578 



Index. 



BEI 



DIP 



Brickenden, L., Changes in Old Land- 

 Surfaces, 479. 



Britain, Post- Glacial Man in, 78. 



British Areas, Life-Zone in the Lower 

 Paleozoic Rocks of, 368, 399, 441. 



Association, Papers read before 



the, 415, 459, 510, 558, 559, 560. 

 Carboniferous Cyclus, 530. 



Brodie, P. B., Remarks on Tertiary 



Insects, 169 ; Molluscs in the Upper 



Keuper at Sh'rewley, 232. 

 Brogger, "W. C, Basic Eruptive Rocks 



of Gran, 46. ' 

 Brookite, Natrolite, and Barytes, New 



Localities for, 567. 

 Brown, Alex., Structure and Affinities of 



Solenopora, 145, 195. 

 Buckman, S. S., On Jurassic Am- 



mouites, 298, 357. 

 Builth, Igneous Rocks near, 382. 

 Bullen, R. A., Shells from Portland 



Rubble-Drift, 431. 



CAERNARVONSHIRE, Relations of 

 some of the Older Eragmental 



Rocks in N.W., 383. 

 Callaway, C, On Chlorite as a Source 



of Biotite, 217; How Chlorite is 



Converted into Biotite, 320. 

 CmnptosaMrus, Restoration of, 193. 

 Carboniferous Crinoidea in the American 



Miiseum, 174. 

 Glacial Deposits of India 



and Australia, 334. 

 Carrock Fell, Variolitic Rocks on, 551. 

 Catalogue of Fossils in the Students' 



Stratigraphical Series, 46. 

 Cayeux, L., Proofs of the existence of 



Radiolarians in pre-Cambrian rocks, 



417 ; Remains of Foraminifera in the 



pre-Cambrian of Brittany, 417. 

 Changes of Level, On Recent, 257, 405, 



502. 

 Chapman, F., The Bargate Beds of 



Surrey, 380. 

 Cheilostomata, Some Jurassic Species of, 



61. 

 Chinese Central Asia, 329. 

 Chipped Flints in the Upper Miocene of 



Burma, 525. 

 Chlorite as a Source of Biotite, 217, 



320. 

 Chlorites, The Rape of the. 111. 

 Chloritic Marl and "Warminster Green- 

 sand, 494. 

 Choffat, P., Jurassic Fauna of Portugal, 



325. 

 Churchill, "W., Action of Glaciers, 93. 

 Clarke, J. M., The Protoconch of 



Orthoceras, 141; on the Genus iV«M«o, 



561. 



Climatic Changes, 340. 



Coal-measures, An Erect Tree in the, 527. 



Coal-seams, Formation of, 382. 



Cole, G. A. J., The Tachylytes of County 



Down, 220. 

 Cone-in-Cone, How it Occurs in the 



Devonian in Pennsylvania, 285. 

 Contact-Metamorphism, Clays and Slates 



and their, 36, 64. 

 Conversion of Compact Greenstones into 



Schists, 179. 

 Cooling and Shrinking Globe, A, 203, 



312. 

 ■ Earth, Problems Connected with 



a, 505. 

 Coral in "Dolomites," 1, 49. 

 Cordierite in the Lake District, 169. 

 Cornwall, Occurrence of Pigotite in, 223. 

 Cotteswold Naturalists' Field Club, 179. 

 Creatures of Other Days, 426. 

 Credner, H., on the Stegocephali, 82. 

 Creighton, J. K., Pigotite in Cornwall, 



223. 

 Crick, G. C, Jurassic Cephalopoda, 385, 



434. 

 Crick and Foord, On Prolecanites com- 



pressus, 1 1 ; On Temnocheilus coronatus, 



M'Coy, 295. 

 Crinoidea of Gotland, 130. 

 Crystalline Schists in the Lepontine Alps, 



233. 

 Crystals, A new Method of Measuring, 



518. 

 Cuba, The Yumuri Valley of, 499. 

 Cyclus from various British Localities, 



530. 

 Cyclus Johnsoni, H. "Woodw., sp. nov., 



537. 

 Cymbites, On the Genus, 351. 



DAMES, W., Stratified Formations of 

 Heligoland, 84. 



Dartmoor Granites, Theories of the Age 

 and Origin of the, 97. 



Davies and Gregory, The Geology of 

 Monte Chaberton, 285. 



Davison, C, On Deposits from Snow- 

 drift, 381. 



Dawson, Sir "W., Note on the Genus 

 Naiaclites, 189. 



Dawson's Canadian Ice-Age, 274. 



Deeley, R. M., Uniformity in Geology, 

 335 ; Glacial Geology, 478, 567. 



Deep Borings, 379. 



Denbighshire Series, of South Denbigh- 

 shire, 564. 



Devonian Volcanic Rocks of Start Bay, 

 286. 



Dindymene Sughesice , Reynolds, sp. 

 nov., 109. 



Biplacanthus tenuistriatus, Traq., sp. 

 nov., 255. 



