In concluding an article on “The Climate Controversy” in the Geol. Mag. for September and October, 1876, I observed (p.451) that it had long appeared to me that the “Glacial period proper” was due neither to a change in the earth’s axis, nor to any variation in the eccentricity of the earth’s orbit, nor to any changes in the distribution of land and water, but to a diminution in the heat-emitting power of the sun. In a memoir on the Newer Pliocene period in England, published in the Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society for Nov. 1880, and Nov. 1882, wherein I have endeavoured to trace in detail the succession of events in this country from the commencement of the Red Crag down to the close of the Minor Glaciation, I have reiterated that view, as being the only one that is reconcileable with the succession thus traced; for with the exception of the single interval of warmer climate in which the beds termed by me the “Cyrena fluminalis formation” accumulated, and which was succeeded bythe renewed refrigeration that I have termed the “Minor Glaciation,” and regarded as coincident with the second advance of the Alpine glaciers long ago detected by Continental geologists, I have not been able to discover any indication of those alternations of warm and cold climate, which form an indispensable part of the eccentricity theories of Adhemar, Croll, Murphy and others.