1856.] Proceedings of the Asiatic Society. 425 



28. — The Mahadewa Hills are all sandstone. 



29. — The Mittoor raDge is trap. 



30. — The sandstone represented on the map by the bright yellow 

 colour is continuous down the valley of the Nerbudda considerably 

 further to the west than Hindia, instead of ceasing at Hosingabad. 



31. — The area coloured as " coal, &c," and which includes Bower- 

 gurh, Doregurh, &c, is in reality gneiss. 



32. — Bhavergurh as here printed should be Bhower, or Bhora- 

 gurh. 



33. — Bhoradoorg and Bhoragurh are one and the same place. 



34. — At Oomrait, Coal is printed and pits shewn, but it is colour- 

 ed as gneiss. 



35. — The whole of the Vindya and the Kymore ranges are of a 

 totally different age from the coal rocks south of the JNerbudda. 



36. — About six miles south of Ramteak Manganese said to be 

 abundant. 



i 37. — At Koorraddee, marble much used in building, is chiefly 

 dolomitic. 



38. — The whole course of the Wyne G-unga is in trap rocks. 



39. — The Palamow and Sirgooja coal fields are not united. 



40. — There is no ground whatever for colouring the great masses 

 of the Himalayas as granite. In Sikkim for instance, Kunchiujinga 

 is undoubtedly not granite as here shewn, and for many of the 

 other great masses the same is true. 



41. — At the foot of the Darjeeling Hills the band of colour repre- 

 senting the Eocene rocks, is more than twice as broad as it should 

 be. It should not extend into the flats or terai. 



42. — There is no ground for colouring such an area as granite in 

 Shahabad. It occurs in detached points and masses. 



43. — The coal in Cutch is not marked. 



44. — There are no known reasons for connecting the cretacious 

 rocks near Trichinopoly with those at Yerdachellum near Pondi- 

 cherry, so as to form a continuous band. 



45. — "What ground is there for saying that coal is found 400 feet 

 deep, at or near Salagur in the Sunderbunds ? 



46. — In Pegu and Arracan to the east of the Bay of Bengal. 

 Mynuoung, which is shewn in Arracan to west of the hill range, is 

 in reality on the banks of the Irrawaddi. 



