578 



Index, 



BOS 



DIA 



Bosworth, T. 0., Tho Zones of the 

 Lower Chalk, 412, 574. 



Botryocrinus, The Species of, 524. 



Boule, M., Great Felines of the French 

 Caves, 270. 



British Association Meeting in South 

 Africa, 1905, 35, 80. 



British Association Meeting in York, 

 1906, 418. 



British Association, Papers read in Section 

 C, 35, 418. 



Brodrick, H., Cause of Pot-holes on 

 Inglehorough, 517. 



Broom, Professor E., Faunas of Permian 

 and Trias, South Africa, 29 ; Classi- 

 fication of the Karroo Beds, 36. 



Brown, H. Y. L., Geological Explora- 

 tions in the West and IS^orth-West of 

 South Australia, 278. 



Brydone, R. M., On the Triraniinghara 

 Chalk, 13, 72, 124, 285, 289, 480, 527. 



Buckman, S. S., Brachiopod Homoeo- 

 raorphy, 239. 



BuUen, R. A., Microzoa and Mollusca 

 from Crete, 354. 



Buttermere, Tarns on the Haystack 

 Mountains, 406. 



nAERMARTHENSHIRE, Igneous, 



\J etc.. Rocks of, 139. 



Caermarthenshire, Ordovician Rocks of 

 Western, 330. 



Cambrian Faunas, Notes on, 380. 



Cambrian Faunas of China, 424. 



Canada, Geological Survey of (Artesian 

 WeUs),S8; (Klondike), 235; (Yukon), 

 279; (Ontario), 280; (Palicozoic 

 Fossils), 566. 



Cantrill, T. C, & H. H. Thomas, 

 Igneous and Sedimentary Rocks of 

 Llangynog, 139. 



Cape Colville, New Zealand, Rocks of, 39. 



Cape of Good Hope, Geological Map, 563. 



Carboniferous Basement Beds at Ingleton, 

 320. 



Carboniferous Fish Fauna from Mans- 

 field District, Victoria, 477. 



Carboniferous Rocks at Rush, Co. Dublin, 

 90 ; of Devon and Cornwall, 568. 



Carboniferous Succession below the Coal- 

 measures, 385, 445, 496. 



Carter, Rev. W. L., Glaciation of the 

 Usk and Wye Valleys, 521. 



Cefni, River, in Anglesey, 262. 



Cephalopods, Small Shells in the Body- 

 chamber of, 188. 



Ceylon Administration Reports, 1904, 

 475. 



Chair of Geology in the Royal College 

 of Science, 192. 



Chalk, The Zones of the Lower, 412, 507. 



Chalk and Boulder-claynearEoyston,239. 



Chalk at Trimmingham, 13, 72, 93, 124, 

 285, 289, 335, 337, 400, 480, 525, 527. 



ChamberUn & Salisbury, Geology — 

 Processes and their Results, 374 ; 

 Geology — Earth History, 472. 



Chapman, Frederick, Concretionary 

 Nodules with Plant - remains from 

 Melbourne, 553. 



Chapman & Mawson, On the Halimeda 

 Limestones of the New Hebrides, 331. 



Chapman, F., & W. Howchin, The 

 PeiTQO-Carboniferous Foraminifera of 

 New South Wales, 273. 



Chima'roid Fish from Lyme Regis, 41. 



Circum-polar Ice, Thickness of, 526. 



Cirnpedes from the Trimmingham Chalk, 

 337. 



Classification of the Karroo Beds, 36. 



Clay-with-Flints, its Origin and Dis- 

 tribution, 91. 



Coal-balls and Concretionary Nodules, 

 553. 



Coal Deposits of Batan Island, 378. 



Cockin, G. M., Limestone of the Lower 

 Carboniferous Series in Cannock Chase, 

 237. 



Cole, Professor G. A. J., Phenomena of 

 Granite Domes, 80. 



Coleman, A. P., Segregation of Sulphide 

 Ores, 80. 



Concretionary Nodules with Plant- 

 remains, Melboiu'ue, 553. 



Cordierite-bearing Lava, 176. 



Cornwall, West, Older and Newer Palaeo- 

 zoics of, 206. 



Corries of Comeragh Mountains, 154,227. 



Cragin, F. W., The Malone Jurassic 

 Formation of Texas, 328. 



Cretaceous Polyzoa, Key to some, 462. 



Crete, Microzoa and Mollusca from East, 

 354. 



Crick, G. C, Geology of South Africa, 

 47. 



Cross Fell Inlier, 481. 



Cunnington, William, Obituary of, 191. 



Cyprus, Pigmy Hippopotamus of, 241. 



DANFORD, C. G., Notes on the 

 Speeton Ammonites, 520. 

 Davison, C, The Doucaster Earthquake, 



42 ; Pendleton Eartli-shake, Nov. 25, 



1905, 171. 

 Dawkins, C. G. E., Exogyra sxnuata in 



the Lower Greensand at Culham, 94. 

 De Ranee, Charles Eugene, Obituary of, 



288. 

 Devonian Plants, New Species and a New 



Genus of, 380. 

 Dewalque, Gilles - Joseph - Gustave, 



Obituary of, 48. 

 Diamond Field at Somabula, Rhodesia, 



459, 569. 



