16 dons. — 18 juin-4 nov. 1877. 
O. Fisher. — Forest-Bed at Happisburg. 479; — Elephas meridionalis in Dorset, 
527. 
S. V. Wood Jr. — American « Surface Geology, » and is Relation to British. 
With some Remarks on the Glacial Conditions in Britain, especialiy in reference to 
t'ne « Great Ice Age » of M. J. Geikie, I, 481. 
J. Shipman. — Conglomerate at the base of the Lower Keuper, 497. 
R. Tate.— Ostracoda and Foraminifera in the Miocene of South Australia, 526. 
H. E. H. — Reversed Faults in Bedded Slates, 527. 
— Geological Society. The Quarterly Journal of the —, t. XXXIII, 
n os 1 et 2 ; 1877. 
J. Buckman. — The Cephalopoda-beds of Gloucester, Dorset, and Somerset, 1. 
D. C. Davies. — On the Relation of the Upper Carboniferous Strata of Shropshire 
and Denbighshire to Beds usuallv described as Permian, 10. 
G. H. Kinahan. — On the Chesil Beach, Dorsetshire, and Cahore Shingle Beach, 
County Wexford, 29. 
P. M. Duncan. — On the Echinodermata of the Australian Cainozoic (Tertiary) 
Deposits, 42; — The Anniversary Address of the President, Proc., 41. 
S. Y. Wood Jr. et Fr. W. Harmer. — Observations on the Later Tertiarv Geology 
of East Anglia, 74. 
S. Y. Wood Jr. — Note on new occurences of species ofMollusca from the Upper 
Tertiaries of the East of England, 119. 
W. W^hitaker. — Note on the Red Crag, 122. 
S. Calderon. — On the Fossil Yertebrate hitherto discovered in Spain, 124. 
F. W. Harmer. — On the Kessingland Cliff-section, and on the relation of the 
Forest-bed to the Chillesford Clay, with some Remarks on the so-called Terrestrial 
Surface at the base of the Norwich Crag, 134. 
A. Helland. — On the Ice-Fjords of North Greenland, and on the formation of 
Fjords, Lakes, and Cirques in Norway and Greenland, 142. 
A. Leith Adams. — On gigantic Land-Tortoises and a small Freshwater Species 
from the Ossiferous Caverns of Malta, together with a List of their Fossil Fauna; and 
a Note on Chelonian Remains from the Rock-cavities of Gibraltar, 177. 
J. S. Gardner. — On British Cretaceous Patellidæ- and other Families of Patelloid 
Gastropoda, 192. 
Mac Kenny Hughes. — On the Silurian Grits of Corwen, North W r ales, 207. 
R. L. Jack et R. Etheridge Jr. — On the Discoverv of Plants in the Lower Old Red 
Sandstone of the neighbourhood of Callander, 213. 
R. Etheridge Jr. — On the remains of a large Crustacean, probably indicative of 
a new species of Eurypterus, or allied genus (Eurypterus StevensoniJ, from the 
Lower Carboniferous Sériés (Cementstone group) of Berwickshire, 223. 
H. Hicks.— On the Pre-Cambrian (Dimetian and Pebidian) Rocks of St. David’s, 
229. 
W. J. Sollas. — On Pharetrospongia Strahani, Sollas, a fossil Holorhaphidote 
Sponge from Jhe Cambridge Coprolite bed, 242. 
R. Tate. — On new species of Bclemnites and Salenia from the Middle Tertiaries 
of South Australia, 256. 
J. F. Blake et W. H. Hudleston. — On the Corallian Rocks of England, 260. 
W. Carruthers. — Description of a new species of Aràucarites from the Coral- 
üne Oolite of Malton, 402. 
W. Topley et G. À. Lebour. — On the Intrusive Character of the Whin Sill of 
Northumberland, 406. 
