EUROPE EVIDENCE 93 



Page 



Europe, Cretaceous overlaps in 29, 1412 



— , Effect of sun-spots on climate in 25, •■')49 



— , Mis^ration and succession of liuiiian types of the old Stone Age of. . 26, 149 



— , Peripheral ranges in 21, WniOO 



— , Petrolenni supi»l.v of 28. 012 



— , Phosphate deposits of 30. 1''4 



— , Record of storminess in 25. 499 



^, Restoration of Pleistocene skulls from 28. 21.". 



European Cretaceous and Eocene 25. ■"•41 



— .Jurassic-Cretaceous division line 26. 296 



— Lower Ordovicic formation : \. W. (iraltaii 27, 555 



— stormine.ss during sun-spot changes, Chart of 25. 518 



maximum and mininuun. Chart of 25. 520 



— time scale 25. 3.S5 



EuRYPTERiD fauna of the I'ittsford shale. Described hy Snrle 24. 490 



— horizon, A new 30, l'>2 



EuRYPTEKiDA, .Johu M. Clarke and Itudolph Ruedemann presented the 



Paleontological Society with their monograph on the 24. 106 



— , Mode of life of the ; John M. Clarke and Rudolph Ruedemaim 21. 76 



EuRYPTERiDS, Distribution and occin-rence of; Summary of M. O'Connell 



24. 499.514 



— Nebraska 24, 113 



— of New York; John M. Clarke and R. Ruedemaim. quotation from.. 24.502 



— , Review of the evidence of the distrilnition of 24. 515 



EuTECTics in complicated mixtures 21, 171 



Evans, E. W., cited on West Virginia oil field 28. 565 



Evans, J. W., cited on feldspars in sedimentary rocks as indices of cli- 

 mate 21, 628 



mechanically formed limestone 21, 644, 647, 648 



EvANSTON peat 29. 237 



EvE, A. S., cited on recent researches on atomic structure in science. . 26, 191 



EvELAND, A. J., cited on Philippine glaciation 28, 522 



Events leading up to the organization of the Geological Society of Amer- 

 ica ; J. J. Stevenson 25, 15 



Evidence as to the mode of formation of coal derived from the deposits 



of Japan, China, and Manclmria ; E. C. Jeffrey and Kono Yasui. 28, 130 



— in San Gorgonio I'ass, Riverside County, of a late I'liocene extension 



of the Gulf of Lower California ; F. E. Vaughan 29, 164 



the Helena-Yellowstone Park region, Montana, of the great Juras- 

 sic erosion surface ; D. D. Condit 28. 161 



— of a glacial dam in the Allegheny River between T\'arren, Pennsylva- 



nia, and Tionesta ; G. F. Wright 25, 84, 215 



climatic oscillations iu the Permo-Carhoniferous beds of Texas; 



E. C. Case 25, 41 



recent changes of level in Porto Rico as shown by studies in the 



Ponce district ; G. J. Mitchell 29, 138 



the I'aleocene vertebrate fauna on the Cretaceous-Tertiary prob- 

 lem ; W. D. Matthew 25, 381 



