38 PHYSIOGRAPHY AXD GEOLOGY OF THE COASTAL PLAIX PROVINCE. 



Outline of Cenozoic History of a Portion of the Middle 



Atlantic Slope. 



Jour. Geol., vol. ii, pp. 568-587, 1894. 



The Cenozoic history of the Middle Atlantic Coastal Plain is described and the 

 development of the present topography discussed. A small scale map shows the distribu- 

 tion of the Columbia deposits in Virginia. 



Harris, Gilbert D. On the Geological Position of the Eocene De- 

 posits of Maryland and Virginia. 



Amer. Jour. Sci., 3d ser., vol. xlvii, pp. 301-304, figs. 1-3, 1S94. 



On the basis of the fossils the Eocene strata of Maryland and Virginia are correlated 

 with the Lignitic stage of the soiitliern states. 



1895 

 Bagg, E. M. Protozoa (Eocene Eauna of the Middle Atlantic Slope). 



Johns Hopkins Univ. Circ, vol. xv, p. 6, 1895. 



A list of 21 species of foraminifera from Woodstock and the Pamunkey River is 

 given of which one is a new species and is described. 



Clark, W. B. Contributions to the Eocene Fauna of the ^Middle \t- 

 lantic Slope. 



Johns Hopkins LTniv. Circ, vol. xv, pp. 3-6, 1895. 



From a study of the Eocene fauna of Maryland and Virginia the author divides th» 

 Eocene strata of these states into two stages, the Aquia Creek and Woodstock. He 

 believes that they represent the Lignitic, Buhrstone, Claiborne, and possibly part of the 

 White Limestone of the Alabama region. 



Descriptions of the Geological Excursions made during the 



Spring of 1895. 



Johns Hopkins Circ, vol. xv, pp. 1-3, 1895. 



The outcrops of the Potomac Eocene and Miocene strata along the Potomac River 

 are briefly described. 



1895 



Cope, E. D. Fourth Contribution to the Marine Fauna of tlir j\Iioecne 

 Period of the United States. 



Proc. Amer. Philos. Soc, vol. xxiv, pp. 135-155, pi. 6. 



Getotherium viegalophysum, a new species from the Miocene at Tar Bay on the 

 James River is described. 



Darton, IST. H. Artesian "Well Prospects in Eastern Virginia, Maryland 

 and Delaware. 



Amer. Inst. Min. Engrs. Trans., vol. xxiv, pp. 372-397, pis. 1-2. 1895. 



The geological occurrence of artesian water in the Coastal Plain is discussed and the 

 records of many deep wells, especially those in the vicinity of Norfolk, are given. 



