67 

 BIBLIOGRAPHY 



This is not intended to be an exhaustive bibliography, but to in- 

 clude only the main articles bearing on the subject. 



Allen, J. H. 



Some Facts Respecting the Geology of Tampa Bay, Florida 

 (Am. Jour. Sci., 2d ser., Vol. I, pp. 38-42, 1846). 



Bailey, J. W. 



Microscopical Examination of Sounds Made by the United 

 States Coast Survey (Smithsonian Contributions, Vol. II, 

 3d Art, 1851. 



Bartram, William. 



Travels through North and South Carolina, Georgia, etc., 

 Containing an Account of the Soil, etc. (Philadelphia, 

 1791). 



Catesby, M. 



Natural History of Carolina, Florida, and the Bahama Islands, 

 1 73 1. (Not seen.) 



Charleston. 



Report of the Scientific Committee of the City on Artesian 

 Wells (Year Book, Charleston, 1882). 



Clark, W. B. 



The Eocene Deposits of the Middle Atlantic Coast (U. S. 



Geol. Surv., Bull. No. 141, 1896). 

 Climatology and Physical Features of Maryland (Md. Weath. 



Service, 1st Bien. Rep. for 1892-93, pp. 1-146, 1894). 

 Outline of the Present Knowledge of the Physical Features of 



Maryland (Md. Geol. Surv., Vol. I, pp. 141-228, 1897). 



Conrad, T. A. 



Fossil Shells of the Tertiary Formations of America (Phila- 

 delphia, 1832-35 ; republished by G. D. Harris, Washing- 

 ton, 1893). 



Observations on the Tertiary and More Recent Formations of 

 a Portion of the Southern States (Phila. Acad. Sci., Jour., 

 Vol. VII, pp. 1 16-129, 1834). 



Observations on the Tertiary Strata of the Atlantic Coast 

 (Am. Jour. Sci., Vol. XXVIII, pp. 104-111; 280-282, 



i8 3 5)- 

 Observations on a Portion of the Atlantic Tertiary Region 

 (Geol. Soc. Penn., Trans., Vol. I, pp. 335-341, 1835). 



