PART IV, 



PUBLICATIONS OF STATE GEOLOGICAL SURVEYS 

 OTHER THAN THAT OF CALIFORNLA.^ 



GEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF ARKANSAS. 



Manganese: its uses, ores, and deposits; by R. A. F. Penrose, 

 Jr. Geol. Sur. Arkansas Report 1890, vol. 1. Little 

 Rock, 1891. xxvii, 642 pp. plates and maps. 



Chapter XIX relates to the manganese deposits of California, giv- 

 ing the location of the deposits, the geologic relations of the manga- 

 nese deposits, the manganese deposits of the Coast Ranges, the 

 manganese deposits of the Sierra Nevada, etc. 



GEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF MISSOURI. 



Lead and zinc deposits; by Arthur Winslow, assisted by 



James D. Robertson, vol. 6. Jefferson City, 1894. 2 



vols. 



On page 187 the author states that although California is not 

 classed as a lead- and zinc-producing State, it contains extensive 

 deposits of lead-producing ores. These occur principally in Inyo 

 and San Bernardino counties, in the southwestern portion of the 

 State. He gives the localities of the lead deposits of San Bernardino 

 County, near Kingston Mountain, in dolomitic limestone ; near 

 Denby, in the Old Woman Mountains. He mentions a large and 

 extensive ledge of carbonate and galena in granite and slate forma- 

 tions. Other localities are mentioned, both in Inyo and San Ber- 

 nardino counties, on the authority of the Ninth Annual Report of 

 the State Mineralogist ; Tenth and Eleventh Census Reports. 



GEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF CANADA. 



Mesozoic fossils, vol. 1, by J. F. Whiteaves. Montreal, 1876- 



80. 3 parts, 262 pp., 32 plates, and one map. 



The author, in his description of the Queen Charlotte Island fos- 

 sils, includes certain Californian Cretaceous fossils described by 

 Gabb, Palaeontology of California. Of these fossils, thirty-one 

 species are like those of the Chico group, nine of the Martinez 

 group, with nine of the Tejon group. 



