552 



INDEX 



Chrysoehloridse, 29 

 Cicindela, 17 



Cicindelidse common to South America 



and Madagascar, 28 

 Clarke, Mr. W. Eagle, on Philippine 



mammalia, 386 

 on Philippine birds, 888 

 Clay, red, of Bermuda, 2(35 

 Climate, astronomical causes of changes 



of, 126 



Climate, properties of snow and ice in 

 relation to, 131 

 of Britain with winter in apJielion, 

 156 



of Tertiary period in Europe and 



N. America, 178 

 temperate in Arctic regions, 181 

 causes of mild Arctic, 190 

 of Tertiary and Secondary periods, 



199, 202 



of the Secondary and Palaeozoic 



epochs, 200 

 change of, during Tertiary and 



Secondary periods, 200 

 affected by arrangement of the 



great continents, 205 

 nature of changes of, caused by high 



excentricity, 230 

 exceptional stability of the present, 



232 



changes of, as affecting migration of 

 plants, 517 

 Climatal changes, lOG 



change, its essential principle re- 

 stated, 158 



changes as modifying organisms, 

 229 



Clouds cut off the sun's heat, 145 

 Coal in Sumatra, 385 

 Coast line of globe, extent of, 221 

 Cochoa, distribution of, 25 

 Cockerell, Mr. Th. D. A., on slugs of 

 Bermuda, 271 



on British land and fresh-water 

 shells, 354 

 Cold alone does not cause glaciation, 135 



how it can be stored up, 133 

 Coleoptera of the Azores, 253 



of St. Helena, 298 



of the Sandwich Islands, 318 



peculiar British species of, 349 

 Comoro Islands, 428 



mammals and birds of, 428 

 Composite of the Galapagos, 288 



of St. Helena, 307 



of the Sandwich Islands, 325 



of the Mascarene Islands, 445 



species often have restricted ranges, 

 504 



Conchisions on the New Zealand flora, 

 506 



Contemporaneous formation of Lower 



Greensand and Wealden, 221 

 Continental conditions throughout geo- 

 logical time, 97-99 

 changes and animal distribution, 102 

 extensions will not explain anoma- 

 lous facts of distribution, 449 



Continental islands, 243 

 of recent origin, 331 

 general remarks on recent, 408 

 ancient, 411 



Continental period, date of, 337 



Continents, movements of, 88 

 permanence of, 97 

 general stability of, 101, 103 

 geological development of, 205 



Continuity of land, 74 



Continuity of now isolated groups, proof 

 of, 70 



Cook, Captain, on a native quadruped in 



New Zealand, 476 

 Cope, Professor, on the Bermuda lizard, 



266 



Coracias temminckii, in Celebes, 462 

 Corvus, 17 



Cossonidse, in St. Helena, 299 

 Cretaceous deposits in North Australia, 

 493, 496 



Cretaceous flora of Greenland, 185 



of the United States, 189 

 CroU, Dr. James, on Antarctic icebergs, 

 136 



on winter temperature of Britain in 



glacial epoch, 141 

 on diversion of gulf -stream during 



the glacial epoch, 143 

 on loss of heat by clouds and fogs, 



145 



on geographical causes as affecting 



climate, 148 

 on ancient glacial epochs, 170 

 on imiversality of glacial markings 



in Scotland, 174 

 on mild climates of Arctic regions, 



189 



on ocean- currents, 190, 204 



on age of the earth, 213 



on mean thickness of sedimentary 

 rocks, 220 



on small amount of marine denuda- 

 tion, 225 



on buried river-channels, 330 

 Ctenodus, 69 



Cyanopica, distribution of, 24 

 Ci/anopica cooki, restricted range of, 15, 

 24 



Cyanopica cyanus, 24 



Cynopithecus niger, in Celebes, 455a 



D. 



Dacelo, 47 



Dana on continental upheavals, 88 



on chalk in the Sandwich Islands, 30 

 on elevation of land causing the 



glacial epoch, 152 

 on elevation of Western America 



194 



on the development of continents 

 205 



on shore-deposits, 222 

 on life extermination by cold epochs 

 230 



