INDEX TO THE PROCEEDINGS. 



Experimental researches on the granites 

 of Ireland, by Prof. Haughton, 171. 



Felis pardoides from the red crag, 226. 



Felis, remains of, in the red crag, 226. 



Folded rocks, Mr. Babbage on, 368 ; 

 Mr. Scrope on, 345. 



^- of Wigtonshire, 362. 



Footmarks in the millstone-grit of Tint- 

 wistle, Cheshire, Mr. Binney on some, 

 350. 



Formation of cones and craters, 327. 



• of craters, and the nature of the 



liquidity of lavas, Mr. Scrope on the, 

 326. 



Fossil cranium of the musk-buffalo from 

 Maidenhead, Berkshire, Prof. Owen 

 on a, 124. 



Crustacea from Lesmahago, 26. 



femur and tibia of the large ex- 

 tinct bird (Gastornis Parisiensis, 

 Hebert) found in the lowest eocene 

 formation near Paris, 204. 



foot-tracks from the millstone- 



grit, 352. 



fucoid from near Bangor, 246. 



mammalia from the red crag, 217. 



remains in the Cambrian rocks of 



the Longmynd and North Wales, 

 Mr. Salter on the, 246. 



tracks from Binks, South Scotland, 



Mr. Salter on, 243. 



Fossils of the upper Keuper sandstone 

 at Leicester, 369 ; at Shrewley, 374 ; 

 of the Wealden at Hastings, 292. 



found in the chalk-flints and 



greensand of Aberdeenshire, 390 ; 

 from Asia Minor, 3 ; from the 

 Hastings cliffs, 291 ; from the tile- 

 stones of Kington, 93. 



Fran CO -Belgian coal-field, MM. De- 

 gousee and Laurent on the, 252. 



Gastornis Parisiensis, Prof. Owen on 

 the affinities of the, 204. 



General Meeting, Annual, i ; special, 

 384. 



Geography of Western Europe at the 

 coal-growth period, outline of the, 37. 



Geology of part of Asia Minor, 1 ; of 

 parts of Australia, Mr. Wilson on the, 

 283 ; of some parts of South Africa, 

 237 ; of Trinidad, Mr. Bowen on the, 

 389 ; of Varna, Capt. Spratt on the, 

 387. 



Gloucestershire, inferior oolite and up- 

 per lias sands of, 292. 



Gneiss and granite, Mr. Scrope on, 345. 



Gold district in South Africa, 237 ; of 

 Peel River, 286. 



veins in quartz and other rocks, 



Mr. Ibbetson on the possible origin 

 of, 384. 



Grampus, remains of, in the red crag, 228. 



Granite converted into syenite, 197. 



Granites of Ireland, Prof. Haughton's 

 experimental researches on the, 171. 



Graptolitic schists of Wigtownshire, 

 364. 



Greenland, Mr. Tayler on the cryolite 

 of, 140. 



Hamilton, W. J. (President), Address 

 on presenting the Wollaston Medal 

 to Sir R. I. Murchison for Sir Wil- 

 liam Edmond Logan, xxi ; Address 

 on presenting the Donation Fund 

 Award to Mr. Prestwich for M. Des- 

 hayes, 25 ; Anniversary Address, 26. 

 Notices of Deceased Fellows : George 

 Bellas Greenough, xxvi ; Sir Heniy 

 Thomas de la Beche, xxxiv ; Thomas 

 Weaver, xxxviii ; The Right Hon. 

 Sir H. Ellis, xxxix ; Sir William 

 Molesworth, xxxix; Lewis Weston 

 Dillwyn,xl; Prof. F. W.Johnston, xli; 

 M. Jean de Charpentier, xli ; Sedg- 

 wick andM'Coy's synopsis of the clas- 

 sification of the British palaeozoic rocks 

 and fossils, noticed, xliv ; Murchison 

 on the relation of the crystalline rocks 

 of the North Highlands to the old red 

 sandstone of that region, and on the 

 recent fossil discoveries of Mr. C. 

 Peach, xlvii ; Salter on the recent dis- 

 covery of fossils in the Cambrian rocks 

 of the Longmynd, xlviii; Murchison 

 on the upper Silurian rocks and fossils 

 discovered near Lesmahago by Mr. 

 Robert Slimon, xlix; Banks on the 

 tilestones or Downton sandstones in 

 the neighbourhood of Kington, and 

 their contents, 1 ; Sorby on the phy- 

 sical geography of the old red sand- 

 stone sea of the central district of 

 Scotland, li ; Sorby on the physical 

 geography of the tertiary estuary of 

 the Isle of Wight, li ; Godvnn-Austen 

 on the probable extension of the coal- 

 measures beneath the south-eastern 

 parts of England, lii ; Ramsay on the 

 permian breccia of Shropshire, Wor- 

 cestershire, &c., Iv ; Hull on the phy. 

 sical geography and the drift phse- 

 nomena of the Cotteswold Hills, Ivii ; 

 Godvs'in-Austen and Martin on the 

 newer tertiary deposits of the Sussex 

 coast, Ivii; Owen on the discovery 

 near Maidenhead of fossil remains of 

 the first example of the subgenus 

 Bubalus yet recognized as fossil in 

 Great Britain, and Prestwich on the 

 gravel in which these remains were 

 found, lix ; Prestwich on the boring 

 sunk throu2:h the chalk at Kentish 



