6o DONS. SÉANCE DU 4 NOVEMBRE IQOI 



glacial beds near Toronto, p 285-3ii. — M.-L. Fuller ; Probable représentatives 

 of Pre-Wisconsiii till in southeastern Massachusetts, p. 3ii-33o. — E. Hoit- 

 Nutter : Sketch of the geology of the Salinas valley, California, p. 33o-337. — 

 C.-N. Gould : Notes on the lossils from the Kansas-Oklahonia Red-beds, 

 p. 337-341. — A.-H. Purdue : lUustrated note on a miniature overthrusl 

 fault and anticline, p. 34i-343. — W.-T. Lee : The Morrison formation of 

 southeastern Colorado, p. 343-353. — 5 : T. -G. Chamberlin : On a possible 

 function of disruptive approach in the formation of Météorites, p. 869 393. — 

 O.-C. Farrington : The constituents of Météorites, p. 393-409. — C.-S. Prosser : 

 The paleozoic formations of AUeghany County, Maryland, p. 4o9-43o. — 

 H -G. Biddle : The déposition of copper by solution in ferrons salts, p. 43o- 

 437. — J -I Gampbell : Evidence of a local subsidence in the interior, p. 

 437-439. — 6 : W.-H. Hobbs : The river systcm of Gonnecticut, p. 469-486. — 

 G.-R. Keys : Gomposite genesis of the Arkansas valley through the Ozark 

 Highlands, p. 486-491. — G. -A. Davis : A 2" contribution to natural history 

 of mari, p. ^qi-ôo'j. — H.-W Turner : Perknite (lime-magnesia rocks), p. 

 5o7-5i2. — J. Perrin Smith : The border-line between paleozoic and mesozoic 

 in western America, p. 012 022. — O.-G. Farringlon : The constituents of 

 météorites, II, p. Ô22-533. 



Cambridge. Muséum of comparative Zool. at Harvard Collège. 

 XXXVI, ^-8, 1901 ; XXXYH, 3, 1901. 



Denver. Bull. Colorado Se. Soc. VII, 23-4o, 1901. 



Minneapolis. The Am. Geologist. XXVII, 5-6; XXVIII, i, 1901. 



XXVII, 5 : J.-B. Woodworth : Original micaceous cross-banding of strata 

 by current action, p. 281-284. — E.-W. Hilgand : A historical outline of the 

 geological and agricultural Survey of the State of Mississipi, p. 284-3ii. — 

 6 : J.-O. Martin : The Ontario coast between Fairhaven and Sodus bay, 

 p. 33i-335, 2 pi. — P. Frazer : The 8'" session of the international Gongress 

 of geologists, p 335-343. — R.-R. Rowley : Two new gênera and some new 

 species of fossils from the Upper Paleozoic rocks of Missouri, p. 343-363, 

 I pi. — G.-R. Keyes : Ore formation on the hypothesis of concentration 

 through surface décomposition, p. 355-363 — S. Galvin : Goncerning the 

 occurence of gold and some other minerai products in lowa, p. 363-372. — 

 XXVIII, I : H.-L Fairchild : Beach structures in the Médina sandstone, p. 

 9-14, 6 pi. — A.-B. Wilimott : The Michipicoten Huronian area, p. 14-20, 

 I pi. — O.-H. Hershey : The âge of the Kansas drift sheet, p. 20 25. — 

 T.-L Watson : The Georgia Bauxite deposits : their chemical composition 

 and genesis, p. 25-46. — J. W Beede : The âge of the Kansas-Oklahoma 

 Red-beds, p. 46. — T -G. Hopkins : A short discussion of the origin ofthe 

 Goal Measures lire-clays. p. ^'j-ôi. — G.-R. Keyes : Nomenclature ofthe 

 Gambrian formations of the St.-François Mountains, p. 5i-53. 



New-Haçen. ïhc Amer. Journ. of Se. (4), XII, 67-70, 1901. 



67 : W.-H. VVced et L.-V. Pirsoon : Geology of the Shonkin Sag and 

 Palisade Butte Laccoliths in the Highwoods Mountains of Montana, p. 1-18. 

 — 68 : J.-L. "\Nortman : Studies on Eocene Mammalia in the Marsh collection, 

 p. i43-i55. — 69 : Id., p. 193-207. — 70 : Id., p. 281-297, 4 pi- — E. Wood : 

 Grihoid from the Hamilton of ( harlestown, Indiana, p. 297-301. i i>l. — 

 G.-R, Keyes : Time value of provincial carboniferous terranes, p. 3o5-3io. 



