RESEARCHES IN THE ARCTIC OCEAN, ETC. 



221 



(1) " Investigations regarding the Submerged Terraces and 

 River Valleys bordering the British Isles," by Professor E. 

 Hull, F.R.S. (with map). Trans. Victoria Institute, vol. xxx. 



(2) " Sub-Oceanic Terraces and River-Valleys off the Coast of 



Western Europe " (with three plates), by the same author. 

 Ibid. vol. xxxi. 



(3) "Another possible cause of the Glacial Epoch" (with 

 map), by the same author. Ibid. vol. xxxi. 



(4) " The Sub-Oceanic Depression known as ' La Fosse de Cap 



Breton,' " by Professor Lobley. Ibid. vol. xxxiii. 



(5) "Deep Sea Soundings in connection with Submarine 

 Telegraphy," by Mr. Edward Stallibrass, F.R.G.S. Jour. 

 Soc. Teleg. Engineers., vol. xvi, p. 479. 



In this paper the author describes the Sub-Oceanic 

 channel of the Congo down to the 1,000-fathom contour, 

 giving the length of the channel as 100 miles. 



(6) On the same subject : — " The Sub-Oceanic River-Valleys of 



the West African Continent, and of the Mediterranean 

 Basin " (with map), by Professor E. Hull, F.R.S. Ibid. 

 vol. xxxii. 



(7) "The Physical History of the Norwegian Fjords," by 

 the same author. Ibid. vol. xxxiv. 



(8) " Submerged Platform of Western Europe." Geol. Mag., 



Lond., vol. vi, pp. 16-18 (1899). 



(9) " Professor Hull's ' Sub-Oceanic Terraces and River- 

 Valleys off the coast of Europe.' " A Review. American 

 Geologist, vol. xxxv, March (1905). By Professor J. W. 

 Spencer, Ph.D. 



(10) "Dr. Fridtjof Nansen's Researches into the Bathymetrical 

 Features of the North Polar Seas." A Review, by 

 Professor E. Hull, F.R.S. Geol. Mag., Decade V., vol. i, No. 

 482, 1904. 



(11) Review of the same by Professor J. W. Spencer. The 

 American Geologist, vol. xxxv, April, 1905. 



(12) "On the Physiographic Improbability of Land at the 

 North Pole," by Professor J. W. Spencer. American 

 Journal of Science, vol. xix, May, 1905. 



