INDEX TO von: ME 26 



501 



Page 



Stanp'ORD University. Summer Meeting 

 of ttie Geological Society of Amer- 

 ica, 1915, held at 389 



Stanley-Browx, JosErii. Keport of 



Editor 10, 11 



Stantox, T. W., oiled on molluscan 

 faunule from tlic Cretaceous of 

 Montana 345 



— ^ ; Correlation between the Cretaceous 

 of the Pacific area and that of 

 other regions of llie world 414 



-of the Cretaceous invertebrate 



faunas of California 414 



• — , Discussion of palcontologlc criteria 



in time relations by 411 



— , Session August 5, 1915. of the Cali- 

 fornia Meeting- of the Paleonto- 

 logical Society called to order by. . 413 



• — ; The invertebrate fauna of the Mor- 

 rison formation 90, 151, 343-348 



Stauffer. C. R. : Olentangy shale and 

 associated deposits of northern 

 Ohio 95 



StegosaupvIA and Sauropoda of the 



Morrison 90, 151, 323-334 



Stephenson', L. W. ; Cretaceous-Eocene 

 contact in the Atlantic and Gulf 

 Coastal Plain 168 



Steunuerg. C. I-I. : Evidence proving 

 that the Belly River beds of Al- 

 berta are equivalent to the .Tudith 

 River beds of Dog Creek and Cow 

 Island, Montana 149 



Stoke.s, • , cited on relation between 



gravitv and latitude discovered b.y 

 Clairaut 



174 

 149 



Sto.xe age of Europe, Migration and suc- 

 cession of human types of the old. 



STifATrGitAPHic (A) disturbance through 

 the Ohio Valley, running from the 

 Appalachian Plateau in Pennsylva- 

 nia to the Ozark Mountains in Mis- 

 souri : .Tames II. Gardner 60, 477 



— and faunal relations of the later Eo- 



cene of the Pacific coast ; Harold 

 Hannibal 168 



• Lincoln formation in 



Washington ; C. E. Weaver 169 



■ — relations of the fossil vertebrate lo- 

 calities of Florida; E. H. Sellards. 154 



SritATiGUAriiv of the region about 

 'I'hree Forks. Montana. New facts 

 bearing on the Paleozoic : W. I'. 

 Haynes 157 



— -. Upper Cretaceous 149 



Stuomp.oli volcano, Italy 387 



SircicriitAr. features of the Tsin Ling 



Shan ; G. D. Louderback 405 



S'rRUCTr;RE of the southern Sierra Ne- 

 , vada ; .T. P. P.ulwada 403 



Sriii'TT, R. .7., cited on lielium 190 



— and .ToiiANX Koi:.\igsiu:i!Ger cited on 



e(|uatioii of eartli's radiation 197 



SwKDKV, Origin of the iron ores at 



Kiruna 99 



Siii!siriE.N'CE on the coast of Maine, Evi- 

 dence of recent ; C. A. Davis 91 



ScDAN, Observations on sand-blast made 

 in the Anglo-Egyptian ; W. H. 

 Hobbs 396 



SrK.ss, F. E., cited on markings found 



on tlie moldavlles of P.olieuiia 277 



moldavites as of nieteoritic ori- 

 gin 281 



Sri.i'MiDE minerals at Butte. Montana: 

 examples of successive replacement 

 of earlier by later sulphides ; .7. C. 

 Ray 402 



— ■ ore enrichment. Some chemical fac- 

 tors affecting secondary ; S. W. 

 Young 393 



Page 



Summer Meeting in California, 1915, 



Topics for discussion at 390 



Sux, Uranium and the 194 



Sr.N'DAXCE invertebrata fauna 347 



SuTTOx limestone of Vancoviver Island. 82 

 SvExiTE fakerite) of the middle and 

 northern Blue Ridge region. Vir- 

 ginia. Hypersthene ; T. L. Watson 



and .7. H. Cline 82 



Symposium on the passage from the Ju- 

 rassic to the Cretaceous. .7oint ses- 

 sion with the Paleontological So- 

 ciety for the 90, 151 



Taff. .7. A.. Acting Secretary Summer 



Meeting. Session August 5. 1915... .S9r> 

 — . Alexander Deussen introduced by. . . 308 

 — , Secretar.v Summer Meeting. Session 



Auffust 4. 1915 393 



— and F. C. Calkixs, Excursion of Cal- 



ifornia Meeting. August 10. 1915. 



in charge of 408 



Talu.s? Can U-shaped valleys be pro- 

 duced b.v removal of 75 



Tarr. R. S.. cited on glaciation of the 



Mount Katahdin region 7'~i 



Taylor. F. B.. Discussion of crustal 



movements in T^ake Erie region by. i;7 



glacier erosion by 73 



— ; Old shorelines of Mackinac Island 



and their relations to lake histoi-y. 08 



'J'ayt.or. W. p. : History of the Aplo- 



dontia group 417 



Te.iox-Rocexe. lone formation of the 

 Sierra Nevada foothills, a local 

 facies of the Upper 168 



Ti;xr>AGT^RrT district of German East 



Africa 32S 



Terrestrial Triassic forms. Correlation 

 between western North America 

 and Europe ; R. S. Lull 413 



Tertiary formations in California 108 



western Washington. Correla- 

 tion of the 170 



— geolos-ical scale of the Great Basin 



to that of the Pacific Coast mar- 

 ginal province. Relation of the: .7. 



C. Merriam 130 



- — (piiddle and late> of the south At- 

 lantic coast of the United States 

 .-ind that of the Pacific coast. Cor- 

 relation between: E. II. Sellards... 41(1 



— - sedimentaries and lavas in Kittitas 



Co\inty. Washington. Relation be- 

 tween the : E. .7. Saunders i;'.7 



— .'cands. Problem of the Texas.. . . 398, 447 



— reefs and reef coi-al« ^(\ 



— rocks of Oabu : C. H. Hitchcock. . . . 13.". 

 Ti:xAs (east). Descriptions of forma- 

 tions of 459 



— . Oil pools of northern 102 



— ^. Pisolites at San Antonio 398 



Tertiarv sands. Problem of the : E. 

 T. Dumble 398, 447 



'i'HAf"iiEF! Park. .7ohn Boyd 110 



TiiAniKR. Mrs. Emma Tre.vowell. 

 Land for .7ohn Boyd Thacher Park 

 douated by 110 



i'liiGK- salt and gvpsum deposits. Oricln 



of 103, 231-242 



TilllM) Section. <;roiiii C: Petrologic, 



Mineralo'jic and l^couoniic 81 



Tiio.MsoN, Sir .7. .7.. cited on sas analy- 

 sis and atomic weiiihl determina- 

 tions 191 



I'liiiMsoN and Tait's Natural Phllos- 

 o')hv quoted on early conditions of 

 the earth 177 



