INDEX TO THE PEOCEEDIIfGS. 



Calamites nodosus, 151. 



Nova-scotica, 151. 



ramosus, 151. 



Suckovii, 151. 



Voltzii, 151. 



Calamodendron in the coal-formations 



of the South Joggins, 134. 

 Calamodendron approximati(,m, 149. 



obscurum, 149. 



Calne railway-station, Wilts, section 



of Trail at, 556. 

 Cambridge, section of a pit in Vic- 

 toria Eoad, 561. 

 Campine sand, 250. 

 Canada, supposed burrows of worms 



in the Laurentian rocks of, 608. 

 Canal-system of EozoonCanadense, 199. 

 Cancellaria Barretti, 289. 



IcBvescens, 289. 



Moorei, 289. 



Cannel Coal in New South Wales, 435, 



439. 

 Canterbury, section in the neighbour- 



of, 434. 

 Cape Clear, 340. 

 Carboniferous Brachiopoda from the 



Mustakli Hills, Thibet, 35; from 



the valley of Kashmere, 39. 

 Carboniferous formations of Nova 



Scotia and New Brunswick, 97. 

 Carboniferous Grlyptodipterines, Dr. J. 



Young on some new genera of, 596. 

 Carboniferous plants, rate of growth 



of, 141. 

 Carboniferous rocks of the valley of 



Kashmere, Capt. H. Godwin- Austen 



on the, 29. 

 Carboniferous Slate(or Devonian rocks) 



and the Old Red Sandstone of South 



Ireland and North Devon, Mr. J. 



Beete Jukes on the, 320. 

 Cardinia ingens, 86. 



Suttonensis, 86. 



Cardiocarpum bisectum, 165. 



fluitans, 165. 



, sp., 165. 



Cardita ? rhomboidalis, 87. 



scabricosiata, 293. 



Cardium casiuon, 582. 



• Haitense, 293. 



inconspicuum, 293. 



lingua-leonh, 293. 



Caribean area, palaeontology of the, 



570. 

 Carpenter, Dr. W. B., on the struc- 

 ture and affinities of Eozoon Cana- 



dense, 219. 

 Carrick, Ayrshire, metamorphic Lower 



Silurian rocks of, 513. 

 Carrigboy, 335. 



Cassidaria sublcsvigata, 287» 



Cassis monilifera, 287, 



sulcifera, 286. 



Cattle, relation of Bos urus to the do- 

 mestic races of, 401. 



Caulopteris, sp., 159. 



Cercomya ledcBformis, 581. 



Cerithium plebeium, 290. 



Chalk, junction of the Thanet Sand 

 and the, 402, 405 ; list of fossils from 

 the beds between the London Clay 

 and the, 422. 



Chama arcinella, 294. 



Chambers of Eozoon Canadense, 209. 



Chancama, Ecuador, section of the 

 Point at, 569. 



Charcoal, tissues in Mineral, 140. 



Cheirotherian footprint from the Keu- 

 per sandstone ofDaresbury, Cheshire, 

 Prof. W. C. Willi amsom on a, 534. 



Chelonians from the ossiferous caves 

 and fissures of Malta, Dr. A. Leith 

 Adams on bones of fossil, 594. 



Chemical characters of Grenville Eo- 

 zoonal ophite, 187. 



Chemnitzia, sp., 88. 



Chillesford beds, list of shells from 

 the, 545. 



Cliillesford Clay, section showing the 

 position of the Bulchamp and Wang- 

 ford Crag-pits relatively to the, 540 ; 

 of the Thorpe Crag-pit relatively to 

 the, 539. 



Chillesford Clay or Loam, Eev. O. 

 Fisher on the relation of the Nor- 

 wich or Fluvio -marine Crag to the, 

 19. 



Chillesford Church, Sufiblk, section of 

 Trail in a pit east of, 556. 



Chondrosteus, Dr. J. Young on the 

 affinities of, 596. 



Chonefes'i Austeniana, 44. 



Hardrensis, var. Thibetensis, 36. 



l(svis, 44. 



Cidaris Melitensis, 299. 



Cisseis astericus, 584. 



Clarke, The Rev. W. B., on the occur- 

 rence and geological position of oil- 

 bearing deposits in New South Wales, 

 439. 



Classification of the " Lower London 



Tertiaries," 414. 

 Clay, Chillesford, 19 ; spaces formerly 

 occupied by selenite in the London, 

 13. 

 Clypeaster ellipticus, 299. 

 Coal, Dr. J. W. Dawson on the con- 

 ditions of the deposition of, 95. 

 Coal-formations of Nova Scotia and 

 New Brunswick, 96. 



