25 Rapt . 
Subject Index. 
B. Fossil. 
General. 
The fossil turtles of North America ; 
Hay, 133. 
Descriptions of five species of North 
American fossil turtles, four of which 
are new ; Hay, 135. 
Cainozoic. 
Pliocene, Java, einige Reptilien der 
Kendeng- oder Trinilfauna ; Dubois, 93. 
Some Oligocene lizards; Douglass, 
90. 
Eocene, Wyoming, Olyptosaurus 
sp. n. ; Loomis, 184. 
Mesozoic. 
Kreide, Icthyosaurus sp. n. ; Broili, 
55. 
Kreideformation, ueber ein Endglied 
des Ichthyosaurierstammes ; Rogenhofer, 
245. 
Cretaceous, North American plesio- 
saurs ; WiUiston, 352. 
Protostega gigas and other Cretaceous 
reptiles from the Kansas chalk ; Stern- 
berg, 285. 
Upper Cretaceous, the Ankylosauridce , 
a new family of armored dinosaurs ; 
Brown, 64. 
Lower Greensand of Kent, note on 
Dinodocus mackesoni ; Woodward, 364. 
Oxford clay, Metriorhynchus bracliy- 
rhynchus ; Leeds, 179. 
Lower Lias, Megalosaurian tibia from 
Warwickshire; Woodward, 363. 
Trias, mandible of Labyrinthodon 
leptognathus ; Woodward, 366. 
Trias, amphibia and reptiles of the 
Keuper in Leicestershire and the 
surrounding counties ; Horwood, 147. 
Triassic, Hallopus victor ; Huene and 
Lull, 155. 
Trias, European Dinosauria ; Huene, 
151. 
Trias, Phytosaurian remains from the 
magnesian conglomerate of Bristol ; 
Huene, 149. 
— Oeocrapiiy. '5627 
Trias, footprints ; Beasley, 23, Lomas, 
183. 
Magnesian conglomerate at Bristol 
and the Elgin sandstone, reptile faunas ; 
Huene, 150. 
Ein neuer Reptilientypus [Placo- 
chelys ] aus der Triasformation Ungarns ; 
Abei, 1. 
Triassic Ichthyosauria, with special 
reference to the American forms ; 
Merriam, 197. 
Trias, structure and relationships of 
American Labyrinthodontidae ; Branson, 
49. 
Triassic reptile from Brazil ; Wood- 
ward, 365. 
Palaeozoic. 
Upper Karroo of Cape Colony, den- 
tition of the Gomphodontia ; Seeley,. 
261. 
Lower Karoo of South Africa, den- 
tition of the palate of Cynognathus ; 
Seeley, 264. 
Permian of S. Africa, Rliinesuchu& 
sp. n. ; Broom, 61. 
Permian, footprints in the lower sand- 
stones of the Exeter district ; Clayden, 
81. 
Permian urodele, Lysorophus ; Wil- 
liston, 353. 
Permian, a new group of Amphibians ; 
WUliston, 354. 
Permian of Texas, a four-horned 
pelycosauriari ; Matthew, 193. 
On the value of the evidence furnished 
by vertebrate fossils of age of certain 
so-called Permian beds in America; 
Case, 71. 
Carboniferous bones and fragments 
of Amphibia and Reptilia from the 
Pennsylvanian formation ; Case, 72. 
In the Pennsylvanian near Pittsburg’ 
discovery of reptilian remains ; Ray~ 
mond, 236. 
Carboniferous, the oldest known rep- 
tile — Isodectes punctulatus Cope ; Wil- 
iston, 351. 
