INDEX. 



503 



Broderip, W. J., Esq., and W. Clift, Esq., notice 

 of their discovery in the cervical vertebrae of 

 the Pterodactyle of cylindrical bony tendons 

 similar to those of the pygmy Musk, 218. 



Brodick, Isle of Arran, description of the coast 

 section from Loch Ranza to, 24. 



■ of the forma- 

 tions in the neighbourhood of, 32. 



■ notice of dislocations in the 



vicinity of, 31. 



Brois, between Sospello and Breglio, geological 

 structure of the mountains of, 188. 



Bromus pinnatus, characteristic of magnesian soils, 

 42. 



Brongniart, M. Adolphe, description of the fossil 

 plants of the Haring coal basin, 373. 



fucoids, considered by, 



as characteristic of the green-sand and cretace- 

 ous periods, 333. 



M. Alex., observations on his con- 



clusions relative to the age of the Qlningen 

 deposit, 278. 



Brook Point, Isle of Wight, notice of the disco- 

 very of remains of the Iguanodon near, 428. 



Brotherton, near Ferrybridge, section of the upper 

 thin-bedded limestone at, 105. 



Brown micaceous, secondary sandstone, descrip- 

 tion of, near Nice, 178. 



Brown, Robert, Esq., a leaf from Qlningen stated 

 by, to resemble that of the Acer villosum, 

 287. 



Brunn Kogel, structure of the, 313. 



Buckland, Rev. Dr., on the discovery of copro- 

 lites, or fossil fieces, in the lias at Lyme Regis, 

 and in other formations, 223. 



fossil 



bones of the Iguanodon, in the Isle of Wight 

 and in the Isle of Purbeck, 425. 



. a new species of Pterodac- 



tyle found at Lyme Regis, 217. 



the occurrence of Agates 



in dolomitic strata of the new red sandstone 

 formation in the Mendip Hills, 421. 

 secondary formations 



between Nice and the Col di Tendi, 187. 

 red sandstone of the Alps, 



first considered by, to be the equivalent of the 

 red sandstone of England, 310, 409 note. 



Bukhur, on the Indus, island of, consists of flint, 

 492. 



Bundelcund, on the geology of a portion of, 191. 



Burnes, Lieut. Alexander, extract from his me- 

 moir on the geology of the banks of the Indus, 

 the Indian Caucasus, and the plains of Tartary, 

 to the shores of the Caspian, 491. 



Burtin, M., fossil figured in his Oryctographie de 

 Bruxelles as a fruit, considered by Dr. Buck- 

 land to be a coprolite, 234. 



C. 



Cabool, notice of the geology on the banks of the 



river of, 492. 

 Cachye, cataract of, formed of red sandstone, 193. 

 CadboU, description of the cliffs near, 149 andnote. 

 Caithness, coast section of, from Strathy water to 



the Pentland Firth, 130. 

 from Duncansby Head to the Ord, 



135, 



fossil fishes of the schist of, 141. 

 characteristic of the for- 



mation, 141. 

 analogy between them and 



the fossil fishes of Thuringia, 77. 

 Mansfeldt and Eis- 



leben, 142. 

 description of, by MM. 



Valenciennes and Pentland, 143. 

 _ . remarks on, by Cuvier, 



142. 



general structure of, 129. 



old conglomerates of, assigned to the 



age of the old red sandstone, 156. ^ 

 range of the, through, 



127. 



schist, appears to be nearly of the age 



of the carboniferous system, 157. 

 not to be identified with any 



Enghsh formation, 157. 

 secondary formations of, divisible into 



three groups : — old red conglomerates and sand- 

 stone, bituminous schist with siliceous flagstone, 

 and upper red sandstone, 126. 

 3 t2 



