Index, 



587 



Dill 



GLY 



Drift-beds of Llandrillo Bay, 349. 



, contorted, 454. 



Duncan, P. M., Corals of the Lias, 426 , 



Ctjclophylhim fungitcs, 197; Fossil 

 Corals of the West Indian Islands, 33 ; 

 Heterophyllia, 584. 

 Du Noyor, G. V., Flint flakes from 

 Carrickfergus and Larne, 388. 



IjlARTH, Features of the, 36 ; internal 

 Li Heat of the, 26, 507, 537, 581. 

 Earthquakes in Northern Formosa, 435. 

 Echinodermata from the Chalk and 



Greensand, 427. 

 Edinburgh Geological Society, 241. 

 Egerton, P. de M. G., Fossil Fish from 



the Lias, 389. 

 Elephant, Asiatic, 389. 

 Elephas primigenius, 316, 540.' 

 Ely, Section at, 347, 407, 438. 

 Entomostraca, Recent and Fossil, 91, 



519. 

 Eocene Mammalia, 416. 

 Escarpments, 40. 

 Evans, J., on some cavities in the Gravel 



of the Valley of the Little Ouse, in 



Norfolk, 443. 

 Eyton, Miss, the Drift-Beds of Llandrillo 



Bay, Denbighshire, 349. 



FALCONER, the late H., Palseonto- 

 logical Memoirs and Notes of, 423 ; 

 The Himalayas, 439. 



Faults, Cause of, 205, 339, 341. 



Favre, A., Geological Researches in the 

 vicinity of Mont Blanc, 187. 



Festiniog Group of the Dolgelly Dis- 

 trict, 5. 



Fielding, E., Heterophyllia mirabilis, 

 Duncan, 533. 



Finchley, Gravel Beds of, 411. 



Fish, New Devonian, 18i. 



remains in the Devonian, 247, 296, 



568. 



Fishes in the Coal-Shale, 186, 495, 

 580 ; from the Lias, 389. 



, Catalogue of Secondary, 573. 



, Death of, in the Bay of Fundy, 



240. 



Fisher, 0., A Few Notes on Clacton, 

 Essex, 213; Age of the Trail, 147; 

 Boulder-clay at Witham and the 

 Thames Valley, 98 ; Denudation and 

 its Agents, 34; On Roslyn or Roswell 

 Hill Clay-pit, near Ely, 407, 438 ; On 

 the Denudations of Norlolk, 544 ; On 

 the Elevation of Mountain Chains, 

 with a Speculation on the Cause of 

 Volcanic Action, 493. 



Flint, 12. 



Flakes from Carrickfergus and 



Larne, 388. 



Flora, Miocene, of the Polar Regions, 

 273, 297. 



Paleeozoic, 330. 



Flower-like form from the Lower Bagshot 

 Beds, 74. 



Flower, \V. II., Extinct Australian Mar- 

 supial, Thylacoleo carnifex, 286. 



Folkestone, Gault of, 169. 



Foote, R. B., Stone Implements in 

 Southern India, 387. 



Forbes, D., On some Points in Chemical 

 Geology, 93 ; Study of Chemical 

 Geology, 366 ; Dr. T. Sterry Hunt's 

 Geological Chemistry, 92, 106; Poly- 

 telite in Cornwall, 147; Researches m 

 British Mineralogy, 47, 222. 



Chemical Geology of, 49. 



Forest-bed of Cromer, 419, 472, 477. 



Formosa, Geology of, 89. 



Fritsch, A., Geological Survey of Bo- 

 hemia, 152. 



GANOIDS, Classification of the, 429. 

 Gaudry, A., Ancient History and 

 Geology of Greece, 372. 



Gault of Folkestone, 163. 



with Phosphatic Stratum at Up- 

 ware, 272. 



Geikie, A., On Denudation now in Pro- 

 gress, 249. 



J., Note on the Discovery of Bos 



primigenius in the Lower Boulder- 

 clay of Scotland, 393, 486, 535 ; Denu- 

 dation in Scotland since Glacial Times, 

 19. 



Gems and Precious Stones of Great 

 Britain, 230. 



Geological Excursion to Somersetshire, 

 233. 



Geological Index, 486. 



Geological Society of London, 31, 88, 

 139, 195, 237, 286, 338, 382, 435, 

 575. _ 



Geologists' Association, 33. 



Gersdorffite from the Craigmuir Nickel 

 Mine, near Inverary, 227. 



Gervais, P., Vertebrate Animals of the 

 Quaternary Period, 228. 



Glacial and Post- Glacial Structure of 

 Norfolk and Suffolk, 452. 



Structure of Lincolnshire and 



Yorkshire, 31. 



Glaciers of Russian America, 284. 



Glacio-marine Drift of Llandrillo Bay, 

 351. 



Glasgow, Surface Geology of, 291. 



• — Geological Society, 90, 142, 



241, 291. 



Glen Roy, Parallel Roads of, 88, 237. 



Globe, Internal Fluidity of the, 26, 507, 

 537, 581. 



Glyphea^ 354. 



