IISTDEX. 



ABEBEIDDY Bay, etc., 465. 

 Aerolites, Indian, 427. 

 Agates, Structure of, 469. 

 Algee, Calcareous, in Paleeozoic and 



other Kocks, 440, 490, 552. 

 American Journal for Science, 91. 

 Ammonites, Yorkshire Types of, 377. 

 Anderson, Tempest, Obituary of, 478. 

 Andes of Peru and Bolivia, 572. 

 Andrews, Dr. C. W., Bird Eemains, 



Transsylvania, 193 ; Marine Eep- 



tilia, Oxford Clay, 219. 

 Anhydrite, Magnesian L., 94. 

 Antarctic Expedition, 144. 

 Arber, E. A. Newell, Fossil Plants, 



S. Staffs, 215 ; Fossil Plants, New 



Zealand, 231 ; Floras of S. Staffs 



Coal-field, 462. 

 Arran, Petrology of, 305. 

 Atlas, Geological, Photographic, 424. 

 Aulophyllum, genus, 41. 



BAHIA, Brazil, Cretaceous Forma- 

 tion of, 356. 

 Bailey, E. Battersby, the Loch Awe 



Syncline, 189. 

 Ball, John, Geography and Geology 



of South-East Egypt, 266 ; Phos- 

 phates of Egypt, 425. 

 Ball, Lionel C, Sphenophyllmn in 



Australia, 133. 

 Banton, J. T., Fossil Beads (?), Bed- 

 fordshire Gravels, 138, 190. 

 Bardsey Island, Geology of, 188. 

 Barrington Bone-bed, Cambridge, 



Minerals of, 252. 

 Barrow, G., Eecords London Wells, 



174 ; Geology Strathspey, 264 ; 



Folding in PalEeozoic Eocks, 463 ; 



Spirorbis L., N. Warwick., 463. 

 Bather, Dr. F. A., A new Crinoid, 



346; Caradocian Cystidea, 418. 

 Bathonian Eocks, Oxford District, 



282. 

 Beaufort Beds, South Africa, 388. 

 Bembridge Limestone at Creechbarrow 



Hill, 45. 

 Bennett, F. J., Home-made Natural 



Eoliths, 47. 

 Benson, W. N., Spilite Lavas and 



Eadiolarian Eocks, 17 ; Polarizing 



Microscope, 447. 

 Bermuda Islands, Geology of, 413. 

 Bibliography of North American 



Geology, 325. 

 Bird Eemains, Upper Cretaceous, 



Transsylvania, 193. 

 Bloomfield, A. H., Bembridge L., 45. 



DECADE V. — VOL. X.— NO. Xn. 



Bonney, T. G., The Work of Eain 

 and Elvers, 36 ; The Structure of 

 the Earth, 37 ; Volcanoes, 273. 



Boswell, P. G. H., Age of Suffolk 

 Valleys, 327. 



Bosworth, T. 0., Keuper Marls around 

 Charnwood, 90 ; South Texas, 481. 



Brachiopoda, Cambrian, Syringo- 

 thyris, 393. 



Branchipod Crustacean, a new, Coal- 

 measures, Eochdale, 352. 



Brauns, E., Mineral Kingdom, 565. 



British Association, List of Papers, 

 448 ; Abstracts, 453, 516. 



British Columbia, Geological Survey 

 Map, 320. 



A Human Skeleton from, 364. 



British Museum, Annual Eeport, 1912, 

 527. 



Brydone, E. M., Proposed Eecognition 

 of Two Stages in Upper Chalk, 

 56 ; New Chalk Polyzoa, 97, 196, 

 248, 436 ; Stratigraphy of Chalk of 

 Hants, 122 ; Division of the Upper 

 Chalk, 380 ; Micraster prczcursor, 

 430. 



Buckman, S. S., ' The Kelloway 

 Eock,' Scarborough, 231; Cam- 

 brian Brachiopoda, 312 ; Yorkshire 

 Type Ammonites, 377. 



Buried Eiver Channel, Fletton, near 

 Peterborough, 414. 



Burrard, Colonel S. G., The Origin 

 of the Himalayan Folding, 167 ; 

 The Origin of Mountains, 385. 



pADELL & WILSON, Methods of 

 \J Working Oil-shales, 129. 

 Cainozoic Mollusca, South Africa, 177. 

 Calcareous Algse in Palaeozoic Eocks, 



440, 490, 552. 

 California University Publications, 131 . 

 Calif ornian Tertiary Sharks, 324 ; 



Eocene Mollusca, 325. 

 Calvert Boring, North Bucks, 469. 

 Cambrian Brachiopoda, C. D. Walcott, 



312. 

 Cambridge Philosophical Society, 40, 



378. 

 Camels, North American, 379. 

 Canada, Department of Mines, 130, 



320, 426; Building and Ornamental 



Stones of, 178 ; Geological Survey 



Memoir, 319 ; Mineral Production, 



320. 

 Cantrill, T. C, Estheria, Bunter, 



South Shropshire, 518. 

 Caradocian Cystidea, Girvan, 418. 

 37 



