NEW 
New Hampshire, geological obser- 
vations on, O. P. Hubbard, xxxiv, 
105; trap and granite boulders, 
and granite veins, 112; blende 
and galena near Eaton, 114; 
White Mountains, 115; effects 
of the deluge of August, 1826, 
115; decomposing granite, 116 ; 
octahedral fluor spar, 117; trap 
dikes near the Willey house, 118; 
Mount Washington, 120; Fran- 
conia Notch and pot hole, 122; 
granite veins in granite, 123!; de- 
tached masses of granite, 124. 
, geological reports on, by C. 
T. Jackson, noticed, xli, 383; 
xlviil, 393 ;—ibid, review of, xlix, 
273; anticlinal axis of primary 
rocks in the state, 28; on the 
glacier theory of drifi, 29 ; Cam- 
el’s Hump mountain ascended, 
313; useful minerals, 33; tin ore 
of Jackson, 34. 
——, mountains, height of, Adams, 
XXxiil, 322. 
; > —, Fall, vii, 12. . 
Byanidig Baha 
—, —, — , Franklin, xxxii, 
322. 
>— , Washington, 
XXXIl1, 822; xxxiv, 120; xxxv, 
378 3 xxxvil, 87; xli, 384, 
—y » ——, Lafayette, xl, 
384, 
ny , Jefferson, xxxiil, 
322 
> ——, ——, Madison, xxxiil, 
322. 
——, ——, Monroe, xxxiil, 
) 
$22. 
, latitude of Mounts Lafayette 
and Washington, xli, 884. 
, tin ore in, xliil, 168; xlix, 34. 
——, iron ore in, xviii, 130. 
Bellows falls,scenery of,vii,12. 
New Harmony, Indiana, Owen’s 
establishment at, xi, 189. 
New Haven medal, J. Al/an,xxxvii, 
285. 
— Gymnasium, xi1i,885 ; xiv,400. 
, latitude and longitude of 
Yale College, xxxiv, 309. 
176 
NEW 
New Haven, geology of the region 
around, vii, 20. 
, tornado, xxxvii, 340.f 
New Holland, bone caves in, xx, 
380. 
, Boomerang, xxxvi, 164.f 
——, minerals of, F. Alger, xxxix, 
157. ' 
New Jersey, geology, mineralogy, 
scenery, Wc. of, J. Pierce, ti, 
181 ;—-Kedidica Hook mountains, 
187; rocks and minerals of the 
vicinity of Patterson, 189, 192; 
Datholite of Patterson, 192; 
trap from Patterson to Spring- 
field, Bergen and minerals, 193- 
195; peat on the Passaic, 196 ; 
pea-ore, ibid, 196; copper, 198 ; 
pipe clay, 198; Snake-hill, 199. 
, alluvial district, with remarks 
on the marl, and its application 
to agriculture, J. Pierce, vi, 237. 
, geology, Hoboken serpentine 
rocks of, and their minerals, (Ne- 
malite, Marmolite, &c.) T. Nut- 
tall, iv, 16. 
, on the ecretaceous formation 
of, S. G. Morton, xvii, 274, 280 ; 
xviii, 248, 249! ; xxii, 905, xxiii, 
288; xxiv, 188; xlvili, 265!, 267. 
——.,, ibid, C. Lyell, xlvii, 213. 
, fossil fish, W. C. Redfield, 
xxxvl, 186; xli, 24, 164; xlui, 
172; xliv, 1384f; xlv, 314, 
L. D. Gale, 
’ dale OE EO 
xxxv, 192. 
, fossil footprints, W. C. Red- 
field, xliv, 184; xlv, 315. 
, fossil rain marks, W. C. Red- 
field, xiiii,172 ; xliv, 136 ; xlv,315. 
,» New Brunswick tornado, 
June, 1835, J. P. Espy, cited by 
R. Hare, xxxii, 158. 
, W. C. Redfield, 
69.f 
L. C.. Beck, 
a 206; xli, 
b) ? 
xxxvi, 115. 
, iron ores of Franklin, v, 243. 
5 —— at Pompton Moun- 
tain, v, 287. 
? 
in MorrisCo.,v,28. 
