166 KANSAS ACADEMY OF SCIEXCE. 



Bulletins — No. 57. A Geological Reconnaissance In Southwestern Kansas, by Robert Hay. 1890. 

 49 pp.; 2 pi. 



58. The Glacial Boundary in Western Penn.sylvania, Ohio, Kentucky, Indiana, and Illinois, by 

 George F»-ederick Wright, with an introductory by Thomas Chrowder Chamberlin. 1890. 112 pp., 

 incl. 1 pi.: 8 pi. 



59. The Gabbros and Associated Rocks in Delaware, by Frederick D. Chester. 1890. 45 pp.; 

 Ipl. 



60. Report of work done in the Division of Chemistry and Physics, mainly during the fiscal 

 year 1887-'88. F. W. Clarke, chief chemist. 1890. 174 pp. 



61. Contributions to the Mineralogy of the Pacific Coast, by William Harlowe Melville and 

 Waldemar Lindgren. 1890. 40 pp.; 3 pi. 



62. The Greenstone Schist Areas of the Menominee and Marquette Regions of Michigan; a con- 

 tribution to the subject of dynamic metamorphism in erui^tive rocks, by George Huntington Wil- 

 liams, with an introduction by Roland Duer Irving. 1890. 241 pp.; 16 pi. 



63. A Bibliography of Paleozoic Crustacea from 1698 to 1889, including a list of North American 

 species and a systematic arrangement of genera, by Anthony W. Vogdes. 1890. 177 pp. 



64. A report of work done in the Division of Chemistry and Physics, mainly during the fiscal 

 year 1888-'89. F. W. Clarke, chief chemist. 1890. 60 pp. 



65. Stratigraphy of the Bituminovis Coal Fields of Pennsylvania, Ohio, and West Virginia, by 

 Israel C. White. 1891. 212 pp.; 11 pi. 



66. On a Group of Volcanic Rocks from the Tewan Mountains, New Mexico, and on the occur- 

 rences of Primary Quartz in certain Basalts, by John Paxson Iddings. 1890. 34 pp. 



67. The Relations of the Traps of the Newark Systeni in the New Jersey Region, by Nelson 

 Horatio Darton. 1890. 82 pp. 



68. Earthquakes in California in 1889, by James Edward Keeler. 1890. 25 pp. 



69. A Classed and Annotated Bibliography of Fossil Insects, by Samuel Hubbard Scudder. 



1890. 101 pp. 



70. Report on Astronomical Work of 1889 and 1890, by Robert Simpson Woodward. 1890. 79 pp. 



71. Index to the Known Fossil Insects of the World, including Myriapods and Arachnids, by 

 Samuel Hubbard Scudder. 1891. 744 pp. 



72. Altitudes between Lake Superior and the Rocky Mountains, by Warren XJpham. 1891. 

 229 pp. 



73. The Viscosity of Solids, by Carl Barus. 1891. 152 pp.; 6 pi. 



74. The Minerals of North Carolina, by Frederick Augustus Genth. 1891. 119 pp. 



75. Record of North American Geology for 1887 to 1889, inclusive, by Nelson Horatio Darton. 



1891. 173 pp. 



76. A Dictionary of Altitudes in the United States (second edition), compiled by Henry Gan- 

 nett, chief topographer. 1891. 393 pp. 



77. The Texan Permian and its Mesozoic Tyi^es of Fossils, by Charles A. White. 1891. 51 pp.; 

 4 pi. 



78. A report of work done In the Division of Chemistry and Physics, mainly during the fiscal 

 year 1889-'90. F. W. Clarke, chief chemist. 1891. 131 pp. 



79. A Late Volcanic Eruption in Northern California and its Peculiar Lava, by J. S. Dlller. 

 189L 33 pp.; 17 pi. 



80. Correlation jjapers — Devonian and Carboniferous, by Henry Shaler Williams. 1891. 279 pp. 



81. Correlation papers— Cambrian, by Charles Doolittle Walcott. 1891. 447 pp.; 3 pi., all col- 

 ored geological maps. 



82. Correlation papers — Cretaceou.s, by Charles A. White. 1891. 273 pp.; 3 pi., one a two- 

 page colored map. 



83. Correlation papers — Eocene, by William Bullock Clark. 1891. 173 pp.; 2 pi. 



84. Correlation papers — Neocene, by W. H. Dall and G. D. Harris. 1891. 349 pp., 3 pi., all 

 two-page colored mai)s. 



85. Correlation papers — The Newark System, by Israel Cook Russell. 1892. 344 pp.; 13 pi., 

 all two-page colored maps. 



86. Correlation papers — Archean and Algonklan, by C. R. Van Hlse. 1892. 550 pp.; 12 pi., all 

 one- or two-jiage colored maps. 



90. A report of work done In the Division of Chemistry and Physics, mainly during the fiscal 

 year 1890-'91. F. W. Clarke, chief chemist. 1892. 77 pp. 



91. Record of North American Geology for 1890, by Nelson Horatio Darton. 1891. 88 pp. 



92. The Compressibility of Liquids, by Carl Barus. 1H92. 96i)p.:29pl. 



93. Some insects of special Interest from Florissant, Colo., and other points In the Tertlarles 

 of Colorado and Utah, by Samuel Hubbard Scudder. 1892. 35 pp.; 3 pi. 



94. The Mechanism of Solid Viscosity, by Carl Barus. 1892. 138 pp. 



95. Earthquakes in California in 1890 and 1891, by Edward Singleton Holdon. 1892. 31 pp. 



96. The Volume Thermodynamics of Liquids, by Carl Barus. 1892. 100 pp. 



