[50] 
Neue  Literatur. 
The  Quarterly  Journal  of  the  Geological  Society  of  London. 
8°.  London.  [Jb.  1900.  I.  [16].] 
56.  1900.  No.  221.  —  Davison:  On  the  Cornish  earthquakes  of  March 
29th  to  April  2nd  1898.  1.  —  Clinch:  On  drift  gravels  at  West  Wickham. 
8.  —  Lamplugh:  On  some  effects  of  earth-movement  on  the  carboniferous 
volcanic  rocks  of  the  Isle  of  Man.  11.  —  Gregory:  On  the  geology  and 
fossil  corals  and  echinides  of  Somaliland.  26.  —  Hind:  On  Palaeoneilo 
carbonifera  n.  sp.  46 ;  —  On  eocene  caicisponges  from  Victoria,  Australia. 
50.  —  Lapworth:  On  the  silurian  sequence  of  rhayader.  67.  —  Groom: 
On  the  geological  structure  of  portions  of  the  Malvern  and  Abberley  Hills. 
138.  —  Blanford  :  On  a  particular  form  of  surface  resulting  from  glacial 
erosion  at  Loch  Lochy  and  elsewhere.  198. 
Palaeontographical  Society.    4°.  London.   [Jb.  1899.  I.  [56].] 
1899.  —  Rupert  Jones  and  H.  Woodward:  The  palaeozoic  phyllo- 
poda.  IV.  (Schluss.)  —  Woods  :  The  cretaceous  lamellibranchia.  I.  —  Hind  : 
The  carboniferous  lamellibranchiata.  IV.  —  Bückman  :  The  Inferior  Oolite 
ammonites.  XL 
Proceedings  of  the  Liverpool  Geological  Society.  Liverpool. 
1896—1898. 
8.  Part  I.  —  Reade  :  The  present  aspects  of  glacial  geology  (Presi- 
dent's Address).  —  Morton:  The  carboniferous  Limestone  of  the  Vale  of 
Clwyd.  —  Cope:  The  igneous  rocks  of  Aran  Mowddy.  —  Lomas:  The 
earthquake  of  December  17th,  1896.  —  Callaway:  A  criticism  on  the 
chemical  evidence  for  the  existence  of  organisms  in  the  oldest  rocks.  — 
Reade:  Geological  observations  in  Ayrshire.  —  Dickson  and  Holland: 
On  some  geological  features  of  the  neighbourhood  of  Varanger  Fjord, 
Arctic  Norway,  with  analyses  of  terrace  deposits,  glacial  waters  etc. 
Part  II.  —  Lomas:  Do  the  crystalline  gneisses  represent  parts  of 
the  original  earth's  crust?  (President's  Address).  —  Morton:  Carboniferous 
Limestone  of  Vale  of  Clwyd.  Part  II.  —  Herdman  and  Lomas  :  The  floor 
deposits  of  the  Irish  Sea.  —  Beasley:  Notes  on  footprints  from  the  Trias 
in  some  Provincial  Museums;  —  A  section  recently  exposed  on  Prenton 
Hill.  —  Moore:  A  chemical  examination  of  sandstones  from  Prenton  and 
Bidston  Hill.  —  Lomas:  Microscopic  examination  of  sandstones  from  Pren- 
ton and  Bidston  Hill.  —  Hewitt:  Sections  exposed  on  site  of  new  Technical 
Schools,  Byrom  Street.  —  Reade  and  Holland:  The  phyllades  of  the 
Ardennes  compared  with  the  slates  of  North  Wales.  —  Lomas:  A  drift 
section  near  Borough  Road,  Birkenhead. 
Part  III.  —  Lomas:  Lithological  homotaxis  (President's  Address); 
—  Notes  on  Swiss  glaciers;  —  Om  some  flint  implements  found  in  the 
glacial  deposits  of  Cheshire  and  North  Wales.  —  Reade:  The  Gypsum 
Boulder  of  Great  Crosby;  —  Foraminiferal  boulder  clay,  Riverside,  Sea- 
combe ,  Cheshire.  —  Morton  :  Description  of  a  geological  map  of  Liver- 
pool. —  Cope  :  The  gabbro  of  Llyn  Eigiau.  —  Dickson  and  Holland  : 
A  visit  to  Auvergne,  with  analyses  of  rocks. 
