72 AMERICAN FOSSIL BRYOZOA. [bull. 173. 



CARBONIFEROUS. 

 Coal Measures. 



Ohio.— Newark, Flint Ridge, Bald Hill. 



Illinois'. — Lasalle, *Seville, Knox County, Peoria, Danville, Springfield and other 

 localities in Sangamon County, Caseyville, Sparta, near Centralia, and localities in 

 Macoupin, Jasper, and Fayette counties. 



loim. — Red Oak. 



Missouri. — Kansas City. 



Nebraska. — Nebraska City, Wyoming. 



Kansas. — Manhattan, Fort Riley, Greenwood County. 



Tndian Territory. — Poteau Mountain. 



Permian. 



Kansas. — Cottonwood Valley and other unrecorded localities. 

 Neil' Mexico. — Guadalupe Mountains, Jornada de Muerto. 



Carboniferous (division not specified). 



Nova Scotia. — Windsor, Stewiacke. 



Montana. — Mystic Lake. 



New Mexico. — Organ Mountains. 



Arizona. — White Mountains, confluence White Mountain and Black rivera. 



Texas. — Fort Belknap. 



CRETACEOUS. 



New Jer.^ey. — Timber Creek, Mullica Hill, Brownsville, Vincentown. 



Mississippi. — Seven miles below Yazoo. 



Arkansas. — Pulaski County (10 miles south of Little Rock). 



EOCENE. 



Maryland. — Upper Marlboro. 



Virginia. — " Rock's bridge" (may not he in Virginia) and other localities. 



North Carolina. — Wilmington. 



South Carolina. — Eutaw, Wantoot, Charleston. 



A lahama. — Claiborne. 



Mississipj)i. — Vicksburg. 



MIOCENE. 



Maryland. — St. Mary's River, Jones' Wharf. 



Virginia. — Williamsburg, Petersburg, Evergreen, Yorktown, Carter's Landing. 



PLIOCENE. 



South Carolina. — Darlington District, Giles Bluff on Peedee River, Smith's on 

 Goose Creek. (Note. — Holmes considered these deposits of Pliocene age, Gabb and 

 Horn think them Miocene. ) 



Post-Pliocene. 



South Carolina. — Charleston. 



California.— Santsi Barbara. (See Gabb and Horn, Journal Academy Natural 

 Sciences Philadelphia, series 2, V, p. 179.) 



I 



