cific 
21 
1. Orographic Movements of the Rocky Mountains—Emmons. 
2. Sandstone Dikes—Diller. 
3. Structure of a Portion of the Sierra Nevada—Becker. 
Antiquities from Under Tuolumne Mountains—Becker. 
5. Early Cretaceous of California and Oregon—Becker. 
6. Tertiary and Post-Tertiary Changes of the Atlantic and Pa- 
Coasts—Le Conte. 
7. Geology of Mount Diablo—Turner. 
8. Geology of Taylorville Region—Diller. 
g. Jura and Trias at Taylorville—Hyatt. 
10. Stratigraphy and Succession of the Rocks, Sierra Nevada 
—Mills. 
Ir. Cretaceous and Early Tertiary—Diller. 
12. Faunas of the Shasta and Chico Formations—Stanton. 
13. Two Neocene Rivers of California—Lindgren. 
14. Age of Auriferous Slates—Smith. 
15. Trias and Jura of Western States—Hyatt. 
16. Shasta-Chico Series—Diller and Stanton. 
17. Geological Sketch of Lower California—Merrill. 
18. Review of Geology of California Coast Range—Fairbanks. 
1g. Characteristic Features of Gold Quartz Veins—Lindgren. 
20. Fauna of Shasta Group, Ete.—White. 
1. Earth Crust Movements—Le Conte. 
22 Precambrian Fossiliferous Formations—Walcott. 
23—Ground Sloths—Merriam. 
24. Drainage Features of California 
5. Geology of Great Basin—Turner. 
26. Sketch of Pedological Geology—Hilgard. 
7. sierra Madre, Near Pasadena—Claypole. 
28. Origin and Structure of Basin Ranges—Spurr. 
29. Drainage Features of California—Lawson. 
30. Geology of the Great Basin in California and Nevada— 
Lawson. 
Lawson. 
31. Geological Section of the Middle Coast Ranges—Lawson. 
The California Academy of Sciences, established in 1854, pub- 
lishes a series of articles on the geology, fossils, mineral and other re- 
sources of California. The most important articles are the following: 
The Natural System of Volcanic Rocks, by Baron Richthofen, 
Memories, Vol. I. 
