INDEX TO THE PEOCEEDINGS. 



ward on tlie species of the genus, 

 494. 



Eryon antiquus, 495. 



• Barrovensis, 495. 



, Brodiei, 498. 



■ crassichelis, 497. 



■ — — Moorei, 499. 



^— Oppeli, 500. 



, sp., 500. 



• Wilmcotensis, 498. 



Esmeraldas, Ecuador, new gold-de- 

 posits in, 593. 



Essex, section across a furrow of Trail 

 covered by Warp, at Wivenhoe, 557 ; 

 section of the railway viaduct over 

 Ah^esford Creek, 562 ; section near 

 G-reat Bentley church, 555. 



Enrynotus, 314. 



Fasciolaria semistriata, 238. 



Eault in ISTorth Devon, probable ex- 

 istence of a great, 360. 



Faults in the Drift-gravel at Hitchin, 

 Herts, Mr. J. W. Salter on, 565; 

 in the Lake-country, 485. 



Eelspar-porphyry of Ayrshire, 520. 



Felspathic rocks of Ayrshire, 516. 



Fenland, Mr. Harry Seeley on the 

 gravels and drift of the, 470. 



Ferns, vascular bundles of, 140. 



Ficula carbasea, 580. 



Filices in the coal-formations of the 

 South Joggins, 135. 



Fisher, the Rev. O., on the relation 

 of the Norwich or Fluvio-marine 

 Crag to the Chillesford Clay or 

 Loam, 19. 



Fishes in the coal-formations of the. 

 South Joggins, 144 ; sketches illus- 

 trating the teeth and scales of some, 

 new genera of Carboniferous, 597. 



Flower, J. W., Esq., on some flint im- 

 plements lately found in the valley 

 of the Little Ouss River, near Thet- 

 ford, 567. 



Fluviatile drift of NewSouth Wales, 444. 



Fluvio-marine Crag to the Chillesford 

 Clay or Loam, relation of the, 19. 



Folkestone, Mr. H. W. Bristow on 

 supposed remains of the Crag on 

 the North Downs near, 553. 



Foraminifera froixi the Tertiary As- 

 phaltic bed, Trinidad, Prof. T. E, 

 Jones on, 592. 



Forest-beds of Porlock Bay, submer- 

 ged, 3. 



Forest Marble, Malmesbury, Wilts, 

 Mr. H. Woodward on the oldest 

 knowii British Crab from the, 493. 



Fort WilHani, 280. 



Fossil British oxen, 391 ; Cheloniang 



from the ossiferous caves and fis- 

 sures of Malta, bones of, 594. 



Fossiliferous rocks of the county of 

 Galway, 506. 



Fossils from the Bantry Bay trough, 

 342 ; Chillesford beds, 545 ; Crag at 

 Walton-on-the-Naze, 542 ; Drift of 

 Barnwell, 476 ; Forest Marble, 

 Malmesbury, Wilts,493; glacial-drift 

 of Caithness, 278 ; Lias and Oolite 

 of England and Bavaria, 494 ; lime- 

 stone near Ballea, 336 ; Lingula- 

 flags near Tyddyngwladis silver- 

 lead mine, 505 ; Lower Miocene de- 

 posits of, 574; Manzanilla beds, 

 Trinidad, 573 ; Moffat shales, Dum- 

 friesshire, 503 ; Mustakh Hills, Thi- 

 bet, 35 ; Mya-bed, 22, 26 ; Oldhaven 

 beds at Grove Ferry, 416 ; Silurian 

 rocks of Galway, 512 ; Tertiary beds 

 of Jamaica, 285 ; Upper Miocene 

 deposits of Cumana, 576 ; Upper 

 Miocene deposits of San Domingo, 

 574 ; valley of Kashmere, 39 ; val- 

 ley of Rocks, 354 ; in the Coal- 

 formations of the South Joggins, 

 125 ; of Bluntisham, 471 ; of Hun- 

 stanton, 473; of March, 473; of 

 the Caribean Miocene, table show- 

 ing the affinities of some of the, 

 588 ; Crag-beds of Belgium, 242 ; 

 Devonian rocks, 365; Lower Lon- 

 don Tertiaries of Kent, 420 ; RbiE- 

 tic beds of South Wales, 79 ; Sutton 

 and Southerndown series, 81. 



Fouque, M., on the recent volcanic 

 disturbances in the neighbourhood 

 of Santorino, 320. 



France, -Mr. A. Tylor on the valley- 

 gravels of part of England and, 

 463. 



Freshwater shells from the Drift of 

 Barnwell, 477. 



Furfooz cave, section of the deposits 

 at the entrance of the, 248. 



Galway, Prof. R. Harkness on the 

 metamorphic and fossiliferous rocks ! 

 of the county of, 506. 



Galway Bay, section from Killery 

 Harbour to, 507. 



Gararie, 280. 



Geographical relations of the Mollusca 

 of some of the Scottish glacial beds, 

 280. _ 



Geological considerations bearing on. 

 the nature of Eozoonal ophite, 213. 



Geological cycles, 101. 



Geological position of oil-bearing 

 rocks in New South Wales, 439. 



Geology of Michigan, 449; North.. 



