140 



TITANOTHERES OF ANCIENT WYOMING, DAKOTA, AND NEBRASKA 



Stanton, Timothy William — Continued. 



1914.1. Boundary between Cretaceous and Tertiary in 

 North America as indicated by stratigraphy 

 and invertebrate faunas: Geol. Soc. America 

 Bull., vol. 25, pp. 349-351, Sept. 15, 1914. 



Records Lance resting conformably on Fox Hills along 

 Missouri River in tlie Dakotas. 



1916.1. Contributions to the geology and paleontology of 

 San Juan County, N. Mex. — 3, Nonmarine 

 Cretaceous invertebrates of the San Juan Basin; 

 U. S. Geol. Survey Prof. Paper 98, pp. 309-326, 

 pis. 79-83, 1916. 



Stevenson-Hamilton, Major J. 



1912.1. Animal hfe in Africa, 539 pp., iUus., London, 

 Wm. Heinemann, 1912. 



Stone, Ralph Walter. 



1910.1 (and Calvert, W. R.). Stratigraphic relations of the 

 Livingston formation of Montana: Econ. Geol- 

 ogy, vol. 5, pp. 551-557, 1 pi.; pp. 652-669; 

 pp. 741-764, 1 fig., 1910. 



Thomas, Oldpield. 



1894.1. See Sclater, Philip Lutley, 1894.1. 



Veatch, Arthur Clifford. 



1907.1. Geography and geology of a portion of south- 

 western Wyoming, with special reference to 

 coal and oil: U. S. Geol. Survey Prof. Paper 56, 

 178 pp., 26 pis., 9 figs., 1907. 



Deposits of the period between the known Cretaceous and 

 the known Eocene: Evanston formation (Eocene?) (p. 86); 

 "Wasatch group (pp. 87-96); Green River formation (p. 97); 

 Bridger formation (p. 99). Divides Wasatch group into three 

 formations, only the uppermost of which (Knight formation) 

 contains vertebrate remains. 



Weed, Walter Harvey. 



1896.1. The Fort Union formation: Am. Geologist, vol. 18, 



pp. 201-211, 1896. 



Reviews early descriptions of the Fort Union "group," 

 gives two sections of Fort Union strata in Montana, and dis- 

 cusses physical and faunal characters. 



Weeks, Fred Boughton. 



1902.2. North American geologic formation names, bibli- 



ography, synonymy, and distribution: U. S. 

 Geol. Survey Bull. 191, 448 pp., 1902. 



Weeks, Fred Boughton — Continued. 



1907.1. Stratigraphy and structure of the Uinta Range: 

 Geol. Soc. America BuU., vol. 18, pp. 427-448, 

 6 pis., 1907. 



Describes the occurrence and relations of pre-Cambrian, 

 Paleozoic, Mesozoic, and Tertiary formations and the geologic 

 structure of the region. 



Wegemann, Carroll Harvey. 



1917.1. Wasatch fossils in so-called Fort Union beds of the 

 Powder River Basin, Wyo., and their bearing 

 on the stratigraphy of the region: U. S. Geol. 

 Survey Prof. Paper 108, pp. 57-60, pis. 22-23, 

 fig. 16, 1917. 



White, Charles Abiathar. 



1876.1. See Powell, John Wesley, 1876.1. 



1878.1. Report on the geology of a portion of northwestern 



Colorado: U. S. Geol. and Geog. Survey Terr. 



Tenth Ann. Rept., pt. 1, pp. 3-60, 1 map, 1878. 



General account of Uinta formation; thickness 1,200 feet, 

 resting unconformably upon other Tertiary. Refers to ex- 

 posures of Bridger "group" in the Uinta Basin (p. 37). 



Willis, Bailey. 



1908.1 (and Hovey, E. O.). Symposium on correlation. 

 Section E, American Association for the Ad- 

 vancement of Science and Geological Society 

 of America: Science, new ser., vol. 28, No. 729, 

 pp. 878-879, 1908. 



Wortman, Jacob Lawson. 



1882.1. The geology of the Big Horn Basin. In Cope, 

 . E. D., Contributions to the history of the Verte- 

 brata * * * Qf Wyoming: Am. Philos. Soc. 

 Proc, vol. 20, pp. 139-142, 1882. 

 1892.1. See Osborn, Henry Fairfield, 1892.67. 

 1893.1. On the divisions of the White River or Lower 

 Miocene of Dakota: Am. Mus. Nat. Hist. 

 Bull., vol. 5, pp. 95-105, June 27, 1893. 



Division of White River into three zones; Titanotherium, 

 Oreodon, and Protoceras. 



1894.1. See Osborn, Henry Fairfield, 1894.90. 



1895.1. See Osborn, Henry Fairfield, 1895.105. 



1903.1. Studies of Eocene Mammalia in the Marsh collec- 

 tion, Peabody Museum, Part II, Primates: Am. 

 Jour. Sci., 4th ser., vol. 15, pp. 163-176, 399- 

 414, 419-436; vol. 16, pp. 345-368, pis. 11-12; 

 vol. 17, pp. 23-33, 133-140, 203-214, figs. 100- 

 146, 1903-4. 

 Origin of tlie primates (vol. 15, pp. 419-436). 



