264 KANSAS ACADEMY OF SCIENCE. 



Eighth Annual Report, 1886-7, Part I. (A H). Contains: 



Area surveyed and atlas sheets of Kans., pp. 70, 71, 169, 170, et al. 



Kansas gas field, p. 89. 

 Part II contains Fossil Plants in Kansas, by Lester Ward, pp. 667, 

 899, 900, et al. 

 Ninth Annual Report, 1887-8. (A H). Contains: 

 Surveys in Kansas, pp. 3, 49, 56. 

 Geologic work in Kansas, p. 104. 

 Tenth Annual Report, 1888-9. (AH). Contains: 



Topographic Survey in Kansas, pp. 6, 8, 84, 89, 95, 103. 

 Geological work at Fort Riley, pp. 31, 154. 

 Eleventh Annual Report, 1889-90, Part I. (A H). Contains: 

 Topographic work in Kansas, pp. 5, 7, 34, 39, 46. 

 Kansas rock gas and oil, p. 598. 

 Twelfth Annual Report, 1890-91, Part I. (A). Contains: 

 Atlas sheets of Kansas, p. 7. 



Topographic work in Kansas, pp. 4, 6, 7, 24, 29, 30, 47. 

 United States Geological Survey, J. W. Powell, Director: 



Bulletin No. 7, 1884. A catalogue of geological maps relating to N. and 

 S. America, by Jules Marcou. (A H). 



Gives maps of Kansas of Hayden and Mudge, Nos. 56, 623, 772. 

 Bulletin No. 32. Mineral Springs of the United States, by Albert C. 

 Peale. (A H). 



Gives analyses of several mineral waters of Kansas. 



Bulletin No. 57, Washington, 1890, 49 pp., 2 pll. A Geological Recon- 

 noissance of Southwest Kansas, by Robert Hay. (A H). 



Bulletin No. 76. Washington, 1891. A Dictionary of Altitudes, by Henry 

 Gannett, 2d edition [1st ed. was Bulletin No. 5.] (A H). 

 Gives most of Kansas railway altitudes. 



Bulletin No. 80, 1891. Correlation papers, Devonian and Carboniferous. 

 (A H). 



Chapter IX discusses "Permian problem in Kansas and Nebraska" and 

 locates productive coal measures in Kansas. 



Bulletin No. 82, 1891. Correlation Papers, Cretaceous, by C. A. White. 

 (A H). 



Gives Hill's Texas Trinity sands in southern Kansas, and refers to work 

 on the cretaceous formations of the state by Hay, Hayden, Lesquereux, 

 Meek, and Mudge. 



Bulletin No. 84, 1892. Correlation Papers, Neocene, by Dall and Harris. 

 (A H). 



Cites Hay on western Kansas Tertiaries, pp. 299-301. 

 United States Geological Survey, J. W. Powell, Director: 



Monographs, Vol. XVII. The Flora of the Dakota group. A posthu- 

 mous work by Leo Lesquereux, edited by F. H. Knowlton, 256 pp., 66 pll., 

 1892. (A H S). 



States that the Dakota group has 460 species of fossil plants and gives 

 over 300 found in Kansas. New species are described of which many are 

 named in honor of J. E.AVest, and some for Profs. Mudge and Snow, and for 

 R. Hay, S. Mason, A. Wellington, and C. Sternberg. 

 United States Geological Survey, J. W. Powell, Director: 



Mineral Resources of the United States, 1882-3, by Albert Williams, Jr. 

 (A H). 



