578 



Index. 



BON 



CRU 



Bone Cave in the Carboniferous of the 

 Wye Valley, 101. 



Bone-beds of Pikermi, 482. 



Bonney, T. G., Yorkshire Boulders, 95 

 Schists from the Lepontine Alps, 161 

 Names for British Ice-sheet, 187, 332 

 Life of, 385 ; On the Limburgite from 

 near Sasbach, 411. 



Bonney & Hill, Drifts of the Baltic Coast 

 of Germany, 41. 



Brachylepas cretacea, H. Woodw., gen. 

 nov., 150, 240, 528. 



{Bradytherium) grave, Andrews, 407 ; 

 see Barytherimn, 528. 



Branner & Newsom, Economic Geology, 

 471. 



British Association, Glasgow, Geological 

 Address, 452 ; List of Papers read, 516. 



British Earthquakes of 1900, 358. 



British Ice-sheets, Names for, 142, 187, 

 284, 332. 



British Pleistocene Fishes, 49. 



Brown, H. Y. L., Map and Report on 

 the Tarcoola District, 424. 



Buckman, S. S., Bajocian and Con- 

 tiguous Deposits on the North Cottes- 

 wolds, 46 ; Homojomorphy among 

 Jurassic Brachiopoda, 326 ; Jurassic 

 Brachiopoda, 478. 



Buliminm and Cassidulinm, 420. 



Bullen, R. Ashington, Notes on two 

 Well -Sections, 280; Eolithic Imple- 

 ments, 426. 



Burckhardt, Prof. Dr. Rudolf, OnTriassic 

 Starfishes, 3. 



pAMBRIAN Brachiopoda, etc., 473. 



Cambrian, Discovery of Eurypterid 



Remains in the, 561. 

 Cambrian Fossils of St. Fran9ois County, 



Missouri, 559. 

 Camel and Nilghai from the Upper 



Miocene of Samos, 354. 

 Canada, The Geological Survey of, 136. 

 Canadian Geology, 471. 

 Canadian Palseozoic Corals, 472. 

 Carboniferous, Lower, Fishes of Eastern 



Fifeshire, 110. 

 Carboniferous Shale from Siberia, 433. 

 Carboniferous System of Eastern Canada, 



266. 

 Carboniferous Trilobites, Notes on some, 



152. 

 Carter, "W". L., Underground "Waters of 



North-West Yorkshu-e, 75. 

 Caucasian Museum, 522. 

 Caucasus, On the, 372. 

 Caves and Pot-holes of Ingleborough, 77. 

 Chalk Ammonite, Note on a, 251. 

 Chalk Cirripede from Normch, 145 ; 



and Dorset, 528. 



Chapman, F., On the Olifant Klip from 



Natal, 552. 

 Characters of Mammals, 242. 

 Cheviot Porphyrites in the Boulder-clay 



of East Yorkshire, 143. 

 Cheviots, Evidences of Ancient Glacier - 



dammed Lakes in the, 513. 

 Circulation of Salt in its Relation to 



Geology, 344, 445, 504. 

 Cirripede from the Upper Chalk of 



Norwich, 145 ; of Dorset, 528. 

 Clark, W. B., Geological Survey of 



Maryland, 266, 418. 

 Clarke, J. M., New Palfeozoic Cnistacea, 



472. 

 Clarke, W. J., Extension of the Shrop- 



sliire Coalfields under the Triassic 



Rocks, 45. 

 Claypole, E. W. , Petroleum in California, 



268 ; Obituary of, 480, 527. 

 Climate under which the Coal was 



formed, 31. 

 Clough, C. T., Suardalan, Glenelg, 382. 

 Coal, Origin of, 29. 



Coal-measm-es of the Shi'opshire Coal- 

 fields, 45, 79. 

 Coal-measures of South Wales, An Insect 



from the, 65. 

 Codrington, T., Submerged and Glaciated 



Rock-Valleys, 572. 

 Ccelacanthus, On the Pectoral Fin of , 71. 

 Cole, G. A. J., On BehnurHskiltorkensis, 



52 ; Concretions of Calcite in Magnesian 



Limestone, 187. 

 Colorado, The Grand Canyon of the, 324. 

 Complimentary Dinner to Sir A. Geikie, 



F.R.S., 287. 

 Concretionary Types in Cellular Mag- 

 nesian Limestone of Durham, 34, 187. 

 Concretions of Calcite in Magnesian 



Limestone, 187. 

 Connection of the Glacial Period with 



Oscillation of the Land, 205. 

 Conte, J. Le, Professor, Obitiiary of, 384. 

 Coomara-Swamy, A. K., Occurrence of 



Corundum as a Contact - Mineral at 



Pont-Paul, 95; Circulation of Salt, 



575. 

 Copper -bearing Rocks of South Austi-aUa , 



520. 

 Coralline Rocks of St. Ives and Elsworth, 



45, 78. 

 Craig, Robert. Obituary of, 191. 

 Crane, Edward, Obituary of, 286. 

 Cretaceous Lizard from the Island of 



Lesiua, 523. 

 Cretaceous Rocks of Britain, 82. 

 Cretaceous Rocks of Queen Charlotte 



Islands, 138. 

 Crick, G. C, A Chalk Ammonite, 251. 

 Crustacea from the Upper Cretaceous of 



Faxe, 486. 



