18 
dons. — 15 juin-9 nov. 1874. 
W. Gomersall. — On the Round Boulder Hills of Craven, 80. 
j. Gunn. — On the Probability of finding Coal in the Eastern Counties,81. 
Harkness. — On the occurence of faults in the Permian rocks of the lower portion 
of the Yale of the Eden, Cumberland, 81. 
H. Hicks. — On the Arenig and Llandeilo rocks of Saint-David’s,82. 
J. Hopkinson. — On some Graptolites from the Upper Arenig Rocks of Ramsey 
island, Saint-David’s, 82 ; — On the occurence of numerous species of Graptolites 
in the Ludlow rocks of Shropshire, 83. 
W. Horne. — On the occurence in the Yoredale rocks of Wensleydale of Fish and 
Amphibian remains, 84. 
J. L. Lobley. — On the British palæozoic Arcadæ, 84. 
Moffat. — On a Horn and Bones found in a cutting in a Street in Maidenhead, 
Berks, 84 ; — On Geological Systems and Endémie diseases, 84. 
Von Richthofen. — On the Lœss of Northern China, and its relation to the Sait— 
basins of Central Asia, 86. 
R. Russell. —On the Geology of the country round Bradford, Yorkshire, 88. 
J. E. Taylor. — On the occurence of Elephanl-remains in the basement beds of 
the Red Crag, 91. 
W. Topley. — On the correspondent between some areas of apparent Upheaval 
and the Tickening of subjacent beds, 91. 
W. Topley et G. A. Lebour. — On the Whin Sill of Northumberland, 92. 
W. Whitaker. — On the occurence of Thanet Sand and of Crag in the S. W. part 
of Suffolk (Sudbury), 92. 
H. Woodward et R. Etheridge jun. — On some specimens of Dithyrocaris from the 
Carboniferous iimestone sériés, East Kilbride, and from the Old Red Sandstone (?) of 
Lanarkshire, with Notes on their geological position, etc., 92. 
W. C. Williamson. — On Fern-stems and Pétioles of the Coal-measures, 106. 
W. W. Gill. — On Coral-Caves with Human bones in stalagmite on Mangaïa, South 
Pacific, 141. 
— Geological Society. The quarterly Journal of the —, t. XXIX, 
n^ 3 et 4; 1873. 
Bryce. — On the Jurassic rocks of Skye and Raasay, 317. 
R. Tate. — On the Palæontology of Skye and Raasay, 339. 
D. Mackintosh. — On the more remarkable Boulders ofthe North-West of England 
and the Welsh Borders, 351. 
Ansted. — On Solfataras and Deposits of Sulphur at Kalamaki, near the isthmus of 
Corinth, 360. 
J. Lucas. — On the origin of Clay-Ironstone, 363. 
Dawson. — On Leptophlœum rhombicum and Lepidodendron gaspianum, 369. 
F. W. Hutton. — Synopsis of the younger formations of New Zealand, 372. 
Carruthers. — On the TreeFerns of the Coal-Measures, and their relations to other 
living and fossil forms, 380. 
Schindler. — On the Geology of Kazirun, Persia, 381. 
T. G. Bonney. — On the Lakes of the north-eastern Alps, and their bearing on the 
Glacier-erosion Theory, 382. 
Gastaldi. — On the effects of Glacier-erosion in alpine valleys, 396. 
Hull. — On the Permian Breccias and Boulder-beds of Armagh, 402. 
G. W. Stow. — Geological notes on Griqualand West, 407. 
Rup. Jones. — On some bivalve Entomostraca, chiefly Cypridinidæ ofthe Carbo¬ 
niferous formations, 409. 
