580 



Index. 



HAR 



LOE. 



Fell, 551 ; Sir H. Howorth on the 



Holderness Boulders, 565. 

 Harkuess Scholarships in G-eology, 288. 

 Harlech Area, Geology of the, 565. 

 Harlech Mountains, Sporadic Glaciation 



in the, 510. 

 Harrison, W. J., Localities for Natrolite, 



etc., 567. 

 Hart, F., "Western Australia, 421. 

 Haug, Ernie, on Jurassic Ammonites, 



170. 

 Heligoland, On the Stratified Formation 



of, 84. 

 Hicks, H., Life -Zones in the Lower 



Paleozoic Eocks, 368, 399, 441 ; 



Lacustrine Deposits of the Glacial 



Period, 465. 

 Hill, E., Eapid Elevation, 144. 

 Hodder, Carboniferous Trilobites from 



the Banks of the, 481. 

 Holderness Boulders, 565. 

 Holmes, T. V., Sections from Eomford 



to Upminster, 283. 

 Howorth, Sir H. H., On the Mammoth 



Age, 161 ; Eecent Changes of Level 



and their Teaching, 257, 405 ; Eeply 



to two Critics, 371 ; On the Scandi- 

 navian Ice-sheet, 496; An Erect Tree 



in the Coal-measures, 527. 

 Hudson's Bay, Pleistocene N.W. and 



W. of, 394. 

 Hull, E., Artesian Borings at New 



Lodge, "Windsor, 92 ; Mr. "Watts on 



the Tardree Perlite, 236. 

 Hume, "W. F., Notes on Eussian Geo- 

 logy, 303, 349; On the Genus Cymbites, 



351. 

 Hunt, A. E., Age and Origin of the 



Dartmoor Granites, 97 ; The Devonian 



Volcanic Eocks of Start Bay, 286 ; 



Dynamical Metamorphism, 430. 

 Hutchiugs, "W. M., Composition of Clays 



and Slates, 36, 64 ; Sediments Dredged 



from Lakes, 300. 

 Hutchinson, H. N., Creatures of Other 



Days, 426. 

 JSyopotamus, 487. 



I 



CE Age, The Canadian, 274. 

 Ice-sheet, On the Scandinavian, 496. 

 The Mechanics of an, 511. 



Identity of ElUpsolites compressus with 



A.ininonites Ilensloxvi, 1 1 . 

 International Geological Congress, 



Zurich, 480. 

 Iron-ore in the Boring at Shakespeare's 



Cliff, Dover, 512. 

 Irving, Eev. Dr. A., Twenty Years' "Work 



at the Younger Eed Eocks, 363. 

 Isle of "Wight, Tertiary Insects from 



the, 167. 



JAPAN, The Seismological Journal of, 

 178, 471. 

 Jeffs, 0. W., Saurian Footprints from 



the Trias of Cheshire, 451. 

 Johnston-Lavis, H. J., Quartz ia the 



Lava of Stromboli, 47 ; Eruptive 



Eocks of Gran, Norway, 252 ; "\''ol- 



canic Phenomena of Vesuvius, 513. 

 Jones, T. E., Ehastic and Liassic Ostra- 



coda of Britain, 93 ; Geology of the 



Plateau Implements in Kent, 416 ; 



Chipped Flints in Upper Miocene, 



Burma, 525. 

 Jones and "Woodward, On some Fossil 



Phyllopoda, 289, 559. 

 Jukes-Browne and Meyer, Chloritic 



Marl and Warminster Greensand, 



494. 

 Jurassic Ammonites, 170, 298, 357. 

 Bryozoa, 61. 



Cephalopoda from "Western Aus- 

 tralia, 385, 434. 



Eocks of Britain, The, 85, 520. 



Species of Cheilostomata, 356. 



KANSAS, Footprints of Vertebrates 

 in the Coal-measures of, 337, 432. 

 Keuper Sandstone Cemented by Barium 



Sulphate, 510. 

 Kokeu, E., The Past "World and its 



Evolution, 281. 

 Kynaston, H., On the Gosau Beds, 91. 



T ACUSTEINE Deposits of the Glacial 

 Lj Period in Middlesex, 465. 

 Lake District, Cordierite in the, 169. 

 Lake, P., On the Denbighshire Series of 



South Denbighshire, 564. 

 Lakeland, Physiographical Studies in, 



489, 539. 

 Landscape Marble, by B. Thompson, 231. 

 Lansdell, H., A Eide to Little Thibet, 



329. 

 Leeson and Laffan, Pleistocene Geology 



in the Valley of the Thames at 



Twickenham, 283. 

 Leigh Creek, Jurassic Coal-measures of, 



S. Australia, 93. 

 Level of Lake Leman, 48. 

 Level, On Eecent Changes of, 502. 

 Lewis, H. C, Glacial Geology, 469. 

 Life-Zones in the Lower Paljeozoic 



Rocks of Britain, 368, 399, 441. 

 Lomas, J., An ancient Glacial Shore, 



222. 

 London, The Malacological Society of, 



426. 

 Loriol's Echinoids of Portugal, 228. 



