BOU 
Botany, FOSSIL. 
Palmacites, generic characters of, 
vii, 182. 
Palm, Ohio, xxxi, 35.f 
trees, indiana, D. D. Owen, 
xlv, 336. 
Sigillaria, vii, 180. 
in coal fields near Liver- 
pool, xlv, 4038. 
, relation to Stigmariz, xlix, 
Qin 
marineria, xxxi, 30.f 
Stigmaria, vii, 180. 
, relation to Sigillariz, xlix, 
pate 
Strobilus caryophyllus, xxxi, 32.f 
Syringodendron, vii, 189. 
Kirtlandius, xxxi, 29.f 
trees and wood, see under 
Fossil. 
Zamia sussexiensis, xlv,401. 
, fossil fruits ae G. A. Man- 
an xlv, 461. 
Botanical collections, notice of sev- 
eral, xlv, 225. 
, fétes in France, ix, 154. 
—w— garden, in Russia, at St. Pe- 
tersburg, xx, 175. 
, in Austria, ii, 340. 
press, J. Locke, xxx, 54.f 
works of Rafinesque, xl, 221. 
under Works. 
Bottles, glass, strength of, xix, 197. 
, for washing, in chemical ma- 
nipulations, xxxi, 292.f 
Botto, G. D., on electro-chemical 
action, xxiv, 197; xxix, 369. 
Boulders over the northern parts of 
England, Prof. Phillips, xxxi, 
360. 
| DIdse eens Varn chtSontexxxls 
375. 
and glaciers in Switzerland, 
Agassiz, xli, 59, 190. 
of the North of Germany, 
xxviii, 389. 
, large, in Invernesshire, vi, 
158. 
and diluvial scratches, in the 
U. States, xli, 174. 
38 
, hotices of various, see! 
EBOowU 
Boulders in New England, their 
positions attributed to a retiring 
ocean, ix, 28. 
jaar. Island, C. T. Waciacn. 
xl, 184. 
——- in Maine, C. T. Jackson,xxxvi, 
152. 
in the Connecticut valley, vi, 
85. 
in western N. York, xxxvi, 39. 
in New York, about the sour- 
ces of the Hudson and to the 
southward, xxxill, 304, 315. 
on Long Island, xxxvi, 20. 
of Labrador feldspar, near 
Pompton, N. J., v, 241. 
of Ohio, D. and I. A. Lapham, 
xxil, 300. 
in the valley of the Muskin- 
gum, xxix, 11. 
in Illinois, xxxiv, 141. 
in Indiana, J. S. Plummer, 
xliv, 296, 303. 
of gneiss and granite on the 
Coteau des Prairies, G. Catlin, 
Xxxvill, 142. 
-of the Canadian lakes and val- 
ley of the St. Lawrence, C. Ly- 
ell, xlvi, 314. 
, the origin of, remarks on, P. 
Dobson, x, 217. 
, Murchison’s citation of Dob- 
son’s views on, xlili, 200. 
, transported by ice, in the po- 
larcurrent, W. C. Redfield, xxxii, 
351. 
, on the supposed transporta- 
tion of, J. E. DeKay, xii, 348. 
, buoyancy of, at great depths, 
xxvill, 111. 
, gravel, W&c., remarks on, 
Sedgwick, xxxiil, 287. 
, or erratic blocks, theory of, 
B. Struder, xxxvi, 326. 
glacial theory of Agassiz, ali 
352.1 
, see farther under Drift oad 
Scratches. 
Boundaries of empires, affected by 
Physical Geography, xiv, 18; 
VO Os 
