134 KANSAS ACADEMY OF SCIENCE. 
Artesian wells in Kansas and the causes of their flow. Amer. Geol., Vol. V, 
1890, pp. 296-301. Sci. Am. Supp., vol. XXIX, No. 755, 1890, pp. 12066, 
12067. Abstract in Trans. Kan. Acad. Sci., Vol. XII, 1890, pp. 24, 25. 
Remarks on certain peculiarities in the distribution of lignite in the Dakota 
formation in Kansas. Bull. Geol. Soc. Am., Vol. I, 1890, p. 26, in discussion 
of paper by G. K. Gilbert: ‘‘ The Strength of the Earth’s Crust.’’ 
Notes on Kansas salt mines. Am. Geologist, Vol. V, 1890, pp. 65-67, pl. 2. 
Notes on some Kansas salt marshes. Trans. Kan. Acad. Sci., Vol. XII, 1890, 
pp. 97-100. : 
Joseph Savage —a memoir. Topeka Daily Capital, Jan. 17, 1892. 
Geology and mineral resources of Kansas. Eighth Bien. Rep. Kansas State 
Board Agr., 1892, pp. 99-162; 11 plates, figures, and maps. Describes the to- 
pographic features and lithologic character and the relations of the carbonif- 
erous, cretaceous, tertiary, and post-tertiary formations in the state, including 
an account of the lead and zinc, coal, salt, and other mineral deposits. 10,000 
copies printed separately also, and distributed as a World’s Fair edition. 
Mineral resources of Kansas, 23 pp., 1893. Printed and distributed as a World’s 
Fair edition. 
The great plains— presidential address before the Kansas Academy of Sci- 
ence., Trans. Kan. Acad. Sci., Vol. XILI, 1892, pp. 3-6. 
Notes on some new species of fossil cephalopods. Trans. Kan. Acad. Sci., 
ibid., pp. 37-47. Description of species occurring in the carboniferous and 
permo-carboniferous of Kansas, with figures. 
In memoriam— Joseph Savage. Ibid., pp. 65-68. 
Additional note on the Brenham meteorite. Ibid., p. 75, with fig. 
Note on the occurrence of granite in a deep boring in eastern Kansas. Ibid., pp. 
Toyo: 
Some characteristics of the glaciated area of northeastern Kansas. Ibid., pp. 
104-106. Describes the glacial deposits and phenomena of this region. 
Sandstone dikes in northwestern Nebraska. Bull. Geol. Soc. Am., Vol. ITI, 1891, 
pp. 50-55, figs. 1-5. Briefly describes the geologic formations of the region 
and states the width and direction of the two dikes. 
A contribution to the geology of the great plains. Ibid., pp. 519-521. Abstract 
in American Geologist, Vol. XI, pp. 56,57. The surface of the plains area 
consists of calcareous and arenaceous clays of tertiary age which may grade 
into post-pliocene to the east. 
Final geological reports of the artesian underflow investigation between ninety- 
seventh meridian of longitude and foot-hills of the Rocky mountains. Report 
of the Secretary of Agriculture, pt. 3, 1893, 209 pp., 36 pll., and 6 maps. 
On the eastern extension of the cretaceous rocks in Kansas and the formation of 
certain sand-hills. Trans. Kan. Acad. Sci., Vol. XIV, 1894 ( published in 
1896), pp. 227-229. 
The river counties of Kansas: Some notes on their geology and mineral resources. 
Ibid., pp. 230-260. 
Water resources of a portion of the great plains. Sixteenth An. Rep. U.S. Geol. 
Surv., 1895, part II, pp. 535-588; map and sections. Describes the hydro- 
graphic, geologic, and topographic features and water-bearing formations of a 
portion of western Kansas and Nebraska and eastern Colorado. 
The geology of the Fort Riley military reservation and vicinity, Kansas. U.S. 
Bull. Geol. Surv. No. 137, 1896, 36 pp; map, sections and plates. 
Redemption of the plains. Harper’s Weekly, March 28, 1896, copied into and 
printed in the Topeka State Journal, April 10, 1896. 
