582 



ALPHABETICAL INDEX. 



Wales, North, Prof. Sedgwick on the 

 older Palaeozoic rocks of, 5. 



. map of, to illustrate Prof. Sedg- 

 wick's memoir, opposite p. 21. 



Mr. Macintosh on the supposed 



traces of glaciers in, 460. 



Mr. Trevelyan on glacier marks 



in, 300. 



— and Cumberland, comparative 



classification of the fossiliferous strata 

 of, by Prof. Sedgwick, 442. 



Walton in Essex, on the appearance of 

 the strata at, 341. 



Warburton, Mr., on a bed of Septaria, 

 containing fresh-water shells at New 

 Cross, 172. 



Wealden, Mr. Simms on its junction 

 with the Lower Green sand at the 

 Teston cutting, by Mr. Simms, 189. 



Westmoreland, Cumberland, and Lan- 

 cashire, comparative classification of 

 the fossiliferous rocks of, with those 

 of North Wales, 442. 



Westwood, Mr., his account of British 

 fossil insects, 400. 



Whale, sperm, Mr. Charlesworth on its 

 occurrence in the Red Crag, 40. 



Whalers ear bones found fossil in the 

 Red Crag, 37. 



White limestone of Corfu and Vido, 

 Capt. Portlock's remarks on, 87. 



Widdrington, Capt., and Dr. Daubeney, 

 on the phosphorite of Estremadura, 

 52. 



Wight, Isle of, thickness of the Green- 

 sand beds of the south-east coast of, 

 76. 



Dr. Fitton on the Atherfield 



section of the Lower Greensand, 

 179. 



Forbes and Ibbetson on the 



section from Black- Gang- Chine to 

 Atherfield, 190, 



distribution of fossils in the 



Lower Greensand of, 1 96. 



Williams, Rev. D., on the trap-rock of 

 Bleadon Hill, Somersetshire, 47. 



on the origin of the gypseous and 



saliferous marls of the New Red 

 Sandstone, 148. 



Wollondilly river, Argyle County, N. S. 

 Wales, Mr. Clarke on dykes of mar- 

 ble and quartz at, 342. 





t 442 



