32 



38. Geology of the Jemez-Albuquerque Region, New Mexico, 



8 m Albert B. Reagan 



39. The Jemez Coal Fields, 10 m Albert B. Reagan 



40. Ripple Marks iu Hudson Limestone in .Toft'erson County, 



Indiana, 5 m Glenn Culbertson 



41. Some Topographic Features in the Lower Tippecanoe Val- 



ley, S m F. J. Breeze 



THE EIGHTEENTH ANNUAL MEETING OF THE 

 INDIANA ACADEMY OF SCIENCE. 



The eighteenth annual meeting of the Indiana Academy of Science was 

 held in Indianapolis, Friday and Saturday, December 2G and 27, 1902. 



Friday, 11 a. m., the Executive Committee met in session at hotel head- 

 quarters. At 2 o'clock p. m. President Harvey W. Wiley called the Acad- 

 emy to order in general session in the room of the State Board of Agricul- 

 ture, State House. The transaction of routine and miscellaneous business, 

 occupied the first part of the session. Following this, papers of general 

 interest were read and discussed. On the disposition of these, special tech- 

 nical subjects occupied the time until adjournment at 5 p. m. 



Tlie addi-ess of the retiring President, Harvey W. Wiley, was delivered 

 in tlie auditorium of the Shortridge High School at 8 p. m. before the 

 members of the Academy and a number of invited guests; subject, "Ye 

 Shall Know Tliem l)y Their Fruits." 



Saturd:iy 27, .-i. m.. the Academy met in general session, befort' wliich 

 tlie remaining jiapcrs of the program were read and discussed. Following 

 the disposition of the papers unlinislied l!usiness was considered. 



Adjournment, 12 m. 



THE FIELD MEETING OF 1902. 



The field meeting was appointed for Madison and Hanover, May 22, 23 

 and 24. The President and some of the members assembled, but owing to 

 the heavy rains and the inclemency of the Aveather all attempts to do field 

 work were necessarily abandoned. 



