578 
ADELL, H. M., Klondike and 
Yukon Goldfield, 89. 
Cader Idris, Ordovician in, 30. 
Cairo, Subsoil of, 39. 
Calcium Carbonate and Evolution in 
Polyzoa, 73. 
Californian Paleontology, 283. 
Pliocene, 284. 
Cambrian of Canadian Cordillera, 
181. 
Canada, Economic Geology of, 87. 
Cantrill, T. C., South Wales Coal- 
field, 274. 
Canu, M.F., French Tertiary Polyzoa, 
376. 
Carboniferous Fossils, Siam, 284. 
Carrara Marble District, 92. 
Marbles, Geological Age of, 47. 
Cassiterite, Malaya, 255. 
San Diego, California, 429. 
Cephalopod, Mandible of Giant, 260. 
Cesaro, C., Demonstration of Law of 
Millar, 139. 
Chacko, I. C., Cordierite, 462. 
Chalk Polyzoa, 97, 241, 337, 433. 
Channels from Glacier Ice-dammed 
Lakes, 26, 45, 77, 229. 
Chapman, F., Hqwisetites wonthag- 
giensis, 2325; Victorian Trilobites, 
232; Cainozoic of Mallu and Vic- 
torian Bores, 281 ; Generic Position 
of “ Asterolepis ornata, var. aus- 
tralis’’, 373. 
Chemical Analyses, St. Bees Sand- 
stone, 17. 
Chirosauroid Footprint, Lower Keuper 
Sandstone, 421. 
Chrysochloris, Skull of, 333. 
Cidarid from Hartwell Clay, 302. 
Cimolestes cutleri, A. S. Woodw., 
sp. noy., 333. 
Clark, W. B., Mesozoic and Cenozoic 
Echinodermata, 277. 
Clarke, F. W., Inorganic Constituents 
of Echinoderms, 231. 
Climate of Geologic Time, 129. 
Closing of National Geological Collec- 
tions, 192. 
Clough, C. T., Obituary of, 525. 
Coal and Coal Resources, Canada, 87. 
Coal Discussion, British Association, 
Newcastle, 511. 
Coal Resources, Canada, 232. 
Coalfields, Present and Future, 550. 
Coal-measure Amphibia and Crossop- 
terygia, 35. 
Coals of South Wales, 220. 
Coastal Changes, Factors in, 188. 
Caloceras Davai, rectiradiatum, var. 
noy., W. Wingrave, 196. 
Index. 
Collins, W. H., Age of Killarney 
Granite, 571. 
Contact-Zone of Alps and Apennines, 
Liguria, 400, 447, 489. 
Cope, T. H., Igneous Rocks, North 
Wales, 90. 
Corals, Eocene, New Guinea, 482. 
Cordierite, Optically Positive, 462. 
Correlation of Potassium and Mag- 
nesium, etc., 233. 
Corrosive Action of Brines, 31. 
Cotton, C. A., Geology of New 
Zealand, 243, 314. 
Cottonwood—American Fork, Survey 
of, 428. 
Cox, A. H., Ordovician, Cader Idris,30. 
Crag Mollusca, British, 472. 
Cranbrook Map, British Columbia, 523. 
Cretaceous Lamellibranchiata, Cata- 
logue of British Types, 37. 
Crick, G. C., Gigantic Cephalopod 
‘Mandible, 260. 
Cross, W., Lavas of Hawaii, 89. 
Crystalline Rocks, Northern Piémont, 
198, 250, 304, 348, 505. 
Crystallographic Relations of Allied 
Substances, 44. 
DA CHIARDIA macgregorz, 486. 
Dallas, J., Obituary of, 477. 
Dana’s System of Mineralogy, 326. 
Davies, A. M., Oxford and Ampthill 
Clays, 395. 
Davies, G. M., Rock and Minerals, 
Croydon, 572. 
Dawson, Charles, Obituary of, 477. 
Day, T. C., Veining in Basalt, Upper 
Whitfield, 137. 
Deeley, R. M., Trail and Underplight, 
2; Fluvio-glacial Gravels, Thames 
Valley, 57; Thames Valley Gravels, 
111; Isostasy, 323; Ice Age and 
Glacier Fluctuations, 536. j 
Delta Deposits of the Nile, 39. 
Demonstration of Law of Millar, 139. 
Desch, C. H., Origin of Agates, 525. 
Determinative Mineralogy, 179. 
Dewey, H., River Gorges in Cornwall 
and Deyon, 234. 
Diamond, Origin of, 327. 
Diatomaceous Deposit, Loch Leven, 
136. : 
Dickerson, R. E., Tejon Cretaceous, 
California, Fauna of, 377. 
Differentiation in Igneous Rocks, 189. 
Dinosaurs in Bushmanland, 283. 
Doelter’s Handbook of Mineralogy, 39. 
Dowling, D. B., Coal-fields, Canada, 
232: 
Draper, D., Origin of Diamond, 327. 
