580 
GAS 
YAS-COAL, Fauna of the, 175. 
Gasteropoda, British Jurassic, 38. 
Geological Development of the Mam- 
malia, 401, 455, 501. 
History of Arctic Lands, 495. 
—— Remarks on certain Islands in 
the New Hebrides, 189. 
Society of Glasgow, 138, 333. 
oS ) ihoncn 2A 135, 
180, 238, 284, 328, 375, 573. 
Survey, 415. 
of United States, 523. 
Time, Measurement of, 97. 
Geologists’ Association, 330. 
Geologists, Eminent Living, 1, 241. 
Geology of Africa, 436. 
of the District West of Caer- 
marthen, 138. 
of the Southern Transvaal, 521. 
and Paleontology of South 
America, 367. 
and Paleontology of Queensland, 
279. 
Text Book of Comparative, 
361. 
Gibson, Walcot, Geological Sketch of 
Central East Africa, 561. 
Glacial Action in Iceland, 426. 
Age, Arctic Lands in the so- 
called, 302. 
Geology, 93. 
and Hskdale Drift, 9. 
Old and New, 35. 
Submergence of the British 
Islands, 277. 
Succession, 31. 
Period, Submergence of the 
British Isles during the, 104. 
Glacier Observations, 349. 
Gosselet, M., Phosphate Beds in the 
North of France, 563. 
Granite, 41. 
‘“Greenstones’’ from the Pennine Alps, 
46. 
Grenadine Islands, Foraminiferal Lime- 
stone from the, 270. 
Gresley, W. S., Notes on some Penn- 
sylvanian Calamites, 86; Anthracite 
and Bituminous Coal-beds, 136. 
Growth of the Indian Peninsula, 309. 
Lake Geneva, Notes on the, 
454, 
ALL and Clarke, Introduction to the 
Study of Paleeozoic Brachiopods, 
130; on Paleeozic Brachiopods, 518. 
Marshall, Glacier Observa- 
tions, 349. 
Hardy, J. D., on Glacial. Submergence, 
Dil 
Index. 
HUN 
Harker, Alfred, Scandinavian Rocks in 
the English Boulder-clays, 140; Meta- 
morphic Rocks around the Shap 
Granite, 287; Magmatie Concentra- 
tion, 546. 
Harlé, E., on Cavern and Pleistocene 
Deposits, South of France, 327. 
Harris, G. D., Republication of Con- 
rad’s Fossil Shells of North America, 
564. 
Hicks, Henry, Folds and Faults in the 
Devonian Rocks, 3; The Mammoth 
and the Glacial Drift, 90, 139; The 
Pre-Cambrian Rocks of Wales, 396; 
on the Base of the Cambrian in 
Wales, 548. 
— T., on Calamostachys Binneyana, 
Schimp, 85. 
Higgins, Rev. H. H., Obituary of, 380. 
Hind, Wheelton, on the Affinities of 
Anthracoptera and of Anthracomya, 
188; Note on Myalina crassa, 514; 
Slab of Shale above the Kinder Scout 
Grit, 540. 
Hinde, G. J., on a new Hexactinellid 
Sponge from Quebec, 56; Note ona 
Radiolarian Rock from Port Darwin, 
137. 
Hobson, Bernard, Granite, 91. 
Holm, Gerhard, on the Hyolithide and 
Conulartide of Sweden, 368. 
Homitray, David, Obituary of, 479. 
Hornblende - Pikrite from Wicklow, 
550. 
Howell, F. W. W., Glacial Action in 
Iceland, 426. 
Howorth, Sir H. H., The True Horizon 
of the Mammoth, 20, 161, 355; The 
Mammoth and the Glacial Drift, 89; 
Condition of the Arctic Lands in the 
so-called Glacial Age, 302; Recent 
Geological History of Arctic Lands, 
495. 
How the Waters of the Ocean became 
Salt, 165. ; 
Hudleston, W. H., Catalogue of Jurassic 
Gasteropoda, 38. 
Hull, E., on the Geological Features of 
Arabia, Petreea, and Palestine, 44 ; 
Submergence of the British Isles 
during the Glacial Period, 104; How 
the Waters of the Ocean became Salt, 
165; Discovery of a Concealed Ridge 
of Pre-Carboniferous Rocks at Nether- 
seal, 552; The Water-bearing Capacity 
of the New Red at Nottingham, 553. 
Hunt, A. R., The Rocks of South Devon, 
139; The Pebble-ridge at West- 
ward Ho, 477 ; Concentric Lamination 
amongst the Pebbles on Northam 
Ridge, 526. 
