580 I^^^^' 



HAR 



Harrison, AV. J., Textbook of Geology, 

 329. „ .„„ 



Haugliton, Eev. Prof., Obituary of, 5(3. 

 Hicks, H., Subdivisions of the Carbon- 

 iferous Series in Great Britain, 91 ; 

 The Age of the Morte Slate Fossils, 



105 ; Morte Slate and Associated 



Beds in North Devon and West 



Somerset, 236. 

 High-level Shelly Clays and Mr. Mellard 



Reade, 189. 

 Hill, E., Low-tide Causeways, 361. 

 Himalayan Fossils, 562. 

 Himalayas, The Gneissose- Granite of the, 



804,346. 

 Hind, Wheelton, On the General Sequence 



of the Carboniferous Rocks, 144 ; Sub- 



di-^asions of the Carboniferous Series 



in Great Britain, 159, 205. 

 Holland, T. H., On Augite - Diontes 



with Micropegmatite, 330. 

 Holm, Gerhard, On Baltoceras, gen. nov., 



251. 



Hornb'lende-Picrite from the Zmutthal, 



Howorth, Sir H. H., On the Erratic 

 Boulders, etc., in the Drift of Eastern 

 England, 123, 153 ; Water versuslce 

 as an Explanation of the Surface Beds 

 of Eastern England, 213 ; The Surface 

 Contour of Scandinavia and Finland, 



355, 361. ., , ^ , , , 



HuU E Another Possible Cause of the 



Gl'acial Period, 48, 89 ; Sir Henry 



Howorth and the Glaciation ot 



Norway, 453 ; Scandinavian Ice and 



Norfolk Drift, 572. 

 Hume W. F., The Cretaceous Strata 



of County Antrim, 332. _ 



Hunt, A. R., Foreign Boulders m the 



Chalk, 239. ^ „„„ 



Hunter, Rev. Robert, Obituary of, 382. 

 Hutchinson, H. N., Prehistoric Man 



and Beast, 77. 



MAR 



Jones T. R., Fossil Entomostraca from 

 Brazil, 195 ; Fossil Entomostraca from 

 South America, 259, 289. 



Judd, J. W., On William Smiths 

 Manuscript Maps, 439. 



KAYSER, E., Notes on Volcanic 

 Bombs, 91. 

 Keislev Limestone, The Fauna ot the, 47. 

 Kilkenny, New Specimen of Ceraier- 



peton Gahani from, 293. 

 KUroe, J. R., On the Distribution ot 



the Drift in Ireland, 288. 

 Kimberley, Rock- Specimens from, 44b, 

 497. 



IGNEOUS Magmas, Differentiation in, 

 553. , , T 



Igneous Rocks in North Pembrokeshire, 



334. 



Indications of Earthquakes, 93. 

 Inflammable Gas and Vapour m the Air, 



88 

 International Geological Congress, 517. 



JAPANESE Earthquake of 1891, 

 Effect of, 23. r. ^ ■ ^ 



Johnston, W. and A. K., Geological 



Map of the British Isles, 417. 

 Johnston-La vis, H. J., On the Chemical 

 Name for H3 0, 526. 



T ACCOLITES of Cutch, 331. 



L Lake, Philip, On the Actual 



Direction of Movement in Faults, bio. 

 Lakes of Caernarvonshire, Notes on 



some of the, 404. -, ^ - ■ 



Laurentian System, Structure and Origm 



of certain Rocks of the, 516. 

 Lewis, H. Carvill, Genesis of the 



Diamond, 367. 

 Life of the Eev. P. B. Brodie 481. 

 Life and Work of Dr. Croll, 71. 

 Life-Zones in the British Carboniferous 



Rocks, 47, 556. . 



Lincoln, New Section m the Middle 



Lias of, 253. r^,r^ ^ \ 



Listof Papers read in Section C (Geology), 



British Association Meeting at Toronto, 



LoWey, J. L., On the Depth of the 

 Source of Lava, 189. 



Lomas, J., Are Crystalline Gneisses por- 

 tions of the Original Earth's Crust? 



537. 

 Low-tide Causeways, 361. 

 Lundgren, Dr. Bernhard, Obituary of, 



144, 431. 

 Lynchets, On the Origin of, 379. 

 Lyons, H. G., Note on the Nubian 



Desert South-East of Korosko, tdi. 



MADAGASCAR, A nearly complete 

 Skeleton of Mpyornis from, 242. 

 Madreporarian Types of Corals, Syste- 

 matic Study of, 170. 1 T „ 

 Manchester, Sheffield, and Lincolnshire 



Railway, Geology of, 49, 98. 

 Manuscript Maps by William Smith, 439. 

 Map of the Lake of the Woods, etc. , 519. 

 Map of Trail Creek, British Columbia, 



Maps, New Geological Survey, 192 

 Marine Animals, Distribution ot, 2b&. 



