284 
INDEX. 
Breccia, siliceous, near Sidmouth, 245. 
-in cave of Gailenreuth, 135. 
-of bones in cave of Bauman’s Hohle, 120. 
—— postdiluvian at Gibraltar, 156. 
——— at Gibraltar coeval with that of English 
and German caves, ibid. 
-of fissures coeval with that of caves, 153. 
Bridgnorth, granite blocks on the east of it, 199. 
-pebbles in new red sandstone, 249. 
Bridlington, elephant’s remains at, 173. 
-caves of diluvium high on chalk cliffs 
at, and near, 192. 
Bridport, character of its valley, 241. 
Brington, Great, gravel pits contain chalk flints, 
197. 
Brongniart, M. his account of the action of water, 
188. 211. 
Brooks, Mr. his collection in osteology, 35. 
Brown, Mr. his account of hyaena's habits, 22. 
-says hyaenas eat one another, 28. 
-his account of hyaenas dragging dead 
camels, 22. 
Bruckmann, his account of caves in the Carpa¬ 
thians, 100. 
Brunswick, heap of remains found near it in 
diluvium at Thiede, 181. 
Buckingham, gravel in vale of, 197. 
Buckinghamshire, its gravel, 196. 
Buffon, his account of valleys in France, 211. 
Burnham, pebbles from Warwickshire in gravel 
at, 252. 
Burringdon cave, in Mendip, with human remains, 
164. 
Burton, near Bridport, elephant’s remains, 174. 
-character of its valley, 241. 
Busbequius, his account of the habits of hyaenas, 
22 . 
C. 
Cairn Gorm, topaz in gravel, 220. 
Cambridge, gravel beds of compound character. 
198. 
Camp, British, on the hill at Paviland, 90. 
Camp de Geants, mastodon at height of 7800 feet, 
222 . 
Cainpsey Hills, proofs of diluvial action on, 201. 
Campden Hills, flank the Bay of Moreton, 250. 
Canali, professor, his collection of bones from 
Palombaro, 161. 
Canal, Oxford, how it passes the oolite escarp¬ 
ment, 254. 
Canstadt, on the Necker, bones in gravel, 25. 
-heap of remains found there, 180. 
-bones of bear, hyaena, and elephant, in 
diluvium at, 101. 
Canterbury, elephant’s remains near, 174. 
Cape, animals now peculiar to it inhabited York¬ 
shire, 44. 
Carlow county, ridges of limestone gravel in, 209. 
Carpathians, caves there described by Hayne and 
Bruckmann, 104. 
-have been under water, 221. 
--gravel of two eras, 189. 
Catcott, Rev. Mr. his account of Hutton cave, and 
specimens, 57. 
-his account of effects of diluvial currents, 
225. 
Caverns preserve remains of antediluvian animals, 
42. 
-of Germany, general description of them, 
109. 
-exist together with fissures at Gibraltar, 
154. 
Caves, their probable origin, 5. 
-not made by the hyaenas, ibid. 
--— their extent in England, 6 . 
-connected with fissures, 142. 
-— open before the deluge, ibid. 
-contain bones but partially, 143. 
-list of most remarkable on the continent, 
104. 
Cette, osseous breccia, 148. 
Cerigo, osseous breccia, ibid, 
Cenis, Mont, gravel of two eras in contact, 189. 
