578 



Index. 



CAR 



Carpenter, H. P., Morphology of the 



Cystidea, 135 ; Obituary of, 528, 573. 



Catalogue of British Fossil Vertebrata, 



25- 



Eocene MoUusca in the 



British Museum, 550. 



Fossil Fishes in the British 



Museum, 123. 



Minerals, 84. 



Caucasus, Transverse Valleys in the, 



392. 

 Cause of Monoclinal Flexure, 505 . 

 Causes of Volcanic Action, 121. 

 Century Ago, A Geologist of a, i. 

 Cephalopoda, Catalogue of Fossil, 324. 

 Ciply, Tooth of Extinct Alligator 



from, 114. 

 Changes of Levels in North America, 



330. 

 Charnvirood Forest, the North-w^est 



Region of, 86. 

 Classification of American Palaeozoic 



Crinoids, 78. 

 Clark, W. B., Revision of American 



Echinoidea, 234. 

 Cole, G. A. J., Aids to Practical 



Geology, 230. 

 Colour-markings on Waldheimia per- 

 forata, 458. 

 Concerning Nomenclature, 576. 

 Concretions in Magnesian Limestone, 



528. 

 Coniston Flags, 528. 

 Contact-Structure in Syenite of Brad- 

 gate Park, 86. 

 Contributions to Precambrian Geology, 



482. 

 Cooke, J. H., on the Pleistocene Beds 



of Gozo, 348. ; Notes on Stereodon 



Melitensis, 546. 

 Cordillera, Recent Elevation of the 



American, 441. 

 Cotteau, G., Cretaceous Echinodea of 



Mexico, 234. 

 Cotteswold Field Club, 554. 

 Cretaceous Echinoids, Abnormal, 116. 



Fishes from Mexico, 514. 



Scandinavia, 80. 



Crick and Foord on Nautilus Neocomi- 



ensis, 25. 

 Crinoidal Stems in the Ordovician of 



Sweden, 141. 

 Cross-Fell Inlier, 282. 



"P)ALL, W. H., Tertiary Flora of 

 -*-^ Florida, 130. 



Elevation of America 



in the Tertiary Period, 287. 



Dames, W., on Nothosaicria, 35 ; on a 



Swedish Cretaceous Bird, 77 ; a 



Tertiary Fish from Melbourne, 475, 



EXT 



Davies, W., Obituary of, 144, 190. 



Davis, J. W., on Scandinavian Cre- 

 taceous Fishes, 80 ; a new species of 

 Fossil Fish from Levenshulme, 465. 



Davison, C, on British Earthquakes, 

 57, 306, 364, 450; on the Expansion 

 Theory of Mountain Evolution, 210 ; 

 Sand brought up by Lobworms, 498. 



Dawson, Sir J. W., on Carboniferous 

 Amphibians, 146 ; Note on Hylono- 

 mus Lyelli, 258. 



Day, A. E., on Funnel-holes on 

 Lebanon, 91. 



Dean, B., Pineal Foramen in Fishes, 



513- 

 Dendrerpeton Acadianum, Owen, 146. 

 Denudation and Elevation of the Weald, 



88. 

 Derby, O. A., on Nepheline Rocks, 



84. 

 Detrital Tourmaline in a Quartz Schist, 



465- 

 Dicynodont from the Elgin Trias, 430. 

 Dorset, Lower Greensand in, 456. 

 Drift Stages of the Darent Valley, 136. 

 Duncan, P. M., Obituary of, 332. 

 Dynamo -metamorphism, 47, 48, 89, 



94, 240, 296, 430, 431, 479. 



■pARTHQUAKES, British, 57, 



^-^ 306, 364, 450. 



Edwards, W. B. D., on the Separation 

 of Minerals, 273. 



Effect of Sedimentation on Temper- 

 ature, 262. 



Elbolton Cave, Exploration of, 525. 



Elevation and Subsidence during the , 

 Glacial Period, 92, 143, 287. 



of the American Cordillera, 



441. 



of the Highlands of Eastern 



Asia, 98, 156. 



EngUsli, G. L., Catalogue of Minerals, 



84. 

 Eocene and Oligocene Beds of the 



Paris Basin, 553. 

 Essays on Theoretical Geology, 8, 70- 

 Esther ia Andrewsii, Jones, sp. nov., 



SO. 



Hmdei, Jones, sp. nov,, 51. 



Estherice, on some more Fossil, 49. 

 Evans, J. W., Apparatus for Isolating 



Minerals, 67 ; Geology of N.E. of 



Caithness, 478. 

 Evolution of Animals, 515. 

 Excavations at Oldbury Hill, 524- 

 Expansion Theory of Mountain Evolu- 

 tion, 210. 

 Exploration of the Glacial Lake Agassiz, 



228. 

 Extinct Reptilia, 381. 



