92 ADDITIONS TO THE LIBBABY. 



H. Woodward. Note on Ellipsocaris Dewalquei, a new Phyllopod 

 Crustacean Shield from the Upper Devonian of Belgium, 444. — H. B. 

 Woodward. Notes on the Bure Valley Beds and the Westleton Beds, 

 452. — J. S. Gardner. A Revised Classification of the British Eocenes, 

 466. — J. Milne. Earth Movements, 481. — W. Keeping. On some 

 Remains of Plants, Foraminifera, and Annelida, in the Silurian Rocks 

 of Central Wales, 485. — E. Hull. Notes on the Permian and Trias, 

 491. — A. Irving. Notes on the Post-Carboniferous (Dyassic) and 

 Triassic Deposits of the Alps, 494. — W. Keeping. The Geology of 

 Cardigan Town, 519. — E. Wethered. On the Origin of the Hae- 

 matite Deposits in the Carboniferous Limestone, 522. — P. H. Car- 

 penter. Notes on Oreaster bulbiferus from the Upper Chalk, Bromley, 

 Kent, 529. — T. Rupert Jones. Notes on the Sudden Destruction of 

 Marine Animals, 533. — R. IT. Traquair. Notice of New Fish-Remains 

 from Borough Lee, near Edinburgh, 540. — J. S.. Gardner. The Fallacy 

 of the Theory of the " Permanence of Continents," 546. — E. B. Tawney. 

 Woodwardian Laboratory Notes : N. Wales Recks, III., 548. — A. Irving. 

 The Permian and Trias ; Rejoinder to Prof. Hull, 559. — C. Lapworth. On 

 the Discovery of Cambrian Rocks in the Neighbourhood of Birmingham, 

 563.— W. Dames. On the Structure of the Head of Archaeopteryx, 566. 



Geological Magazine. Dec. II. Vol. ix. Nos. 7-12. 1882. Pur- 

 chased. 



. . Vol. x. Nos. 1-6. 1883. 



II. Woodward. On a New Genus of Fossil " Calamary," from the 

 Cretaceous Formation of Sahel Alma, near Beirut, Lebanon, Syria, 1. — T. 

 Davidson. On Scottish Silurian Brachiopoda, 5. — H. II. Howorth. Traces 

 of a Great Post-Glacial Flood, 9, 71, 113. — E. B. Tawney. Woodwardian 

 Laboratory. Notes ; N.Wales Rocks, 17, 65. — W. Whitaker. The Red 

 Chalk of" Norfolk, 22.— A. G. Nathorst. On the so-called "Plant 

 Fossils " from the Silurian of Central Wales, 33. — W. Carruthers. On the 

 Foliage of SigUlaria Serlii, Brongn., 49. — A. Nehring. The Fauna of 

 Central Europe during the Loess-Period, 51. — W. Flight, Supplement 

 to a Chapter in the History of Meteorites, 59. — A. Rzehak. On the Orbi- 

 toidal Strata near Auspitz, Moravia, 79. — E. T. Newton. On the Remains 

 of a Red-throated Diver, Culymbus septentrionalis, Linn., from the 

 " Mundesley River Bed," 97.— J. J. H. Teall. Notes on the Cheviot 

 Andesites and Porphyrites, 100, 146. — W. N. Walker. Walker's Specific 

 Gravity Balance for Rocks and Minerals, 109. — J. W. Judd. Note on the 

 Performance of Walker's Specific Gravity Balance, 110. — J. W. Dawson. 

 Canadian Pleistocene, 111. — C. Lapworth. The Secret of the Highlands, 

 120, 193, 252.— J. D. Dana. The Flood of the Connecticut River Valley 

 from the Melting of the Quaternary Glacier, 128. — O. von Ettingshausen. 

 A Contribution to the Tertiary Flora of Australia, 153..-^-E. B. Tawney. 

 The Broc-kenhurst Beds near Lyndhurst, 157. — A. Irving. u Bergstiirze " 

 or " Landslips," 160.— W. D. Carr. The Lincoln Lias, 164.— J. Brysen. 

 The Glacial Phenomena of North America, as studied in Long Island, New 

 York, U.S., 109.— T. G. Bonney. Second Note on the Pebbles in the 

 Bunter Beds of Staffordshire, 199".— H. H. Howorth. The Fauna and Flora 

 of the European Loess, being a reply to Professor Dr. Nehring, 206. — W. 

 Keeping and C. S. Middlemiss. On some New Railway Sections and other 

 Rock Exposures in the District of Cave, Yorkshire, 215.— T. Mellard 

 Reade. Some Suggestions on the Cromer Forest Bed, 221. — J. G. 

 Goodchild. On " Overlap " and its Related Phenomena, 224.— W. O. 

 Crosby. Origin of Continents, 241. — J. E. Marr. Origin of the Archaean 

 Rocks, 263. 



