The Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society of London, Bind 26

Forsideomslag
Longman, Green, Longman, Roberts, & Green, 1870
 

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Side 111 - On the Structure and Classification of the Transition Rocks of Shropshire, Herefordshire, and part of Wales, and on the Lines of Disturbance which have affected that Series of Deposits, including the Valley of Elevation of Woolhope.— Proc.
Side 58 - On the sedimentary deposits which occupy the western parts of Shropshire and Herefordshire, and are prolonged from NE to SW, through Radnor, Brecknock and Caermarthenshires, with descriptions of the accompany-ing rocks of intrusive or igneous characters', Proceedings of the geological Society of London, vol.
Side 94 - On the fossils of the older deposits in the Rhenish provinces; preceded by a general survey of the fauna of the Paleozoic rocks, and followed by a tabular list of the organic remains of the Devonian System in Europe.
Side 72 - On the character of the beds of clay lying immediately below the coal seams of South Wales ; and on the occurrence of coal-boulders in the Pennant grit of that district.
Side 6 - On the Gravel and Alluvial Deposits of those parts of the Counties of Hereford, Salop and Worcester, which consist of Old Red Sandstone ; with an Account of the Puffstone, or Travertin of Spouthouse, and of the Southstone Rock near Tenbury. — Proc. Geol. Soc.
Side 182 - Description of certain Fossil Crania, discovered by AG BAIN, Esq., in Sandstone Rocks at the South-eastern Extremity of Africa, referable to different Species of an extinct Genus of Reptilia (DlCYNODON), and indicative of a new Tribe or Sub-order of Sauria.
Side 55 - On the Rhaetic Beds and White Lias of Western and Central Somerset, and on the Discovery of a new Fossil Mammal in the Grey Marlstones beneath the Bone-bed.
Side 90 - On the Meaning originally attached to the term " Cambrian System," and on the evidences since obtained of its being geologically synonymous with the previously established term
Side 157 - On the Discovery of the Remains of Insects, and a new genus of Isopodous Crustacea belonging to the family Cymothoidœ, in the Wealden formation in the Vale of Wardour, Wilts — Proc.
Side 59 - On the Upper Formations of the New Red System in Gloucestershire, Worcestershire, and Warwickshire, showing that the red (saliferous) marls, with an included band of sandstone, represent the Keuper or " marnes irisees," and that the underlying sandstone of Ombersley, Broomsgrove, and Warwick is part of the " Bunter Sandstein," or " gres bigarre," of foreign geologists, by RIM and HE Strickland.

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