l88 ADDITIONS TO THE LIBKAKf. [Nov. 1 894, 



The Forest of Wyre Coalfield, 497.— G. E. J. McMurtrie. The Yorkshire 

 Coalfield, 510.— The Lancashire Coalfield, 640, 689, 751, 785, 848.— 

 C. E. Willis. The Asbestos Fields of Port au Port, Newfoundland, 641. 

 —The Ehenish-Westphalian Coalfield, 688, 736, 880, 929, 975.— F. L. 

 Nason. The Franklinite Deposits of Mine Hill, Sussex County, New- 

 Jersey, 705. — A. Firket. Some Belgian combustible Rocks assimilated 

 or assimilable to Cannel Coal, 848. — J. G. Summons. The Pembroke- 

 shire Coalfield, 941.— The Coal Deposits of Siberia, 943.— J. C. P Anson. 

 Californian Coal, 1041. — Coal Measures of Alabama, 1072. — F. Laur. 

 The Bauxites : A Study of a New Mineralogical Family, 1090.— The 

 Shropshire Coalfield, 1119. — J. Randall. The Shropshire Coalfields and 

 their Surroundings, 1071. — A. Firket. The Origin and the Mode of the 

 Formation of Coal, 1181. — Deshayes. Sosnowice Collieries, Dombrova 

 Coalfield, Russian Poland, 1214. 



London. East India Association. Journal. Vol. xxv. Nos. 7 & 8, 

 1893. 



. . . Vol. xxvi. Nos. 1-4. 1893-94. 



. Geological Magazine. Decade 3. Vol. x. Nos. 6-12, 



1893. 

 V. Ball. The Volcanoes of Barren Island and Narcondam in the Bay 

 of Bengal, 289.— C. Davison. On the British Earthquakes of 1892, 291. 

 — Sir Henry H. Howorth. The Condi tic n of the Glacial Lands in the 

 so-called Glacial Age, 302. — P. Lake. The Growth of the Indian 

 Peninsula, 309. — A. J. Jukes Browne. The Relative Age of Flints, 315. 

 — Agnes Crane. New Classifications of the Brachiopoda, 318. — W. Shone. 

 The Cause of the Crateriform Sand Dunes and Cwms, 323. — G. A. J. Cole. 

 The Rocks of the Volcano of Rhobell Fawr, 337. — F. Chapman and 

 C. Davies Sherborn. On the Ostracoda of the Gault at Folkestone, 345. 

 — Marshall Hall. Glacier Observation, more especially Colonial, 349. — 

 Sir Henry H. Howorth. The True Horizon of the Mammoth, etc., 353. — 

 C. Davison. Note on the Quetta Earthquake of December 20th, 1892, 

 356. — T. Rupert Jones. On some Fossil Ostracoda from S.W. Wyoming, 

 and from Utah, U.S.A., 385. — O. Earle. The Evolution of the American 

 Tapir, 391.— H. Hicks. The pre-Cambrian Rocks of Wales, 396.— K. A. 

 von Zittel. The Geological Development, Descent, and Distribution of 

 the Mammalia, 401, 455, 501. — A. Smith Woodward. Some Cretaceous 

 Pycnodont Fishes, 433, 487. — Catherine A. Raisin. Contributions to the 

 Geology of Africa, 436. — E. W. Claypole. The Upper Devonian Fishes 

 of Ohio, 443. — C. S. Du Riche Preller. On the Origin of the Engadine 

 Lakes, 448. — C. Davison. Note on the Growth of the Lake of Geneva, 

 454. — O. C. Marsh. Restoration of Coryphodm,k%Y. — H. B.Woodward. 

 On a Bed of Oolitic Iron-ore in the Lias of Raasay, 493. — Sir Henry H. 

 Howorth. The Recent Geological History of the Arctic Lands, 495. — 

 Wheelton Hind. Note on Myalina crassa (Fleming), 514. — T. Rupert 

 Jones and Henry Woodward. The Fossil Phyllopoda of the Palasozoic 

 Rocks, 528. — C. Callaway. On the Conversion of Chlorite into Biotite 

 in Rock-metamorphism, 535. — P. B. Brodie. Notes on the Eocene 

 Tertiary Insects of the Isle of Wight, 538. — Wheelton Hind. Descrip- 

 tion of a Slab from the Shale above the Kinder Scout Grit, Rabchester, 

 Lancashire, 540. — A. J. Jukes Browne. The amount of disseminated 

 Silica in Chalk considered in Relation to Flints, 541. — A. Harker. Ber- 

 thelot's Principle applied to Magnetic Concentration, 546. 



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