488 



BULLETIN OP THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA 



Page 



Co.MANCHEAN of Chamberliii and Salis- 

 bury, Reference to 307 



Comparison of marine vertebrates of 

 western North America with those 

 of other Triassic areas ; J. C. Mer- 

 riam 413 



the Cretaceous faunas of Japan 



with those of western United 

 States ; H. Yabe 414 



— floras of California with those 



of other Cretaceous areas ; F. II. 

 Knowltou 414 



CoNGi.oMiaiATKS. Causes producing 

 scratched, impressed, fractured, and 

 recement.ed pebbles in ancient ; .1. M. 

 Clarke 00 



CoxN'KCTicuT, I'yrrhotite, norite, and 



p.vroxenite from Litchfield S3 



CoxoDOXT bed at Eighteen-mile Creek, 



New York, Fish fauna of the 154 



CONTIXENTAL glaciation. Evidence of... 78 



— glacier in central Illinois, Glacial 



erosion near margin of 70 



Cope, E. D., cited on description of the 

 famous skull '•AnaptomoriJhus'' 



homiiiiriilits 430 



COPPEH ores. Examples of progressive 

 change in the mineral composition 



of ; C. F. Tolman, .Tr 394 



Coral Island theory. Comprehensive ; 



G. C. Curtis 78 



— reefs and platforms. Various locali- 



ties of .",0 



. ■ — reef corals of the southeastern 



United States, their geologic his- 

 t o r y and significance ; T. \V. 



Vaughan 58 



of Florida 59 



Corals as constr\ictional geologic 



agents. Summarized statement of . . 59 

 — , Evolution of the Anthozoa and the 



systematic position of Paleozoic... 157 

 Cordii.leran Section, Proceedings of . . . 



129-140 



, Kegister of the Seattle Meeting. . 140 



.Visitors and other geologists tak- 

 ing part in the meeting of the. . . . 140 

 CoRxw.VLL, N. C. : Occurrence of mam- 

 mal remains in the asphalt beds of 



McKitlrick, California 107 



CoRREi.ATiox and chronology- on the 

 basis of paleography ; Charles Schu- 

 chert 411 



— between invertebrate faunas of Cali- 



fornia and those of Mexico ; E. L. 

 Packard 414 



the Cretaceous of the Pacific area 



and that of other regions of the 

 world : T. W. Stanton 414 



— middle and late Tertiary of the 



South Atlantic coast of the TTnited 

 States with that of the I'acific 

 coast : E. 11. Selhirds 41(') 



— Miocene of the Pacific region 



and that of other areas of the 

 world. Topic of California Meeting 

 of the Paleontological Society, Au- 

 gust 6, 1915 415 



terrestrial Triassic forms of 



western North America and Eu- 

 rope; R. S. Lull 413 



— -of Miocene, Introductory remarks 



on ; H. F. Osborn 415 



the Cretaceous invertebrate faunas 



of California ; T. W. Stanton 414 



. — • .Topic for the California 



Meeting of the Paleontological So- 

 ciety, August 5, 1915 414 



Lower Miocene of California; 



Ralph Arnold 415 



Page 

 Correlation of the Miocene floras of 

 western T.'nited States with those 

 of other Miocene areas ; F. H. 



Knowlton 416 



Tertiary formations in western 



Washington ; C. L. Weaver 170 



■ — Triassic, Symposium for Cali- 

 fornia Meeting of the Paleontolog- 

 ical Society, August 4, 1915 415 



Correspondents, 1914 118 



— , Deaths reported of, 1914 5, 12 



— deceased 127 



CoRRV sandstone. Marine fauna in 210 



Council, Report of 5 



Cowlitz Valley, Washington. Eocene of 



the 136. 169 



Cu.\ XDALL, A. K., quoted on dikes of 



Elliot County, Kentucky 482 



CuATKR, Kilauea, a drop-fault 77 



CitAWPORL), 1{. D., cited on flow-ljreccia. 4()(i 

 Cretaceous age of the Potomac group 



indicated 330 



— and Eocene time in North America. 



Ueference to 29."'( 



— Echinoderms of California. Note on 



the ; W. S. W. Kew 100 



— Eocene contact in the Atlantic and 



Gulf Coastal Plain ; L. \V. Ste|ihen- 



son 108 



period in the Rocky Mountain 



front and Great Plains provinces, 

 I'hysiographlc study of 105 



— faunas of .Japan compared with those 



of western United States : H. Yabe. 414 



the Santa Ana Mountains: 



E. L. Packard 109 



— floras of California compared with 



those of other Cretaceous areas ; 



V. H. Knowlton 414 



— formation. The Morrison, an iuitial.. 



90, 151, ."{03-314 



— formations. lielation of, to the Uocky 



Mountains of Colorado and New 

 Mexico ; W. T. Lee 114. 150 



— invertebrate faunas of California. 



Correlation of: T. W. Stanton.... 414 

 --of the Pacific area: correlation be- 

 tween it and that of other regions 



of the world ; T. W. Stanton 414 



— . Kecent work on the dinosaurs of the 41i> 



— stratigraphy, Upi)er 149 



— , Symposium on the passage from the 



.lurassic to the 90, 151 



— time in North America, Close of .Tu- 



lassic and opening of; H. F. Os- 

 born 295-.302 



Ci;i;ssox mine. Cripple Creek. Colorado, 



Recent remarkable gold "strike" at. 84 



Cripple Creek, Colorado, Recent re- 

 markable gold "strike" at the Cres- 

 son mine 84 



Criteria of correlation from the point 

 of view of the invertebrate paleon- 

 tologist ; E. O. Ulrich 410 



Criiuk. a. U. ; Origin of Monks Mound. 74 



Cross. Wiiitmax, cited on forms of ig- 

 neous rocks of the San Juan Moun- 

 tains of Colorado 399 



— . Discussion of gold "strike" at Cres- 

 son mone. Cripple Creek, Colorado, 



by 85 



(juoted on flow-breccia 400 



the production of lithophysiP. . 256 



— . Ivemarks on effects of ])ressure on 



rocks and minerals by S4 



— and L\RSK\ (luoted on connec- 



tion of Morrison and Gunnison 



l)eds 311 



Cuistal movements in the Lake Erie 

 region. Preliminary paper on re- 

 cent ; Charles E. Decker 66 



