Notices of Memoirs — British Association Meeting, 1887. 467 



■44:. Prof. J. S. Panton. — Places of Geological Interest on the Banks 



of the Saskatchewan. 

 4o. Bev. R Hill.— The Disaster at Zng, on July 5, 1S87. 

 4fi. Dr. A. Fritsch. — On the Permian Fauna of Bohemia. 



47. Prof. W. G. Williamson. — Eeport on the Carboniferous Flora of 



Halifax. 



48. A. SmitJi Woodward. — On the Affinities of the so-called Torpedo 



(Gyclobatis, Egerton) from the Cretaceous of Mount Lebanon. 



49. Prof. J. F. Blahe. — Description of a New Star Fish from the 



Yorkshire Lias. 



50. C. E. Be Bance. — Eeport on the Underground Waters in the 



Permeable Formations of England. 



51. Prof. Vilanova. — Notice du Dinotherium, deux especes, trouvees 



en Espagne. 



52. A. E. Foord. — On the Genus Piloceras, Salter, as elucidated b}^ 



examples lately discovered in N. America, and in Scotland. 



53. J. S. Gardner. — Eeport on the Fossil Plants of the Tertiary 



and Secondary Beds of the United Kingdom. 



54. A. Bell. — Eeport on the " Manure " Gravels of Wexford. 



55. B. G. Pell— The Pliocene Beds of St. Erth, Cornwall. 



56. J. S. Gardner. — Eeport on the Higher Eocene Beds of the Isle 



of Wight. 



57. W. A. E. UssJier. — The Triassic Eocks of West Somerset. 



68. W. A. E. JJsslier. — The Devonian Eocks of West Somerset on 

 the Borders of the Trias. 



59. Prof. H. Garvill Lewis. — The Matrix of the Diamond. 



60. Prof T. G. Bonney. — Observations on the Eounding of Pebbles 



by Alpine Eivers, with a Note on their Bearing upon the 

 Origin of the Bunter Conglomei'ate. 



61. Prof. W. Boyd DaioJcins. — The Present State of the Channel 



Tunnel, and the Boring at Shakespeare's Cliff, near Dover. 



62. Prof. Otto Torell. — On the Extension of the Scandinavian Ice 



to Eastern England in the Glacial period. 



63. Prof H. Garvill Lewis. — On the Terminal Moraine of the Irish- 



Sea Glacier, near Manchester. 



64. E. P. Quinn. — Upon a Simple Method of Projecting Microscopic 



Eock Sections upon the Screen, both by ordinary and by polar- 

 ized light. 



List of Papers bearing upon Geology read in other Sections. 

 Section A. — Mathematical and Physical Science. 



Prof. E. Hidl. — On the Effect of Continental Lands in Altering the 



Level of Adjoining Oceans. 

 H. C. BusseJl. — On some Variations in the Level of the Water in 



Lake George, New South Wales. 



E. Douglas Arcliibald. — The Direction of the Upper Currents over 



the Equator in connexion with the Krakatoa Smoke-Stream. 



Section B. — Chemical Science. 



F. W. Clarice. — The Chemical Structure of Natural Silicates. 



