TWENTY-SEVENTH ANNUAL MEETING. 273 



longicaudatus Hall to Phillipsla major and remarks that the upper coal 

 measures of Kansas extend westward to near the west, county line of 

 Greenwood Co., Kansas, whereas the trllobite in question was found some 

 25 miles east of this line at Madison. 



Mammoth Sigillaria, by Edwin Waters. No. 9, September, 1891, p. 140, 

 describes large specimens now in Snow Hall at Lawrence and at Yale Col- 

 lege, and says that they were found almost at the top of the coal measures 

 In Greenwood Co., Kansas. 



Prospectus, Reports, and other information relating to Kansas Coal 

 Belt Mining Company, Shenandoah, Penna., 1884, 31 pp., with map. 

 Geological Survey of Missouri: 



The 1st and 2d Annual Reports of the Geological Survey of Missouri, by 

 G. C. ^wallow. State Geologist. Jefferson City, Mo., 1855, 209 and 239 pp., 

 15 pll., 19 sections, and 5 maps. (A H V S). 



Refers to the position of the loess on the Missouri river and to the simi 

 larity of the rock strata on each side. 

 Report of the Geological survey of the State of Missouri, by G. C. Broadhead. 

 Jefferson City, 1873, 323 x iv pp., 3 plates and sections and 9 maps. (A S V). 

 Contains observations on the geology of Kansas. 

 Geological survey of Texas. Second Annual Report. Austin, 1891. Cites R. 

 Hay on "Red-beds," pp. 336-421. On Salt of Kansas, p. 445. Article on 

 Carboniferous Cephalopods, by Alphaeus Hyatt, describes several new 

 species from Geary Co., Kansas. (A H S). 



This paper is also printed separately, pp. 329-356. Illustrated. 

 Second Geological Survey of Pennsylvania. Coal Flora of the United States, 

 by Leo. Lesquereux, Vol. I, 1880, p. 109. (A H). 



Vol. IH, 1884, p. 880, gives six Kansas localities and describes 28 species 

 of Kansas coal plants. (A H). 



One locality given is Ellsworth, which, if correct, implies that a widely 

 spread coal measures Neuropteris is found in Cretaceous strata. 

 Geological Survey of Illinois: Vol. VII, 1883, gives (p. 193) Range of Fossils 

 in Kansas coal measures, and describes, pp. 214, 240, 249, fossils from 

 Kansas, two being named after the finders, Professor Mudge and Mrs. St. 

 John. (A S). 

 Catalogue of Pythonomorpha, found in the Cretaceous strata of Kansas, by 

 E. D. Cope. (A H). 



Read before the American Philosophical Society, Dec. 17, 1871. Trans- 

 actions Am. Phil. Soc, Vol. XIV. 

 On a new Testudinata from the chalk of Kansas, by E. D. Cope. Transactions 



Am. Phil. Soc, Jan., 1872. (A H). 

 On two New Ornithosaurians fi'om Kansas, by E. D. Cope. Trans. Am. Phil. 



Soc, March, 1872. (A H). 

 American Naturalist. May, 1887. Mesozoic and Cenozoic realms of the in- 

 terior of North America, by E. D. Cope. 



Refers to the existence of the Loup Fork formation in Kansas. 

 Syllabus of University extension lectures, by E. D. Cope. 



Refers to coal measures and other strata of Kansas. Philadelphia, 1891. 

 American Geological Classification and Nomenclature, by Jules Marcou. Cam- 

 bridge, Mass., 1888. Printed for the author. 



Gives upper coal measures in the Dyas in Kansas. 

 Kansas in a Nutshell, by George P. Guerrier. Cambridge, Mass. 1889. 



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