INDEX TO THE PROCEEDIXG:^. 



to the sea, 487 ; river Trent to the 

 sea-cliff beyond Aldborough, 160; 

 tunnel at Grreenway House to Kings- 

 wear, 435 ; illustrating the form of 

 sea-beaches, 89; "kernel-roasting" 

 of copper-ores, 398 ; last upheaval 

 of the plateau of Saxon Switzerland, 

 551; in a chalk-quany near Grui- 

 gencoiu't, 111 ; railway- cutting west 

 of Caffiers, 473 ; Camps-HiU brick- 

 field, Hertfordshire, 287 ; Kelsea 

 Hill ballast-pit, 154; the Ashdown 

 Sands, Hastings, 392 ; Subhima- 

 layas, 44 ; Wangford Crag-pit, Suf- 

 folk, 377 ; near Amiens, 106 ; Cagny, 

 ill the valley of the Arve, 118 ; 

 Elinghen, Bas-Boulonnais, 477 ; 

 of a bleached patch in the Keuper 

 marls near Worcester, 370 ; banded 

 sandstone, Grres des Vosges, near 

 Eaon I'Etape, Vosges, 390; banded 

 yellow rock, Northamptonshire Oo- 

 lites, 390 ; Bunter sandstone near 

 Shiffnal, Shropsbbe, 363 ; Carboni- 

 ferous grit and sandstone, Willey 

 Park, Shropshire, 399 ; sandstone, 

 Workington, Cumberland, 389 ; 

 coast south of Whitehaven, 391, 392; 

 cliff east of Southwold, Suffolk, 375; 

 Coniston grits, Austwick, Clapham, 

 Yorkshire, 368 ; Cotham Quarry, 

 203 ; Cretaceous beds in Kent and 

 the Bas-Boulonnais, 482 ; Grris- 

 thorpe cliff, 180 ; Hessle cliff, 253 ; 

 Keuper sandstone, Chve Hill, Shrop- 

 shire, 376 ; Montpeher Quarry, 

 202 ; quarry on Ashley Down, 200 ; 

 red surface-loam between Coclsall 

 and Albright on, Shropshire, 374 ; 

 variegated yellow sandstone. Ash- 

 down Sands, Hastings, 390 ; the 

 Alps, 38 ; Argile plastique and 

 Caleaire grossier in a clay-pit at 

 Yaugirard, Paris, 372 ; beds exposed 

 in Filey Bay, 227 ; " Cliff" at Bed- 

 ding's Wood, two miles east of 

 Appleby, 177 ; Hessle di>ift, 252 ; 

 parallel roads of Glen Boy, 85, 88 ; 

 strata from tlie chalk to the Bern- 

 bridge limestone at Whitecliff Bay, 

 Isle of Wight, 519 ; showing de- 

 composed chalk, 111, 113 ; details of 

 stracture of the Oohtic u'on-ore 

 formation, Northamptonshire, 396 ; 

 direction of line of ferruginous ac- 

 cumulation in banded yellow sand- 

 stones, 394 ; escarpment of Loess 

 between the quai'ry and the Impe- 

 rial Eoad, Amiens, 113 ; relation 

 of grey beds to calcareous strata, 



Upper Silurian formation, Shrop- 

 shire, 383 ; in the Trias of the east 

 of France, 383 ; the subdivisions of 

 the Speeton Clay, 231 ; thickness 

 of the Carboniferous rocks fi-om 

 North LancasMre to Leicestershire, 

 322 ; through Caffiers, 474 ; the 

 north of the Bas-Boulonnais, 483 ; 

 I'idge prolonging the Wold-scarp 

 in Lincolnshire, 165. 



Serapis, temple of, 276. 



Shiffnal, Shropshh-e, section of Bunter 

 sandstone near, 363. 



Shropshh-e, section of Carboniferous 

 grit and sandstone in Willey Park, 

 399. 



Siberia, coal in, 100. 



Silurian formation, Shropshire, section 

 of the Upper, 383 ; rocks of Lanark- 

 shire, Crustacea fi*om the, 289. 



Sinai, true coal-plant from, 509. 



Sivalik strata, 45. 



Skiddaw series. Dr. H. A. Nicholson 

 on the Graptolites of the, 8, 125. 



Slates, variegated Cambrian, 379. 



Smyth, W. W., Esq. (President), Ad- 

 dress on handing to Professor An- 

 sted the Wollaston Medal for trans- 

 mission to Dr. C. F. Naumann, of 

 Leipzig, xxvii ; address on handing 

 to Mr. Godwin- Austen, for M. 

 Bosquet, of IMaestricht, the balance 

 of the Wollaston Donation-fund, 

 xxviii. Anniversary Address, Feb- 

 ruary 21, 1868, xxix; Obituary 

 notices of deceased Felloivs : — Mr. 

 W. J. Hamilton, xxix; Earl of 

 Eosse, xxxiii; Dr. C. G. B. Dau- 

 beny, xxxiii ; Mr. Ashurst Ma- 

 jendie, xxxvi; Sir George Clerk, 

 Bart., xxxvii ; Sir Charles Lemon, 

 Bart., xxxvii; Dr. James Black, 

 xxxviii ; Mr. Evan Hopkins, xxxviii ; 

 Admiral Theobald Jones, xxxix. 

 Geological Sui'vey of the United 

 Kingdom, xxxix ; of Italy, xl ; of 

 Austria, xli ; of the Western United 

 States, xlvi; physical structure of 

 Palestine, li; Fraas's 'Aus dem 

 Orient,' h; change of climatal 

 conditions, Iviii ; Dove's * Eiszeit, 

 Fohn, und Scirocco,' Ix; Heer's 

 * La Flore Miocene des regions po- 

 lah'es,' Ixi ; Yon Walter shaus en's 

 ' Ueber die Klimate der Gegenwart 

 und der Yorwelt,' Ixiv ; Hochstet- 

 ter's 'New Zealand,' Ixv; Favre's 

 ' Eeeherches geologiques dans les 

 parties de la Savoie, &c., voisines 

 du Mont Blanc,' Ixxi ; Granites of 



