78 
dons. — 3 mars-5 mai 1879. 
J. Cl. Ward. — On the Physical History of the EnglishLake District; with Notes on 
the Possible Subdivisions of the Skiddaw Slates (fin), 110. 
A. Champernowne. — The Devonian Question, 125. 
E. Hull. — The Devonian Question : Reply to Mr. Kinahan’s Note, 127, 192. 
— Geological Society of London, 138, 189, 232. 
Ch. Callaway. — The Tripartite Division of the Silurian and Cambrian Forma¬ 
tions, 142; — On Plagioclinal Mountains, 216. 
C. J. A. Meyer. — Chloritic Mari and Upper Greensand, 143. 
A. J. Jukes-Browne. — Chloritic Mari and Upper Greensand, 143 ; — Kinahan’s 
Geology of Ireland, 236. 
G. H. Kinahan. —Sir R. Griffith and the Old Red Sandstone, 144 ; — 237. 
W. Davies. — On some Fish Exuviæ from the Chalk, generally referred to Dercetis 
elongatus, Ag. ; and on a New Species of Fossil Annelide, Terebella Lewesien- 
sis, 145. 
J. St. Gardner. — On the Corrélation of the Bournemouth Marine Sériés with the 
Bracklesham Beds, the Upper and Middle Bagshot Beds of the London Basin, and 
the Bovey Tracey Beds, 148. 
J. Nolan. — On the Metamorphic and Intrusive Rocks of Tyrone, 154. 
R. Etheridge jun. — NotesDn the Bivalves contained in the Gilbertson Collection, 
British Muséum, and figured in Phillip’s « Geology of Yorkshire », 161. 
0. Lenz. — Geological Notes on Western Africa, 172. 
Nehring. — On the Quaternary Deposits at Westeregeln and Thiede, near Bruns¬ 
wick ; in illustration of the Subaerial Origin ofLœss, 176. 
J. W. Davis. — The Calder Valley, 191. 
Prestwich. — On the Discovery of a Species of Iguanodon in the Kimmeridge 
Clay near Oxford ; and a Notice of a verv Fossiliferous Band of the Shotover 
Sands, 193. 
Lycett. — On Trigonia Elisœ, Cornet and Briart, 195. 
H. Woodward. — Notes on Palæozoic Crustacea. Eurypterus Scouleri, Hib- 
bert, 196. 
T. G. Bonney. — On Professor Dana’s Classification of Rocks, 199. 
G. H. Morton. — Geology of the Isle of Man, 211. 
E. T. Hardmann. — The Fossiliferous Clay Beds overlying Basait, Lough 
Neagh, and the Geological âge of that Lake, 214. 
— The Geologists’ Association, 230. 
H. B. Woodward. — The Mammoth not Pre-glacial in Britain, 235. 
H. H. Winwood. —Geology of North De von, 236. 
R. H. Traquair. — Occurence of Eurynotus in the Carboniferous Limestone of 
Belgium, 237. 
J. R. Dakvns. — The Bridlington and Sewerby Gravels, 238; — Glacial Troughs 
beneath the Glacier des Bossons, 239. 
W. Vicary. — Miocene or Eocene? Age of the Bovey Lignites, 240. 
— Geologists’ Association. Annual Report of the — for 1878. 
-Proceedings of the—, t. I, n os 1-6, 8-11 ; 1859-65. 
Wiltshire. —On the Red Chalk of England, 9 ; — On the Ancient Flint Impleraents of 
Yorkshire, and the Modem Fabrication of similai Specimens, 215. 
S. J. Mackie. — On the Geology of the South-East of England, in illustration of the 
Value of Theoretical ideas in Geological investigations, 11; — On the Flint Imple- 
ments lately found in the Drift, 55. 
