ENVIBONMENT OF THE TITANOTHEKES 



137 



Matthew, 

 1897. 2 



1899. 2. 



1901. 1 



1903. 1 



1906. 1 



1908. 1 



1909. 1. 



1909. 2. 

 1914. 1 



1918. 1 



William Dillbe. 



. A revision of the Puerco fauna: Am. Mus. Nat. 



Hist. Bull., vol. 9, pp. 259-323, Nov. 16, 1897. 

 Points out the distinct separation of species of upper and 



lower beds and adopts Wortman's proposed name, Torrejon 



for the upper beds. 



, A provisional classification of tlie fresh-water 

 Tertiary of the West: Am. Mus. Nat. Hist. 

 Bull., vol. 12, pp. 19-75, Mar. 31, 1899. 

 Is the White River Tertiary an eolian formation? 

 Am. Naturalist, vol. 33, pp. 403-408, May, 1899. 

 Summary of the paleontologic evidence against the "lake- 

 basin" hypothesis. 



Fossil mammals of the Tertiary of northeastern 

 Colorado: Am. Mus. Nat. Hist. Mem., vol. 1, 

 pt. 7, pp. 353-447, 1901. 



Stratigraphy of White River deposits ("Horsetail Creek," 

 "Cedar Creek," and "Martin Canyon beds") and of "Loup 

 Fork" formation ("Pawnee Creek beds"). Evidence as to 

 mode of deposition (chiefly eolian); analysis of faunas: correla- 

 tion of horizons: systematic descriptions. 



List of the Pleistocene fauna from Hay Springs, 

 Nebr.: Am. Mus. Nat. Hist. Bull., vol. 16, pp. 

 317-322, Sept. 25, 1902. 



Lists for comparison the faunas of Hay Springs (Nebr.), 

 Silver Lake (Oreg.), and Washtucna Lake (Wash,). 



The fauna of the Titanotherium beds at Pipestone 

 Springs, Mont.: Am. Mus. Nat. Hist. Bull., 

 vol. 19, pp. 197-226, 19 figs.. May 9, 1903. 



(and Gidley, J. W.). New or little-known mam- 

 mals from the Miocene of South Dakota: Am. 

 Mus. Nat. Hist. Bull., vol. 20, pp. 241-268, 15 

 figs., July 20, 1904. 



Upper Miocene "Loup Fork beds," geology and faunal list. 

 Lower Miocene "Rosebud beds" (new name). New Carni- 

 vora and Rodentia. 



Hypothetical outlines of the continents in Tertiary 

 times: Am. Mus. Nat. Hist. Bull., vol. 22, pp. 

 353-384, 7 figs., Oct. 25, 1906. 



A lower Miocene fauna from South Dakota: Am. 

 Mus. Nat. Hist. Bull., vol. 23, pp. 169-219, 

 26 figs., 1907. 



"Lower Rosebud" and "Upper Rosebud" deposits and 

 faunas: comparison with American Oligocene and Miocene 

 faunas. New Carnivora, Rodentia, Artiodactyla. 



Mammalian migrations between Europe and 



North America: Am. Jour. Sci., 4th ser., vol. 



25, pp. 68-70, January, 1908. 

 The Carnivora and Insectivora of the Bridger 



Basin, middle Eocene: Am. Mus. Nat. Hist. 



Mem., vol. 9, pt. 6, pp. 289-559, pis. 44-52, 



118 figs., 1909. 

 History of exploration. Stratigraphy and faunal divisions. 



Condition of deposition. 



See Osborn, Henry Fairfield, 1909. 321. 



Evidence of the Paleocene vertebrate fauna on the 



Cretaceous - Tertiary problem: Geol. Soc. 



America Bull., vol. 25, pp. 381-402, Sept. 15, 



1914. 

 See Granger, Walter, 1918. 1. 



Meek, Fielding Bradford. 



1862. 1 (and Hayden, F. V.). Descriptions of new Lower 

 Silurian (Primordial), Jurassic, Cretaceous, and 

 Tertiary fossils, collected in Nebraska by the 

 exploring expedition under command of Wm. F. 

