dons. — 17 juin-4 novembre 1878. 
19 
S., 182; — On Reptiiian remains from the Dakota Beds of Colorado, 193; — Des¬ 
criptions of New Yertebrata from the Upper Tertiary Formations of the West, 219; 
— On some Saurians found in the Triassic of Pennsylvania, 231; — On the Yerte¬ 
brata of the Dakota Epoch of Colorado, 233. 
F. A. Genth. — On some Tellurium and Yanadium Minerais, 113. 
L. Lesquereux. — Land Plants recently discovered in the Silurian Rocks of the 
U. S., 163; — A Species of Fungus recently discovered in the shales of the Dar- 
lington Coal Bed (Lower Productive Coal Measures, Alleghany River Sériés) at Can- 
nelton, in Beaver County, Pennsylvania, 173. 
C. M. Cresson. — Bituminous Material from Pulaski County, Virginia, U. S., 215. 
Fr. Prime, Jr. — On the Palæozoic Rocks of Lehigh and Northampton Counties, 
Pennsylvania, 248. 
P. Frazer, Jr. — Remarks on Professor Prime’s Paper, 255. 
J. P. Lesley. — On a Sériés of Chemical Analysis of Siluro-Cambrian Limestone 
beds in Cumberland County, Pennsylvania, 260. 
Grande-Bretagne. Londres. Geological Magazine (The), 
2 e sér., 2 e déc., t. III, n° 11 ; 1876. 
0. Feistmantel. — On the Gondwana Sériés of India, as a Probable Représenta¬ 
tive of the Jurasso-Triassic epoch in Europe, 481. 
W. H. Dalton. — Subsidence in East Essex, 491. 
J. F. Blake. — On the Motion of Glaciers, 493. 
Ch. Lapworth. — On Scottish Monograptidæ (suite), 499. 
S. H. Scudder. — Fossil Palæozoic Insects, 519. 
0. Heer. — New Orthopterous Insect in the Coal-Measures of Scotland, 520. 
G. Krefft. — Further discoveries of Ossiferous Caverns in New South Wales, 520. 
T. G. Bonney. — Glacial origin of Lake-Basins, 521. 
R. Etheridge, Jr. — Carboniferous and Post-tertiary Polyzoa, 522. 
T. R. Jones. —The « Sarsen Stones », 523. 
J. W. Judd. — Formation of Rock-Basins, 523. 
G. Linnarsson. — On the Silurian Rocks of Sweden, 525. 
G. H. Morton. — Section of Boulder-clay, North Docks, Liverpool, 526. 
W. T. Aveline. —The Graptolitic Mudstones’of the Lake district, 527. 
D. Mackintosh. — Mr. Reade on Drift-sequence, and Mr. Milne on Coast-ice, 528. 
S. Parrv. — Human Remains beneath Boulder-clay?, 528. 
— Id., t. Y, n os 7-11; 1878. 
H. Woodward. — On a New and Undescribed Macrouran Decapod Crustacean, 
from the Lower Lias, Barrow-on-Soar, Leicestershire, etc., 289; — Notes on some 
Arctic Silurian or Devonian (?) Fossils from Beechey Island, brought home by the S. 
Y. Pandora in 1875, and from Port Dundas, Lancaster Sound, by an earlier Expé¬ 
dition in 1853, 385; — Discovery of the Remains of a Fossil Crab (Decapoda-Bra- 
chyura) in the Coal-Measures of the Environs of Mons (Belgium), 433. 
O. Fisher. — On the possibility of Changes in the Latitudes of Places on theEarth’s 
surface, being an Appeal to Physicists, 291. 
R. F. Tomes. — A List of the Madreporaria of Crickley Hill, Gloucestershire, with 
Descriptions of some New Species, 297. 
T. M. Hall. — The late Professor Phillips on the North Devon Rocks, with an 
Introductorv Note, 305 ; — On a Method of Estimaling the Extent of Geological Areas, 
352. 
J. Durham. — Discovery of an Ancien! « Kitchen Midden » near Dundee. 310. 
