582 



Index. 



PAL 



PALEONTOLOGY, Handbook of, 



37; 



Palaeozoic Fishes, 374. 

 Pantobiblion, 427. 



Panton, J. H., Mastodon and Mam- 

 moth in Ontario, 504. 

 Pavlow, M., Note on Hipparion, 517. 

 Pays-Bas, Geology of the, 224. 

 Penning, W. H., Geology of the 



Southern Transvaal, 235. 

 Perched Blocks near Austwick, 291. 

 Perforating Fungi, in Fossil Elasmo- 



branch Teeth, 35. 

 Permian Fishes of France, 477. 

 Perissodactyla, on the Molars of the, 



317, 384- 

 Petroleum, Geology, 508. 



Origin of, 506. 



Petrological Notes, 536. 



Petrology, Introduction to the Study of, 



276. 

 Pfaff's Allgemeine Geologie, 384. 

 Phenomena of the Glacial Epoch, 217, 

 Pholidophorus Ger7nanicus, 545. 

 Physical Geology of the Sub- Himalaya, 

 93- 



Tennessee, 45. 



Physical Study of an Ancient Estuary, 



.357. 

 Picrite in Sark, 332. 

 Pineal Foramen in Fishes, 531. 

 Pleistocene Beds of Gozo, 348. 

 PUiironaulilus nodoso-carinatus, Romer, 



sp., 481. 

 Pollini, C., Tertiary Fishes of Aix-en- 



Provence, 476. 

 Porphyritic Rocks of Jersey, 41. 

 Post-Pliocene Continental Subsidences, 



262. 

 Post-Tertiary Marine Deposits, 383. 

 Potonie, H., Erect Tree-stump with 



Roots, 133. 

 Practical Geology, Aids to, 230. 

 Precambrian Geology, 482. 

 Prestwich, J., Drift in the Darent Valley, 

 136; Saiga Antelope in Britain, 190. 

 Priem, F., Evolution of Ammonites, 



515- 

 Pristis, Monograph of Fossil Species 



of, 427. 

 Pristiphorus, Fossil Remains of, 39. 

 Proceedings of the Cotteswold Field- 

 Club, 550. 

 Pseudotrionyx Delheidi, 546. 

 Purbecks in the Vale of Wardour,'455. 

 Pylle Hill, Rhastic Section at, 285. 



"D FADE, T. M., Theory of Monn- 



-*■*- tain Building, 140; Sedimentation 



and Temperature, 262 ; Perched 



STE 



Blocks of Norber Brow, 291 ; Normal 

 Faulting, 487. 



Recent and Rapid Elevation, 98, 156, 

 294. 



Reply to Mr. Somervail, 89. 



Restoration of Stegosaurus, 385. 



Reusch, H., on Glacial- striae and 

 Boulder-clay, 215. 



Ristori, Dr., on the Italian Alps, 36. 



Roberts, T., on two Abnormal Creta- 

 ceous Echinoids, 116. 



Rock-shelters, 524. 



Specimens from Kimberley, 412. 



Rocks from the Tonga Islands, 250, 



North Devon, 43. 



■ of Pembrokeshire and Devon, 



500. 



Roper, G., Dicynodont from the Trias, 

 430- 



Ross, O. C. D., The Origin of Petro- 

 leum, 506. 



Rutley, F., on a Spherulitic and Perlitic 

 Obsidian, 285. 



Rutile in Fireclays, 259, 304. 



CAIGA Antelope in Britain, 94, 



*^ 190. 



Salt Range, Recent Investigations in 



the, 410. 

 Sand brought up by Lobworms, 489. 

 Sands and Gravels in Boulder-clay, 



337, 402. 

 Sansan, Fossil Mammals of, 277. 

 Sauvage, H. E., Lower Permian Fishes 



of France, 477. 

 Scandinavian Glacier, the, 387. 

 Scudder, S. H., Tertiary Insects of 



North America, 280. 

 Seeley, H. G., on a Saurischian Reptile 



from Australia, 138; on Bubalus 



Bamii, sp. nov., 199. 

 Shap, Altered Coniston Flags at, 459. 



Granite, 139. 



Sherborn and Smith Woodward, Cata- 

 logue of Vertebrata, 25. 

 Siliceous Rocks from South Australia, 



.115- 



Sjogren, H., on Valleys in the Caucasus, 



392. 

 Somerset, a nearly perfect Ichihyo- 



satirus from, 289. 

 Somervail, A,, Geology of the Lizaid, 



46. 

 Spencer, J. W., Continental Subsidence 



in America, 262. 

 Stebbing, T. R. R., the Naturalist of 



Cumbrae, 218. 

 Stegosaurus, Restoration of, 385. 

 "Stem-ossicles" of Crinoidea, 88. 



