EVOLUTION OF MODERN SURFACE FEATURES 57 



REFERENCES 



A complete list of references for a general review of this kind would 

 include nearly all the publications on western geology. Some sort of 

 selection is thus obviously necessary. Although I have not been entirely 

 consistent, I have, for the most part, restricted my documentation to 

 papers published in the last decade or two, and especially to papers 

 presenting novel or controversial matters. Well-known or long-established 

 facts of western geology are for the most part not documented. For these, 

 the reader can profitably consult various general works and compila- 

 tions, including those listed. 



General References 



Dunbar, C, O. 1949. Historical Geology. John Wiley and Sons, New York. 



Eardley, A. J. 1951. Structural Geology of North America. Harper and 

 Brothers, New York. 



Fenncman, N. M. 1931. Physiography of Western United States. McGraw- 

 Hill Book Co., New York. 



Special References 



Allen, V. T. 1929. The lone formation of California: Calif. Univ. Dept. 



Geol. Sci. Bull, IS: 347-448. 

 Anderson, F. M. 1938. Lower Cretaceous deposits in California and 



Oregon. Geol. Soc. Am. Special Paper 16. 

 Atwood, W. W., and W. W. Atwood, Jr. 1938. Working hypothesis for 



the physiographic history of the Rocky Mountain region : Bull. Geol. 



Soc. Am. 49: 957-980. 

 Axelrod, D. I. 1957. Late Tertiary floras and the Sierra Nevada uplift. 



Bull. Geol. Soc. Am., 68: 19-45. 

 Baker, A. A., C. H. Dane, and J. B. Reeside, Jr. 1936. Correlation of 



the Jurassic formations of parts of Utah, Arizona, New Mexico, and 



Colorado. U. S. Geol. Survey Prof. Paper 183. 

 Bradley, W. H. 1936. Geomorphology of the north flank of the Uinta 



Mountains. U. S. Geol. Survey Prof. Paper 185-1, pp. 163-204. 

 ■ — — — . 1948. Limnology and the Eocene lakes of the Rocky Mountain 



region. Bull. Geol. Soc. Am., 59: 635-648. 

 Bryan, Kirk. 1938. Geology and ground-water conditions of the Rio 



Grande depression in Colorado and New Mexico. Natl. Res. Comm., 



Regional Plan., Pt. 6, Upper Rio Grande, pp. 197-225. 

 Burbank, W. S., and T. S. Lovering. 1933. Relation of stratigraphy, 



structure, and igneous activity to ore deposition of Colorado and 



southern Wyoming, in Ore Deposits of Western States (Lindgren 



volume). Am. Inst. Min. Metall. Eng., pp. 272-316. 

 Chaney, R. W. 1938. Paleoecological interpretations of Cenozoic plants 



in western North America. Bot. Rev., 9: pp. 371-396. 



