Geological Papers read before the British Association, Dundee. 463 



D. Milne Home— On the Old Sea Cliffs and Submarine Banks of tlie 



Frith of Forth. 

 Dr. J. Bryce — Accomit of Eecent Eesearches into the Age of the 

 Arran Granites. 



E. A. Wiinsch — On some Carboniferous Fossil Trees, embedded in 



Trappean Ash, in the Isle of Arran. 

 Professor Harkness and Dr. H. A. Nicholson — On the Coniston 



Group of the Lake District. 

 Dr. H. A. Nicholson — On the Graptolites of the Skiddaw Slates. 

 Dr. H. A. Nicholson — On the Nature and Systematic Position of the 



Graptolitidee. 



E. H. Scott — Preliminary Eeport of the Committee for the Explora- 



tion of the Plant Beds of North Greenland. 

 J. Wyatt — On the Gradual Alteration of the Coast Line in Norfolk. 

 George Maw — On the Cambrian Eocks of Llanberis, with reference 



to a break in the Conformable Succession of the Lower Beds. 

 Dr. Oldham — On the Geology of India. 

 The President — An Account of the Progress of the Geological 



Survey of Scotland. 

 H. "Woodward — Third Eeport on Fossil Crustacea. 



F. M. Burton — On the Lower Lias, and traces of an ancient Ehastic 



Shore in Lincolnshire. 



J. E. Taylor — On the Norfolk Chalk-marl. 



H. S. Ellis — On the Mammalian Eemains from the Submerged 

 Forest in Barnstaple Bay, Devonshire. 



W. Pengelly — Third Eeport of the Committee for the Exploration of 

 Kent's Cavern, Devonshire. 



Professor Ansted — On the Conversion of Stratified Eock into Granite 

 in the north of Corsica. 



Dr. Julius Schvarcz — On the Internal Heat of the Earth. 



Dr. C. Le Neve Foster — On the Preseberg Iron Mines, Sweden. 



F. Gordon Davis — On the Calamine Deposits of Sardinia. 



Dr. C. CoUingwood — On the Geology of the North of Formosa, and 

 of the adjacent Islands. 



On some sources of Coal in the Eastern Hemi- 

 sphere. 



-Notes on the Geological Features of the Sarawak 



Eiver. 



W. Carruthers — ^Enumeration of British Graptolites. 

 E. Hull — -On the Structure of the Pendle Eange, Lancashire, as 



illustrating the South-easterly attenuation of the Carboniferous 



Sedimentary Eocks of the North of England. 

 W. S. Mitchell — Second Eeport on the Alum-Bay Leaf-bed. 

 E. Hull — Observations on the Eelative Geological Ages of the 



principal Physical Features of the Carboniferous District of 



Lancashire. 

 W. Carruthers— On British Fossil Cycadeae. 



On Calamite89 and Fossil Equisetacese. 



Professor Charles Martins — On the Ancient Glacier of the Valley of 



Argelez, in the Pyrenees (read in French by the Author.) 



