580 



Index. 



GIL 



Gilpin, E., Distinctive Featui-es of Nova 



Scotian Coalfields, 467. 



• On Gold-mining, 563. 



Gilbert, G. K. , North American Geology, 



562. 

 Godwin -Austen, Lt.-Col. H. H., A New 



Railway- cutting at Guildford, 334. 

 Observations 



on certain Tertiary Formations S. of 



the Alps, 379. 

 Graphical Methods in Field Geology, by 



A. Harker, 154. 

 Griffith, A. F., Faults, 429. 

 Uriffithides brevispinus, H. Wondw., sp. 



nov. 484, 489. 

 Carringtoniana, H. Woodw., 



sp. nov. 486, 489. 

 glaber, H. Woodw. sp. nov. 



485, 489. 

 Gunn, John, Causes of Change of Climate, 



73, 125. 

 The Mammoth in the Forest 



Bed, 47. 



TTALITHERIVM Chouqueii, sp. 



■J-l nov., Gaudry, 462. 



Hall, Prof. J. , On the LameUibranchiate 

 Fauna, 559. 



Fossil Reticulate Sponges, 557. 



Hallett, P., Notes on Niagara, 563. 



Harker, A., Graphical Methods in Field 

 Geology, 154. 



■ Packing of Sand-gi-ains, 479. 



Space between Grains of 



Sand, 192. 



Headon, Middle-marine Beds, by H. 

 Keeping, 95. 



~ by J. W. 



Elwes, 94. 



Hebert, Prof. E., Introduction to Geo- 

 logy, 40. 



Hicks, Dr. Henry, On the Cambrian 

 Conglomerates in Anglesey and Caer- 

 narvonshire, 43. 



On the Pre- Cambrian Rocks 



of St. Davids, 285. 



■ Rock Specimens from Angle- 



sey and Caernarvonshire, 43. 



Hill, Rev. E., On Ice-age Theories, 513. 



The Rocks of Guernsey, 



236. 



Hinde, Dr. G. J., Fossil Sponges, 132. 



On some Fossil Calci- 



sponges from the Well-boring at Rich- 

 mond, 377. 



On the Structure and 



A^nitiesoitheFamilj Eeceptaculitidcs, 



382. 

 Hinge of Spirifer, by John Young, 18. 

 Hochstetter, Dr. Ferdinand von, Obituary 



of, 526. 



KEN 



Holmes, T. V., On the One-inch Geo- 

 logical Survey Map, 240. 



Hope's Nose, Section at, by H. B. Wood- 

 ward, 524, 575. 



Hudleston, W. H., Contributions to the 

 Palaeontology of the Yorkshire Oolites, 

 49, 107, 146, 193, 241, 293. 



Mollusca from S. 



Australia, 339. 



Hughes, T. McKenny, The International 

 Geological Congress, 432. 



On Spongia para- 



doxica, 185. 



On Tracks of Ter- 

 restrial and Fresh-water Mammals, 42. 



Hutton, Capt. F. W., On the Geologicitl 

 Position of the Weka-pass Stone, 379. 



Hunt, T. Sterry, Eozoic Rocks of N. 

 America, 566. 



Geological History of 



the Serpentines, 276. 



IRVING, Rev. A., On the Permian 

 J. Trias of Central Europe, 284. 



The Permian- Trias 



Question, 45, 192, 321. 



On the so-called 



Bunterschiefer, 575. 



JONES, Prof. T. R., On Carboniferous 

 Entomostraca from Nova Scotia, 356. 



On Palaeozoic Phyl- 



lopoda, 348. 

 On the srenus 



JEchinocaris, 393. 



On the Fora- 

 minifera and Ostracoda fi'om the Well- 

 boring at Richmond, 377. 



On the Geology 



of Newbury, 122. 



— On the Geology 



of S. Africa, 476. 



Judd, Prof. J . W., Nature of the Jurassic 

 Deposits imder London, 143. 



Notes on the Jurassic 



Rocks which underlie London, 376. 



Jukes-Browne, A. J., Classification of 

 Jurassic Strata, 625. 



• Handbook of Phy- 

 sical Geology, 461. 



Post- Glacial Ra- 

 vines in the Chalk-wolds of Lincoln- 

 shire, 45. 



Jurassic Dinosaur, A New American, by 

 0. C. Marsh, 99, 252. 



Jurassic Strata, Classification of, by A. 

 J. Jukes-Browne, 525. 



KEEPING, H., The Middle Headon 

 Marine Beds, 95. 

 Kendall, P. F., On Slickensides, 551. 



