BIBLIOGRAPHY OF TENNESSEE GEOLOGY. 27 



Greenleaf (James L.) 



Water powers on eastern tributaries of the Mississippi, between the Ohio 



and the Yazoo. 

 Grover (N. C.). 



See Hall (M. R.), Grover (N. C.) and Horton (A. H.). 

 Guild (Jo. C.). 



1. Report on the Tennessee River and Walden's Ridge iron ores, the Wai- 



den's Ridge coal field and the Carter County magnetic and limonite iron 

 ores. 



Expert R.epts. on the mineral properties of the E. Tenn. Land Co., pp. 

 27-38, New York, 1891. 



2. Report of Jo. C. Guild, Inspector of Mines, 1885-86. 



Biennial Kept. Bureau of Agriculture, Statistics and Mines, pp. 269-365, 



Nashville, 1887. 

 Contains his first, second and third semi-annual reports. 



Gurley (William F. E.). 



See Miller (S. A.) and Gurley (Wm. F. E.) 

 Guyot (Arnold). 



1. On the Appalachian mountain system. 



Amer. Jour. Sci., 2d ser., vol. 31, pp. 157-187, 18*61. 



Gives numerous elevations on the Tennessee-North Coralina line. 



2. Measurement of the mountains of western North Carolina. 



Ashevllle News, July 18, 1860. 



Reprinted in Clingman, Thomas L., speeches and writings, pp. 138-147, 



Raleigh, 1877. 

 Includes height of numerous peaks on the Tennessee line. 



Hal! (Frederick). 



Letters from the East and from the West. 

 168 pp. 800, Washington, 1840. 



Brief reference to minerals about Nashville, chap. 19, on pp. 149-160. 

 Describes a visit to Nashville with remarks on the geology and the col- 

 lection and work of Prof. Troost. 



Hall (J.). 



1. Notes upon the geology of the Western States. 



Am. Jour. Sci., vol. 42, pp. 51-62. 



2. Geology of New York, part 4 (fourth or western district). 



Vol. XXVII, 685 pages, 54 plates, geological map of the Middle and Western 

 States, 1843. 



3. Notes explanatory of a section from Cleveland, Ohio, to the Mississippi 



River, in a southwest direction, with remarks upon the identity of the 

 western formations with those of New York. 

 Assoc. Am. Geol. Trans., pp. 267-293. 



4. On the parallelism of the Paleozoic deposits of North America with those 



of Europe, followed by a table of the species of fossils common to the 

 continents, with indication of the positions in which they occur, and 

 terminated by a critical examination of each of the species, by Ed. de 

 Vermeuil. 



Translated and condensed from Bull. Geol. Soc. France, 2d ser., vol. IV, for 

 this journal. 



Am. Jour. Sci., 2d ser., vol. 5, pp. 176-183, 359-370; vol. 7, pp. 45-51, 218-231. 



