of England, 88 ; of the 

 South Wales Direct Line, 141. 



Rhajtic Rocks around Cliartield, 532. 



Richardson, L., X on- Sequence between 

 the Keuper and Rhffitic of Gloucester- 

 shire and AVorcestershire, 429 ; On the 

 Rhajtic Rocks around Charfield, 532. 



Ricketts, Charles, Obituary of, 240. 



Ripple-mark, Descriptive Nomenclatm-e 

 of, 410. 



River Capture in the Don System, 544. 



Rogers, A. W., Gouritz River System, 

 217. 



RoAve, A. W., Zones of the White Chalk 

 in Yorkshire, 228. 



Royal Microscopical Society, 40. 



Rugosa, Morphology of the, 468. 



Rutlev, Frank, Obituary of, 333. 



s 



ALT Deposits of Dax, 265. 



Sangregraude, Trinidad, Rocks from 



Borings at, 193, 241. 

 Sarsen- Stones in a Clay-pit near Braden- 



ham, 618. 

 Schwartz, E. H. L., Hot Springs, 252. 

 Scottish Carboniferous Rocks, 82 ; Deu- 



tozoic Hocks, 591. 



