Index. 



581 



JAM 



MOU 



JAMIESOX, T. F., Eaised Beaches 

 of the Scotch Survey, 22 ; The 



Interglaciiil Question, 534. 

 Johns, Cosmo, Allotropic Forms of Silica, 



118; Carboniferous Basement Beds at 



Ingleton, 320. 

 Jones, 0. T., Geology of the Plvnlimnion 



District, 336. 

 Jukes-Browne, A. J., Clay-with-Flints, 



91 ; Zone of Ostrea limatn, 93, 335 ; 



Zones of the Lower Chalk, 412, 507 ; 



Reply to, 574. 

 Justen, Frederick, Death of, 576. 



TT'ARIIOO Beds of South Africa, 36. 



Keislev Limestone, 481, 572. 

 Klondike Goldfields, Report on, 235. 

 Koenen, A. von. Small Shells in the 

 interior of larger ones, 1 88. 



LAKE Oxford and tlie Goring Gap, 

 470. 

 Lake, P. , The Trilobites of the Bokkeveld 



Beds, 423 ; Trilobites from Bolivia, 



283. 

 Lamarck and Playfair, 145, 193. 

 Lambe, L. M., New Species of Tcntudo 



and Baena, 270. 

 Lamplugh, G. W., Thickness of Land- 

 ice, 571. 

 Lang, W. D., The Reptant Eleid Polyzoa, 



60 ; Forms of the Polyzoan genus 



Entalophora, 462. 

 Laterites, The Origin of, 536. 

 Lava, Cordierite-bearing, 176. 

 Leboui', G. A. L., Unconformity and 



Thrust in the Coal - measures of 



Northumberland, 281. 

 Leptastrcea barroni, Gregory, sp.nov., 56. 

 Lias, Section of Upper and Middle, near 



Evercreech, 368. 

 Liassic Dentaliidse, 237. 

 Longton, Fossil Insect from the Coal- 

 measures of, 25. 

 Looe, Taunusian Fossils from, 33. 

 Loose Valley, near Maidstone, 573. 

 Lorenzo Giuseppe, Professor, The 



Eruption of Vesuvius, April, 1906, 



329. 

 Ludlow District, The Highest Silurian 



Rocks of the, 89. 

 Lyme Regis and Sidmouth, Geology of, 



558. 



MACCLESFIELD, Congleton, Crewe, 

 etc.. Geology of, 558. 

 Machine-made Implements, 69, 143. 



Maclaren, J. M., Source of the Waters 



of Geysers, 511 ; Origin of certain 



Laterites, 536. 

 Madreporaria Rugosa, Operculate Forms 



of, 547. 

 Maitland, A. Gibb, Geological Survey 



Reports, Western Australia, 276, 



475, 567. 

 Malay States, Federated Geology in the, 



40. 

 Map of Geology of Cape of Good Hope, 



563 ; of North America, 564. 

 Man', J. E , An Introduction to Geology, 



85 ; Relations of the Dufton and 



Keisley Limestone, 481. 

 Mastodon in the Pleistocene of South 



Africa, 49. 

 Matley, C. A., The Carboniferous Rocks 



of Rush, Co. Dublin, 90. 

 Mattliew, G. F., New Batrachian Foot- 

 prints from the Carboniferous of 



Canada, 39 ; Devonian Plants, 380 ; 



Notes on Cambrian Faunas, 380. 

 McConnell, R. G., Report on the 



Klondike Goldtields, 235 ; Mineral 



Discoveries in Yukon, 279. 

 Melbourne, Concretionary Nodules -with 



Plant- remains from, 553. 

 Melbourne, Memoirs of the National 



Museum, 477. 

 Mellor, E. T., Pernio - Carboniferous 



Glaciation in the Transvaal, 82 ; The 



History of American Geology, 328. 

 Memoirs of the Geological Survey, 86, 



275, 558, 559. 

 Mendip Area, Carboniferous limestone 



of the, 141. 

 Mennell, F. P., Plutonic Rocks and 



Crystalline Schists, 84 ; Notes on 



Arch;Ban Stratigraphy, 2a5; Somabula 



Diamond Field of Rhodesia, 459, 569. 

 Menzies, North Coolgardie Goldtield, 



West Australia, 567. 

 Merrill, G. P., American Geology, 328. 

 Mesozoic Plants fi'om Nagato and Bitchu, 



38. 

 Mesozoic Rocks, On the genus Dimyodon 



m British, 202. 

 Method of Classifying Igneous Rocks, 



131. 

 Microzoa and MoUusca, Notes on some, 



354. 

 Mineral Discoveries on Windy Arm, 



Yukon, 279. 

 Mineralogical Society of London, 44, 



143. 

 Mineralogical Survey of Ceylon, 475. 

 Mineralogy, Elements of, 422. 

 Miocene Foraminiiera from the Monterey 



Shale of California, 236. 

 Moen, The Chalk and Drift in, 237. 

 Mount Torlesse Annelid, Ai;o of, 46. 



