212 DONATIONS. 



British Association for the Advancement of Science. Report, 1861 

 (continued). 



C. R. Gordon. — The Laws discoverable as to the Formation of Land 

 on the Globe, 112. 



C. Gould. — Results of the Geological Survey of Tasmania, 112. 



A. H. Green. — The Faults of a portion of the Lancashire Coal-field, 



113. 

 Hagen. — Fossil Insects of England and Bavaria, 113. 

 R. Harkness. — Old Red Sandstone of South Perthshire, 114. 

 . The Sandstones and their associated Deposits of the Valley or 



the Eden and the Cumberland Plain, 115. 



D. Milne-Home. — Elongated ridges of Drift, common in the South of 

 Scotland, called " Kaims," 115. 



E. Hull. — Isomeric Lines, and the relative distribution of the Cal- 

 careous and Sedimentary Strata of the Carboniferous Group of 

 Britain, 116. 



J. B. Jukes. — Progress of the Geological Survey in Ireland, 117. 

 J. G. Marshall. — The relation of the Eskdale Granite at Bootle to 



the Schistose Rocks, &c, 117, 

 G. H. Morton. — Pleistocene Deposits of the Districts around Liver- 

 pool, 120. 

 C. Moore. — Notes on two Ichthyosauri, 121. 

 W. Haidinger. — Present State of the Imperial Geological Institution 



of Vienna, 121. 

 R. Owen. — Dinosaurian Reptile (Scelidosaurus Harrisoni) from the 



Lower Lias of Charmonth, 121. 

 — — . Remains of a Plesiosaurian Reptile (Plesiosaunis Australis) from 



the OoliticjFormation in the Middle Island of New Zealand, 122. 

 W. Patterson. — Certain markings in Sandstones, 123. 

 W. Pengelly. — New Bone-cave at Brixham, 123. 



. Recent Encroachments of the Sea on the shores of Torbay, 124. 



. Relative Age of the Petherwin and Barnstaple Beds, 124. 



. Age of the Granites of Dartmoor, 127. 



J. Phillips. — Post-glacial Gravels of the Valley of the Thames, 129. 



T. A. Readwin.— Gold of North Wales, 129. 



Richardson. — Details of the Carboniferous Limestone, as laid open 



by the Railway-cutting and Tunnel near Almondsburv, north of 



Bristol, 130. 

 J. W. Salter. — Nature of Sigillarice, and on the Bivalve Shells of the 



Coal, 131. 

 R. H. Scott. — Granitic rocks of Donegal, 131. 

 H. Seeley. — The Elsworth rock, and the Clay above it, 132. 

 W. S. Symonds. — Some phenomena connected with the Drifts of the 



Severn, Avon, Wye, and Usk, 133. 

 Vaughan. — Subterranean Movements, 134. 

 W. Whincopp. — The Red Crag Deposits of the County of Suffolk, 



considered in relation to the finding of Celts, in France and 



England, in the Drift of the Post-pliocene period, 134. 

 J. T. Wilkinson and J. Whitaker. — The Burnley Coal-field and its 



fossil contents, 135. 

 A. B. Wynne. — Geology of Knockshigowna in Tipperary, Ireland, 135. 

 J. Yates. — The Excess of Water in the Region of the Earth about 



New Zealand, 136. 

 C. T. Beke. — Volcanic Eruption on the Coast of Abyssinia, 180. 

 E. Belcher. — Glacial Movements noticed in the vicinity of Mount 

 St. Elias, on the North-west Coast of America, 186. 



