112 ADDITIONS TO THE LIBEAKT. 



the Committee appointed for tlie purpose of collecting and reporting on the 

 Tertiary (Miocene) Flora, &c., of the Basalt of the North of Ireland, 162. 

 Knowles. Report of the Committee appointed for the purpose of con- 

 ducting Excavations at Portstewart and elsewhere in the North of Ire- 

 land, 171. — R. A. C. Godwin -Austen. On some further Evidence as to 

 the Range of the Palaeozoic Rocks beneath the South-east of England, 

 227. — W. J. Macadam. On the Chemical Composition of a Nodule of 

 Ozokerite found at Kinghorn-ness, 309. — W. Thomson. Notes on a 

 Sample of Fuller's Earth, foimd in a FuUonica recently excavated at Pom- 

 peii, 321.— P. M. Duncan. Address to Section C, Geology, 326.— P. H. 

 Carpenter. On the Nomenclature of the Plates of the Crinoidal Calyx, 

 333. — V. Ball. On the Coal-fields and Coal-production of India, 334. — J. 

 F. Blake. On Geological Episodes, 335. — F. M. Burton. On the Keuper 

 Beds between Retford and Gainsborough, 336. — F. M. Burton. On a 

 Northerly Extension of the Rhsetic Beds at Gainsborough, 336. — W. Boyd 

 Dawkins. On the Bone Caves of Derbyshire, 337. — R. J . Ussher and A. 

 LeithAdams. Discoveryof aBoneCavenearCappagh,Co.Waterford,338. 

 — C. Ricketts. On some remarkable Pebbles in the Boulder-clay of Cheshire 

 and Lancashire, 339. — A. Renard and T. Murray. On the Volcanic Products 

 of the Deep Sea of the Central Pacific, with reference to the ' Challenger ' 

 Expedition, 340. — C. Moore. On Ammonites and Aptychi, 341. — J. W. 

 Davis. On Ostracacanthus dilatatus, gen. et spec, nov., 343. — E. Wilson. 

 The Age of the Penine Chain, 343. — Phene, On the Deposit of Car- 

 bonate of Lime at Hierapolis, in Anatolia, and the Efflorescence of the 

 Limestone at Les Baux, in Provence, 344. — J. D. Everett. On some 

 Broad Features of Underground Temperature, 345. — W. C. Williamson. 

 On the Botanical Affinities of the Carboniferous Sigillaric^, 346. — J. H. 

 Collins. The Geological Age of the Rocks of West Cornwall, 347. — J. 

 Perry. The Surface Rocks of Syria (suggested by the Quarries at Baalbek), 

 348. — G. Blencowe. On certain Geological Facts observed in Natal and 

 the Border Countries during Nineteen Years' Residence, 349. — G. R. Vine. 

 On Carboniferous Polyzoa and Palceocoi-yne, 350. — H. Hicks. On the 

 Classification of the British Pre-Cambrian Rocks, 351. — G. A. Lebour. 

 On ' Culm ' and ' Kulm,' 352.— S. B. Skertchley. Evidence of the Exist- 

 ence of Palaeolithic Man during the Glacial Period in East Anglia, 379. — 

 E. B. Tylor. Address to Section D, Dept. Anthropology, 381.— W. J. 

 Knowles. On Flint Implements from the Valley of the Bann, 389. — V. 

 Ball. On the Forms and Geographical Distribution of Ancient Stone Im- 

 plements in India, 394. — J. W. Davis. On the Discovery of certain Pockets 

 of Chipped Flints beneath the Peat on the Yorkshire INIoors, near Halifax, 

 395. — W. Boyd Dawkins. On the Geological Evidence as to the An- 

 tiquity of Man, 399. 



British Association for the Advancement of Science. Reports of the 

 32nd and 33rd Meetings (1862 and 1863). 1863, 1864. 

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Brussels. Musee Royal d'Histoire Naturelle. Annales. Tome iv. 

 1880. (Text 4to ; Atlas obi. 4to.) 

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L. G. de Koninck. Faune du calcaire carbonifere de la Belgique, 

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