580 



Index. 



GEE 



KLE 



Great Ice Age, 321, 348, 402. 



■ and Antiquity of Man, 29. 



' in relation to Submer- 

 gence, 348, 402. 



Gregory, J. W., Fossils from tlie Lower 

 Greensand in Kent, 97, 187 ; Palae- 

 ontology and Physical Geology of the 

 West indies, 184 ; The ' Schistes 

 Lustres' of Mont Jovet, 574. 



Gresley, "W. S., On the Eastern Limits 

 of the Midland Coalfield. 92 ; Structure 

 and Peculiarities of Iron Ores of Lake 

 Superior Region, 92 ; Indentations of 

 the Bunter Pebbles, 239 ; Ice-plough 

 Furrows of a Glacial Period, 280. 



Grimes, G. E., Eadiolarians in English 

 Cretaceous Rocks, 345. 



HALL and Clarke's Palseozoic Brachio- 

 poda, etc., 327. 

 Harker, R., Carrock Fell, A Study in 

 the Variation of Igneous Rock-masses, 

 139; Petrology for Students, 514. 



Prof. Allen, Obituary of, 96. 



Harmer, F. W., On Deep Boring, 



476. 

 Hatch and Chalmers, Geology of Ma- 

 shonaland and Matabeleland, 193 ; 

 Gold Mines of the Rand, 571. 

 Hicks, H., On the genus Tlutonides, 



from St. Davids, 96. 

 Hill, W. and Jukes-Browne, On the Oc- 

 cuiTence of Radiolaria in Chalk, 372. 

 Hill, Rev. E., Questions and Answers 

 on Ice Motion, 79 ; The Tower of 

 Eccles-by-the-Sea, 229; Observations 

 on East Anglian Boulder-clay, 555. 

 Hinde and Fox, Radiolarian Rocks in 

 the Lower Culm of Devon, Cornwall, 

 and Somerset, 332. 

 Holm, G., On Didymograptus, etc., 



433, 481. 

 Hoskins, P., On Glauconite from An- 

 trim, 317. 

 Howorth, Sir H. H., " Two Birds with 

 One Stone," 46 ; On the Shingle Beds 

 of Eastern East Anglia, 280; The 

 Chalky Clay of the Fenland and its 

 Borders, 373. 

 Hulke, Dr. J. W., Obituary of, 144, 



189. 

 Hull, E., Geological Age of the Rocks of 

 Charnwood Forest, 92 ; Fresh-water 

 Fishes in the Nile and Jordan "Waters, 

 140 ; The Glacial Deposits of Aber- 

 deenshire, 450. 

 Human Remains from Palseolithic 



Gravels in Kent, 330. 

 Hunt, A. R., Budleigh Salterton Peb- 

 bles, 240 ; Note on the Torbay Raised 

 Beaches, 405. 



Hutchings, "W. M., An Interesting Con- 

 tact-Rock, 122, 163 ; A Contact- 

 Rock from Shap, 314. 



and McMahon, Note on 



Pseudo-Spherulites, 257. 



Huxley, The Right Hon. T. H., 

 Obituary of, 337. 



Kyanodon, On a Restoration of, 441. 



ICE Age, Astronomical Theory of, 3, 

 55 



— Dr. Croll's Theory of the, 



142. 



Motion, Questions and Answers 



on, 79. 



Ice -plough Furrows of a Glacial 

 Period, 280. 



Iguanodon, in the British Museum, Re- 

 construction of, 289. I 



Ilyocypris oblonga, sp. nov., T. R. 

 Jones, 24. 



Indentation of the Bunter Pebbles, 239. 



Interesting Contact-Metamorphism, 432. 



— — Rock, 122, 163. 



Interglacial Deposits, On Scottish, 



217. 



Introduction of Modern Geology, 89. 



Iron Ores of the Lake Superior Region, 

 92. 



Ironstone above the Chalk near Dover, 

 227. 



Ishihara, H., On Contact-Metamor- 

 phism, 432. 



TOHNSTON-LAVIS, H., Pipernoid 

 tl Tuff of the Campania, 309. 

 Jones, T. R., FossU Ostracoda from 



Canada, 20. 

 and Woodward, H., On some 



Palaeozoic Phyllopoda, 539. 

 Jukes-BroAvne, A. J., Gault and Lower 



Greensand, 188. 



KARAKORAM-HIMALAYAS, Ex- 

 ploring in the, 88. 



Kendall, J. D., On Whitehaven Sand- 

 stone Series, 185. 



Kent, Lower Greensand Fossils in, 187. 



Keraterpetuni Galvani, Huxley, 81. 



Keswick, Notes on some Railway Cut- 

 tings near, 282. 



Keuper Outlier near Kidderminster, 265. 



Kimberley, Notes on the Diamond-bear- 

 ing Rocks of, 493. 



Klement, M. C., Origin of Dolomite, 

 329. 



