Index. 



579 



FAU 



FAUNA Antiqua Sivalensis, 43. 

 Feilden, H. "W., on Hippopotamus 

 amphibius, 235. 



Ffynnon Beuno Caves, 489, 566. 



Fisher, 0., Geologists visiting "Wey- 

 mouth, 336. 



Fish-remains from New Zealand, 93. 



Foliation of Lizard Gabbro, 575. 



Folkestone, Landslip near, 240. 



Ford and D wight, Fossils from Meta- 

 morphic Limestone, 277. 



Forest of Dean, Limestones of the, 529. 



Form of Rock- Surface under a Talus, 65. 



Fossil Algae, from Canada, 503. 



Elephants of Germany and Italy, 



135. 



Fish-remains from the Mountain 



Limestone, 148. 



Fish in the Old Eed Sandstone, 



507. 



Flowering or Phanerogamous 

 Plants, 495. 



Mammalia of Maragha, 134. 



from Baltavar, 227. 



Radiolaria from Jura, 79. 



Fossils of the Rhsetic Formations of 

 "Warwickshire, 508. 



Fringed Ostracoda from the Carbonifer- 

 ous, 433. 



Fritsch, Dr. Anton, Fauna of the Gas- 

 coal, 44. 



pABBROS, Dolerites and Basalts, 



— Metamorphosis of Lizard, 481. 



Galicia, Rock- Salt Formations of, 121. 



Gardner, J. S., Distribution of Teredo - 

 bored Wood, 161 ; Does Teredo in- 

 habit Freshwater ? 336 ; on Mesozoic 

 Angiosperms, 193 ; Fossil Flowering 

 Phanerogamous Plants, 495. 



Gas-coal of Bohemia, 44. 



"Gault" so-called of "West Dereham, 

 Norfolk, 55. 



Geology of Bridlington Bay, 86. 



Eskdale, Rosedale, etc. , 87. 



■ Holderness, 85. 



South Australia, 278. 



South-West Lincolnshire, 86. 



the Coasts adjoining Rhyl, 



etc., 87. 



the Kimberley District, 166. 



the Pays-Bas, 171. 



the Vale of Clwyd, 89. 



Geological Age of Beds containing Plants 



in India, 232. 



North Atlantic, 189. 



History of Cornish Serpen- 

 tines, 359. 



Map of Alsace-Lorraine, 78. 



HOR 



Geological Map of Lower Egypt, 30. 



Society, 39, 91,134, 180,230, 



330, 375, 572. 



Survey of India, 170, 173, 462. 



of United States, 464. 



101. 



Record, 88. 



Relations of Rocks of Assouan, 



Geologists visiting Weymouth, 336. 



Gilpin, E., Geology of Cape-Breton 

 Island, 378. 



Glacial Periods in Low Latitudes, 300. 



Phenomena of the Isle of Got- 

 land, 367. 



Shell-bed in British Columbia, 



233. 



Glaciation of South Lancashire, 331. 



Gloucestershire, Inferior Oolite, 186. 



Granitoid and Felsitic Rocks, 330. 



Graptolite, Family Dichograptidse, 13. 



Gregory, J. R., on Two French Meteo- 

 rites, 357. 



Gresley, W. S., on a Modern Ferru- 

 ginous Conglomerate, 11. 



Griesbach, C. L., Geological Formation 

 of Afghanistan, 121. 



Griffith, A. B., Eocene Formations in 

 Servia, 380. 



Guide to Department of Geology, etc. , 



Gunn, J., on the Rocks of Caithness, 31. 



HARDMAN, E. T., on the Geology 

 of the Kimberley District, 166. 

 Harrison, W. J., Deep-Boring in Keuper 



Marls, 453. 

 Hauer, F. von, Annals of Natural History 



Museum of Vienna, 169. 

 Heim, A., Glaciers of Isar and Linth, 



259. 

 Herrmann, Dr. O., on Dichograptidse, 13. 

 Hicks, H., Bone-Caves in N. "Wales, 39 ; 



on the Rocks of Pembrokeshire, 330 ; 



on the Ffynnon Beuno and Cae Gwyn 



Caves, 566. 

 Highbury Microscopical Society, 138. 

 Hill, "W., Beds between the Upper and 



Lower Chalk of Dover, 137. 

 Hill, W., and Jukes-Browne, A., Zone 



of Belemniiella plena, 136. 

 Hinde, G. J., Note on Eopliyton ? ex- 



planatum, 337. 

 Hippopotamus amphibius, Distribution of, 



235. 

 Hippopotami, Recent and Fossil, 114. 

 Holl, Harvey B., Obituary of, 526. 

 Homotaxis and Contemporaneity, 293. 

 Honiton, Tunnel Section near, 308. 

 Hornblende-bearing Rocks from Inch- 



nadampf, 346. 



