Anniversary Address. 263 



The Field Meetings of the Club are calculated in an 

 eminent degree to draw our attention to these infinite 

 resources, and stimulate us to study Nature in all her 

 branches, and learn in her school the marvellous lessons 

 she constantly and regularly teaches. Since the Jubilee 

 Meeting, ten years ago, when the President gave such an 

 interesting i-eview of what the Club had been the means of 

 accomplishing during the 50 years of her existence, 

 Meetings have been held in Northumberland — at Ber- 

 wick, Carham, Cornhill, Holy Island, Kirknewton, Middleton 

 Hall, Mindrum, and Norham (in the Norham and Island- 

 shire and Glendale Wards of the county) ; at Alnwick, 

 Beadnell, Beanley, Bridge of Aln, Callaly, Fame Islands, 

 Felton, Glanton, North Charlton (in the East Coquetdale, 

 Whittingham, and Bambui-ghshire Wards) ; at Alwinton, 

 Kidland, and Rothbury (in the Western Hills) ; at Morpeth 

 and Newbiggen (in the Morpeth Ward) ; at ChoUerford, 

 Corbridge, and Newcastle (in the Tyne Valley). 



In Berwickshire. — Duns, Cockburnspath, Cranshaws, 

 Earlston. 



In Roxburghshire. — Hawick, Hownam, Jedburgh, Kelso, 

 Melrose, St. Boswells, Yetholm. 



East Lothian. — 'Aberlady, Dunbar, Haddington, Preston- 

 kirk. 



Midlothian. — Stow. 



Selkirkshire.— Selkirk and St. Mary's Loch. 



Peeblesshire. — Peebles. 



Dumfriesshire and Roxburghshire.— Canonbie and 

 Newcastle ton for Liddesdale. 



The graphic and exhaustive pen of your learned and 

 most observant Secretary has given us details of the 

 expeditions, and of the objects most worthy of notice — of 

 the scenery that attracted attention, of the Flora that gave 

 beauty and colour to the landscape, of the Geological 

 formations that prevailed in the district, of the Birds that 

 the eye of the ornithologist observed, of the remarkable 

 Trees that adorned the parks and pleasure grounds, that are 



