INDEX TO Yt)LUME 26 



499 



11?. 



SI) 



1:..-. __ 



Page 



Proceedings of the Sixth Annual Meet- 

 ing of the Paleontological Society, 

 held at Philarlelphia, I'ennsylvania, 

 December liO, 80. and 31. 1914 ; 

 R. S. Basslfi-. Secretary 141-170 



Summei- .Meeting of the (leolog- 



ical Society of America, held at the 

 I'niversity' of California and at 

 Stanford ' I'niver.sity. August .'!. 4, 

 and .',. 101.1: .1. A. Taff. Secretary 

 l>ro tail X,SO-40S 



Paleontological So- 

 ciety, held at the Pniversity of 

 CaMfornia and at Stanford Pui- 

 versitv. August 3. 4, .5. and (>. 

 1'.>1.". :' Chester Stock. Secretary pro 

 tan 409-41.S 



Twenty-seventh Annual Meet- 

 ing of the ecological Society of 

 America. held at Philadelphia, 

 Pennsvlvania. December 20. :'A), and 

 ."1. lo'll : E. O. Hovey. Secretary, l-l'.! 



I'uossER. CiiAUi.K.s. Discussion of classi- 

 fication acpieous habitats by I-)'"' 



Pkosseu. C. S.. cited on P.erea-P.edford 

 contact at Warner Hollow, Ash- 

 tabula County, Ohio ^14 



Cussewag sandstone ^li> 



— , Discussion of Hamilton group of 

 western New York by 



North American continent in 



Upper Devonic time by 



— , T'nconformity at the base of the 

 Berea sandstone in Ohio discussed 

 bv '•><■'■ 



PuoiTY. W. F. : Crvstalline marbles ot 



Alabama ll^'-^ 



PfRdATOiRK formation. Perry and llaug 



cited on •'•"' 



I'yuoxENiTE^ pyrrhotite, and norite 

 from Litchtield. Connecticut : Ernest 

 Howe ^■' 



QUATKR.VAUV deformation in southern 

 Hllnois and southeastern Missouri : 

 E. W. Shaw 67 



li.vuin.vcTiMTv and isostasy ; G. _}'• ^^, 

 P.ecker 86, 1^^1-204 



U.VDKJLOGY, Recent advances in lo'J 



Rattlesnake Pliocene of eastern Ore- 

 gon. Review of the fauna of the... 169 



Rav, .T. C. : IO.\ami)les of successive re- 

 l)laceinent of earliei- sulphide min- 

 erals bv later sulphides at P.utte, 

 .Montana 402 



— introduced bv C. F. Tolman, .7r 402 



Raymond. P. 10.. Discussion of Paleozoic 



stratigi-aphv about Three Forks, 



Montana, by 157 



Red P.ed gyi)snm deposits of western 



Wyoming. Conditions of the upper. 222 



— Reds (Chugwater fcii-niati<jn ) of west- 



ern Wyoming. Description of 218 



of western Wyoming. Origin of; 



E. R. Branson 01, 217-230 



Reeds, C. A. ; fJeologiir deposits iti rela- 

 tion to Pleistocene man 109 



— ; (iraphlc projection of Pleistocene 



climatic oscillations 106 



Registek of the Califoi'nia Meeting. 



1915 4().S 



meeting of the raleunioldgical 



Society at I-biladelpliia. 1914 PiO 



I'iiiladelpbia .Meeting, 1914.... 11.". 



Seattle Meeting of the Cordil- 



leran Section 140 



Reid. H. F.. Renuirks on crustiil move- 

 ments In Pake ICrle region by 07 



Page 

 Reid, II. F.. Remarks on glacial ero- 

 sion by '73 



Report of Auditing Committee 87 



of Paleontological Society . . 150 



Committee on Geological Nomen- 

 clature 57 



Council of Paleontological Society. 144 



Editor 10 



I'hotograph Committee 57 



the « ouncil 5, 87 



Rhode Island, Basic rocks of 92 



Richards. T. W.. and M. E. La.mbert 

 cited on comparative atomic weight 



determinations of lead 192 



Rich. .T. L.. Discussion of evidence of 

 recent subsidence on the coast of 



Maine by 91 



— . Monks Mound discussed by 75 



— ; Some peculiarities of glacial erosion 

 near the margin of the continental 



glacier in central Illinois 70 



RiiT-MotNTAiN. Type of rifted relict 



mountain, or ; .1. M. Clarke 90 



ItiGGS, E. S.. cited on Bnichiusauvas . . . 329 

 deltas in the Morrison forma- 

 tion 320 



• largest known dinosaur 153 



origin of Morrison formation.. 318 



RiVEU beds. Alberta Belly, and Montana 

 .Tudith, of Dog Creek and Cow 



Island, efjuivaleut to 149 



River waters. Materials in solution in. 224 

 Rocks of northeastern Illinois and east- 

 ern Wisconsin, .\lexandrian . . . 95, 155 



- Rhode Island, Basic 92 



Rocky Mountain front and (Jreat I'lains 

 provinces. Physiographic study of 

 the Cretaceous-Eocene period in the. 105 

 . phosphate deposits. Origin of the. 100 



— Mountains in Colorado and Now Mex- 



ico. Relation of Cretaceous forma- 

 tions to the 114. 156 



Rodents of Rancho La Brea ; L. R. 



Dice 167 



Rogers. A. F.. Discussion of papers 



bearing on ore deposition by 403 



— introduced by C. F. 'J'olman. Jr 395 



— ; Sericite. a low temperature hydro- 

 thermal mineral 395 



Rose, Gcstav, .Analysis of the litho- 

 phvsa' from Cerro de las Navajas 

 by" 259 



RosEiu'RG (|uadrangle. Oregon, Slphnn- 



uiiii xiiitcrai.sis zone. Fauna of thi-. 109 



RuCK.MAN, .1. II. ; Fauna and relations 

 of the white shales of the Coalinga 

 district 108 



— ; Relations of the Santa Margarita 

 formation in the Coalinga east 

 side field 160 



RrTiiERi'oRD, Sir Ernest, cited on 



structure of atoms 190 



Saint Lawrence Valley, New York, 

 I'ost-Ordovician deformation in the. 



115. 287-294 



Sai.ton Sea. Interesting changes in the 



composition of the; A. E. Vinson.. 402 



Saxd-I!I.as T. Corrasive efficiency of nat- 

 ural ; Charles Keyes 03 



— erosion from studies in the Libyan 

 desert. Range and rhythmic action 

 of : William II. llobbs 03 



Sands, I'roblem of the Texas Tertiary. 447 



Sands I'oSE. ICxtent of Berea 209 



in ( >hio, Berea 90. 1.55, 2O.-.-210 



S a n t a a n a Mountains, Cretaceous 



faunas of the 109 



Santa Catai.ina Mountains, Arizona, 



Bajadas of the 391 



