— 503 — 



the Occürrence of Granite in a Boring at Bletchley. 356: — A. S. Wood- 

 ward : Palaeontology in the Malton Mnsenm. 361. 



No. 303. September. — T. Rupert Jones and H. Woodward: On 

 some new Devonian fossils (Plate XII). 385. — R. Lydekker : On an 

 Ichthyosaurus paddle. 388. — Charles Davidson: Origin of Stone Rivers 

 of the Falkland islands. 390. — A, S. Woodward : Note on Bhinobatus 

 Iragesiacus. 393. — A. Harker: On Eyes of Pyrites and other Minerals in 

 Slate. 397. — Rudolf Schäfer : On Phillipsastraea d'Orb. 398. — Charles 

 Davidson : On the Mean Rate of Subaerial Denudation. 409. — E. Marr : 

 On the Lower Palaeozoic Rocks of the Fichtelgebirge. 411. — G. H. Stone : 

 Scratched and facetted Stones of the Salt-Range. 415. — A. Somervail : 

 On the Greenstone and Associated Rocks of the Lizard. 425. 



No. 304. October. — H. A. Nicholson : Relations between Syringo- 

 lites and Römeria, and on the genus Caliapora. 432. — E. D. Cope : On 

 the Proboscidea (PI. XIII). 438. — A. Smith- Wood ward : Preliminary Notes 

 Dil New British Jurassic fishes. 448. — P. Gerald Sandford: Analysis on 

 the Füllers Earth of Nutneld. 455 ; — Analysis of the Gault and Green- 

 rsand. 456. 



4) The Quarterly Journal of the Geolog ical Society of 

 London. [Jb. 1889. II. -230-.] 



No. 179. Vol. XLV. Part 3. August 1. 1889. — Proceedings of the 

 Geological Society, Session 1888—89. 79. — J. W. Dawson : Supplementary 

 Note on Rocks of the Atlantic Coast of Canada. 80. — J. R. Kilroe : On 

 the Origin of Moveraents in the Earth Crust. 83. — G. J. Hinde: On 

 sonie Fossil Siliceous Sponges from the Quebec Group of Little Metis. 84. 



— PapersRead: A. Champernowne : On the Asprington Volcanic Series 

 of South Devon. 369. — E. Hill : On the Rocks of Alderney and the 

 Oasquets. 380. — H. G. Seeley: On the Pelvis of Ornithopsis. 391. — 

 H. N. Worth: On the Elvans and Volcanic Rocks of Dartmoor. 398. — 

 Jukes-Brown and Hill: On the Occürrence of Colloid Silica in the Lower 

 Chalk of Berkshire and Wiltshire. 403. — Cole and Jennings : On the 

 Northern Slopes of Cader Idris. 422. — S. S. Buckman : On the Cotteswold, 

 Midford, and Yeovil Sands, and the Division between Lias and Oolite. 440. 



— C. Callaway: On secondary minerals in Shear-zones in the Cristalline 

 üocks of the Malvern Hills (PI. XVI). 475. — C. Candler : Oii some 

 undescribed Lacustrine Deposits in Saint Cross, South Elniham, Sulfolk. 

 •504. — R. Lydekker : On Chelonian Remains from the Wealden and Pur- 

 lieck. 511. — McMahon: On the Hornblende-schists and Banded Cristalline 

 Rocks of the Lizard. 519. — T. Roberts : On the Upper Jurassic Clay of 

 Lincolnshire. 545. — E. A. Walford : On some Bryozoa from the Inferior 

 Oolite of Shipton Gorge, Dorset. Part. I (PI. XVII— XIX). 



5) The American Journal of Science. Edited by J. D. and E. S. 

 Dana. [Jb. 1889. II. -394-.] 



Vol. XXXVII. No. 224. August 1889. — S. P. Langley : Observation 

 of Sudden Phenomena, 93. — George H. Williams: Possibility of Hemi- 



