ADDITIONS TO THE LIBKAET. II 7 



Brisbane. Eoj^al Society of Queensland. Proceedings. Vol. i. 

 Part 1. 1884. 

 E. Palmer. Hot Springs and Mud Eruptions on the Lower Flinders 

 River, 19.— C. W. De Vis. The Moa {Dinoryiis) in Australia, 23.— 

 J. Falconer. AVater Supply: Springs and tlieir Origin, 28. — H. F. Wall- 

 mann. Pseudomorpliism in Minerals, 32. — C. W. De Vis. Ceratodus 

 Forsteri Post-Pliocene, 40. 



British Association for the Advancement of Science. Report of the 

 Fifty-fourth Meeting, 1884. Montreal. 1885. 

 T. Rupert Jones. Second Report of the Committee on the Fossil 

 Phyllopoda of the Palaeozoic Rocks, 75. — C. E. De Ranee. Tenth 

 Report of the Committee appointed for the purpose of investigating the 

 Circulation of Underground Waters in the Penneable Formations of 

 England and Wales, and the Quantity and Character of the Water sup- 

 phed to various Towns and Districts from those Formations, 96. — G. R. 

 Vine. Fifth and last Report of the Committee appointed for the purpose 

 of reporting on Fossil Polyzoa, 97. — Twelfth Report of the Committee 

 appointed for the pui'pose of recording the Position, Height above the 

 Sea, Lithological Characters, Size, and Origin of the Erratic Blocks of 

 England, Wales, and Ireland, reporting other matters of interest con- 

 nected mth the same, and taking measures for their Preservation, 219. — 

 W. Topley. Report upon National Geological Surveys : Part I., Europe, 

 221.— C. E. De Ranee and W. Topley. Report of the Committee 

 appointed for the purpose of inquiring into the Rate of Erosion of the 

 Sea-coasts of England and Wales, and the Influence of the Artificial 

 Abstraction of Shingle or other Material in that Action, 238. — J. W. 

 Davis. Fourth Report of the Committee appointed to assist in the Ex- 

 ploration of the Raygill Fissure in Lothersdale, Yorkshire, 240. — J. Milne. 

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

 gating the Earthquake Phenomena of Japan, 241. — T. G. Bonney. On 

 the Archaean Rocks of Great Britain, 529, — H. S. Poole. Note on the 

 Internal Temperature of the Earth at Westville, Nova Scotia, 644. — 

 W. T. Blanford. Presidential Address to Section C, Geology, 691. — 

 E. Gilpin, jun. Results of the past Experience in Gold Mining in Nova 

 Scotia, 711. — E. Gilpin, jun. A Comparison of the Distinctive Featm-es 

 of Nova-Scotian Coal-fields, 712.— H. A. Budden. On the Coals of 

 Canada, 713. — D. Honeyman. On the Geology of Halifax Harbour, 

 Nova Scotia, 714. — J. H. Panton. Gleanings from Outcrops of Siliu-ian 

 Strata in Red River Valley, Manitoba, 715. — G. C. Brown. The Apatite 

 Deposits of the Province of Quebec, 716. — F. D. Adams. On the Occur- 

 rence of the Norwegian ^' Apatitbringer " in Canada, with a few Notes on 

 the Microscopic Characters of some Laurentian Amphibolites, 717. — 

 L. W. Bailey. On the Acadian Basin in American Geology, 717. — E. W. 

 Claypole. Pennsylvania before and after the Elevation of the Appalachian 

 Mountains, 718. — J. S. Newberry. Phases in the Evolution of the North 

 American Continent, 719. — H. C. Le^\us. Marginal Kames, 720. — H. 

 Miller. On Fluxion-Structure in Till, 720.— A. R. C. Selwyn. On the 

 Glacial Origin of Lake Basins, 721, — R. Richardson, On Points of Dis- 

 similarity and Resemblance between Acadian and Scottish Glacial Beds, 

 722, — W. F. Stanley. On the Improbability of the Theory that former 

 Glacial Periods in the Northern Hemisphere were due to Eccentricity of 

 the Earth's Orbit and to its Winter Perihelion in the North, 723.— E. Hill. 

 On Ice-Age Theories, 723. — J. S. Newberry. On the recent Discoverv 

 of new and remarkable Fossil Fishes in the Carboniferous and Devonian 

 Bocks of Ohio and Indiana, 724. — J. HaU. On the Fossil Reticulate 



