1 86 ADDITIONS TO THE LIBRARY. [Nov. 1 8 94.', 



London. Athenaeum. (Journal.) Parts 787 -792. 1893. 



. . ( .) Parts 793-798. 1894. 



. British Association for the Advancement of Science. Report 



of the Sixty-third Meeting, held at Nottingham in September 

 1893. 1894. 

 John Milne. Investigation of the Earthquake and Volcanic Phenomena 

 of Japan : Thirteenth Report of the Committee, 214. — C. Davison. 

 Report of the Committee on Earth Tremors, 287. — C. E. De Ranee. 

 Nineteenth Report of the Committee on the Circulation of Underground 

 Waters, 463. — T. Rupert Jones. Tenth Report of the Committee on 

 Eossil Phyllopoda of the Palaeozoic Rocks, 465. — Malcolm Laurie. The 

 Eurypterid-bearing Deposits of the Pentland Hills, 470. — H. J. Johnston- 

 Lavis. The Volcanic Phenomena of Vesuvius and its Neighbourhood, 

 471. — 0. W. Jeffs. Fourth Report of the Committee on the Collection, 

 Preservation, and Systematic Registration of Photographs of Geological 

 Interest in the United Kingdom, 473. — A. Smith Woodward. The Regis- 

 tration of the Type Specimens of British Fossils, 482. — Dugald Bell. The 

 Character of the High-level Shell-bearing Deposits at Clava, Chapelhall, 

 and other Localities, 483. — P. F. Kendall. Twenty-first Report of the 

 Committee on Erratic Blocks of England, Wales, and Ireland, 514. — 

 F. Clowes. On a Nottingham Sandstone containing Barium Sulphate 

 as a Cementing Material, 732. — J. J. H. Teall. Address to Section C : 

 Geology, 733. — E. Hull. Notes on the Water-bearing Capacity of the 

 New Red Sandstone of Nottingham, 743. — E. Hull. On the Discovery 

 of a Concealed Ridge of pre-Carboniferous Rocks under the Trias of 

 Netherseal, Leicestershire, 745. — J. L. Myres. On the Geology of the 

 Coastland of Caria, 746. — R. H. Traquair. On the Discovery of Cepha- 

 laspis in the Caithness Flags, 747. — Montague Browne. On some Verte- 

 brate Remains not hitherto recorded from the Rhsetic Beds of Britain, 

 748.— G. Fowler. Note on a Fault at Cinder Hill, 749.— H. Hicks. 

 On the Base of the Cambrian in Wales, 750. — E. T. Newton. On the 

 Reptilia of the British Trias, 752. — J. P. Iddings. The Dissected Volcano 

 of Crandall Basin, Wyoming, 753. — Sir Archibald Geikie. On Structures 

 in Eruptive Bosses which resemble those of Ancient Gneisses, 754. — 

 W. J. Sollas. On the Pittings in Pebbles from the Trias, 755.— V. Ball. 

 On Bones and Antlers of Cervus giganteus incised and marked by Mutual 

 Attrition while buried in Bogs or Marl, 756. — R. D. Oldham. Note to 

 accompany the Exhibition of a Geological Map of India, 756. — H. J. 

 Johnston-Lavis. On Quartz Enclosures in Lavas of Stromboli and 

 Strombolicchio, and their Effect on the Composition of the Rock, 759. — 

 A. T. Metcalfe. On the Gypsum Deposits of Nottinghamshire and 

 Derbyshire, 760. — H. B. Woodward. On a Bed of Oolitic Iron-ore in 

 the Lias of Raasay, 760. — A. C. G. Cameron. Note on a Transported 

 Mass of Chalk in the Boulder Clay at Cat worth in Huntingdonshire, 760. 

 — J. G. Goodchild. Augen Structure in Relation to the Origin of Eruptive 

 Rocks and Gneiss, 761. — W. C. Brogger. The Genetic Relations of the 

 Basic Eruptive Rocks of Gran (Kristiania Region), 762. — J. P. Iddings. 

 Petrological Features of the Dissected Volcano of Crandall Basin, 

 Wyoming, 763. — A. Harker. Berthelot's Principle applied to Magmatic 

 Concentration, 765. — W. J. Sollas. On the Origin of Intermediate 

 Varieties of Igneous Rocks by Intrusion and Admixture, as observed at 

 Barnavave, Carlingford, 765. — W. J. Sollas. On the Transformation of 

 an Amphibolite into Quartz-mica-diorite, 765. — F. T. Howard and E. W. 

 Small. On some Igneous Rocks of South Pembrokeshire, with a Note 

 on the Rocks of the Isle of Grassholme, 766.— W. W. Watts. Notes on 



