532 



SUBJECT INDEX 



Geology (Continued) 



jHomestake ore body, structure of. S. 



Paige. 446. 

 flgneous geology of southeastern Idaho. 



G. R. Mansfield. 446. 

 *Iron-depositing bacteria and their ge- 

 ologic relation. E. C. Harder. 56. 

 *Iron ore near Stanford, Mont. L. G. 



Westgate. 393. 

 *Iron-ore resources of Europe. M. RoES- 



LER. 419. 

 fKatmai region, Alaska, structural and 



volcanic geology of. C. N. Fenner. 



444. 



tLithology of Bend Series, Texas. M. I. 

 Goldman. 425. 



fLlanoria, Paleozoic land area in Louisi- 

 ana and Texas. H. D. Miser. 444. 



fLode deposits of Manhattan, Nev. H. 

 G. Ferguson. 444. 



*Manganese ore in Batesville district, 



Ark. H. D. Miser. 194. 

 *Manganese ore in Colo. E. L. Jones, 



Jr. 393. 

 •Manganese ore in Wyo. E. L. Jones, Jr. 



392. 



•Massachusetts, igneous rocks of Essex Co. 



C. H. Clapp. 470. 

 fMeanders of James and Potomac riv- 

 ers. M. R. Campbell. 421. 

 fMicro-paleontology of Bend Series, 



Texas. P. V. Roundy. 425. 

 •Mid-continent oil and gas field, origin of 



faults, anticlines and buried Granite 



Ridge of. A. E. Fath. 236, t423. 

 •Mineral resources of Goodnews Bay, 



Alaska. G. L. Harriman. 376. 

 jMines and minerals, classification of, for 



taxation. H. W. Cornell. 421. 

 •Mining in Matanuska coal field and 



Willow Creek district, Alaska. T. 



Chapin. 375. 

 •Mining in northwestern Alaska. S. H. 



Cathcart. 375. 

 tMississippian of Mississippi and Ohio 



valleys. C. BuTTs. 445. 

 •Mogollon district, N. Mex. H. S. 



Ferguson. 375. 

 tMoon craters, interpretation of. S. 



Paige. 422. 



fMountain pediments, erosion of desert 



ranges. Kirk Bryan. 422. 

 •Oil and gas field. Lance Creek, Wyo. 



E. T. Hancock. 237. 

 •Oil and gas, geology of Alamosa Creek 



valley, N. Mex., with reference to. 



D. E. Winchester. 260. 

 *Oil field. Cement, Okla. Frank 



Reeves. 510. 



•Oil possibilities in Baxter Basin, Rock 

 Springs uplift, Wyo. A. R. SchulTz. 

 418. 

 fPaleontological work at the National 



Museum. R. S. Bassler. 446. 

 fPalladium mine near Kasaan, Alaska, 

 the Salt Chuck. J. B. Mertie, Jr. 423. 

 jPeneplanation, suggested modification 



of doctrine of. L. LaForgE. 447. 

 •Permian salt deposits of south central 



U. S. N. H. Darton. 470. 

 •Phosphate rocks near Maxville, Mont. 



J. T. Pardee. 393. 

 fPleistocene lakes along Mohave River^ 



Cal. D. G. Thompson. 423. 

 fPleistocene lakes in the Basin-and-Range 



Province. O. E. Meinzer. 447. 

 fPoplar Dome in Montana, structure of. 



W. T. Thom, Jr. 421. 

 •Potash deposits in Spain. H. S. GalB- 



376. 

 •Potash deposits of Alsace. H. S. GalE. 



392. 

 •Potash resources of Nebraska. W. B. 



Hicks. 376. 

 fRio Tinto and other historic mines of 



Spain. C. DeKalb. 426. 

 jSalines and saline lakes, utilization of 



some. R. C. WELLS. 446. 

 fSalton Basin, Cal., fault features of. 



J. S. Brown. 423. 

 fSedimentary rocks, sizing scale for con- 

 stituents of. C. K. WentworTh. 426. 

 fStratigraphy of Bend Series and contig- 

 uous formations in Texas. P. V. 

 Roundy and M. I. Goldman. 425. 

 fStratigraphy of metamorphic rock of 

 southeastern Pennsylvania and Mary- 

 land. A. I. Jones and E. B. Knopf. 

 446. 

 •Sunset- Midway oil field, Cal. Part L 

 R. W. Pack. 58. 



