INDEX. 
285 
Ceuta, breccia in a cave opposite, 160. 
Chalk, pebbles of, near Northampton, 197. 
■■ once extended far beyond its present limits 
in Dorset and Devon, 245, 
—— flints in diluvium of eastern counties, 194. 
-in Derbyshire, 197. 
Channel, English, its greatest depth less than 
420 feet, 246. 
Charcoal in cave of Gailenreuth, 135. 
-at Paviland, 83. 
Chard, outlier of chalk near it, 245. 
Charmouth, character of its valley, 241. 
■ elephants’ remains near it, 174. 
Charn wood Forest may have supplied the porphyry 
found in Berks and Oxon, 252. 
-- - supplied porphyritic pebbles, 
197, 198. 
Cherso, bones found there, 154. 
Chesil Bank, near Weymouth, its ingredients, and 
whence derived, 247. 
-rolled tooth of elephant in it, ibid. 
Chevalier, M. his account of bones at Gibraltar, 
148. 
Chellaston, character of diluvium on gypsum, 195. 
Cherwell, quartzose pebbles in its valley and ad¬ 
jacent plains, 252. 
-valley of, its gravel, 198. 
Cheshire, granite blocks on its plains, 199. 
Chartham, elephant’s remains, 174. 
Chert in limestone beds at Kirkdale, 4. 
Chimney, aperture like, in roof of the cave at Pa¬ 
viland, 92. 
Chronology, inferences from cave at Kirkdale, 48. 
_cause of error in J. Hunter’s idea of 
the age of bones in the German caves, 147. 
Chudleigli, caves and fissures in the limestone 
there, 69. 
Clackmannan, coal-field described by Mr .Bald, 185. 
Clay prevails in diluvium of east coat of England, 
192. 
Clwydd, vale of, lead mine worked in gravel there, 
177. 
Clwydd, vale of, elephant’s teeth in ditto, with 
the lead, 174. 
Cliff on each side the gorge of the Bode river, 118. 
Cliffs produced by diluvial denudation, 95. , 
-perish rapidly on east coast of England, 190. 
Clift, Mr. his account and drawings of Plymouth 
bones, 75. 
-- his assistance in ascertaining bones, 35. 
-observed marks of teeth on bones from 
Plymouth, 73. 
Clifton Hall, elephant’s tusk found there, 179. 
Climate, probably warmer before the deluge, 44. 
--state of antediluvian discussed, 45. 
-change (if any) took place at the de¬ 
luge, 47. 
Cock, bones of domestic, in cave at Kostnitz, 168. 
Compton-Bishop, in Mendip, cave with foxes’ 
bones, 166. 
Concud, bones in caves at, 160. 
Concurrence of accidents necessary to the dis¬ 
covery of bones, 97. 
Continent, antediluvian same as the present, 162. 
-its gravel and animals same as in Eng¬ 
land, 99. 
Conybeare, Rev. W. D. his extract from Cat- 
cott, 57. 
- his account of gravel in central parts 
of England, 195. 
- Rev. J. J. his discoveries in Belgic 
villages near Bath, 91. 
Copley medal awarded for the author’s account 
of Kirkdale, in Philosophical Transactions, 1. 
Coral rag constitutes the rock at Kirkdale, 4. 
Cornwall, stream works with pebbles of tin ore, 
177. 
Corsica, osseous breccia, 148. 
Copper ore in diluvial gravel in India, 220. 
Costorphine hill, its drifted boulders and de¬ 
nudations, 204. 
Cotswold hills, valleys of denudation on them, 256. 
Cottle, Joseph, Esq. his collections from Ply¬ 
mouth, 72. 
