Index. 



581 



MAR 



EAI 



Marine Organisms and the Conditions of 

 their Environment, 227. 



Marr, J. E., Life-Zones in the British 

 Carboniferous Rocks, 47 ; Trinucle/is 

 seticornis and the Upper Bala Beds, 

 378, 480. 



Marsh, 0. C, The Dinosaurs of North 

 America, 38 ; On the Skull of Proto- 

 ceras, 433. 



Martin, E. A., Foreign Boulders in the 

 Chalk, 169. 



Maryland Geological Survey, 560. 



Matthews, G. E.,The Oldest Siphonotreta, 

 68. 



McMahon, C. A., Notes on Volcanic and 

 other Rocks which occur between 

 Chaman and Persia, 234 ; On the Age 

 of the Gueissose- Granite of the Hima- 

 layas, 304, 345. 



Memoir of William Pengelly, 557. 



Mesosaurian Reptile from Brazil, 145. 



Mesozoic Fauna from Borneo, 407. 



Method of Determining Actual Direc- 

 tion of Movement in Faults, 545. 



Microscopic Contents of a sample of 

 Bracklesham Clay, 226. 



Middle Lias of Lincoln, New Section in 

 the, 253. 



Millericrinus recuhoriensis from the 

 Muschelkalk, 116. 



Mineralogical Geology, 418. 



Moissan, H., Chemical Geology, 178. 



Mojsisovics, E., On Himalayan Fossils, 

 562. 



Mollusca, Catalogue of Tertiary, 278. 



Mollusca of the Chalk Rock, 286. 



Morte Slate Fossils, Age of the, 59, 105, 

 191, 236. 



Morton, G. H., On the Range of Species 

 in Carboniferous Limestone in North 

 Wales, 132 ; Geology of the Country 

 around Liverpool, 565. 



Murray, Dr. J., On Marine Organisms, 

 227. 



NEWTON, R. B., On a Jurassic 

 Lamellibranch from Borneo, 407. 

 Newton and Teall, A Collection of Rocks 



and Fossils from Franz Josef Land, 



375.^ 

 New Fork, Glacial Geology of Western, 



529. 

 Norway, The Glaciation of, 453. 

 Nubian Desert South-East of Korosko, 



Note on the, 237. 



OBITUARIES of David Robertson, 

 94 ; Dr. Bernhard Lundgren, 144, 

 431 ; Prof. C. Tomlinson, 191 ; Rev. 

 J. E. Cross, 192 ; Prof. E. D. Cope, 



240 ; Rev. Robert Hunter, 382 ; Sir 



A. W. Franks, 428 ; Samuel Allport, 



430 ; James Windoes, 527 ; Rev. 



Prof. Haughton, 573 ; Baron Von 



Ettingshausen, 575 ; Rev. P. B. 



Brodie, 576. 

 Observations on Ameghino's Notes on 



the Geology of Argentina, 20. 

 Ogilvie, M.. Microscopic and Systematic 



Study of Madreporarian Types of Fossil 



Corals, 170. 

 Ordovician Beds near Tramore, Fauna 



of, 502. 

 Orthoceratidse, Baltoceras, a new genus 



of the Family, 251. 

 "Ovenstones" (Talcose-schist) from 



near Zinal, Canton Valais, 110. 

 Oxfordshire, Terraced Hill Slopes in 



North, 299. 



PALEOLITHIC Deposits at HitcLin 

 and their Relation to the Glacial 



Epoch, 229. 

 Palseontographical Society, Puhlications 



of the, 134. 

 Palasontology of the Decapod Crustacea 



of England, 671. 

 Palaeontology an d Geology of Argentina, 4 . 

 Parkinson, J., Igneous Rocks in North 



Pembrokeshire, 335. 

 Pedinothuria and EliJcodiadema, new 



Subgenera of Echinoidea, 90. 

 Pembroke, Earthquakes of August, 1892, 



and November, 1893, 92. 

 Pengelly, William, A Memoir of, 557. 

 Petalograptus and Cephalograptus, Sub- 

 genera of Diplograptus, 140. 

 Plant-remains in the Triassic Rocks of 



South Africa, 235. 

 Pleistocene Plants from Casewick, 



Shacklewell, and Grays, .377. 

 Pleistocene Rubble Drift near Portslade, 



302. 

 Pliosaur, On the Structure of the Skull 



of a, 92. 

 Portraine Inlier, Account of the, 334. 

 Prehistoric Man and Beast, 77. 

 President's Address to the British Asso- 

 ciation, 457. 

 Protoceras, The Skull of, 433. 

 Protosiphon Kenipianuni^ new Suhgenus 



and Species, 70. 

 Pt/rotheriiwi-heds, 568. 



UESTION of Nomenclature, 526. 



EAISED Beaches and Glacial De- 

 posits of the Varanger Fiord, 140. 

 Raisin, C. A., Nature and Origin of 



