i:SDEX TO THE PROCEEDINGS. 



Caratal, section from Las Tablas to, 

 347. 



Carboniferous anticlinal in North 

 Wales, 180. 



Carbonaceous deposits in cretaceous 

 rocks, 242, 243. 



Carboniferous rocks, Lower, the evi- 

 dence of a ridge of, crossing the 

 plain of Cheshire beneath the Trias, 

 171, 178 J supposed structure of 

 the, under the Cheshu-e plain, 180. 



Carentonian stage, 239, 241, 244, 

 246. 



Camforth and Lancaster, drifts be- 

 tween, 415. 



Cairickfergus, flint flakes from, 48. 



Carrion Hill, decaying granite of, 

 275. 



Carrock Fell, felstone-porphyry of, 

 438. 



Carruthers, Mr. W., on the structure 

 and affinities of Sigillaria and allied 

 genera, 248. 



Carstone, 188 ; fossils of the, 189. 



Cascajo, 339, 340. 



Casley cuttiag, decay of granite near, 

 278. 



Castleford, course of the Aire to, from 

 Bingley, 61. 



Caves, table of MammaKa from, 195. 



Cay ton-gill beds, 294. 



Celestine, on the occurrence of, in the 

 Nummuhtic Limestone of Egypt,40. 



Cerro de Sal, 256. 



Chagford, spheroidal masses of granite 

 near, 278. 



Chalk, Lower, new Acrodont Saurian 

 from the, 442. 



Chalk, Red, of Hunstanton, 185 ; and 

 gault, comparison of composition of, 

 190. 



Chaly, Wady, 26. 



Chamile, Wady, 31, 32. 



Charente, Cretaceous rocks of the, 

 239 ; section of the Cretaceous beds 

 of the, 240. 



Cheesering, 279. 



Chehkiang, Tungting series in, 131. 



Cheshire, on the evidences of a ridge 

 of Lower Carboniferous rocks cross- 

 ing the plain of, beneath the Trias, 

 171, 178 ; section through the cen- 

 tral plain of, 181. 

 Chile lodes in the Caratal gold-fields, 

 338. 



China, notes on the geology of, with 

 more especial reference to the pro- 

 vinces of the Lower Yangtse, 119 ; 

 superficial deposits of, 134. 

 Chinese cosmogony, 134. 



Chung-shan, iron-ore in the, 127 ; sec- 

 tion of, near Nanking, 130. 

 Chung-shan series, 129. 

 Cinn-preas Burn, occurrence of gold 



in, 322. 

 Clacton, age of the deposit at, 212. 

 Clare, G-raptohtes occurring in, 160. 

 Clark, Mr. G-. T., on the basalt-dykes 

 of the mainland of India opposite to 

 the islands of Bombay and Salsette, 

 163. 

 Climate, glacial, Mr. Murphy on the 

 nature and cause of the, 350; post- 

 glacial, 214. 

 Coal-beds at Pah-hwei-miau, section 



of, 124. 

 Coal-mines of Kaianoma, in the island 



of Yezo, 254. 

 Coal of the Tungting series, 126 ; of 



the Chung-shan series, 130. 

 Cognac, section through, 240. 

 Combe rock at Brigliton, 79. 

 Concan, basalt dykes of the, 164. 

 Congleton, section across the anticUnal 



of the river Dane near, 178. 

 Coniacian stage, 239, 241, 246. 

 ConocorypTie hufo, 52. 



applanata, 53. 



? humerosa, 54. 



Consumption death-rate, connexion 

 of the geological structure and phy- 

 sical features of the south-east of 

 of England with the, 431. 

 Contorted sand and gravel near TJlver- 

 stone, 421 ; in the Furness penin- 

 sula, 422. 

 Copper-ores of Hastings county, Ca- 

 nada West, 271. 

 Copper -works at Nash, 29. 

 Coquand, M. H., the Cretaceous strata 

 of England and the north of France 

 compared with those of the west, 

 south-west, and south of France 

 and north of Africa, 237. 

 Corinna lode in the Caratal gold-field, 



337. 

 Cottingley Beck, section at, 65. 

 Crask Bridge, granite and trap in 



mica-schist above, 320. 

 Crayford, lower brick-earth, at, 212. 

 Crayford pit, sections in, 90, 91, 92, 



93, 94. 

 Cretaceous rocks of Arabia Petraea, 



36 ; of Sinai, fossils from the, 44. 

 Cretaceous strata of England and the 

 north of France compared with those 

 of the west, south-west, and south 

 of France and north of Africa, 237. 

 Crystals, pseudomorphous, of chloride 

 of sodium in the "Waterstone 



