492 



BULLETIN OP THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA 



Page 

 (tKEGoii'i , W. K., Discussion of tlie affini- 

 ties of llie Multitubereulata l).v. . . . 152 



— ; Observations on Adapida' and otlier 



Leninroidea 153 



file phylogeny of tlie higlier 



primates 153 



— ; On tile classification and phjiogeny 



of the Leninroidea 426 



relationship of the Eocene Le- 

 mur XdtlKirctiis to the Adapidce 

 and to other )irimates 419-425 



— , Paper of U. L. Moodie presented 



and discussed by 154 



Group A. First Section : Iiynamic, 



Structural. Glacial. Physiograi)hic. 01 



Grouxu-si.oiiis. Megalocnus and other 



Cuban 152 



GuTENBEHG, 15. . cited on intensity of 



earthquake waves 172 



Gypsum deposits, Hypothesis for the 



origin of 223 



of the upiicr lied Beds of Wyo- 

 ming 240 



— — , Origin of tliick salt and. 103,231-242 



Hajiada of file Libyan Desert, Origin 



of the basins within the 390 



Ha.mii.ti).\ group of western Xew York ; 



A. W. (irabau 11:;, 15S 



Handy. F. :\I. ; Kole of sedimentation in 



diastrojiliisni and vulcanism 138 



HAXXtHAi-. llARoi.L): Stratigraphic and 

 fauna 1 relations of the later Eocene 

 of the Pacific coast 108 



Harvard Museum of Comparative Zool- 

 ogy, The coral island model of 

 Borabora. Tahiti, installed in 7!) 



Hatcher. .T. B.. cited on collection of 

 dinosaur bones in Carnegie Museum 

 at I'ittsburgh 340 



— dinosaurs deiiendent on one pe- 

 culiar type of habitat 327 



on the origin of the Morrison 



formation 319 



Hauer and Weiss cited on lithophysa?. 256 



Haug. E., (juoted on extension of last 



staae of .lurassic system 298 



— and H. B. Woodward cited on rela- 



tions of the .Jurassic and the Cre- 

 taceous in Wiltshire. England 298 



Hawkins, A. C, and C. W. Brow.v : 

 Basic rocks of Rhode Island : their 

 correlation and relationships '.i2 



Ha WORTH, Erasmus. Informalion asked 

 how to distinguish flow - breccias 

 from other t.vpes of lireccia b.v. . . . 4(tl 



— , Physiographic features of bolsons 



discussed b.y •".9:; 



— , Remarks on the Coal Creek batholith 



by :•.!>'.• 



Hayford. J. F., cited on "tlie Pratt- 

 Hayford hypothesis'" establishing 

 isostas.v 179 



— and Bowie cited on topography and 



isostatic compensation 181 



Bowie's formula of value of 



gravit.v at sealevel 181 



Haynes, W. p. ; New facts bearing on 

 the Paleozoic stratigraphy of the 

 region about Three Forks. Mon- 

 tana 157 



Heads and tails ; a few notes relating 

 to Sauropod dinosaurs ; W. J. Hol- 

 land 153 



Heave fault-slipping in California Coast 



Range region 404 



Hecker. O., cited on voyages to deter- 

 mine Intensity of gravity at sea. . 183 



Helderberg escarpment as a geological 



park 110 



Page 

 lEi.if.M. Development of 190 



— of ("arnot spring, Santenay and Cesar 



sjiring. Nevis 193 



Iel.mert, F. R., cited on pendulum ob- 

 servations 174 



Hel.mert's formula of value of gravity 



at sealevel 181 



Ie.micones at the mouths of hanging 



valleys ; C. E. Decker . . . 76 



Ieuschel. Sir Johx, and Charees 

 Bai'.hage cited as first to indicate 

 tendency to isostasy 178 



Ieiveltox formation of the Canton, 



Xew York, quadrangle 289 



IiCE. R. R., C. E. Decker introduced bv. 



00, 70 



—, Discussion of crustal movements in 



Lake Erie region by 07 



Del, Robert T.. Commuted for life. . 8 



Iitchcock. C. H.. Remarks on State 



Survey methods in New England by 138 



— ; Tertiary rocks of Oahu 133 



Hours. W. H. ; Limited effective vertical 



range of the desert sand-blast, 

 based on observations made in the 

 Libyan desert and in the Anglo- 

 Egyptian Sudan 396 



— : Xew evidence of the existence of 

 fixed anticyclones above the conti- 

 nental glaciers 73 



— ; Origin of the basins within the 



hamada of the Libyan desert 396 



— ; Bange and rhythmic action of sand- 



blast erosion from studies in tlie 

 Libyan desert 63 



— , Bemai-ks on physiographic control in 



tile J'hilippines bv 390 



IIoLDEX. U. .!., Fellovv-elect 110 



HuLi.AXD. W. J.; Heads and tails; a 

 few notes relating to Sauropod 

 dinosaurs 15;*, 



lliiEEicK, Arthur: Xew S))ecies of 

 Ficus from the interglacial deposits 

 of the Kootenay Valley. British 

 Columbia 159 



HoEMEs. Arthur, cited on radioactive 



transformations 194 



— and Rutherford cited on esti- 



mate for amount of radium in 



rocks 196 



IliPi.WAv, R. S.. Discussion of epigene 



proliles of the desert by 391 



— . Remarks on the structure of the 



southern Sierra Nevada by 404 



— . Excursion of California Meeting. Au- 

 gust 7. 1915, in charge of. . 407 



— and J. S. DiELER ; Characteristics of 



the Lassen Peak eruptions of May 



20-22. 1915 ■. 397 



lliii'Kixs, W., cited on thickness of 



earth's crust 178 



IlnTEi, Wai,tox', Philadelphia, Annual 



dinner at 104 



HovEY, E. O., Acting Secretary of First 



Section 61 



Third Section 99 



— . A. K. Lobeck introduced by 77 



— , (t. C. Curtis introduced by 77 



— . Report of Secretary 5 



— -. Toastmaster at annual dinner 104 



lIovEY. Horace Carter, Bibliography 



of ". 25 



— . Memorial of 21 



— . Photograph of 21 



Howe. Erxest ; Pyrrhotite. norite, and 

 pyroxenite from Litchfield. Con- 

 necticut 83 



— , Secretary of Third Section 81 



Hrafxtixxtihryggur obsidian, Descrip- 

 tion of the 258 



