During the past few years the study of the minute structure of minerals and rocks has received the attention of so many able geologists, that microscopical mineralogy and petrography may now be regarded as a fairly established means for the identification and diagnosis of inorganic species. As a special instance, I may point to Heddle's researches on Amazonstone, where the discrepancy of its chemical constitution from normal orthoclase, and its aberrant crystalline form, are accounted for under the microscope, with polarised light, by minute structural peculiarities which support the view that it is composed, not of orthoclase and albite, as has been supposed, but of orthoclase and a paragenetic constituent, allied to, if not identical with, oligoclase.