DONS. — OCTOBRE, NOVEMBRE ET DÉCEMBRE 1905 85 
— Cambridge. Ann. rep. Mus. Comp. Zoôl. at Harvard 
Coll., 1904-1905. 
— B.ofthe Mus. of Comp. Zoôl. at Harvard Coll., XLVL, 10: 
XLVIIL, 5 ; XLIX, 1, 2, 1905. 
XLIX, 1 : W. M. Davis. Glaciation of the Sawatch Range, Colorado, 1-12. 
— 2: In. The Wasatch, Canyon, and House Ranges, Utah, 15-56. 
— Chicago. The Journal of Geol., XHI, 6-7, 1905. 
6 : Rollin D. SarisBury. The mineral Matter of the Sea, with some Specu- 
lations as to the Changes which have been involved in its Production, 
469-484. — Reginald A. Day. The Classification of igneous intrusive Bodies, 
485-508. — J. K. PRATHER. Glauconite, 509-513. — George Davis LOUDERBAGK. 
The Mesozoic of Southwestern Oregon, 514-555. — Junius HENDERSON. 
Arapahoe Glacier in 1905, 556. — 7 : E. B. BRANsoN. Structure and Rela- 
tionships of American Labyrinthodontidæ, 568-610. — John J. STEVENSON. 
Recent Geology of Spitzbergen, 611-616. — Stuart WeLLer. The Northern and 
Southern Kinderhook Faunas, 617-634. — W. D, Smrrn. The Development of 
Scaphites, 635-654. 
— Columbus. Z. of Geol. Surv. of Ohio, (4), 7, 1905. 
Charles S. Prosser. Revised Nomenclature of the Ohio Geological Forma- 
tions, 1-36. 
— Denver. P. ofthe Colorado Se. S., VIIT, pp. 55-70. 
Wm. P. HeaDDen. Mineralogical notes, N° 11, 55-70. 
— Jefferson City. Rep. of the State Geologist. Missouri 
Bureau of Geol. and Mines. Prelim. rep. 1900, 1903, 1904. 
1900 : Jno. A. GALLAHER. Preliminary rep. on the structural and economic 
Geology of Missouri, 1-259. — 1904 : À Geol. map of Missouri. 
— B. Missouri Bureau of Geol. and Mines, (2), 1, IE, 1903-1904. 
I: Sydney H. Bazz and A. F. Srurn. The Geology of Miller County, 1-197. 
— Il : E. R. Bucxrey and H. A. Bueurer. The Quarrying Industry of 
Missouri, 1-370. 
— Lancaster. Economic Geol., 1, 1-2, 1905. 
1 : Frederick Leslie RANsoME. The Present Standing of Applied Geology, 
1-10. — James Furman Kemr. Secondary Enrichment in Ore-Deposits of 
Copper, 11-25. — Marius R. CAMPBELL. Hypothesis to Account for the Trans- 
formation of Vegetable Matter into the Different Varieties of Coal, 26-33. — 
Waldemar LINDGREEN. Ore-Deposition and Deep Mining, 34-46. — Charles 
Kenneth Lertx. Genesis of the Lake superior Iron Ores, 47-66. — Eugene C. 
SULLIVAN. The Chemistry of Ore-Deposition-Precipitation of Coppér by 
Natural Silicates, 67-73. — 2 : Thomas Thornton Reap. The Phase-Rule and 
Conceptions of Igneous Magmas, with their Bearing on Ore-deposition, 
101-118. — C. E. SiE8ENTHAL. Structural Features of the Joplin District, 
119-128. — Chester Wells PüurINGToN. Ore Horizons in the Veins of the San 
Juan Mountains, Colorado, 129-133. — Orville A. Dergy. The Geology of the 
Diamond and Carbonado Washings of Bahia, Brazil, 134-142. — Charles 
Godfrey Gunraer. The Gold Deposits of Plomo, San Luis Park, Colorado, 
143-1864. — William Battle Puicrps. The quicksilver Deposits of Brewster 
County, Texas, 155-162. — Waldemar LiNpGReEN. Occurrence of Albite in 
the Bendigo Veins, 163-166. 
