AVRIL, MAI ET JUIN I907 4^ 



— Edimbourg. P. ofthe R. S. ofEdinburgh, XXVII, i,a, 1907. 



— P. R. ph r s. S., XVI, 8, 1907. 



— The Scottish Geogr. Mag., XXIII, 4, 5, 6. 



4 : M. J. Newbigin. The Swiss Valais a Study in Régional Geography, 

 769-191. — Lionel W. Hinxman. The Hivers of Scotland : The Beauly and 

 Conon, 192-202. — 5 : Marion J. Newbigin. A Study in Régional Geography : 

 The Swiss Valais, 225-238. — 6 : Cadell. Some Old Mexican Volcanoes, 

 281 3io. 



— Londres. Geol. Literature, Geol. S. Library, 1906. 



— Rep. ofthe Rritish Ass. for the Advancement of Se 1906. 

 Kendall. On the Geology of the Country round York, 558. — Fearnsides. 



The Lower Palœzoic Rocks of Pomeray, 558. — Culpin and Grâce. Récent 

 Exposures of Glacial Drift at Doncaster and Tickhill, 559. — H. Broodrick. 

 On Faults as a Predisposing Cause ofthe Existence- of Pot-holes on Inglebo- 

 rough, 559. — Danford. Notes on the Speetan Ammonites. 56o. — J. Par- 

 kinson. The Post Cretaceous Stratigraphy of Southern Nigeria, 56i-562. — 

 Edgeworth David. An Occurence of Diamonds in the Matrix at Oakey 

 Creek near Juverell New South Wales, 562-563. — Hatch. On « the Gullinan » 

 Diamond, 563 — Holland. Exhibition of a remarkable Form of Sodalite 

 from Rajputana, 563. — Wilmore. A Contribution to our Knowledge of the 

 Limestone Knolls of Ct-aven, 563. — Garwood. The Fauna Séquence in the 

 Lower Carboniferous Rocks of Westmorland and the adjacent areas of 

 West Yorkshire and North Lancashire, 564. — Woodward. Fossil Arthro- 

 pods of the Coal-Formation, 567 . — Seward. The Jurassic Plants from the 

 Rocks of East Yorkshire, 568. — J. Cole The Teaching of Geology to Agri- 

 cultural Scholars, 569-570. — Bather. Notes on the Index Animalium, 570. — 

 W. Harmer. The Glacial Deposits of the East of England, 570. — Id. Lake 

 Oxford and the Goring Gap, 572-073. — R. Cotsworth. On the Continuous 

 Glacial Period, 573. — J. Milne. Certain Earthquake Relationships, 573. — 

 Discussion on the Origin of Trias, 574-076. — E. David. Notes on the Permo- 

 Carboniferous Coal-Fields of Australasia, 576. — Gregory. The Problem of 

 the Palœozoic Glaciations of Australia and South Africa, 576. — Ed. Hull. 

 On the Arlesian Boring for the Supply of the City of Lincoln from the New- 

 Red Sandstone, 577-579. — Ed. David. Further Note on the Occurence of 

 Diamond in the Matrix in New-South Wales, 579. — J. Lavis. Récent Obser- 

 vations at Vesuvius, 079. — Oldham. A Criterion of the Glacial Erosion of 

 Lake Bosnis, 579. — L. Carter. Notes on the Glaciation of the Usk and Wye 

 Valleys, 579. — Reynolds. A Silurian Julier in the Easter Mendips, 58o. — 

 Sheppard. On a Section in a Postglacial Lacustrine Deposit at Hornka, 58i. 

 — Kendall. On the Plain of Marine Denudation beneath the Drift of Hol- 

 derness, 58i. — Reynolds. Igneous Rocks ofthe Districts. S. W. of Dolgelly, 

 58i. — Id. A Picrite from the Eastern Mendips, 58i. — J. Lomas. On the 

 Forms of Carbonate of Lime in Pearls and the Pearl-Oyster, 58i. 



— The Quarterly J. ofthe Geol. Surv., LXIII, a, 1907. 



A. Jukes-Browne. On the Age and Origin of the Plateous around Torquay, 

 106-123 — Andrews. On Zenglodon Wanklyni, 124-127. — Mawson and 

 Woodward. On the Cretaceous Formation of Bahia and its Vertebrate 

 Fossiis, 128-139. — Id - O n Scleromochlus Taylori, i4o-i44- — Douglas. On 

 Changes of Physical Constants in Minerais and Igneous Rocks on the Pas- 



