dons. - 18 juin-4 nov. 1877. 
15 
P. Frazer Jr. — Regarding some Mesozoic Ores, 651. 
Washington. Geological and Geographfcal Survey of tlie Territories. 
Bulletin of the U. S. —, t. III, n° 1 ; 1877. 
A. S. Packard Jr. — On a new Cave Fauna in Utah, 157. 
F. Y. Hayden. — Notes on some Artesian Borings along the line of the Union 
Pacific Railroad in Wyoming Territory, 181. 
Grande-Bretagne. Londres. Geological Magazine (The), 2 e sér., 2° dé¬ 
cade, t. 1Y, n os 7-11; 1877. 
J. Milne. — Across Europe and Asia. Travelling Notes, 289, 337, 399, 459, 511. 
J. H. Blake. — On the Age ofthe Mammalian Rootlet-bet at Kessingland, 298. 
Cl. Reid. — On the Succession and Classification of the Beds between the Chalk 
and the Lower Boulder-clay in the neighbourhood of Cromer, 300; — On the 
junction of the Limestone and Culm-Measures near Chudleigh, 454. 
R. Etheridge Jr. — Further Contributions to British Carboniferous Palæontology, 
306: — Palæontological Notes, 318. 
A. Irving. - On the so-called Permian and the New Red Sandstone Formations, 
309. 
J. R. Dakyns. — On Prof. Hull’s Carboniferous Classification, 312; — A Sketch 
of the Geology of Keighlev, Skipton, and Grassington, 346 ; — The Antiquity of 
Man, 439. 
G. M. Dawson. — Mesozoic Yolcanic Rocks of British Columbia and Chile. Relation 
of Yolcanic and Metamorphic Rocks, 314. 
J. Gunn. The Norfolk Forest-bed, 335. 
J. W. Judd. — Geology and Scenery of Newfoundland, 336. 
A. J. Jukes Browne. — Notes on the Corrélation of the Beds constituting the 
Upper Greensand and Chloritic Mari, 350; — The Origin of Cirques, 477. 
J. S. Gardner. — The Red Clay of the deep-sea and the Gault deposits, 377. 
G. S. Boulger. — Dr. William Smith's Geological Maps, 378. 
E. Hull. — Prématuré Conclusions, 378. 
W. T. Aveline. — The relation of the Permian to the Trias, 380. 
H. A. Nicholson. — Huronian Yolcanic Rocks, 380. 
S. Y. Wood Jr. et F. W. Harmer. — The Kessingland Freshwater bed and Wey- 
bourne Sand, 385. 
Macdakin. — The Northampton Ironstone Beds in Lincolnshire, 406. 
H. Howorth.— Geology of the Isle of Man, 410, 456. 
0. Feistmantel. — The Cycadaceæ in the Damuda sériés, and the Nürschan Gas- 
coal of Bohemia, 431. 
Breese. — Forest-Bed ofEast Norfolk, 432. 
R. Mantovani. — Is Man Tertiary? The Antiquity of Man in the Roman Country in 
relation to the Geology of the Yalley of the Tiber, 433. 
E. J. Hebert. — Reversed Faults in Bedded Slates, 441. 
Yerbeek. — The Geology of Sumatra, 443. 
Ch. Callaway. — The migration of Species as related to the Corrélation of Geolo¬ 
gical Formations, 445 ; — Pr. Mantovani and the Miolithic Period, 528. 
H. B. Woodward. — Notes on the Devonian Rocks near Newton Abbot and Tor- 
quav, with Remarks on the subject of their classification, 447. 
T. G. Bonney. — The Coral-Rag of Upware, 476; — On certain Rock-Structures, 
as illustrated by Pitchstones and Felsites in Arran, 499. 
