Mineralogy and Geology. 135 
Part III a synopsis of all the species which have been hitherto 
described from Oregon as well as California. 
Military College, Sandhurst. Pages 95-102; 97-112, Plates A. 
XXI-xXtv, xv—xvi. London: (H. iér i 
paragraphs from Chapter ix by Prof. Paul Broca, General Secre- 
tary of the Anthropological Society of Paris, on the human skulls 
and bones found in the cave of Cro-Magnon, near Les Eyzies, re- 
ferring to the work itself for more details. a 
“No discovery could be of greater interest to Anthropologists 
than that of these bones. It is the complement, I wey say th 
® 
exhumed. The stratigraphical details of the contents of the Cro- 
Magnon Cave, furnished by M. Louis Lartet (see the work, pages 
n 
— older than, the carved objects from the great Les-Eyzies 
a 
