ADDITI0N8 TO TUK LIHRAKY. 197 



London. Atheuccum. (Journal.) Nos. 32G9-32y(). 1890. 



. . ( .) No8. 3297-3322. 1891. 



. . ( .) Parts 750-7i5(). 1890. 



. . ( .) Parts 757-761. 1891. 



. British Association for the Advancement of Science. Report 



of the 58th Meeting. Bath, 1888. 1889. 

 H. W. Crosskey. Sixteenth Kepoit of the Committee appointed for 

 the purpose of recoidinii' the position, height ahove the sea, hthological 

 chavacters, size, and origin of the Erratic Blocks ot England, Wales, and 

 Ireland, 101. — A. Bell. Second Report of the Committee appointed for 

 the purpose of reporting upon the " Manure " Gravels of AN'extord, 13-3. — 

 C. E. Be Ranee. Fourteenth Report of the Connuittee appointed for the 

 purpose of investigating the Circulation of Underground Waters in the 

 Permeable Eormaiions of England and Wales, and the Quantity and Cha- 

 racter of the Water supplied to various Towns and Bisitricts from these 

 Formations. — W. C. Williamson. Report of tlie Committee appointed 

 for the purpose of investigating the Flora of the Carboniferous Rocks of 

 Lancashire and West Yorkshire, 150. — T. Rupert Jones. Sixth Report 

 of the Committee on the Fossil Phyllopoda of the Palaeozoic Recks, 173. — 

 J. W. Bavis. Second Report of the Committee appointed for the pur- 

 pose of ascertaining and recording the localities in the British Islands in 

 which evidences of the existence of Prehistoric Inhabitants of the country 

 are found, 289. — II. J. Johnston-Lavis. Report of the Committee ap- 

 pointed for the investigation of the Volcanic Phenomena of Vesuvius and 

 its neighbourhood, 320. — G. W. Lamplugh. Report of the Committee 

 appointed for the purpose of investigatmg an ancient Sea-beacJi near Brid- 

 , lington Quay, 328. — J. F. Blake. Report of the Committee appointed 

 to investigate the Microscopic Structure of the Older Recks of Anglesey, 

 367. — J. 5lilne. Eighth Report of the Committee appointed for the pur- 

 pose of investigating the Earthquake and Volcanic Phenomena of Japan, 

 422. — Report of the Committee appointed for the purpose of considering 

 the advisability and possibility of establishing in other parts of the country 

 obsenations upon the prevalence of Earth Tremors similar to those now 

 being made in Durham, 522. — W.Boycl Bawkins. Addi-ess to Section C, 

 Geology, 644. — H. B. Woodward. Further Note on the Midford Sands, 

 660. — 11. B. Woodward. The Relations of the Great Oolite to the Forest 

 Marble and Fuller's Earth in the South-west of England, (351. — II. B. 

 Woodward. Note on the Portland Sands of Swindon and elsewhere, 652. 

 — 0. W. Jeffs. On Local Geological Photography, 653. — C. Callaway. 

 Further Notes on the Origin of the Crystalline Schists of Malvern and 

 Anglesey, 653. — C. Callaway. Sketch of the Geology of the Crystalline 

 Axis of the Malvern Hills, (Jo4. — P. Frazer. Archean Characters of the 

 Rocks of the Nucleal Ranges of the Antilles, 654. — P. Frazer. On a Speci- 

 men of Quartz from Australia, and Three specimens of Oligoclase from 

 North Carolina, exhibiting curious Optical Properties, 655. — W. Whitaker. 

 On the extension of the Bath Oolite under London, as shown by a Deep 

 Boring at Streatham, 656. — E. Wethered. On the Lower Carboniferous 

 Rocks of Gloucestershire, 657. — II. H. Winwood. On the Tytherington 

 and Thornbury Section, 058.— H. Cossham. The Northern Section ot the 

 Bristol Coal-tield, 659. — W. A. E. Ussher. Some Points of Interest in the 

 Geolog}' of Somerset, 659. — H. F. Osborn. The Evolution of the Mam- 

 malian Molar Teeth to and from the Tritubercular Type, 660. — A. Irving. 

 Note on the Relation of the Percenta<?e of Carbonic Acid in the Atmo- 