 Raynolds, with some remarks on the rocks from 

 which they were obtained: Acad. Nat. .Sci. 

 Philadelphia Proc, vol. 13, pp. 415-447, 1862. 

 Wind River deposits considered intermediate in age between 

 Fort Union and White River. 



101959— 2S— VOL 1 11 



Mercer, Henry Chapman. 



1899. 1. The bone cave at Port Kennedy, Pa., and its 

 partial excavation in 1894, 1895, 1896: Acad. 

 Nat. Sci. Philadelphia Jour., 2d ser., vol. 11, 

 pt. 2, pp. 269-286, Feb. 4, 1899. 



Referred to the Pleistocene, but without comparison with 

 other cave formations and faunas. 



Merriam, John Campbell. 



1901.1. A contribution to the geology of the John Day 

 Basin [Oreg.]: California Univ. Dept. Geology 

 Bull., vol. 2, pp. 269-314, pis. 6-8, fig. 1, 1901. 



Geology, faunas, and floras of the Cretaceous (Chieo and 

 Kno.\ville), Eocene (Clarno), Oligocene (John Day), Columbia 

 River lava, Miocene (Mascall), Pliocene (Rattlesnake), 

 Quaternary (p. 2C9), 



NicKLBs, John M. 



1924.1. Geologic literature on North America, 1785-1918: 

 U. S. Geol. Survey Bull. 746 (Bibliography), 

 1167 pp.; Bull. 747 (Index), 658 pp., 1924. 



Osborn, Henry Fairfield. 



1878.3 (and Scott, W. B.). Palaeontologieal report of 

 the Princeton Scientific Expedition of 1877: 

 Princeton Coll. E. M. Mus. Geol. Archaeol. 

 Contr., No. 1, 107 pp., Sept. 1, 1878. 



A general account of the Bridger badlands, with notes on 

 analysis of the rocks. 



1881.8 (and McMaster, J. B.). A memoir upon Loxolo- 

 phodon and Uintaiherium, two genera of the 

 I suborder Dinocerata, accompanied by a strati- 



graphical report of the Bridger beds in the 

 Washakie Basin by J. B. McMaster: Princeton 

 Coll. E. M. Mus. Geol. Archaeol. Contr., vol. 

 1, No. 1, pp. 5-54, 1881. 



Topography and geology described. Section given and im- 

 portant fossil localities indicated. Osborn notes for first time 

 difference in fauna between beds of the two basins and con- 

 siders "Washakie" as somewhat later than Bridger. First 

 stratigraphic section with geologic location of species. Error 

 in stratigraphy. 



1887.30. See Scott, William Berryman, 1887.1. 



1887.37 (and Scott, W. B.). Preliminary report on the 

 vertebrate fossils of the Uinta formation col- 

 lected by the Princeton expedition of 1886: 

 Am. Philos. Soc. Proc, vol. 24, No. 126, pp. 

 255-264, 1887. 



1890.51. See Scott, William Berryman, 1890.1. 



1892.67 (and Wortman, J. L.). Fossil mammals of the 

 Wasatch and Wind River beds, collections of 

 1891: Am. Mus. Nat. Hist. Bull., vol. 4, pp. 

 81-147, Oct. 20, 1892. 



Geology of the Big Horn Basin (Wortman), p. 135, Analysis 

 and description of the fauna (Osborn) . Considers Wind River 

 beds distinct from and successive to the Wasatch of Big Horn 

 Basin. 



1893-82. Rise of the Mammalia [vice-presidential address 

 before American Association for the Advance- 

 ment of Science]: Am. Jour. Sci., 3d ser., vol. 

 46, pp. 379-392, 448-466, November, Decem- 

 ber, 1893; Am. Assoc. Adv. Sci. Proc, vol. 

 42, pp 189-227, 1894. 



1894.89. A division of the eutherian mammals into the 

 Mesoplacentaha and Cenoplacentalia [terms 

 subsequently altered to Meseutheria and Ce- 

 neutheria]: New York Acad. Sci. Trans., vol. 

 13, pp. 234-237, June 4, 1894. 



