IKDEX»TO THE PROCEEDINGS. 



Oxford, probable section under, 80; 



Prof. J. Phillips on some sections of 



the strata near, 115, 307. 

 Oxfordshire and Northamptonshire, 



Mr. E. Hull on the probable depth 



of the coal-measures under, 64. 

 Palasozoic flora, 279 ; period, land and 



sea in the later, 74. 

 Palermo, fossil foraminifera from, 300 ; 



ossiferous cave near, 99. 

 Palichthyologic notes, No. 12, by Sir 



P. G. Egerton, 119. 

 Paludina acicularis, 167. 



conoidea, 169. 



— ■ — Deccanensis, 167. 



normalis, 166. 



Pyramis, 167. 



Rawest, 169. 



ScmJceyi, 168. 



soluta, 169. 



subcylindracea, 168. 



Takliensis, 169. 



Virapai, 170. 



Wapsharei, 167- 



Parian formation, newer, 466, 469 ; 



older, 463, 469. 

 Parker, W. K, Esq., and T. R. Jones, 

 Esq., award of the balance of the Do- 

 nation-fund to, xxvi ; on fossil fora- 

 minifera from South Australia, 261 ; 

 on the rhizopodal fauna of the Me- 

 diterranean, 293. 

 Parry, Capt., and Lieut. Foster, rock- 

 specimens from Spitzbergen, brought 

 by, 442. 

 Passage-beds from the Silurian to the 



Old Eed Sandstone, 193. 

 Paviland Care, 490. 

 Pea-grit of Gloucestershire, 7, 11. 

 Peak, Eobinhood's Bay, section at the, 



14. 

 Pebble-bed, formation of a, 349. 

 Pentiand and Lammermuir Hills, Mr. 



A. Geikie on the, 320. 

 Permian sand-rock near Worksop, 142 ; 

 rocks and trias near Mansfie'd, 75 ; 

 Mr. Kirkby on the claim of the, to 

 be entitled a system, 412. 

 Perna-bed of the Cotteswolds, 42. 

 Perna riieleagrinoides, 178. 

 Phaneropleuron Andersoni, 137. 

 Phillips, John, Esq. (President), Ad- 

 dress on presenting the Wollaston 

 Medal to Sear!es V. Wood, Esq., 

 xxv ; address to Mr. T. Rupert Jones 

 and Mr. W. Kitchen Parker on giving 

 them the residue of the Wollaston 

 Donation-fund, xxvi; Anniversary 

 Address, February 17, I860, xxvii ; 

 Notices of deceased Fellows: — Mr. 

 William Anstice, xxvii ; Mr. William 



John Broderip, xxvii; Mr. John 

 Brown, xxvii; Mr. Joseph Carne, 

 xxviii ; Earl Cathcart, xxviii ; Dr. 

 J. G. Croker, xxviii ; Sir I. L. Gold- 

 smid, Bart., E.R.S., xxviii; Mr. 

 William Kennett Loftus, xxviii ; Mr. 

 David Mushet, xxix; Sir G. T. 

 Staunton, E.R.S., xxix ; Mr. Samuel 

 Stuchbury, xxix ; Prof. Cleveland, 

 xxix; Alexander von Humboldt, xxix; 

 Archduke John of Austria, xxx ; 

 progress of geology and paleonto- 

 logy, xxxi ; palseontological data, 

 xxxii ; provinces in space, xxxv ; 

 provinces in time, xxxvi ; zones of 

 life, xxxviii ; the distribution of am- 

 monites, with a table of their dis- 

 tribution, drawn up by John Phil- 

 lips, under the direction of William 

 Smith, in 1817, xli; beds below the 

 Chalk, xlii ; palajontological periods, 

 xiiii ; table of the distribution in 

 time of certain classes of marine in- 

 vertebrata, xlv; physiological rela- 

 tions, xlv ; succession of life, xlviii ; 

 geological time, 1 ; conversion of 

 geological into historical time, li; 

 the gravel of the Valley of the Somme 

 with worked flints, lii ; conclusion, 

 lv. 



Phillips, Prof. J., on some sections of 

 the strata near Oxford, 115, 307. 



Physa Prinsepii, 173. 



Physical geography of the Trias, 74. 



Pilbrow, J., Esq., on a well-section 

 near Gosport, 447. 



Pisidium Medlicottianum, 181. 



Placodermata, 127. 



Planularia pauperata, 454. 



Platygnathus Jamesoni, 126. 



Polyptychodon interruptus, from the 

 Lower Chalk at Dorking, Prof. Owen 

 on some remains of, 262. 



Polyptychodon, remains of the, from 

 near Erome, Somerset, 263 ; from 

 the Upper Greensand near Cam- 

 bridge, 262, 263 ; from the Green- 

 sand of Kursk, Russia, 262, 263. 



Polystomella craticulata, 306. 



crispa, 306. 



Polytrema miniacea, 303. 



Porcellanite or thermantide, 467. 



Prestwich, J., Esq., description of some 

 gravels from Spitzbergen, 438 ; on a 

 raised beach in Mewslade Bay, and 

 the occurrence of the boulder-clay 

 on Cefn-y-bryn, 487 ; on the bone- 

 cave at Brixham, 189 ; on the pre- 

 sence of the London Clay in Nor- 

 folk, as proved by a well-boring at 

 Yarmouth, 449. 



