Index. 



581 



KEU 



Keuper Marls at Great Crosby, by T. 



Mellard Reade, 445. 

 Kidston, R., On the Fructification of 



Zdlleria, 335. 

 Kinahan, G. H., A Faulted Slate, 123. 

 Kirkby, J. "W., On Carboniferous Ento- 



mostraca from Nova Scotia, 356. 

 Koto, Dr. B., Studies on some Japanese 



Eocks, 238. 



LACROIX, A., On Crystals of Olivine 

 in Sands of tbe Isle of Bom-bon, 



465. 

 LamelKbranchiate Faima, On the, by 



Prof. James Hall, 559. 

 Lamplugb, G. "W., Boulder-clay at 



Bridlington, 185. 

 Land Shells in the Red Crag, By R. G. 



Bell, 262. 

 Lewis, H. G., On Marginal Kames, 565. 

 Lias, ArchceastacKS [Eryon), in the, by 



C. Spence Bate, 307. 

 Libyan Desert, Geology and Palaeon- 

 tology of the, by Prof. Karl Zittel, 172. 

 Lindstrom, G., Palceocyelus Fletcher i, 



190. 

 — Eeply to, by P. Martin 



Duncan, 239. 

 List of Papers read in Section C (Geology) , 



British Association, 555. 

 Lizard District, Serpentine of, by A. 



Somervail, 479. 

 London Clay at Southampton, by J. "W". 



Ehves, 548. 

 Lycaon anglicus, sp. nov., Lydekker, 443. 

 Lydekker, R., Fossil Carnivora and 



Rodentia, 442. 

 On a new Species of 



Merycopotamiis, 5i5. 



— Onthe A?ithracotheriidce, 



547. 



On the Distribution of 



Siwalik Mammals and Birds, 489. 



Indian Tertiary Mam- 



malia, 424. 



MACKAT, A. H., On Lacustrine De- 

 posits, 561. 

 Mammalia, Indian Tertiary, by R. 



Lydekker, 424. 

 Mammoth, in the Forest Bed, by J. 



Gunn, 47. 

 Marcou, Jules, The Permian- Trias 



Question, 97. 

 Marginal Kames, byH. C. Lewis, 565. 

 Marsh, Prof. 0. C, New Jurassic 



Dinosaurs, 99, 252. 

 On the American 



Cretaceous Pterodactyls, 345, 



NEW 



Martin, Prof. K., On the Erratic Stones 



of Overyssel, 462. 

 Matthew, "G. F., The Geological Age of 



the Acadian Fauna, 470. 

 The Primitive Conocory- 



phean, 471. 

 Mead-End Bed, The Long, by S. V. 



Wood, 65. 

 Megalichthys latieeps, sp. nov., Traquair, 



121. 

 Megalichthys, On the Genus, by R. H. 



Traquair, 115. 

 Mello, Rev. J. Magens, On a Specimen 



of Iron Amianthus, 332. 

 Merritt, W. H., Economic Minerals of 



Canada, 521. 

 Merycopotamus nanus, Lydek., sp. nov., 



545. 

 Metalliferous Deposits, by C. Ochsenius, 



310. 

 Metamorphic Area in Shropshire, by C. 



Callaway, 362. 

 Metamorphism, Notes on Progressive, by 



C. Callaway, 218. 

 Metcalf, A. T., Vertebrata from the 



Trias of the South Coast of Devon, 94. 

 Miall, Prof. L. C, On Megalichthys 



from the Yorkshire Coal-fields, 237. 

 Mickleborough, J., Locomotory Append- 

 ages of Trilobites, 80. 

 Miller, Hugh, On Fluxion- Structure in 



Till, 472. 

 Mineralogy, Text-Book of Descriptive, 



by H. Bauerman, 424. 

 Moa-Bones in New Zealand, by C. 



Smith, 129. 

 Modiola linguloides, sp. nov., Hudleston, 



341. 

 Mollusca, from South Australia, by W. 



H. Hudleston, 341. 

 Montreal, British Association at, 466, 



513,555. 

 Montreal, Proceedings of Nat. Hist. 



Soc. of, 464. 

 Mi^acites Aiistralis, sp. nov., Hudleston, 



340. 



NEUROPTEROUS Wing from 

 Queensland, byH. Woodward, 337. 

 Newberry, J. S., New Fossil Fishes in 



the Carboniferous and Devonian of 



Ohio and Indiana, 523. 

 Phases in the Evolution 



of the North American Continent, 522. 

 Newbury, On the Geology of, by T. R. 



Jones, 122. 

 Newton, E., Antelope Remains fr-om 



the British Newer I'liocene Beds, 255. 

 New Zealand, Moa-Bones in, by C. 



Smith, 129. 



