144 KANSAS ACADEMY OF SCIENCE. 
Weather Bureau, by C. F. Marvin, pp. 156-166; 3 charts. Roentgeu rays and cloudy conden- 
sation, pp. 167-168. June, pp. 191-228;6 charts. Kite Experiments at the United States 
Weather Bureau, by C. F. Marvin, pp. 199-208. July, 1896, pp. 229-280; 8 charts. Kite ex- 
periments at the Weather Bureau, by C. F. Marvin, pp. 238-255; 4 charts. August, pp. 281- 
314;4 charts. Experiments with kites at San Francisco, Cal., by W. H. Harmon, pp. 
288-289. September, pp. 315-358; 6 charts. 
Report of the Chief of the Weather Bureau for 1895, from the report of the Secretary of 
Agriculture, by Willis L. Moore, pp. 65-96. 
United States Department of the Interior—U. S. Geological Survey, Chas. D. Walcott, Di- 
rector: Fourteenth Annual Report, 1892-93. Part I— Report of the director, pp. 1-166. 
Administrative reports, pp. 167-322; 1 pl. Topographic progress map, in pocket. 
Part II—Accompanying papers. Potable waters of eastern United States, by W J 
McGee, pp. 5-48; figs. 1-5. Natural mineral waters of the United States, by A. C. Peale, 
pp. 49-88; pll. m1 and rv in pocket. Results of stream measurements, by F. H. Newell, pp. 
89-156; pll. v and vi; figs. 6-24. The laccolitic mountain groups of Colorado, Utah, and 
Arizona, by Whitman Cross, pp. 157-242; pll. vit-xyt; figs. 25-43. The gold-silver veins of 
Ophir, California, by Waldmar Lindgren, pp., 249-284; pll. xvit and xvur. Geology of 
the Catoctin belt, by Arthur Keith, pp. 285-396; pll. x1x-xxxrx; fig. 44. Tertiary revolu- 
tion in the topography of the Pacific coast, by J. S. Diller, pp. 397-434; pll. xu-xuviz; figs. 
45-48. The rocks of the Sierra Nevada, by W. H. Turner, pp. 435-496; pll. xnyo-nix; 
figs. 49-51. Pre-Cambrian igneous rocks of the Unkar terrane, Grand Canon of the Col- 
orado, Arizona, by Charles D. Walcott; with notes on the petrographic character of the 
lavas, by Joseph Paxson Iddings, pp. 497-524; pll. Lx-Lxv; figs. 52 and 53. On the struc- 
tures of the ridge between the Taconic and Green mountain ranges in Vermont, by T. 
Nelson Dale, pp. 525-550; pll. Lxvi-Lxx; figs 54-64. The structure of Monument mountain 
in Great Barrington, Massachusetts, by T. Nelson Dale, pp. 551-566; pll. Lxxr and LxxIt; 
figs. 65-72; The Potomac and Roaring Creek coal fields in West Virginia, by Joseph D. 
Weeks, pp. 567-590; pll. Lx11t and Lxtv; figs. 73-75. 
Fifteenth Annual Report, 1893-94. Report of the director, pp. 1-108; pl. 1. Adminis- 
trative Reports, pp. 109-252. Accompanying papers. Preliminary report on the geology 
of the common roads of the United States, by Nathaniel Southgate Shaler, pp. 255-306. 
The Potomac formation, by Lester Frank Ward, pp. 307-398; pll. 11-1v; figs. 1-5. Sketch 
of the geology of the San Francisco peninsula, by Andrew C. Lawson, pp. 399-476; pll. 
V-x11; figs. 6-8. Preliminary report on the Marquette iron-bearing district of Michigan, 
by Charles Richard Van Hise and William Shirley Bayley, with a chapter on the Repub- 
lic trough, by Henry Lloyd Smith, pp. 477-650; pll. x11-xxv1; figs. 9-20. The origin and 
relations of central Maryland granites, by Charles Rollin Keyes; with an introduction on 
the general relations of the granitic rocks in the middle Atlantic Piedmont plateau, by 
George Huntington Williams, pp. 651-740; pll. xxvo-xLvuT; figs. 21-29. 
Sixteenth Annual Report, 189495. Part I.—Papers of atheoretic nature. The dinosaurs 
of North America, by Othniel Charles Marsh, pp. 133-414; 85 pll.; 66 figs. Glacier Bay and 
its glaciers, by Harry Fielding Reid, pp. 415-462; 11 pll. Some analogies in the Lower Creta- 
ceous of Europe and America, by Lester F. Ward, pp. 463-542; 11 pll.;3 figs. Structure de- 
tails in Green Mountain region of eastern New York, by T. Nelson Dale, pp. 543-570; 31 
figs. Principles of North American pre-Cambrian geology, by Charles Richard Van Hise; 
with an appendix on flow and fracture of rocks as related to structure, by Leander Miller 
Hoskins, pp. 571-874; 10 pll.; 69 figs. Summary of the primary triangulation executed by 
the United States Geological Survey between the years 1882 and 1894, by Henry Gannett, 
pp. 877-885. 
Part IIl.—Papers of an economic character. Geology and mining industries of the 
Cripple Creek district, Colorado, by Whitman Cross and R. A. F. Penrose, jr., pp. 1-210; 
pli. 1-x1v; figs. 1-37. A geological reconnaissance across Idaho. by George H. Eldridge, pp- 
211-276; pll. xv-xvIT; figs. 38-41. The geology of the road-building stones of Massachusetts, 
with some consideration of similar materials from other parts of the United States, by 
Nathaniel Southgate Shaler, pp. 277-342; pll. xvim1-xxtvy. Economic geology of the Mercur 
mining district, Utah, by J. Edward Spurr, with introduction by S. F. Emmons, pp. 343- 
456; pll. xxv-xxxiv; figs. 42-47. The public lands and their water supply, by Frederick 
Haynes Newell, pp. 457-534; pll. xxxy-xxxrx; figs. 48-57. Water resources of a portion of 
the Great Plains, by Robert Hay, pp. 535-588; pll. x~-xL1z; figs. 58-65. 
Part III.—Mineral Resources of the United States, 1894, metallic products. The produc- 
tion of iron ores in various parts of the world, by John Birkinbine, pp. 21-218; pll. -xv. 
Iron and steel and allied industries in all countries, by James M. Swank, pp. 219-250. Gold 
fields of the southern Appalachians, by George F. Becker, pp. 251-331; pll. xvi-xv117; fig. 1, 
Copper, by Charles Kirchhoff, pp. 332-358. Lead, by Charles Kirchhoff, pp. 359-377. Zinc- 
by Charles Kirchhoff, pp. 378-388. Manganese, by Joseph D. Weeks, pp. 389-457. The pro 
