578 



Index. 



BUT 



Butler, A. G., On a Fossil Butterfly 



from the Stonesfield Slate, 2. 

 Butterfly, Fossil, 2. 

 "By Flood and by Fell," 280. 



r^ALCEOLA sandalina, 57, 140. 

 Calvert, J., "Vazeeri Rupi," 116. 



Cambrian and Silurian, History of the 

 Names, 385, 453, 504, 561. 



Rocks of Ramsay Island, 94. 



Cambridge, New Woodwardian Pro- 

 fessor at, 144. 



Campbell, J. F., Glacial Phenomena 

 of the Hebrides, 379 ; Glaciation of 

 Ireland, 127. 



Canada, Geological Survey of, 363. 



, Post-Pliocene Geology of, 39. 



Cannock Chase, Bunter Conglomerate 

 of, 16. 



Cape of Good Hope, Trilobite from 

 the, 43. 



Carboniferous Palaeontology, 295, 297, 



344- 



Cardiff" Naturalists' Society, 566. 



Carinella cdlulifera, 433. 



Came, E., Obituary Notice of, 480, 524. 



Carnivore from Wyoming, Tertiary, 33. 



Carruthers, W., On Halonia of Lindley 

 and Hutton, and Cyclocladia of 

 Goldenberg, 145 ; Review of the 

 Contributions to Fossil Botany pub- 

 lished in Britain in 1872, 461. 



Caryophyllia Bredai, '}p,']. 



Cave, Victoria, il. 



Cephalopoda-bed, 327. 



Cetarthrosaurus Walkeri, 328. 



Ceylon, Structure of a Rock from, 19. 



Chalk, Analysis of, from Tyrone, 434. 



, of Dorset, 440 ; of the York- 

 shire Wolds, 323. 



-, Zones in the, 361. 



Champlain Formation, 277. 

 Chapman, H., " Evolution ofLife," 278. 

 Charlton, Excursion to, 328. 

 Chesil Bank, 445, 481, 573. 

 Clay-ironstone, Origin of, 233, 395. 

 Climate, Changes of, 351. 

 Coal-area of the United States, 99. 

 Coal-field of the Forest of Wyre, 138. 

 Coal-measures of Brown Clee Hill, 348. 



. • , Tree-ferns of the, 236. 



Coal of Burmah, 358. 



Coal-seam, Occurrence of a Quartzite 



Boulder in a, 289. 

 Colonosaurus Mudgei, 34. 

 Conchicolites, 54. 

 Contortions, 202. 

 Conula7-ia, 295. 

 Cooper, G. C, Diamond-fields of 



South Africa, 237. 



DE 



Copper Ore in the Bunter Conglome- 

 rate, 16. 



Coprolites of the Upper Greensand, 93. 



Coral Rag, 407, 



Corals, Eocene, of the West Indies, 379. 



, Devonian, of Ontario, 567. 



Cornwall, Royal Geological Society, 524. 



, Royal Institution of, 317. 



, Tin-ore of, 317. 



Cotteswolds, Geologizing on the, 134. 



Cox, E. T., Geological Survey of 

 Indiana, 310. 



Crag Fossils, New, 383. 



Cretaceous Formation of Bohemia, 117. 



Inocerami, 1 19 ; Polyzoa and 



Foraminifera, 118. 



Crinoidea, Notes on, 262. 



Crinoids of the Deep-sea, 220. , 



Cross Fell, Surface Geology of, 337, 



Crossness, Excursion to, 422. 



Crustacea, Eocene, from Portsmouth, 43. 



, Report on Fossil, 520. 



Crystallographic Formulae, New Me- 

 thod of Writing, 299, 428, 527. 



Cyathaspis, lifi. 



Cyclas-clay, 139, 187, 238. 



Cyclocladia, 145. 



T^AKYNS, J, R., On some points 



^~' connectedwith the Drift of Derby- 

 shire and Yorkshire, 62. 



Dalton, W.H., Geological Problems,332. 



Dana, J. D., Glacial and Champlain 

 Eras in New England, 277. 



Danby, T. W., New Method of Writing 

 Crystallographic Formulae, 428. 



Darwinian Theory, 226, 278. 



Daubree, M., Stratified Rocks, 472. 



Davidson, T., Brachiopoda from the 

 Jurassic Rocks of Scotland, 233. 



Davies, D. C, Permian Beds of Shrop- 

 shire, 46. 



, W., Award of the Murchison 



Medal to, 183. 



Dawson, J. W., Post-Pliocene Geology 

 of Canada, 39 ; Carboniferous Plants 

 of Bear Island, 43 ; American Lake 

 Basins and Arctic Currents, 137 ; 

 Leptophlceicm and Lepidodendron, 234 ; 

 Fructification of Sigillaria, 513. 



Deltas, Formation of, 89. 



Depths of the Sea, 215. 



De Ranee, C. E., On the Occurrence 

 of Lead, Zinc, and Iron Ores, in Car- 

 boniferous Rocks in the North- West 

 of England, 64, 303 ; Cyclas Clay of 

 West Lancashire, 187 ; Lower Scro- 

 bicularia and Lower Cyclas Clays, 

 287 ; On the Surface Geology of the 

 Neighbourhood of Cross Fell, 337. 



