182 Reports and Proceedings. 
J. Mackenzie.—On the New South Wales Coal-field. 
J. Randell.—On the Position in the Great Oolite, and Mode of 
Working, of the Bath Freestone. 
HI, Seeley.—On the Significance of the Sequence of Rocks and 
Fossils. 
E. R. Lankester.—On the Species of the genus Pteraspis. 
Dr. T. Wright.—On the White Lias of Dorsetshire. 
Preliminary Report of the Committee.—On the Distribution of the 
Organic Remains of the North Staffordshire Coalfield. 
Sir W. Logan, Dr. Dawson, and Dr. Sterry Hunt.—On Organic 
Remains in the Laurentian Rocks of Canada. 
W. A. Sanford.—Notice of Carnassial and Canine teeth from the 
Mendip Caves, which probably belong to Felis antiqua. 
W. Boyd Dawkins.—On the newer Pliocene Fauna of the Caverns 
and River-deposits of Somersetshire. 
Dr. Falconer.—On Fossil and Human Remains of the Gibraltar 
Cave. 
Professor Phillips.—On distribution of Granite blocks from Wasdale 
Crag. 
Professor Phillips.—On excavation of Valleys near Kirby Lonsdale. 
Professor W. B. Rogers.—On a cast of a peculiar fossil found in 
the Mesozoic Sandstone of the Connecticut Valley. 
W. Bristow.—On the Rhetice (or Penarth) beds of the neighbour- 
hood of Bristol and the south-west of England. 
Professor Hennessey —On Geological Climate. 
Dr. T. Hodgkin.—Notice of some Geological Appearances in the 
north-west of Morocco. 
Dr. R. N. Rubidge—On the Relations of the Silurian Schist with 
the Quartzose rocks of South Africa. 
Dr. T. Wright.—On the Development of Ammonites. 
H, Seeley.—On the Pterodactyle as evidence of a new sub-class of 
Vertebrata. 
M. Hébert.—Note on some of the Oolitic strata seen at Dundry. 
W. W. Smyth.—On the Thermal Water of the Clifford Amalga- 
mated Mines of Cornwall. 
A. Bassett.—On the South Wales Mineral Basin. 
ES. Higgins.—On Otolites. 
H. C. Hodge.—On the origin of certain Rocks, and on the Ossiferous 
Caverns of the South of Devonshire. 
Dr. P. Carpenter.—On the connection between the Crag formations 
and the recent North Pacific Faunas. 
THe SEvERN-VALLEY Narvurauists’ Firip-cLtus.—The second 
Field-meeting this season was held in the Forest of Wyre on the 
30th June last. The place was chosen chiefly for the benefit of 
Botanical and Entomological members, being the habitat of many 
rare plauts and insects; but it is not without interest to the 
Geologist. The Forest was formerly much more extensive than it 
is at present, and nearly entirely stands on Carboniferous strata. 
These are almost horizontal ; but in the cuttings of the newly made 
