Geology and Mineralogy. 69 
tree, pres a Glossopteris beds are overlaid by Productus and 
Sper er-b 
The ame is accompanied by a map showing ate distribution of 
the plant beds in Eastern India, between the 
southwestern side of the Godavery River; 5 and of others farther 
south, near Madras and Trichonopoly, and in oes district of Cutch, 
where only the later beds have been observ 
10. one lites—An article by a oats “J ohn Hopkinson ~ 
a viz: Dendhograpt ‘iia, D. divergens, D. flea 
merica: 
age _ormerion : Asi e eleven are of the genera Didymograp- 
callograptus, Clim tus, D 
Dendrograptut and age iiir$ es tplograptus, Ptilograptus, 
ll. Kegion of eruptive ioe of the pee af Schemnitz, HHun- 
gue —Mr. J. W. Judd, in a paper read before 1 Socie ety 
in April pa describes this Hungarian region ote pes ive rocks, 
sample and basalts of the Pliocene; also ‘hi hly metamorphic 
including quartzytes, crystalline limestones, various schists, 
gneiss and aptyte, which are Triassic in age ; 
ge; and so-called syenyte 
~ pg et greenstone. As held = Von Pettko, ; Richthoten, at 
‘Ts, the greenstones are Tertiary, they naming them green- 
Ary, 
at ec hg and propyiyte; and, according to Judd, a granite 
The yenyte are only coarser forms of trach of the same a 
within the most recent 1 1 d 
a geological periods 
No 9 eee tnaek 6 a later date than the heme Bibs : 
eM a Vo che ic phenomena of the Alps,— Recent numbers of Wood- 
caer eological Magazine” contain a valuable series of papers 
noes and volcanic phenomena, of British and Euro opean 
