50 DONATIONS. 



British Association for the Advancement of Science. Eeport, 1864 

 (continued). 



P. B. Brodie. — Two outliers of Lias in South Warwickshire, and pre- 

 sence of the Rhsetic Bone-bed at Kjiowle, 52. 



P. P. Carpenter. — Connexion between the Crag Formations and the 

 recent North Pacific Faunas, 52. 



Daubeny. — Cause of the Extrication of Carbonic Acid from the In- 

 terior of the Earth, and on its Chemical Action upon the Consti- 

 tuents of Felspathic Rocks, 52. 



W. B. Dawkins. — Newer Pliocene Fauna of the Caverns and Eiver- 

 deposits of Somersetshire, 53. 



R. Harkness. — Lower Silurian Rocks of the South-east of Cumber- 

 land and the North-east of Westmoreland, 53. 



J. Hector. — Geology of the Province of Otago, New Zealand, 54. 



Hennessy. — ^Possible Conditions of Geological Climate, 65. 



W. Keene. — Coal-measures of New South Wales with Spirifer, 

 Glossopteris, and Lepidodendron, 58. 



E. R. Lankester. — Species of the genus Pteraspis, 58. 



J. Leckenby. — Boulder-clay and Drift of Scarborough and East 

 Yorkshire, 58. 



C. Moore. — Geology of the South-west of England, 59. 



C. W. Peach. — Traces of Glacial Drift in the Shetland Islands, 59. 



. Additional List of Fossils from the Boulder-clay of Caithness, 



61. 



W. Pengelly. — Accumulation of Shells, with Human Industrial 

 Remains, found on a hill near the River Teign, in Devonshire, 63. 



. Changes of Relative Level of Land and Sea in South-eastern 



Devonshire in connexion with the Antiquity of Mankind, 63. 



J. Phillips. — Formation of Valleys near Kirkby Lonsdale, 63. 



. Measure of Geological Time by Natm-al Chronometers, 64. 



. Distribution of Granite Blocks from Wasdale Craig, 65. 



W. B. Rogers. — Peculiar Fossil found in the Mesozoic Sandstone of 

 the Connecticut Valley, QQ. 



R. N. Rubidge. — Relations of the Silurian Schist with the Quartzose 

 Rocks of South Africa, 66. 



J. W. Salter. — New Forms of Glenoid Trilobites from the Lowest 

 Fossiliferous Rocks of Wales, 67. 



. Old Pre-Cambrian (Laurentian) Island of St. David's, Pem- 

 brokeshire, 67. 



W. Sanders. — Explanation of a Geological Map of the Bristol Coal- 

 field, 68. 



W. A. Sanford. — Carnassial and Canine Teeth from the Mendip 

 Caverns, probably belonging to Felis antiqua (syn. Fardus), 69. 



H. Seeley. — Significance of the Sequence of Rocks and Fossils, 69. 



W. W. Smyth.— Thermal Water of the Clifford Amalgamated Mines 

 of Cornwall, 70. 



H. C. Sorby. — Conclusion to be drawn from the Physical Structm'e 

 of some Meteorites, 70. 



W. W. Stoddart. — Lowest Beds of the Clifton Carboniferous Series, 71. 



H. B. Tristram. — Bone Breccia with Flints in Lebanon, 72. 



. Sulphur- and Bitumen-deposit at the South-west Corner of 



the Dead Sea, 73. 



H. Woodward. — Family of the Eurypterida, with descriptions of 

 some new genera and species, 73. 



T. Wright. — Development of Ammonites, 73. 



. White Lias of Dorsetshire, 75. 



