DONS. — OCTOBRE, NOVEMBRE ET DECEMBRE I904 79 



The Baraboo iron ore, 242-253. — Berry. The Gretaceous exposure near Cliff- 

 wood, 253-264. 



— New-Haven. TheAm.J. o/ -Se, XXVIII, 106-107, 1904. 



106 : Cross. New Devonian Formation in Colorado, 253-26o. — Eastman. 

 Upper Devonian Fish Remains irom Colorado, 253-26o. — Hay. Fossil 

 Turtles belonging^ to Ihe Marsh Collection in Yale University Muséum, 261- 

 276.— Whiteaves. Uintacrinus and Hemiasler in tlie Vancouver Cretaceous, 

 287-289. — loj : Foerste. Ordovician-Silurian Contact in the Ripley Island 

 Area of Southern Indiana, with notes on the âge of the Cincinnati 

 geanticline, 321-342. — Keyes. Unconformity of the Cretaceous on Older 

 Rocks in Central New Mexico, 36o-362. — Morgan and T.vllmon. Peculiar 

 occurrence of Bitumen and Evidence as to its Origni, 363-377- 



— Ne"W-York. Mining Magazine, X, i-5, 1904. 



/ ; Church. Mining, Past and Future, i-G. — Ransome. The géographie 

 Distribution of Metalliferous Ores Within the United States, 7-14. — Hen- 

 Ricu. The Guanajuato niining district, 23-3o, — 5 : IIevdhick. Tlie Kansas 

 Oil fields, 363-374- — Spencer. Genesis of the Magnclite Deposits of Sussex 

 County, New-Jersey, 376-381. — Weidman. ïhe Baraboo Iron-Bearing District, 

 419-420 



— Science, XX, 5io-52o, 1904. 



5 10 : East.man, Henderson. A Récent Paleontological Induction, 465-466. — 

 5i3 : Becker. Présent Problems of Geophysics, 545-557. — Williston. The 

 Stomach Stones of the Plesiosaurs, 565. — oi5 : Eastm.\n. The Earliest 

 Mention of Fossil Fishes, 648-649. — ôiy : Beal, Metcai.e. Stomach Stones, 

 722. — Eastman Notes on the History of Scientific Nomenclature, 727-730. — 

 5ig : Id. Style in scientific composition, S06-809. — 520 : Gill. Extinct pedi- 

 culate and Other Fishes, 845-S46. 



— T. American Ins. Min. Eng., XXXIV, 1904. 



Dickson. The Ore-Deposits of Sudbury, Ontario, 3-67. — Sauveur and 

 Boynton. Note on the Influence of the Rate of Cooling ou the Structure of 

 Steel, i5o-i57 Blak. Origin of Pebble Covered Plains in Désert Régions, 

 161-162. — Adams. Zinc- and Lead-Deposits of Northern Arkansas, 163-174. — 

 Watson. Geological Relations of the Manganèse Ore Deposits of Georgia, 

 207-253. — KiNziE. The Treadnell Group of Mines, Douglas Island, Alaska, 

 334-386. — BoEHMER.Some Practical Suggestions Concerning the Genesis of Ore- 

 Deposits, 395-400. — Prich.\rd. Observations on Mother Lodes Gold-Deposits, 

 California, 454-466. — Smith. The GaruetFormations of the Chillagoe Copper- 

 Field, North-Queensland, Australia, 467-47"- — Kansome. The Geology and 

 the Copper-Deposits of Bisbee, Arizona, 618-642. — Watson. The Yellow- 

 Ocher Deposits of the Cartersville District of Bisbee, Arizona, 643-665. — 

 Turner. Notes on contact-metaniorphic Deposits in the Sierra Nevada 

 Mountains, 666-667. — Brown. The Gold-Minings Districts of central Siberia, 

 777-8o3. — RuDRA. Mincirai Resources of Bristish India, 8o4-834- — Jennings. 

 The Copper-Deposits of the Kaibab Plateau, Arizona, 839-840 — Shockley. 

 Noies on the Coal-and Iron-Fields of Soulheastern Shansi, Chinn, 841-870. 



— Rochester. P. Rochester Ac. of Se, IV, 137-148, 1904. 



Ward. Willamette météorite, 137-148. 



— Washington. Smith. Contributions to Knowledge, XXXIII, 

 1904. 



