In a previous paper on the Permian Formation in the Alps of Piémont, Dauphiné, and Savoy, I referred incidentally to the large masses of pietre verdi or greenstones which constitute perhaps the most striking geological feature of the extensive areas covered by the crystalline rocks of the Piémontese Alps in a crescent-shaped curve about 200 miles in length from the Maritime range to Monte Viso, Grand Paradiso, and Monte Rosa. In the present paper I propose to deal more fully, although necessarily within narrow limits, with these pietre verdi which, owing alike to their extraordinary development, variety, and complexity, to their intimate association with each other and with the crystalline sedimentary rocks, and to their intricate composition and origin, have for the last fifty years presented most interesting problems and passed through many remarkable phases of interpretation. As a necessary preliminary to a description of the different areas, it will be convenient to briefly consider the most recent classification of the crystalline formations of the Piémontese Alps generally, and of the pietre verdi rocks in particular.