578 



Index. 



CAM 



DAW 



CAMBRIAN Eocks, New Trilobites 

 from tlie, 294. 



Fossils, 417, 495. 



Carboniferous age, Igneous rocks of, 468. 



Limestone, fossils from the, 



174 ; pockets in the, 527. 



— strata. Chitons, from the, 



340 ; Insects in the, 285, 385, 388. 



— Eocks near Bishopbriggs, 



221; of North "Wales, ,11, 92; of 



Scotland, Eutomostraca of the, 273. 

 Carruthers, W., On an Aroideous Fruit 



from the Stonesfield Slate, 147 ; Cy- 



cadean Fruits fi'om the Secondary 



Eocks of Britain, 101 ; On Cycadeoidea 



Yatesii, 199 ; On Graptolites, 187, 



336 ; On the Systematic Position of 



Graptolites, 70. 

 Casartelli, L. C, Eecent Earthquakes, 



187 ; Volcanic Disturbance in the 



Mediterranean, 239. 

 Cephalaspid, New, 509. 

 Cephalaspidean Fishes, Newgenusof, 152. 

 Cephalopoda of Bohemia, 322, 

 Chalk Escarpments, 483 ; Cliffs, 488. 

 Chambers, Dr. E., " Eskar," at St. Fort, 



549. 

 Charnwood Forest, Eocks of, 163. 

 Cheirolepis from the Old Eed Sandstone, 



147. 

 Chemistry of the Primeval Earth, 357, 



426, 433, 477, 525. 

 Chillesford Beds, Relation of the, to the 



Norwich Crag, 129, 560. 

 China, Geology of, 322. [340. 



Chitons from the Carboniferous Strata, 

 Christy, H., and E. Lartet, Eeliquiee 



Aquitanicse, 321. 

 Clark, G., Geology of Mauritius, 168. 

 "W. B., Secondary Deposits in 



New South Wales, 26. 

 Clays and Sands, White, subjacent to 



the Boulder-clay Drifts, 241, 299, 335. 

 Cliffs, 447, 488, 550, 567-575. 

 Clifton, Gorge of the Avon at, 444. 

 Close, M. H., General Glaciation of 



Ireland, 167, 234. 

 Coal-field of South Staffordshire, Pro- 

 bable Duration of the, 263. 

 measures of Scotland, Fossils from 



the, 130. 

 of Northumberland, Fishes from 



the, 323, 424 ; of Nova Scotia, 73, 74 ; 



of the Andes, 216 ; of Brazil, 420 ; 



of Eussia, 265. 



Eesources of India, 264. 



Supply, 94. 



Cochliodonts, Mandible and Mandibular 



Teeth of, 59. 

 Coeraans, E., Cretaceous Flora of Hai- 



naut, 319. 

 Colliery Explosions, 106. 



Collingwood, C, Sulphur Springs of 



Formosa, 420. 

 Concretions, Banded and Brecciated, 337, 

 Continents, Origin of, 223. [481. 



Conulus 2»'iscus, 417. 

 Cope, Professor, Diuosaurian from New 



Jersey, 93. 

 Coprolite Workings in the Pens, 309. 

 Corals from the Infra-Lias of South 



Wales, 27. 

 Cornwall, Royal Geological Society of, 23. 

 Cotteswold Naturalists' Field Club, 372, 



422. 

 Crag Deposits of England and Belgium, 9 1 . 



, RhyncJioceti of the, 191. 



Crags, Upper and Lower, in Norfolk, 331. 

 Cretaceous Flora of Hainaut, 319. 

 Fossils of South Bedfordshire, 



157. 



Rocks of Britain, 456 ; of 

 Norfolk and Kent, 29. 



Crickitt, R. E., Hot Springs of Bath, 174. 



Crinoidea, 16. 



Crookesite, 528. 



Crustacea from Styria, Triassic, 319. 



, New genus of, from the Coal- 

 measures, 320 ; from the London and 

 Plastic Clays, 529, 531. [29. 



Curry, J., Drift of the North of England, 



Cycadean Fruits from the Secondary 

 Rocks of Britain, 101. 



Oycadeoidea Yatesii, 199. 



Cyclophyllum, 416. 



Cyrtina heteroclita, 255, 314. 



DA. COSTA, P., Tertiary Fossils of 

 Portugal, 407. 



Damon, R., On a Collection of Recent 

 Shells from the Ruins of Pompeii, 293. 



Davidson, T., Perforate and Imperforate 

 Brachiopoda, 311. 



Davies, D. C, Bala and Hirnant Lime- 

 stones, 283 ; On a Bed of Phosphate of 

 Lime in North Wales, 251 ; Lower Car- 

 boniferous Rocks of North Wales, 92. 



T., Senarmontite in Cornwall,192 ; 



On Silver-Fahlerz, 575. 



Dawkins, W. B., Bcjiilder-clay of the 

 Thames Valley, 430 ; Lower Brick- 

 earths of the Thames Valley, 79 ; On 

 Bos longifrons, 167 ; On Rliinoceros 

 leptorhinus, 218 ; Age of the Thames 

 Valley Deposits, 574. 



Dawson, J. W., Coal Discoveries and 

 Primordial Fossils in North America, 

 73 ; Discoveries in regard to JEozoon 

 Caiiaden.ie, 222, 326 ; Insects from the 

 Carboniferous and Devonian forma- 

 tions, 374 ; On Palaeozoic Insects re- 

 cently discovered in Nova Scotia and 

 New Brunswick, 385 ; Pulrnonate 

 Mollusk in the Coal-formation, 417. 



