28 
dons. — 17 juin-4 novembre 1878. 
J. Goodall. — On the Discovery of a eut Stump of a Tree, giving Evidence of the 
Existence of Man in N. Z. at or before the Volcanic Era, 144. 
W. T. L. Travers. —Notes on Dr. Haast’s supposed Pleistocene Glaciation of N. 
Z., 409. 
A. D. Dobson. — On the Date of the Glacial Period; a Çomparison of Views repre- 
sented in Papers published in the Transactions of the N. Z. I., Vois Y. and VI., 440. 
Th. Mackay. —The Glacial Period of N. Z., 447. 
J. C. Crawford. —Did the great Cook Strait River flow to the North-West or to 
the South-East?, 448; — Some further Proofs as to the ancient Cook Strait River 
and the Harbour of Wellington as a Fresh-water Lake ; aîso, a Considération of the 
Date at which the Islands were united. 451. 
C. W. Purnell. — On the Wanganui Tertiaries, 453. 
R. Daintree. — Notes on the Microscopie Structure of certain Igneous Rocks sub- 
mittedby the Director of the G. S. of N. Z., 458. 
J. C. Firth. — Deep Sinking in the Lava Beds of Mount Eden, 460. 
— Id., t. VIII; 1875, 
W. T. L. Travers. — Notes on the Extinction of the Moa, with a review of the 
discussions on the subject, published in the Tr. of the N. Z. I., 58. 
G. Thorne, Jun. — Notes on the Discovery of xMoa and Moa-Hunters’ Remains at 
Pataua River, near Whangarei, 83. 
C. H. Robson. — Notes on Moa Remains in the vicinity of Cape Campbell, 95. 
Taylor White. — Notes on Moa Caves, etc., in the Wakatipu District, 97. 
F. E. Maning. — A Letter relative to the Extinction of the Moa, 102. 
W. N. Blair. — On the Building Materials of Otago, 123. 
J. Carruthers. — Yolcanic Action Regarded as due to the Retardation of the 
Earth’s Rotation, 351, 409. 
J. C. Crawford. — On the Old Lake System of N. Z., with some Observations as 
to the formation of the Canterbury Plains, 369 ; — On the Igneous Rocks of the Pro¬ 
vince of Wellington, 375 ; — On the Probability of Finding Extensive Coal Deposits 
within the Province of Wellington, 379. 
F. W. Hutton. — On the cause of the former great Extension of the Glaciers in 
N. Z., 383. 
J. M. Tunny. — The Coals and Coal Fields in the Pr. of Auckland, 387, 428. 
— Id., t. IX; 1876. 
W. N. Blair. — The Building Materials of Otago, 108. 
J. Hector. — On the Remains of a Dog found by Capt. Rowan near White Cliffs, 
243; —On a new Trilobite (Homalonotus expansus), 602. 
C. H. Robson. —Further Notes on Moa Remains, 279. 
F. W. Hutton. — Remarks on Dr. von Haast’s Classification of the Moas, 363; — 
On the relation between the Pareora and Àhuriri Formations, 590; — Descriptions 
of some new Tertiary Mollusca from Canterbury, 593. 
B. S. Booth. — On a second discovery of Moa-bones at Hamilton, 365. 
J. C. Crawford. — An attempt at an explanation of the origin of Minerai Veins, 
particularly those of Gold and Silver, 560; — On probable reasons why few Fossils 
are found in the Upper Palæozoic, and possible Triassic Rocks of N. Z., 561. 
S. P. Smith. — Sketch of the Geology of the northern portion of the Hawke Bay, 
565. 
S. H. Cox. —Notes on the Vallev Svstem on the Western Flanks of Mount Cook, 
577. 
