BIBLIOGRAPHY OF TENNESSEE 



101 



Paleontology Continued. 



Contributions to the coal flora of 

 Tracy City, Brown (C. S.). 



Correlation papers, Cretaceous, White 

 (C. A.). 



Description d'un nonveau genre de 

 fossiles, Troost-, 11. 



Description of a new species of fossil 

 asterias, Troost, 14. 



Description of new and remarkable 

 fossils from the paleozoic rocks. 

 Miller and Gurley, 2. 



Description of new forms of upper 

 Cambrian fossils, Walcott, 5. 



Description of new species of Fossil 

 Crustaccea from the Lower Silurian 

 of Tennessee, Safford and Vodges. 



Description of new species of pale- 

 ozoic echinodermata, Miller and 

 Gurley, 4. 



Description of some more species of 

 invertebrates from the paleozoic 

 rocks, Miller and Gurley, 6. 



Die Silurische Fauna des westlichen 

 Tennesse, Roemer. 



Exhibition of certain bones of Megal- 

 oynx not before known, Safford, 26. 



Fauna of the Lower Cambrian of 

 Olenellus zone, Walcott, 4. 



Finding of the remains of the fossils 

 sloth at Big Bone Cave, Tennessee, 

 Mercer. 



Gastropoda of the Chazy formation, 

 Raymond. 



List of Tenessee Crinoids, Troost, 22. 



New and interesting species of pale- 

 ozoic fossils, Miller and Gurley, 3. 



New genera and species of Echino- 

 dermata, Miller and Gurley, 5. 



New species of crinoids from Illinois 

 and other States, Miller and Gurley, 

 1. 



New species of Echinodermata and a 

 new crustacean from the paleozoic 

 rocks, Miller and Gurley, 7. 



New species of paleozoic inverte- 

 brates from Illinois and other 

 States, Miller and Gurley, 8. 



Notes on the Middleton formation of 

 Tennessee. Mississippi and Ala- 

 bama, Safford, 20. 



Notes on fossils from Tennessee, 

 Winchell (A.), 3. 



(Note on) tooth of Petalodus ohioen- 

 sis, Safford, 46. 



On the faunal relations of some of the 

 geologic . groups of the eastern 

 United States, Rogers (W. B.). 



On the giganic remains which char- 

 acterized the Transition series of 

 the valley of the Mississippi, 

 Troost, 3. 



Paleontology Continued. 



On the localities in Tennessee in 



which bones of giganic mastodon 



and Megalonyx Jeffersonii ar3 



found, Troost, 2. 



On the Pentremites reinwardtii, a 

 'new fossil, with remarks on the 



genus Pentremites, etc., Troost, 1. 

 On some fossils of recent formations, 



Lesquerenx, 2. 

 On species of fossil plants from the 



Tertiary of Mississippi, Lesquerenx, 



1. 

 On Silurian and Devonic Cystida and 



Camarocrinus, Schuchert, 2. 

 On the species of calceola found in 



Tennessee, Safford, 39. 

 Paleontology (of New York), Hall 



(J.), 5. 



Palaeospongiologie, Rauff. 

 Remains of the mastodons recently 



found in Tennessee, McCallie, 3. 

 Remarks on some fossil bones re- 

 cently brought to New Orleans 



from Tennessee and from Texas, 



Carpenter. 

 Remarks on the genus Tetradium 



with notice of the species found in 



Middle Tennessee, Safford, 38. 



Perry County. 



Geology of Tennessee, Safford, 22. 



Introduction to the Resources of Ten- 

 nessee, Killebrew and Safford, 2. 



Oil and gas developments in Ten- 

 nessee, Munn. 



Tennesse phosphates, Hayes 12, and 

 17. 



Tennessee white phosphates, Hayes, 

 2. 



Terrestrial magnetism, Faris, 3. 



Petroleum. 



Oil and gas developments In Ten- 

 nessee, Munn. 



Standingstone folio, Campbell, 1. 

 Wartburg folio, Keth, 4. . 



Phosphate. 



A brief, reconnoissance of the Ten- 

 nessee phosphate fields, Hayes, 20. 



A rrew and important source of phos- 

 phate rock in Tennessee, Safford, 

 17. 

 Columbia folio, Hayes and Ulrich. 



Commercial development of the Ten- 

 nessee phosphate, Memminger. 



Geological relations of the Tennessee 

 brown phosphate, Hayes, 21. 



Handbook of Tennessee, Paine. 



Horizon of phosphate rocks in Ten- 

 ness.ee, Safford, J8, 



