DONATIONS. 383 



II. GEOLOGICAL CONTENTS OF PERIODICALS 

 PURCHASED FOR THE LIBRARY. 



Annals and Magazine of Natural History. 2nd Series. Vol. xix. 

 No. 112. April 1857. 



W. K. Parker and T. R. Jones.— Foraminifera, 273 (2 plates). 



R. Howse. — Permian fossils, 304. 



W. King. — RhjTieliouella Geinitziana, 349. 



. . . No. 113. May 1857. 



S. P. Woodward. — Land and freshwater Shells of Khasmir and 



Tibet, 408. 

 R. Owen. — Dichobime onna, 426. 

 H. Falconer. — Plagiaulax, 426. 

 Sir P. G. Egerton. — Fish-remains from Ludlow, 427. 



, . . . No. 114. June 1857. 



R. Howse. — On the Permian System of the Counties of Durham 



and Northumberland, 4G3. 

 S. P. Woodward. — On the Mantle and Oral Apparatus of Tere^ 



hratula caput-serpentis, 482. 



Edinburgh New Philosophical Journal. New Series. No. 10. April 



1857. 



L. Blodgett. — Distribution of heat in the North American climate, 



205. 

 W. S. Symonds. — Triassic rocks of the vale of Worcester and at 



the Malvern Tunnel, 25/. 

 P. B. Brodie. — Notice of corals in the lias of Gloucestershire, 



Worcestershire, Warwickshire, and Scotland, 260. 

 W. Crowder. — Iron-manufacture in the Cleveland district, 264. 

 H. C. Sorby. — Physical Geography of the Tertiary Estuary of the 



Isle of Wight, 2/5 (plate). 

 D. Page's Text-book of Geology, noticed, 330. 

 W. H. Emorv. — United States and Mexican Boundary Surveys 



331. 

 C. F. Winslow. — Volcanic phenomena, 359. 

 J. E. Ga\^t.— Garfish, 359. 



A. Winchell. — Geology of Middle and Southern Alabama, 359. 

 J. W. Dawson and W. B. Rogers. — Parallelism of rock-formations 



in Nova Scotia and other parts of America, 359. 

 J. Wyman and L. Agassiz. — Carboniferous reptiles, 360. 

 J. W. Foster.— Fossil Elephant of North America, 361. 

 James Hall. — Geology of the Upper Mississippi Valley, 362. 

 J. D. Dana. — Geological history of North America, 362. 

 J. D. Whitney. — Inclined stratification in Warren County, New 



York, 363. 

 J. P. Lesley. — The Broadtop Coal-region in central Pennsylvania, 



363. 

 J. S. Newberry. — Fossil fishes and Coal-beds of Linton, Ohio, 



364. 

 T. S. Hunt. — Some Euphotides and other felspathic rocks, 366. 



The Serpentines of the Green Mountains, 367. 



A. H. Worthen and L. Agassiz. — Fish-remains from the Carbo- 

 niferous Limestone and Coal-measm-es of Illinois, 367. 



