200 ADDITIONS TO THE HBllARY. 



London. City of London College. Calendar for 1890-91. 1890. 

 Colliery Guardian. Vol. Iviii. Nos. 1540-1565. 1890. 



J. R. S. Hunter. Geology of the Upper Ward of Lanarkshire, 1.3. — 

 Coal in the South of England, 14. — J. 11. Collins. A Practical Directory 

 of English and Foreign Mining, Metallurgical, and Mineralogical Terms, 

 28, 101, 180, '220, 259, 335, 370, 412, 539, 627, 714, 756, 803, 844, 886, 

 926, 972.--Il.»M. Chance. Geology of the Choctaw Coalfield, 100.— 

 R. S. Weitzel. The Coalfields of Texas, 218. 



. . Vol. lix. Nos. 1566-1591. 1891. 



J. IT. Collins. A Practical Directory of English and Foreign Mining, 

 Metallurirical, and ISIineralogical Terms, 28, 118, 162, 250, 294, 334, 379, 

 418.— Briart. The Coal Formation, 68, 101, 144, 207, 246.— Iron Ores of 

 Australia, 502. — The Explorations for Natural Gas near Middlesbrough, 

 533. — Coal in the South of England, 533. — Discovery of Brown Phos- 

 phatic Chalk in the South of England, 669. — The South Wales Coal- 

 field, 840, 886, 915, 958, 1002, 1049. 



. East India Association. Journal. Yol. xxii. Nos. 3-5, 



1890. 



. . . Yol.xxiii. No. 1. 1891. 



-. Edinburgh and Dublin Philosophical Magazine. Series 5. 

 Yol. xxx. Nos. 182-187. 1890. Presented by Dr. W. Francis^ 

 F,G.S. 



. YoL xxxi. Nos. 188-193. 1891. 



. Federated Institution of Mining Engineers. See Barnsley. 



. Geological Magazine. Dec. iii. Yol. vii. Nos. 7-12, 



1890. 

 A. Smith Woodward. On a Head of Euryeormus, from the Kim- 

 meridge Clay of Ely, 289.— A. Smith Woodward. Note on the Gill- 

 rakers of Leedsia jiroblematica, 292. — R. N. Lucas. Notes on the Geology 

 of Finland, 293. — J.W.Gregory. On Rhynchopygiis PFooc?^, Forbes sp., 

 from the English Pliocene, 300. — O. Fischer. On Dynamo-Metamor- 

 phisni, 303. — C. J. Forsyth Major. On a Pliocene Mammalian Fauna at 

 Olivola, 305.— J. F. Blake. On the Base of the Sedimentary Series in 

 England, ;')08. — W. M. Hutchings. On the Probable Origin of some 

 Slates, 316. — R. Etheridge, jun. On the occurrence of the Genus Turri- 

 lepas and the Jaws of Annelids in the Upper Silurian Rocks of New South 

 Wales, 337. — H. 0. Nicholson. Note on the occurrence of Triyonograptus 

 ensiforrnis, Hall sp., and of a variety oi Didymograpius v-fractiis, Salter, 

 in the Skiddaw Slates, 340. — T. Mellard Reade. Secular Straining of the 

 Earth in Relation to deep phenomena of volcanic action, 344. — L. W. 

 Fulcher. Yulcano and Stromboli, 347. — J. F. Blake. On the Base of the 

 Sedimentaiy Series in England and VYales, 354. — E. Wilson. Fossil types 

 in the British Museum, 363. — T. Rupert Jones. On some Fossil Estheriae, 

 385. — A. Smith Woodward. Vertebrate Palaeontology in some American 

 and Canadian Museums, 390. — IT. W. Moncktou. On the Denudation 

 and Elevation of the Weald, 395. — T. R. Struthers. Tertiary and Post 

 Tertiary Stratigraphy, 397.— II. Hicks. The Rocks of St. Davids, 401.— 

 R. Lydekker. On certain Teeth referred to Ilycenodon indiciis, 402. — A. 

 Irving. Note on the Elevation of the Weald, 403. — T. Rupert Jones. 

 On some >mall Bivalve Shells from the Karoo Formation, South Africa, 



