﻿272 BULLETIN 103, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM. 



Floridian, Bahamian, West Indian, and Central American reefs. 

 In addition to my studies in ttie field and my work on charts and 

 maps in the office, I have compiled all available information on 

 Pleistocene and Recent strand-line movement along the Atlantic 

 coast between Argentina on the south and New England on the 

 north. 



The discussion to follow will present evidence on Recent change in 

 the position of strand line, on the amount of change, and on the rela- 

 tions of the living coral to the basements on which they have formed 

 for the West Indies from Antigua along the Caribbean arc to Cuba, 

 the Bahamas, the Bermudas, Florida, and Central America. Accounts 

 of these areas will be followed by remarks on some other West Indian 

 Islands, on the Brazilian reefs, on the Argentine shore line, and on the 

 shore line of the United States between Florida and Cape Cod. 



[Footnote continued from page 271.] 



Investigations of tho geology and geologic proccesses of the reef tracts and adjacent areas in the Bahamas 

 and Florida, Carnegie Inst. Washington Year Book No. 12 (for 1913), pp. 183-184, 1914. 



The platforms of barrier coral reefs, Amer. Geog. Soc. Bull., vol. 46, pp. 426-429, 1914. 



Preliminary remarks on the geology of the Bahamas with special reference to the origin of the Floridian 

 ■vnd Bahama oolites, Carnegie Inst. Washington Pub. No. 182, pp. 47-54, 1914. 



The building of the Marquesas and Tortugas atolls and a sketch of the geologic history of the Florida 

 ree." tract, Carnegie Inst. Washington Pub. No. 182, pp. 55-67, 1914. 



Study of the stratigraphic geology and of the fossil corals and associated organisms in several of the smaller 

 West Indian Islands, Carnegie Inst. Washington Year Book No. 13 (for 1914), pp. 358-360, 1915. 



Geological investigations in the Bahamas and southern Florida, Carnegie Inst. Washington Year Book 

 No. 13 (for 1914), pp. 227-233, 1915. 



Reef corals of the Bahamas and southern Florida, Carnegie Inst. Washington Year Book No. 13 (for 

 1914), pp. 222-226, 1915. 



Coral reefs and reef corals of the southeastern United States, their geologic history and tlieir significance, 

 Abstract, Science, new ser., vol. 41, pp. 508-509, April 2, 1915; Geol. Soc. America Bui., vol. 26, pp. 58-60, 

 1915. 



Introductory remarks to symposium on the factors producing changes in position of strand line during 

 the Pleistocene and post-Pleistocene, Washington Acad. Sci. Journ., vol. 5, pp. 444-445, June 18, 1915. 



[R6sum6 of the present status of the geologic correlation of the Cretaceous and Tertiary formations of the 

 Antilles], Washington Acad. Sci. Journ., vol. 5, p. 489, July 19, 1915. 



Memorandum on the geology of the ground waters of the Island of Antigua, B. W, I., West Indian Bull., 

 vol. 14, No. 4, 4i pp., 1915. Imperial Dept. of Agri. for the West Indies. 



The geologicsigniflcauceofthe growth rate of the Floridian and Bahaman shoal-water corals, Washington 

 Acad. Sci. Jouru., vol. 5, No. 17, pp. 591-600, Oct. 19, 1915. 



On Recent Madreporaria of Florida, the Bahamas, and the West Indies, and on collections from Murray 

 Island, Australia, Carnegie Inst. Washington Year Book No. 14 (for 1915), pp. 220-231, 1916. 



And Shaw, Ji. W., Geologic investigations of the Florida coral-reef tract, Carnegie Inst. Washington 

 Year Book No. 14 (for 1915), pp. 233-238, 1916. 



Study of the stratigraphic geology and of the fossil corals and associated organisms in several of the smaller 

 West Indian Islands, Carnegie Inst. Washington Year Book No. 14 (for 1915), pp. 368-373, 1916. 



Present status of the investigations of the origin of barrier coral reefs, Amer. Journ. Sci., ser. 4, vol. 41, 

 No. 241, pp. 131-135, Januarj', 1916. 



The results of investigations of the ecology of the Floridian and Bahaman shoal-water corals, Nat. Acad. 

 Sci. Proc, vol. 2, pp. 95-100, February, 1916. 



Some littoral and suhlittoral physiographic features of the Virgin and northern Leeward Islands and 

 their bearing on the coral reef problem, Washington Acad. Sci. Journ., vol. 6, No. 3, pp. 53-66, Feb. 4, 1916, 

 also abstract Geol. Soc. America Bull., vol. 27, No. 1, pp. 41-45, 1916. 



The corals and coral reefs of the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean Sea (abstract of paper read before 

 special meeting of Amer. Ass. Adv. Sci., in cooperacion with Pan-American Congress), Science, new ser., 

 vol. 43, pp. 250-251, February 18, 1916. 



In collaboration with Cushman, J. A., Goldman, M. I., Howe, M. A., and others: Some shoal-waler 

 bottom samples from Murray Island, Australia, and comparisons of them with samples from Florida and 

 the Bahamas, Carnegie Inst. Washington Pub. No. 213, pp. 235-297, pis. 94-98, 1918. 



Chemical and organic deposits of the sea, Geol. Soc. American Bull., vol. 28, pp. 933-914, pis. 47, 48, 1918. 



