dons. — 26 juin-6 nov. 1876. 
S. Y. Wood Jun. — The Climate Controversy, 385 , 442. 
W. J. Sellas. — On Eubrochus clausus, a Vitreo-hexactinellid Sponge from the 
Cambridge Coprolite Bed. 398. 
T. M. Hall. — Fossil Fish in North Devon. 410. 
D. Mackintosh. — New and extensive sections of Boulder-clay at Liverpool, 429. 
A. Günther. — Contributions to our Knowledge of the Fish-fauna of the Tertiary 
deposits of the Highlands of Padang, Sumatra, 433. 
Ph. Gr. Egerton. — Notice of Harpactes velox, a Predaceous Ganoid Fish of a new 
genus, from the Lias ofLvme Regis, 441. 
H. Miller. — Considérations bearing on Théories of the formation of Rock-basins, 
451. 
H. B. Woodward. — Àdditional Remarks upon inversions of Carboniferous strata 
in Somersetshire, 455. 
H. Landor. — On Ground-Ice as a carrier of stones and débris, 459. 
S. B. J. Skertchlv. — Inter-glacial Man, 476. 
J. Monckman. — The Staining of Rocks beneath the Magnesian Limestone, 476. 
— Geological Society. The quarterly Journal of the —, t. XXXII, 
n° 2; 1876." 
Owen.— Evidence of a carnivorous Reptile (Cynodraco major, Ow.) about the 
size of a Lion, with Remarks thereon, 95. 
R. Etheridge Jun. — On the occurence of the genus Astrocrinites (Austin) in the 
Scotch Carboniferous Limestone Sériés, with the Description of a new species 
(A.? Benniei), and Remarks on the genus. 103. 
A. C. Ramsav. — How Anglesey became an Island, 116. 
J. Gunn. —■ On the presence of the Forest-bed Sériés at Kessingland and Pakefield, 
in Suffolk, and its position beneath the Chillesford Clay, 123. 
W. Ramsay. — On the Influence of various substances in accelerating the préci¬ 
pitation of clay suspensed in water, 129. 
J. E. Marr, H. Hicks. —Fossiliferous Cambrian Shales near Caernarvon, 134,135. 
T. G. Bonney. — On Columnar, Fissile and Spheroïdal Structure, 140. 
J. A. Phillips. — On the so-called Greenstones of Western Cornwall, 155. 
J. D. Kendall. — Hæmatite in the Silurians, 180. 
J. Aitken. — Observations on the Unequal Distribution of Drift on opposite sides 
of the Pennine Chain, in the country about the source of the river Calder, with 
Suggestions as to the causes which led to that resuit, together with some Notices 
on the High-level Drift in the upper part of the Yalley of the river Irwell, 184. 
W. H. PenDing. — Notes on the Physical Geology of East Anglia during the Gla¬ 
cial Period, 191. 
P. M. Duncan. — On some Unicellular Algæ parasitic within Silurian and Tertiary 
Corals, with a Notice of their Presence in Calceola sandalina and other Fossils, 
205. 
W. J. Harrison. — On the Occurence of theRhætio Beds in Leicestershire, 212. 
Italie. Milan. S'ocietà italiana di Scienze naturali. Atti délia — , 
t. XVII, n° 4 ; 1874. 
Em. Spreafico. — Conchiglie marine nel terreno erratico di Cassina Rizzardi 
presso Fino nella provincia di Como, 432. 
— ld., t. XVIII; 1875. 
Mantovani. — Delle Argilïe scagliose e di alcuni Ammoniti dell’Apennino delT 
Emilia, 28. 
