18 
DONS. — 4 NOVEMBRE 1872-6 JANVIER 1873. 
Ch. Lapworth. — On the lower silurian rocks in the neighbourhoed of Galashiels, 46. 
J. Haswell.. — On the old estuarinebeds ofthe Carse of Stirling, 58. 
D. Marshall. — On the probable cause of the Non-existence of depositsbetween the permian 
and the lower silurian in the Southern Uplands of Scotland, 66. 
W. Linford. — On the Budleigh Salterton Pebbles, 67. 
A. Taylor. — Suggestions for the Study of the Chemical geology of the Bathgate Hills, 73. 
A. Taylor. — On unpublished sections illustrating the superficial geology ofthe Northern Dis¬ 
trict of Edinburgh, 77. 
S. Mossmann.— On the Chromate of iron, Serpentine, and other Minerais-of the Shetland 
Isles, 78. 
Ch. W. Peach. — Notes on the Pebbles of Budleigh Salterton, 79. 
G. Lyon. — Notice of a specimen of Lepidodendron y wit\ï cones'attached, from Corstorphine 
Hill, Edinburgh, 81. 
W. Grossart. — Note on a species of Conifer from the^carboniferous sandstone.of.Shotts, 
Lanarkshire, 81. 
J. Linn. — List of fossils obtained from the Bathgate limestone, 82. 
C. W. Peach. — On the discovery of Spbrorbis carbonarius in the limestone ofBurdiehouse, 
and of an Estheria in Camstone Quarry, Arthur’s Seat, 82. 
A. Taylor. — On sections made by the drainage operations in the Pleasance, Edinburgh, illus¬ 
trative of the physical structure of Salisbury crags, 83. 
H. A. Nicholson. — On the Coniston limestone'of Cumberland and Westmoreland and its 
associated rocks, 84. 
H. A. Nicholson. — On the Corrélation of the silurian deposits of the North of England with 
those of the South of Scotland, 105. 
H. F. Alexander. — On the origin of Cabook^or the Latérite of Ceylon, 113. 
R. Walker. — On a new species of Amblypterus, and other fossil fish remains from Pitcor- 
thie, Fife, 119. 
G. Lyon.— On a mass of contortéd sandstone in Ilunter’s Bog, 125. 
G. Lyon. — On a new species of Rhhodus, 125. 
A. Somervail. — On the occurence of Sanguinolites iridinoides in thecarboniferous limes¬ 
tone of Middleton, 130. 
A. Somervail. —On the occurence of Spirifer ovalis in the carboniferous limestone of 
Mid-Lothian, 131. 
R. Th. Shiells. —Notice of stratification underlying the site ofthe Old Darien house, Edin¬ 
burgh, 132. 
J. Brown. — On local glaciation in the Pentland/133. 
A. Somervail. — On the occurence of Strepsodus and Rhizodopsis in the TJpper Coal 
Measures of Edmonstone, Mid-Lothian, 137. 
J Henderson.— On the fossils foundpn the rocks underlying the South site of Edinburgh, 138. 
A. S. Myers. — On Blocks and Boulders lying loose on and imbedded in the rocks which form 
the Seaboard of Benholm Parish, Kincardineshire, between High and Lo\v Water- 
Marks, 141. 
J. Henderson. — Notice of a Fault in the carboniferous rocks on the Wâter of.Leith, above 
Currie ; with some observations on the geology of the district, 1 44. 
Londres. The Athenæum, n os 2350 à 2355 ; 1872. 
— Geological Society. The Quarterly Journal of the —, t. XXVIII, 
3 e part. (n° 111) ; 1872. 
H. A. Nicholson. —Migrations of the Graptolites, 217. 
Ph. de M. G. Egerton. — On Prognathodus Guntheri , Egerton, a new genus of fossil fish 
from the Lias of Lyme Regis, 233. 
J. Nicol. —How the parallel roads of Glen Roy were formed, 237. 
C. J. À. Meyer. — On the wealden as a fluvio*-lacustrine formation, and on the relation of the 
so-called Punfield formation , to the wealden and neocomian, 243. 
R. Daintree. — On the geology of the Colony of Queensland, 271. 
R. Etheridge. — Description of the palæozoic and mesozoic fossils of Queensland, 317, 
W. Carruthers. — Notes on fossil plants from Queensland, 350. 
