ADBITION-S TO THE IIBRAKY. 121 



man Taylor. On the Cudgegong Diamond Field, New South Wales, 444- 

 —J. P. 'Lesley. Origin of Pipe Ore, 459. — S. Allport. On the Hocks of 

 Brazil Wood, Charnwood Forest, 481. — 0. Feistmantel. Notes on the 

 fossil Flora of East Australia and Tasmania, 485. — H. Woodward. Fur- 

 ther Notes on Sumatran Fossils, 492. — E. Wilson. The Age of the 

 Pennine Chain, 500. — F. T. S. Houghton. Notes on an Olivine Gabbro 

 from Cornwall, 504. — J. Milne. Further Notes upon the Forms of Vol- 

 canos, 506. — J. R. Dakyns. On the Parallel Roads of Glen Roy, 529. — 

 J. W. Davis. New fossil Fish Spine, Ctenacanthus minor ^ 531. — E. 

 Wilson. On the Occurrence of the Keuper Basement Beds in the Neigh- 

 bourhood of Nottingham, 532. — H. Woodward. Further Notes on 

 Sumatran Fossils, 535. 



Geological Magazine. Dec. IT. Yol. vii. Nos. 1-6. 1880. 



J. Clifton Ward. Notes on the Geology of the Isle of Man; 1. — E. 

 Hill. Eccentricity and Glacial Epochs, 10. — W. Davies. On some fossil 

 Bird-remains from the Siwalik Hills, India, in the British Museum, 18.— 

 G. H. Kinahan. The supposed Old Red Sandstone of the Curlew and 

 Fintona Districts, 27. — C. Lapworth. On Linnarsson's recent Discoveries 

 in Swedish Geology, 29, 68. — C. von Ettingshausen. Report on the Fossil 

 Flora of Sheppey, 37. — J. S. Gardner. Cretaceous Gasteropoda, 49. — C. 

 Reid. The Glacial Deposits of Cromer, 55. — J. CroU. Mr. Hill on the 

 Cause of the Glacial Epoch, 66. — H. Woodward. A new Genus of Tri- 

 lobites, Onycopyge Liversidgei, from New South Wales, 97. — J. Milne. 

 Note upon the Cooling of the Earth, 99. — H. Hicks. On the Pre-Cam- 

 briam Rocks of Ross-shire, with Petrological Notes by T. Davies, 103, 

 155, 222, 266. — R. Etheridge, jun. British Carboniferous Tubicolar An- 

 nelides, 109, 171, 215, 258.— G. Cole. Artificial Perlitic Structure, 115. 

 — C. Callaway. Pre-Cambrian Geology of Anglesey, 117. — T. G. Bonney. 

 Notes on Pre-Cambrian Rocks, 125. — F. Romer. On the Occurrence of 

 Upper Devonian Goniatite Limestone in Devonshire, 145. — 0. Fisher. 

 On the Cromer Cliffs, 147.— E. T. Newton. The Vertebrata of the 

 Forest-Bed Series of the East of England, 152. — J. Milne. Note on the 

 Geographical Distribution of Volcanos, 166. — H.Woodward. Notes on 

 the Anomalocystidae, a remarkable Family of Cystoidea from the Silurian 

 Rocks, 193. — P. N. Bose. Notes on the Plistory of the Extinct Carnivora, 

 202, 271.— E. B. Tawney. Woodwardian Laboratory Notes : North 

 Wales Rocks, 207. — W. H. Hudleston. Contributions to the Palaeonto- 

 logy of the Yorkshire Oolites, 241. — A. J. Jukes Brown. The Subdivi- 

 sions of the Chalk, 248. — R. Etheridge, jun. Contributions to British 

 Tubicolar Annelides (part 4), 258. 



. . Yol. vi. Nos. 7-12. 1879. Purchased. 



. . Yol. vii. Nos. 1-6. 1880. PurcMsed. 



Geologists' Association. Proceedings. Yol. vi. Nos. 1-6. 1879 

 and 1880. 



C. Barrois. A Geological Sketch of the Boulonnais, 1. — Excursion to 

 the Gorge of the Mole, Box Hill, and Dorking, 38. — C. Barrois. Excursion 

 to the Boulonnais, 39. — W. H. Hudleston. On the Controversy respecting 

 the Gneiss of the North-west Highlands, 47.— W. M. Williams. On the 

 so-called ''Crater Necks" and "Volcanic Bombs" of County Antrim, 

 Ireland, 80.- — J. S. Gardner. On the British Eocenes and their Deposi- 

 tion, 83. — H. Goss. The Insect Fauna of the Secondary or Mesozoic 

 Period, and the British and Foreign Formations of that Period in which 

 Insect Remains have been detected, 116. — R. F. Tomes. On the fossil 

 Corals obtained in the Oolite of the Railway-cuttings near Hook Norton^ 

 Oxfordshire, 152. — C. Barrois. Note on the Rev. J. F. Blake's Paper on 



VOL. XXXVI. n 



