63 DONS. — JUILLET, AOUT ET SEPTEMBRE I904 



Origin of the Marine (Halolimnic) Fauna of Lake Tanganyika. 337-382. — 

 482 : Rééd. Sedgwick Muséum Notes; New Fossils from Haverfordwest, II, 

 383 388. — BoNNEY. Some Eroded Rocks in Corsica, 388-392. Hind. Homo- 

 taxial Equivalents of the Lower Culm of N. Devonshire, 092-407. — Crick. 

 On Actinocamax, Miller, and Atractilites, Link , 407-410. — Hunt Nomen- 

 clature of Ripple-Mark, 410-418;— Coomâraswâmy. The C.eology of Ceylon ; 

 III. The Balangoda Group, 418-422. — 483 : Rupert Jones. Note on a Palteo- 

 zoic Cypridina from Canada, 438 439. — H.-B Woodward. A Small Anti- 

 cline in the Great Oolite Séries North of Bedford, 439-441. —Newton. Linthia 

 ohlongâ from the Sinai Peninsula, 441-445. — Broom. On Algvasaurus Baiiri, 

 gen. et sp. nov., from the Cretaceous Beds of South Africa, 440-447. — Prior. 

 Note on PiJlow-Lava from Mullion Island to Gorran Haven,Cornwall, 447-449. 



— Fearnsides. On the Occurrence of a Limestone wilh Upper Gault Fossils 

 at Barnwell, near Cambridge, 36o-363. — Arnold-Bemrose. On some Quart- 

 zite-Dykes in Mountain-Limestone near Snelston (Derbyshire), 364-371. — 

 Elsden. On the Age of the Llyn-Padarn Dykes, 372-388. 



— The Mining Journal, LXXVI, 3593-36o5, 1904. 



— Phil. T. R. S. ofLondon, (A) CGI II, 365-372; CCIV, 373-3^4; 

 (B) CLXXXXVII, 230-233, 1904. 



{B). 23 1 : Oliver et Scott. On the Structure of the Palseozoic Seed Lage- 

 nostoma Lomaxi, 193-247. 



— P. R. Soc, LXXIII, 496; LXXIV, 497-499, 1904. 



497- SpENCEii. On the Structure and Aflinities of Palœodiscus and Agela- 

 crinus, 3i- 46. — 4g8 : Arber. The Fossil Flora of the Culm Measures of 

 North-west Devon, and the Palaiobotanical Evidence vv'ith regard to the Age 

 of the Beds, 95- 99. — Bâte. Furlher Note on the Remains of Elephas 

 cypriotes, Batc, from a Cave-Deposit in Cyprus, 120 121. 



— Obitiiaiy notices of fellows of the R. S., II, III, 1904. 



— The Quai'terl)' Journal, LX, 239, 1904. 



Davison. The Caernarvon Earthquake of June i9th. 1903. and its Acces- 

 sory Shocks, 233-242. — English. Eocene and Laler F'ormations snrrounding 

 the Dardanelles, with Appendices by Flett, Newton and Holland, 243-295. 



— DE LoRENzo. The Ilistory of Volcanic Action in the Phlegrsean Field, 

 296-315. — Du Riche Freller. Phenomena bearing upon the Age of the Lake 

 of Geneva, 3i6 3i8. — Jukes-Browne. The Valley of the Teign, 3x9-334. — 

 Davies. The Discovery of Human Remains under the Stalagmite-Floor of 

 Gough's Cavern, Cheddar, 335 348. — Richardson. The Evidence for a Non- 

 Sequence betveen the Keuper and Rhaelic Séries in Nortli-West Glouces- 

 tershire and Worcestershire, 349 359. 



— Rep. of the Seçent^-Third Meeting of the Rritish Ass. for 

 the ad(>ancement of Se, Southport, sept., 1903. 



MiLNE. Seismological Investigations ; Eighth Rep of the Com. 77-85. — 

 UssHKR. Edenvale Caves co. Clare, i83-i85, — Hisd. Life-zones in the British 

 Carboniferous Rocks; Rep. ofthe Com., 185-192. — Dwerryhouse. The move- 

 ments of Underground Waters of North-west Yorksliire; Foutth Rep. ofthe 

 Com., 192-197. — Watts. Photographs of Geological Interest in the United 

 Kingdom ; Fourlecnth Rep. of the Com., 197-218. — Statuer. Estuarine 

 Dèposits at Kirminglon, Lincolnshire, Preliminary Rep. ofthe Com., 218-219. 



— Lomas Investigation ol tlie Fauna and Flora ofthe Trias ofthe British 



