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  ADDITIONS 
  TO 
  THE 
  LIBRARY. 
  

  

  Seventh 
  Report 
  of 
  the 
  Committee 
  appointed 
  for 
  the 
  purpose 
  of 
  investi- 
  

   gating 
  the 
  Circulation 
  of 
  Underground 
  Waters 
  in 
  the 
  Permian, 
  New 
  Red 
  

   Sandstone, 
  and 
  Jurassic 
  Formations 
  of 
  England, 
  and 
  the 
  Quantity 
  and 
  Cha- 
  

   racter 
  of 
  the 
  Water 
  supplied 
  to 
  Towns 
  and 
  Districts 
  from 
  those 
  Formations, 
  

   309. 
  — 
  S. 
  Haughton. 
  On 
  the 
  Effects 
  of 
  Oceanic 
  Currents 
  upon 
  Climates, 
  

   451.— 
  B. 
  Balfour. 
  On 
  the 
  Island 
  of 
  Socotra, 
  482.— 
  T. 
  Fairley. 
  On 
  the 
  

   Blowing 
  Wells 
  near 
  Northallerton, 
  544, 
  601. 
  — 
  W. 
  L. 
  Carpenter. 
  On 
  

   the 
  Siliceous 
  and 
  other 
  Hot 
  Springs 
  in 
  the 
  Volcanic 
  District 
  of 
  the 
  North 
  

   Island 
  of 
  New 
  Zealand, 
  580. 
  — 
  J. 
  Y. 
  Buchanan. 
  On 
  Manganese 
  Nodules 
  

   and 
  their 
  Occurrence 
  on 
  the 
  Sea-bottom, 
  583. 
  — 
  E. 
  Divers. 
  On 
  the 
  

   Chrome 
  Iron 
  Ore 
  of 
  Japan, 
  587. 
  — 
  A. 
  C. 
  Ramsay. 
  Presidential 
  Address 
  

   to 
  Section 
  C, 
  Geology 
  : 
  On 
  the 
  Origin 
  and 
  Progress 
  of 
  the 
  present 
  State 
  

   of 
  British 
  Geology, 
  especially 
  since 
  the 
  first 
  meeting 
  of 
  the 
  British 
  Asso- 
  

   ciation 
  at 
  York 
  in 
  1831, 
  605. 
  — 
  E. 
  Hull. 
  On 
  the 
  Laurentian 
  Beds 
  of 
  

   Donegal 
  and 
  of 
  other 
  Parts 
  of 
  Ireland, 
  609. 
  — 
  G. 
  H. 
  Kinahan. 
  On 
  the 
  

   Laurentian 
  Rocks 
  in 
  Ireland, 
  609. 
  — 
  A. 
  R. 
  Hunt. 
  On 
  the 
  Occurrence 
  of 
  

   Granite 
  insitu 
  about 
  20 
  miles 
  S.W.'of 
  the 
  Eddystone, 
  610. 
  — 
  W. 
  J. 
  Sollas. 
  

   The 
  Connection 
  between 
  the 
  Intrusion 
  of 
  Volcanic 
  Rock 
  and 
  Volcanic 
  

   Eruptions, 
  613. 
  — 
  B. 
  Latham. 
  On 
  the 
  Influence 
  of 
  Barometric 
  Pressure 
  

   on 
  the 
  Discharge 
  of 
  Water 
  from 
  Springs, 
  614. 
  — 
  J. 
  E. 
  Clark. 
  Glacial 
  

   Sections 
  at 
  York, 
  and 
  their 
  Relation 
  to 
  the 
  later 
  Deposits, 
  614. 
  — 
  G. 
  W. 
  

   Lamplugh. 
  On 
  the 
  Bridlington 
  Glacial 
  Shell-beds. 
  616. 
  — 
  J. 
  R. 
  Mortimer. 
  

   On 
  Sections 
  of 
  the 
  Drift 
  obtained 
  from 
  the 
  new 
  Drainage 
  Works 
  of 
  Drif- 
  

   field, 
  617. 
  — 
  A. 
  G. 
  Cameron. 
  On 
  the 
  Subsidences 
  above 
  the 
  Permian 
  

   Limestone 
  between 
  Hartlepool 
  and 
  Ripon, 
  617. 
  — 
  J. 
  D. 
  Kendall. 
  The 
  

   Glacial 
  Deposits 
  of 
  West 
  Cumberland, 
  617. 
  — 
  H. 
  G. 
  Seeley. 
  On 
  Simo- 
  

   saurus 
  pmiUus 
  (Fraas), 
  a 
  Step 
  in 
  the 
  Evolution 
  of 
  the 
  Plesiosauria, 
  618. 
  

