The Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society of London, Volume 20The Society, 1864 - Electronic journals Vols. 1-108 include Proceedings of the society (separately paged, beginning with v. 30) |
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Page v
... containing Flint Im- plements , Land and Freshwater Shells , & c . [ Abstract . ] .. 378 WOOD , S. V. , jun . , Esq . On the Structure of the Red Crag in Suf- folk and Essex . [ Abstract . ] .... WRIGHT , Dr. T. On the Fossil Echinide ...
... containing Flint Im- plements , Land and Freshwater Shells , & c . [ Abstract . ] .. 378 WOOD , S. V. , jun . , Esq . On the Structure of the Red Crag in Suf- folk and Essex . [ Abstract . ] .... WRIGHT , Dr. T. On the Fossil Echinide ...
Page x
... contain more than seventy pounds ' worth of gold , and which , with the cases containing it , is the gift of Sir Daniel Cooper , Bart . , late Speaker of the Legis- lative Assembly of New South Wales . These two cases of specimens are ...
... contain more than seventy pounds ' worth of gold , and which , with the cases containing it , is the gift of Sir Daniel Cooper , Bart . , late Speaker of the Legis- lative Assembly of New South Wales . These two cases of specimens are ...
Page x
... containing the Sharpe Collection of Mollusca have been furnished with glazed lining , and a Catalogue of the Foreign specimens contained in the collection has been commenced . The numerous additions lately made to the Foreign ...
... containing the Sharpe Collection of Mollusca have been furnished with glazed lining , and a Catalogue of the Foreign specimens contained in the collection has been commenced . The numerous additions lately made to the Foreign ...
Page x
... containing the titles of works added to the Library between the end of 1859 and June 1862 , and a complete classified list of the Periodical works in the possession of the Society at the latter date , the publication of which was begun ...
... containing the titles of works added to the Library between the end of 1859 and June 1862 , and a complete classified list of the Periodical works in the possession of the Society at the latter date , the publication of which was begun ...
Page lx
... containing two great assemblages of fossils perfectly distinct from each other . No one could have dreamed of this merely from an examination of the English Bunter and Keuper strata . Such a fact as that stated above ought to act as a ...
... containing two great assemblages of fossils perfectly distinct from each other . No one could have dreamed of this merely from an examination of the English Bunter and Keuper strata . Such a fact as that stated above ought to act as a ...
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Common terms and phrases
Ammonites appear Avicula contorta Basin beds breccias calice Carboniferous Chalk clay Coal-measures colour columella containing convex corallites corallum Corals costæ Cretaceous D'Archiac deposits described Devonian dissepiments district dorsal drift Edwards & Haime England Eocene epitheca exotheca fauna feet formation fossils fragments France genera genus Geol Geological Society geologists granite gravel Greensand grey Grit Hill inch Inferior Oolite Journ Jurassic Keuper Lias limestone locality Lower Silurian Magnesian margin marl miles mineral Miocene nearly Nivajè shale noticed Nummulitic occur Old Red Sandstone Oligocene paleozoic Permian Permian rocks plate portion posterior present Prof Professor Pteraspis Quart R. I. Murchison Red Sandstone ridges river San Domingo sand sclerenchyma seen septa série shale Shells side silica Silurian Sir R. I. Murchison spec species specimens spines stone strata stratigraphical surface Tertiary thickness tion Trias Upper valley Yoredale Ziphius zone
Popular passages
Page lix - ... the centre outwards, the pith enclosed in a longitudinal canal, and possessed of medullary rays. The fauna is rich, varied, and beautifully preserved. Nearly all the types of life are strictly and peculiarly Mesozoic.
Page 317 - Extension of the Triangulation of the Ordnance Survey into France and Belgium with the Measurement of an Arc of Parallel in Latitude 52° N. from Valentia in Ireland to Mount Kemmel in Belgium By Colonel Sir Henry James, RE, FRS, etc., Director of the Ordnance Survey. 4to vol. London. 1863. Tyneside Naturalists
Page 99 - Annual Report of the Trustees of the Museum of Comparative Zoology. Together with the Report of the Director, 1865.
Page 397 - ... cavirostris, it is not certain that the latter is truly fossil ; nor, if it be so, have we any knowledge of its stratigraphical position. 3. Of the certainly fossil Ziphii, the stratigraphical position of Belemnoziphius longirostris is unknown ; but all the other species of that genus, and Choneziphius planirostris, are derived from the English or Antwerp Crag, and are not known to occur out of it. 4. So that at present we are justified in regarding Belemnoziphius and Choneziphius as true Crag...
Page 108 - It is very gratifying to me to be able to report the gain of two new Corps during the year.
Page lx - ... the interval of time shorter or longer that elapsed between the close of the lower and the commencement of the upper formation; and so it often happens that strata a few yards in thickness, or, more notably still, the absence of these strata, may serve to indicate a period of time as great as the vast accumulations of the whole Silurian series
Page 130 - I concluded the description of this remarkable Arrangement with the following hint at their origin : — " May not the plastic and irresistable agent which picked up the materials composing the Blue Clay, and then melting, left them in their present position, have been largely instrumental in excavating the basins of the great Canadian lakes."* And, in 1860, in a "Narrative of the Canadian Expeditions...
Page xxiv - To promote researches concerning the mineral structure of the earth, and to enable the Council of the Geological Society to reward those individuals of any country by whom such researches may hereafter be made,' — ( such individual not being a Member of the Council.
Page 27 - Paternoster Row. BRITISH ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE. The next ANNUAL MEETING of the Association will be held under the Presidency of Sir C.
Page 227 - ... has been ground down and washed away by running water. How vast then must be the spaces which this abstraction of matter has left vacant ! how far exceeding in dimensions all the valleys, however numerous, and the hollows, however vast, which we can prove to have been cleared out by aqueous erosion ! The evidences of the work of denudation are defective, because it is the nature of every destroying cause to obliterate the signs of its own agency...