SUBJECT INDEX 



679 



*Coal south of Mancos, Montezuma 

 County, Colorado. A. J. Collier. 

 318. 



*Colville Indian Reservation, Wash- 

 ington, geology and mineral deposits 

 of the. J. T. Pardee. 315. 



*Cretaceous fish scales, some Ameri- 

 can. T. D. A. CocKERELL. 440. 



*Cretaceous, upper, floras of the east- 

 ern gulf reg-on in Tennessee, 

 Mississippi, AlaVjama, and Georgia. 

 E. W. Berry. 631. 



Florida, Lower Cretaceous age of 

 limestones underlying. Joseph A. 

 CuSHMAN. 70. 



*Gas and oil prospects of the Lake 

 Basin field, Montana, geology and. 

 E. T. Hancock. 50. 



Geology, present tendencies in. 

 Adolph Knopf, 453; Eugene Wes- 

 ley Shaw, 513. 



*Glacial deposits and landslides, rela- 

 tion of, to reservoir sites in the San 

 Juan Mountains, Colorado. Wal- 

 lace W. Atwood. 316. 



fGlaciation, paleozoic, in southeastern 

 Alaska. Edwin Kirk. 107. 



fGlauconite, general character, mode 

 of occurrence and origin of. M. I. 

 Goldman. 501. 



*Gold lode mining in Willow Creek 

 district, Alaska. Stephen R. 

 Capps. 633. 



*Gravina and Revillagigedo Islands, 

 Alaska, structure and stratigraphy 

 of. Theodore Chapin. 49. 



fGround-water supplies, quantitative 

 methods for estimating. O. E. 

 Meinzer. 293. 



*Idaho, Pine Creek District, recon- 

 naissance of. E. L. Jones. 637. 



*Inyo Range and eastern slope of 

 southern Sierra Nevada, California, 

 geologic reconnaissance of. Adolph 

 Knopf. 414. 



*Inyo Range, stratigraphy of. Edwin 

 Kirk. 414. 



*Italian leucite lavas as a source of 

 potash. Henry S. Washington. 

 104. 



*Kantishna Region, Alaska, the. 

 Stephen R. Capps. 439. 



*Lamprophyre dikes near Santaquin 

 and Mt. Nebo, Utah, two. G. F. 

 Loughlin. 228. 



♦Landslides and glacial deposits, rela- 

 tions of, to reservoir sites in the 

 San Juan Mountains, Colorado. 

 Wallace W. Atwood. 316. 



*Lost Creek coal field, Morgan Coun- 

 ty, Utah, geology of. Frank R. 

 Clark. 318. 



Lower Cretaceous age of the lime- 

 stones underlying Florida. Joseph 



A. CuSHMAN. 70. 



fManganese deposits. D. F. Hew- 

 ETT. 386. 



*Manganese deposits in Madison 

 County, Montana. J. T. Pardee. 

 48. 



fManganese deposits of the Appa- 

 lachian Valley of Virginia and Ten- 

 nessee. G. W. Stose. 383- 



fManganese deposits of the Bates- 

 ville district, Arkansas. H. D. 

 Miser. 384. 



fManganese deposits of the Colorado 

 River desert region. E. L. Jones. 



384- 

 fManganese deposits of the north- 

 western states. J. T. Pardee. 



385. 



f Manganese-ore deposits of Cuba. 

 E. F. BuRCHARD. 385. 



§Map-making conference. 605. 



*Mesozoic, early, and late Paleozoic 

 formations of southwestern Mon- 

 tana and adjacent parts of Wyom- 

 ing. D. Dale Condit. 530. 



Metalliferous deposits. Adolph 

 Knopf. 453- 



f Military problems, habits of thought 

 of a geologist applied to. Kirk 

 Bryan. 452. 



