129 



The inferences drawn by the author from these facts, and which he 

 corroborates by other evidence, are that a large area must have been 

 upHfted, and that its rise was elfected by a slight change in the 

 convex form of the fluid matter on which the crust of the earth rests ; 

 and therefore that the fluidity of the former is sufiiciently perfect to 

 allow of the atoms moving in obedience to the law of gravitation, 

 and consequently, of the operation of that law modified by the cen- 

 trifugal force : and lastly, that even the disturbing forces do not 

 tend to give to the earth a figure widely diflferent from that of a 

 spheroid in equilibrium. 



March 7, 1839. 



The MARQUIS of NORTHAMPTON, President, in the Chair. 



George Godwin, jun. Esq., and George Gulliver, Esq., were bal- 

 loted for, and duly elected into the Society. 



A paper was read, entitled, " On the Male Organs of some of the 

 Cartilaginous Fishes." By John Davy, M.D., F.R.S., Assistant 

 Inspector of Army Hospitals. 



In this paper, which is wholly occupied with anatomical details, 

 the author refers to his paper on the Torpedo, which was published 

 in the Philosophical Transactions for 1834; and also to Miiller's 

 work "De Glandularum secernentium structura penitiori," whose 

 descriptions and views are not in accordance with those given in 

 that paper. In the present memoir he adduces evidence of the ac- 

 curacy of his former statement, chiefly founded on microscopical ob- 

 servations, and offers some conjectures respecting the functions of 

 several organs found in cartilaginous fishes ; but does not pretend 

 to attach undue importance to his speculations. 



A paper was also read, entitled, " Researches in Physical Geo- 

 logy. — Third Sej'ies. On the Phenomena of Precession and Nuta- 

 tion, assuming the interior of the earth to be a heterogeneous fluid." 

 By W. Hopkins, Esq., M.A., F.R.S., &c. 



Having, in his last memoir, completed the investigation of the 

 amount of precession and nutation, on the hypothesis of the earth's 

 consisting of a homogeneous fluid mass, contained in a homogeneous 

 solid shell, the author here extends the inquiry to the case in which 

 both the interior fluid and external shell are considered as hetero- 

 geneous. After giving the details of his analytical investigation, he 

 remarks, that he commenced the inquiry in the expectation that the 

 solution of this problem would lead to results different from those 

 previously obtained on the hypothesis of the earth's entire solidity. 

 This expectation was founded on the great difference existing be- 

 tween the direct action of a force on a solid, and that on a fluid mass, 

 in its tendency to produce a rotator}" motion ; for, in fact, the dis- 

 turbing forces of the sun and moon do not tend to produce directly 