   — 
  P. 
  M. 
  Duncan. 
  On 
  Axtcrosmilia 
  Reedi, 
  a 
  new 
  Species 
  of 
  Coral 
  from 
  the 
  

   Oligocene 
  of 
  Brockenhurst, 
  Hants, 
  618. 
  — 
  J. 
  Prestwich. 
  On 
  the 
  Strata 
  

   between 
  the 
  Chillesford 
  Beds 
  and 
  the 
  Lower 
  Boulder 
  Clay: 
  The 
  Mun- 
  

   desley 
  and 
  Westleton 
  Beds, 
  620. 
  — 
  J. 
  Prestwich. 
  On 
  the 
  Extension 
  into 
  

   Middlesex, 
  and 
  other 
  Inland 
  Counties, 
  of 
  the 
  Mundesley 
  and 
  

   Westleton 
  Beds, 
  in 
  relation 
  to 
  the 
  age 
  of 
  certain 
  Hill-gravels 
  and 
  some 
  of 
  

   the 
  Valleys 
  of 
  the 
  South 
  of 
  England, 
  620. 
  — 
  E. 
  B. 
  Poulton. 
  A 
  preliminary 
  

   Account 
  of 
  the 
  Working 
  of 
  Dowkerbottom 
  Cave, 
  in 
  Craven, 
  during 
  August 
  

   1881, 
  622.— 
  E. 
  Wethered. 
  On 
  the 
  Formation 
  of 
  Coal, 
  623.— 
  W. 
  C. 
  

   Williamson. 
  Preliminary 
  Remarks 
  on 
  the 
  Microscopic 
  Structure 
  of 
  

   Coal, 
  62o. 
  — 
  W. 
  Cash. 
  On 
  the 
  Halifax 
  Hard 
  Seam, 
  626. 
  — 
  J. 
  Spencer. 
  

   Researches 
  in 
  Fossil 
  Botany, 
  627.— 
  J. 
  Spencer. 
  Notes 
  on 
  Astromyelon 
  

   and 
  its 
  Root, 
  628. 
  — 
  W. 
  A. 
  E. 
  Ussher. 
  On 
  the 
  Palasozoic 
  Rocks 
  of 
  North 
  

   Devon 
  and 
  West 
  Somerset, 
  629. 
  — 
  E. 
  Hull. 
  The 
  Devono-Silurian 
  Forma- 
  

   tion, 
  631.- 
  — 
  E. 
  Hill. 
  On 
  Evaporation 
  and 
  Eccentricity 
  as 
  Co-factors 
  in 
  

   Glacial 
  Periods, 
  631. 
  — 
  A. 
  Strahan. 
  On 
  the 
  Discovery 
  of 
  Coal-Measures 
  

   under 
  New 
  Red 
  Sandstone, 
  and 
  on 
  the 
  so-called 
  Permian 
  Rocks 
  of 
  St. 
  

   Helen's, 
  Lancashire, 
  632. 
  — 
  E. 
  B. 
  Tawney. 
  On 
  the 
  Upper 
  Bagshot 
  Sands 
  

   of 
  Hordwell 
  Cliff, 
  Hampshire, 
  633.— 
  J. 
  R. 
  Dakyns. 
  On 
  '[ 
  Flots," 
  634.— 
  

   P. 
  H. 
  Carpenter. 
  Remarks 
  upon 
  the 
  Structure 
  and 
  Classification 
  of 
  the 
  

   Blastoidea, 
  634. 
  — 
  P. 
  H. 
  Carpenter. 
  On 
  the 
  Characters 
  of 
  the 
  " 
  Lansdown 
  

   Encrinite" 
  (Millericrinus 
  Prattii, 
  Gray, 
  sp.), 
  635. 
  — 
  A. 
  Strahan. 
  On 
  the 
  

   Lower 
  Keuper 
  Sandstone 
  of 
  Cheshire, 
  635. 
  — 
  E. 
  Wilson. 
  On 
  a 
  Discovery 
  

   of 
  Fossil 
  Fishes 
  in 
  the 
  New 
  Red 
  Sandstone 
  of 
  Nottingham, 
  637. 
  — 
  E. 
  

   Wilson. 
  On 
  the 
  Rhaetics 
  of 
  Nottinghamshire, 
  637.— 
  W. 
  T. 
  Blanford. 
  

   The 
  Great 
  Plain 
  of 
  Northern 
  India 
  not 
  an 
  old 
  Sea-basin, 
  638. 
  — 
  W. 
  King. 
  

   The 
  Gold 
  Fields 
  and 
  the 
  Quartz-outcrops 
  of 
  Southern 
  India, 
  639. 
  — 
  R. 
  

   Russell. 
  On 
  the 
  Geology 
  of 
  the 
  Island 
  of 
  Cyprus, 
  640.— 
  E. 
  Hull. 
  Obser- 
  

   vations 
  on 
  the 
  two 
  Types 
  of 
  Cambrian 
  Beds 
  of 
  the 
  British 
  Isles 
  (the 
  Cale- 
  

   donian 
  and 
  Hiberno-Cambrian), 
  and 
  the 
  Conditions 
  under 
  which 
  they 
  were 
  

  

  