dons. — 15 jlin-9 nov. 1874. 
19 
Duncan.— On the genus Palœocoryne, Dune, et Jenkins, and its affînities, 412; — 
On Caryophyllia Bredai, M. Edw. et H., from the Red Crag of Woodbridge, 503; — 
On the Older tertiarv formations of the West-Indian Islands, 548. 
R. Mortimer. — On Markings in the Chalk of the Yorkshire Wolds, 417. 
P. de M. G. Egerton. — On Platysiagum sclerocephalum and Palœospinax priscus, 
419. 
T. Wright. — On ajiew genus of silurian Àsteriadæ, 421. 
J. C. Ward. — On the Glaciation of the northern part of the Lake-district, 422. 
F. Drew. —On Alluvial and Lacustrine deposits and Glacial records of the Upper- 
Indus basin, 441. 
W. T. Blanford. — On the nature and probable origine of the superficial deposits 
in the valleys and deserts of central Persia, 493. 
J. Buckman. — On the Cephalopoda-bed and the Oolite sands of üorset and part 
of Somerset, 504. 
H. G. Seelv. — On Cetarthrosaurus Walkeri, an ichthyosaurian from the Cam¬ 
bridge Upper Greensand, 505. 
Duke of Argyll. — On six Lake-basins in Argyllshire, 508. 
Owen. — On the skull of a dentigerous Bird (Odontopteryx toliapicus. Owen) 
from the London Clay of Sheppev, 511. 
J. W. Hulke. — On the anatomy of Hypsilophodon Foxii, 522. 
J. Geikie. — On the Glacial phenomena of the Long Island or Outer Hébrides, 532. 
J. F. Campbell. — On the Glacial phenomena of the Hebrides/545. 
R. Etheridge jun. — On the Lignite deposit ofLal-Lal, Victoria, Australia. 565. 
— 1(1., t. XXX, nos 1_3; 1874. 
W. H. Flower. — On the skull of a species of Halitherium [H. Canhami), from 
the Red Crag of Suffolk, 1. 
H. Woodward. — On new facts bearing on the inquiry concerning forms interme- 
diate between Birds and Reptiles, 8. 
J. W. Hulke. — On a very large Saurian limb-bone adapted for progression upon 
Land, from the Kimmeridge Clay of Weymouth, 16; — On the anatomy of Hypsilopho¬ 
don Foxii, 18; — On an Astragalus of Iguanodon Mantelli, 24. 
T. M. Reade. — On the Drift-beds of the North-West of England. Part I : Shells of 
the Lancashire and Cheshire low-level Boulder-Clay and Sands, 27. 
R. D. Darbishire. — On a deposit of Middle Pleistocene gravel in the Worden- 
Hall Pits, 38. 
H. G. Fordham. — On the Structure sometimes developed in Chalk, 43. 
A. W. Edgell. — On some Lamellibranchs of the Budleigh-Salterton Pebbles, 45. 
A. W. Stiffe. — On the Geology of the Mekran coast, 50. 
E. J. Dunn. — On the mode of occurence of Diamonds in South Africa, 5t. 
A. B. Wynne. — Observations on some Features in the physical geology of the 
Outer Himalayan région of the Upper Punjab, 61. 
Ramsav. — On the physical history of the valley of the Rhine, 81. 
J. C. Ward. — On the origin of some of the Lake-basins of Cumberland, 96. 
G. Maw. — Geological notes on a journey from Algiers to the Sahara, 105. 
Davidson et King. — On the Trimerellidæ, a palæozoic family of the Palliobranchs 
or Brachiopoda, 124. 
D. Mackintosh. — On the traces of a great Ice-sheet in the Southern part of the 
Lake-district and in North-Wales, 174. 
W. Shone, — On the discovery of Foraminifera, etc., in the Boulder-clays of Che¬ 
shire, 181. 
