20 
DONS. 
17 juin-4 novembre 1878. 
— Geological Society of London. 323, 367. 
D. Mackintosh. — Reply to Mr. Ussher and H. E. H., 331. 
Ch. Callaway. — On the Fauna and Age of.the Shineton Shales, 332. 
S. G. Perceval. — Orthis redux in Midland Bunter Pebbles, 333. 
W. Theobald. — What is an erratic?, 333. 
A. B. Wynne.—What is an erratic?, 334. 
S. Y. Wood, Jr.— Subglacial origin ofTill, 335. 
J. Milne. — On the Form of Yolcanos, 337; — « Coast ice on a rising area. » Re- 
ply to Dr. G. Linnarsson, 425. 
Hippisïey. — Somersetshire Coal-Measures, 345. 
A. G. Cameron. — Notes on some Peat Deposits at Kildale and West Hartlepool. 
351. 
G. J. Kinde. — Arbusculites argéntea, Murray, 378. 
E. M. Cole. — Age of the Rocks of Monte Generoso, 378. 
J. Çroll. — Çataclysmic Théories of Geological Climate, 390. 
G. H. Kinahan. — Land Plants in the Irish Silurians, 398. 
A. F. Griffith. — On a Flint Implement from the Barnwell Gï-avel, 400. 
R. Damon. — Wayside Notes in Travels over Europe. The Great Northern Drift, 
403. 
J. Evans. — Address delivered to the Geological Section, British Association for 
the Advancement of Science, Dublin, August 15, 1878, 411. 
H. B. Woodward. — The Monte Generoso Beds, 422. 
T. G. Bonney. — The Quartzites ofthe Bunter Conglomerate, 428. 
E. Rigaux. — The Fossil Brachiopoda of the Lower Boulonnais, 436. 
W. Davies. — Supplementary Note to « Pleistocene Mammals Dredged off the 
Eastern Coast », 443. 
J. Nolan. — On the Ancient Volcanic District of Slieve Gullion, 445. 
M. H. Close. — The Extent of Geological Time, 450. 
G. Maw. — Geological History of the North American Lake Région, 455. 
E. Hull. — On the Geology of the Environs of Dublin, 457. 
H. Hicks. — On some New Pre-Cambrian Areas in "Wales, 460. 
C. Williamson. — On the Supposed Radiolarians and Diatomaceæ of the Coal- 
Measures, 461. 
W. Traill. — On the Rocks of Ulster as a Source of Water Supply, 463. 
E. T. Hardman. — On Rullite, a hitherto undescribed Minerai, 464. 
W. King. —On the âge of the Crystalline Rocks of Donegal, 465. 
T. SterryHunt. — The Origin and Succession of the Crystalline Rocks, 466. 
E. Hill. — The possibility of Changes of Latitude, 479. 
R. Craig. — Geological Time, 479. 
Agnes Crâne. — The General History ofthe Cephalopoda, Recent and Fossil, 487. 
J. W. Davis. — The Physical Forces which hâve caused the Présent Configura¬ 
tion of the Valley ofthe Calder in Yorkshire. 500. 
J. Lamplugh. — On the Occurence of Marine Shells in the Boulder-clav at Brid- 
lington and elsewhere on the Yorkshire Coast, 509. 
F. A. Bedwell. — Notes on the Bridlington Crag and Boulder-clay, 517. 
— Geological Society. The Quarterly Journal of the —, t. XXXIY, 
n° 3 ; 1878. 
R. Daintree. — Note on certain Modes of Occurence of Gold in Australia, 431. 
E. T. Newton. —Description of a New Fish from the Lower Chalk of Dover, 439. 
T. M. Reade. — The Submarine Forest at the Alt Mouth, 447. 
