BIBLIOGRAPHY OF TENNESSEE. 

 GEOLOGY, SOIL, DRAINAGE, FORESTRY, ETC. 



By ELIZABETH COCKRILL. 



A. 



Anonymous. 



1. Resources of Tennessee. 



(In Southern Lumberman, Nov. 15, 1901, vol. 40, No. 458:4.) 



2. State Forestry Association for Tennessee (organization). 



(In Forester, Aug., Sept., 1901, vol. 7:208, 230-31; Forest Leaves, Oct., 1901, 

 vol. 8:78; Southern Lumberman, Aug. 15, 1901, vol. 40, 452:5.) 



3. Tennessee Forests. 



(In Southern Lumberman, July 15, 1901, vol. 39, No. 450:4-5.) 



4. What can the State do in the matter of forestry? 



(In Southern Lumberman, April 15, 1900, vol. 36, No. 420: 4.) 



5. Hardwood bottom lands in two Southern States. 



6. A brief description of the forests of Tennessee. 



7. Descriptive report of various tracts of mineral lands in Kentucky and 



Tennessee adjacent to and on the lines of the Cincinnati Southern and 

 Knoxville & Ohio railways. 

 12 pp. n. p. (1873). 



8. The copper mines of Tennessee. 



Mining Mag., vol. 6, p. 193, 1856. Reprinted from the Union and American. 



9. Prospectus of the Southern Zinc Company, with a report upon the com- 

 pany's mines, Union County, Tennessee. 



19 pp., 800; 1860. 



10. Joint Conference Coal Miners and Operators of District Nineteen, Knox- 



ville, Tenn. 



Contains proceedings of special convention of Coal Operators Association 

 and United Mine Workers of America of District No. 19, held at Knox- 

 ville, Tenn., Aug. 27-31, 1907, on pp. 131-251. 



August 6 to 9, 1907, pp. 251, Knoxville (1907). 



11. Mountain regions of North Carolina and Tennessee. 



DeBow's Rev., vol. 26, pp. 702-706, 1859. 

 ] 2. Resurvey of the Tennessee River from Brown's Ferry to Florence, Ala. 



Chief of Eng. Rept., 1872, pp. 495-501. 

 13. Drainage Law of Tennessee. 



Senate Bill No. 229. Extract from Acts of Tennessee, 1909, Chapter 185. 



Tenn. Geol. Survey, Bull. No. 3, extract C, pp. 48-74, 1910. 



Abbott (H. L.) and Humphreys (A. A.) 



Report upon the physics and hydraulics of the Mississippi River, upon 



the protection of the alluvial regions against overflow, and upon the 



deepening of the mouths. Based upon surveys and investigations, etc. 



U. S. Army, Corps of Topographic Engineers, prof. Papers, No. 4, XIII, 



456, 147 pages, 20 plates. 4, Philadelphia, 1861. Also Washington, 1861. 



Again, 214, pp. 1 pi., Washington, 1867. With additions, 691 pp. 25 pi. 



(Prof. Paper, No. 13.) Washington, 1876. 



Reviewed by J. B. Eads, Van Nostrand's Eng. Mag., vol. 19, pp. 211-229, 

 1878. 



