106 



BIBLIOGRAPHY OF TENNESSEE GEOLOGY. 



Stone Building Continued. 



Pikeville folio, Hayes, 15. 



Relation of the strength of marble 

 to its structure, Perry. 



Statistical reports, Shifllett, 4, 5, 6, 

 7, 8 and 9. 



Stones for building and decoration, 

 Merrill, 1. 



Stevenson folio, Hayes, 13. 



Tennessee (building stone), Cotton 

 and Gattinger. 



Tennessee marble as a building stone, 

 Ferris (Chas.). 



The Nashville division, Southern 



Railway, 4. 

 Stone Lithographic. 



Lithographic stone from Tennessee, 

 Howe. 



Stevenson folio, Hayes, 13. 

 Stoneware and Brick Clays. 



Clays of West Tennessee, Nelson. 



Stoneware and brick clays of western 

 Tennessee and northwestern Mis- 

 sisippi, Eckel, 3. 

 Stratigraphy. 



Appomattox formation on the Mis- 

 sisippi embayment, McGee, 1. 



Cambrian system in the United 

 States and Canada, Walcott, 2. 



Chart of geological nomenclature in- 

 tended to express the relation of 

 Minnesota to the great geological 

 series of the earth, Winchell, (N. 

 H.) 



Classification of the geological for- 

 mations of Tennessee, Safford, 19. 



Correlation of the Lower Silurian 

 horizons of Tennessee, Ulrich, 2. 



Correlation papers, Cretaceous, 

 White (C. A.). 



Description of two new species of 

 fossil shells of the genera sca- 

 phites and Crepidula, etc., Morton. 



Documents anciens et nouceaux sur 

 la faune premordiale et le systeme 

 taconique en Amerique, Barrande. 



General features of the alluvial plain 

 to the Mississippi River below the 

 mouth of the Ohio, Hilgard (E. 

 W.). 1. 



Midway stage, Harris, 1. 



Modes of depositon of the Lafayette 

 formation in the Mississippi valley, 

 Hilgard (E. W.), 7. 



North America Mesozoic and Ceno- 

 zoic geology and paleontology, 

 Miller (S. A.), 2. 



Notes and description of fossils from 

 the Marshall groups of the eastern 

 States, with notes on fossils from 

 other formations, Winchell (A.), 2. 



Stratigraphy Continued. 



Notes on the Middleton formation of 

 Tennessee, Mississippi and Ala- 

 bama, Safford, 20. 



Observations on the unification of 

 geological nomenclature, with spe- 

 cial reference to the Silurian for- 

 mation of North America, Miller 

 (S. A.), 1. 



On the Cretaceous and superior for- 

 mations of western Tennessee, Saf- 

 ford, 8. 



On the geological age and equiva- 

 lents of the Marshall group, Win- 

 chell (A.), 1. 



On the relations of the middle and 

 upper Silurian, Hall (J.), 7. 



Remarks on the drift of the Western 

 and Southern States, Hilgard (E. 

 W.), 6. 



Remarks on the formations com- 

 prised under the the terms "Orange 

 sand", McGee, 6. 



Remarks on the relative age of the 

 Niagara and the so-called Lower 

 Helderberg groups, Worthen. 



Remarks on the taconic system, 

 Stevens. 



Remarks on the thickness and iden- 

 tity of the Calciferous formations 

 from Canada to Tennessee, Wal- 

 cott, 3. 



Silur-fauna des westlichen Tennes- 

 see, Roemer. 



Tennessee, Safford, 13. 



The age and origin of the LaFayette 

 formation, Hilgard (E. W.), 8. 



The Columbia formation in the Mis- 

 sisippi embayment, McGee, 5. 

 The LaFayette formation, McGee, 

 4. 



The Loess of the Mississippi valley 

 and the aeolian hypothesis, Hil- 

 gard (E. W.), 5. 



The Middleton formation of Tennes- 

 see, Mississippi and Alabama, Saf- 

 ford, 33. 



The upland geological formations of 

 Obion, Dyer, Lauderdale, Tipton 

 and Shelby Counties Safford, 53. 



Use of the term Linden and Clifton 

 limestones in Tennessee geology, 

 Foerste, 3. 



Utica slate and related formations 

 of the same geological horizon, 

 Walcott, 1. 

 Cambrian. 



Cambrian system of the United 

 States and Canada, Walcott, 2. 



Notes on the Cambian rocks of Vir- 

 ginia and the southern Appalach- 

 ians, Walcott, 6.. 



