88 ADDITIONS TO THE LIBRARY. 
Edinburgh. Royal Physical Society. Proceedings. Session 1881-82. 
1882. | 
R. Etheridge, jun. Opening Address, 1.—B.N. Peach. On some Fossil 
Myriapods from the Lower Old Red Sandstone of Forfarshire, 177.—J. 
Gibson. An Addition to the Fish Fauna of the Oil Shales of Edinburgh- 
shire, 190. 
: : Session 1882-83. 1883. 
R. Kidston. On Sphenopteris crassa, Lindley & Hutton, 235.—H. 
Miller. River-Terracing, its Methods and their Results, 263.—J. Bennie. 
On the Glaciated Summit of Allermuir, Pentlands, 307—W. Gemmill. 
On the Discovery of Late Glacial Implements in the Rhins of Galloway, 
322.—B. N. Peach. On the Occurrence of Pterygotus and a Limuloid in 
Caithness Flagstones, and on the Nature and Mode of Formation of 
“ Adam’s Plates,” 348. 
——_—_—— 
Exeter. Teign Naturalists’ Field Club. Report of the Proceedings 
for the year 1883. 1884. : 
Geneva. Société de Physique et d'Histoire Naturelle. Mémoires. 
Tome xxviii. Partie 1 (1882-83). 1883. 
P. de Loriol. Description des Echinides des environs de Camerino 
(Toscane), précédée d’une notice stratigraphique par M. Canavari, No. 3. 
Geological Magazine. Dec. IL. Vol. x. Nos. 7-12. 1883. 
R. Owen. Onan Outline of the Skull, basal view, of Thylacoleo, 289.— 
T. H. Waller. A Lava from Montserrat, West Indies, 290.—S. V. Wood. 
On the Cause of the Glacial Period, 293.—C. Ricketts. On Accumulation 
and Denudation, and their Influence in causing Oscillation of the Earth’s 
Crust, 302, 848.—T. McK. Hughes. On the Brecciated Bed in the Dimetian 
at St. Davids, 306—T. M. Reade. Examination of a Calculation of the 
Age of the Earth based upon the Hypothesis of the Permanence of Oceans 
and Continents, 309.—T. 8S. Hunt. The Decay of Rocks geologically 
considered, 310.—C. Lapworth. The Secret of the Highlands, 337.— 
J. J. H. Teall. On Hypersthene Andesite, 344.—H. H. Howorth. 
Traces of a great Post-Glacial Flood, 356,415.—J. Young. On the Shell- 
Structure of Chonetes Laguessiana, De Kon., 368.—T. Davidson. Note on ° 
Chonetes Laguessiana, 871.—O.C. Marsh. American Jurassic Dinosaurs: 
Restoration of Brontosaurus, 385.—S. V. Wood. Further Remarks on the 
Origin of the Loess, 389.—J.G. Goodchild. Joints, 397.—A. Irving. On 
the Bagshot Sands as a Source of Water Supply, 404.—R.N. Worth. The 
Rocks in the Neighbourhood of Plymouth, and their Stratigraphical Re- 
lations, 423.—E. T. Newton. On the Occurrence of the Cave Hyzena in 
the “ Forest Bed” at Corton Cliff, Suffolk, 452.-—T. G. Bonney. On some 
Breccias and Crushed Rocks, 435.—T. V. Holmes. On Eskers or Kames, 
438.—H. Woodward. Synopsis of the Genera and Species of Carboni- 
ferous-Limestone Trilobites, 445, 481, 584—_T. McK. Hughes. On some 
Fossils supposed to have been found in the Pleistocene Grayels of Barnwell, 
near Cambridge, 454.—J. Gunn. Does Elephas primigenius occur in the 
Norfolk Forest Bed?, 456.— Diamond Mining at Kimberley, South 
Africa, 460.—T. Rupert Jones. Palzeozoic Phyllopoda, as reported on 
to the British Association, Southport, 1883, Section C, Geology, 461.— 
H. Trautschold. A few words concerning the Periodical Movements 
of the Ocean, 487.—S. V. Wood. On the Long Mead-End Bed, 493.— 
P. F. Kendall. On the Dissolution of Aragonite Shells in the Coralline 
