No. 8.] BIBLIOGRAPHY OF CONNECTICUT GEOLOGY. dy 



Hartford, given for period February 8, 1896, to December 31, 1899, 

 inclusive, 42-44. 



No. 44, 1901. Profiles of rivers in the United States, 12-14. Dis- 

 cusses and illustrates profiles of Connecticut and Housatonic rivers 

 from source to mouth. 



No. 47, 1 90 1. Daily readings in height of the Connecticut river at 

 Hartford given for the year 1900, and for Housatonic at Gaylordsville 

 from October 23 to' December 31, 1900, 35. 



No. 63, 1902. Daily readings of height of the Housatonic at Gay- 

 lordsville from October 23, 1900, to December 31, 1901; also list of 

 undeveloped water powers along that stream, 87-90. 



No. 75, 1903. Table and diagram of monthly discharge of Housa- 

 tonic at Gaylordsville, 24. 



No. yS, 1903. Housatonic river; quality of water, 84, 85; daily 

 gage height, 1900-02 inclusive, 93-95; current meter discharge measure- 

 ments, 104. 



No. 82, 1903. Daily readings of Connecticut river at Hartford for 

 the year 1902, 48, 49. 



No. 97, 1904. A study of the Connecticut River drainage basin, in- 

 cluding daily gage height at Hartford for 1903, 80-83; the Mianus river 

 near Stamford for 1903, 94-114; Byram river at Pemberwick, Green- 

 wich, and Riverville for 1903, 1 18-124. 



No. 124, 1905. Daily gage reading of Connecticut river at Hart- 

 ford, for 1904, 121-122; daily gage reading of the Housatonic at Gay- 

 lordsville, 147-152; of Shetucket near Willimantic for 1904, 112- 

 113- 



No. 144, 1905. Distribution of chlorine in ground water, and tables 

 showing determinations for the state, 22-28, map. 



No. 149, 1905. List of deep well borings in Connecticut, 23-24. 



283. Upham, W. 



The succession of Glacial deposits in New England. 

 Am. Assoc. Adv. Sci., Proc, xxviii, 299-310, 1880. 



Description of the occurrence and extent of the various drift de- 

 posits, — till, stratified deposits, moraines, etc., of New England. Dis- 

 cussion of origin. No description of any particular glacial phenomena 

 of Connecticut. 



^84. U[pham],W. 



[Abstract of] " Some typical eskers of southern New 

 England," by J. B. Woodworth. 

 Am. Geo!., xiv, 396, 1894. 



Woodworth's article states that eskers were deposited in channels 

 of drainage upon, in, or beneath the waning ice-sheet. (See Wood- 

 worth, 301.) 



285. Valcherville, M. de. 



Highland Park, Manchester. ; 



Connecticut Quart., i, 299, 1895. 

 Describes the old Wyllys copper mine. 



286. Walcott, C. D. 



The Taconic system of Emmons, and the use of the- 

 name Taconic in geologic nomenclature. 



