ART. 16. SOME PECULIAR FOSSIL FORMS MANSFIELD 7 



Barbour, Erwin Hinckley — Continued. 



Present knowledge of the distribution of Daimonelix: Science, n. s., 



vol. 18, pp. 504-505, 1903. 



The Boyd County Mastodon, Tefrabclodon oshorni, Nebr. Geol. Survey, 



vol. 4, p. 504, 1917. 



A preliminary report on the Nebraska State Museum : Nebr. State Mus. 



Bull., vol. 1, No. 1, p. 14, 1924. 

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Naturalist, vol. 27, pp. 559-560, 1893. 

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 James, Joseph Francis. Remarks on Daimonelix, or "Devil's Corkscrew." 



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1895. (Read before the Biol. Soc. of Washington, March 23, 1895.) 

 Jennings, Otto Emery. Notes on the vegetable tissues in Daemonelix: Car- 

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 Kenyon, Frederick C. In the region of the new fossil, DaemoneUx: Amer. 



Nat., vol. 29, pp. 213-227, 1 pi., 1895. 

 Kindle, E. M. Range and distribution of certain types of Canadian Pleistocene 



concretions: Geol. Soc. Amer. Bull., vol. 34, pp. 609-648, 1923. 



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vol. 2, p. 134, 1905. 

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1912. 

 Maksland, Thomas Herbert. Notes on the chemical composition of the 



silicious tubes of the Devil's Corkscrew, Daemonelix: Nebr. Univ. 



Studies, vol. 2, pp. 125-130, 4 figs., 1897. 

 O'Harra, C. C. The badland formations of the Black Hills region : S. Dak. 



Sch. Mines, Dept. Geol. Bull. No. 9, pp. 26, 41, 51-53, 87 (1 fig.), 



1910. 



The White River Badlands : S. Dak. School of Mines, Bull. No. 13, pp. 



36, 44, 59-61 (2 figs.), 89 (1 fig.), 1920. 



Ortmann, a. E. " Tuefels-Korkzieher," Aus der Natur, Leipzig, Jahrgang 5, 

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OsBORN, Henry Fairfield. Cenozoic Manmial Horizons of Western North 

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Peterson, Olof August. Recent observations upon Daemonelix: Science, n. s-, 

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Peterson, Olof August. Suggestions regarding the probable origin of Dae- 

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■ Description of new rodents and discussion of the origin of Daemon- 

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Perisho, E. C, and Visher, S. S. A preliminary report upon the geography, 

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RiGGS, Elmer Samuel. Loup Fork beds of eastern Wyoming [Abstract] : 

 Science, n. s., vol. 29, p. 196, 1909. 



