Contents of Volume XL 



NUMBER I. 



The Osteology of Embolophorous, Dollovianus (?) Cope, with an 



Attempted Restoration. E. C. Case .-.-.. i 



The Cincinnati Group in Western Tennessee, between the Ten- 

 nessee River and the Central Basin. Aug. F. Foerste - - 29 



The Hurricane Fault in Southwestern Utah. E. Huntington and 



J. W. Goldthwaite - - - - - 46 



Studies for Students : The Criteria Requisite for the Reference 



OF Relics to a Glacial Age. T. C. Chamberlin . . - . 64 



Reviews: Summaries of the Literature of Structural Materials, IH (Edwin C. 

 Eckel), 86 ; Origin of the Oligocene and Miocene Deposits of the Great 

 Plains, by J. B. Hatcher (Willis T. Lee), 92. — Authors' Abstracts : The 

 Geological Society of America, Cordilleran Section, 94 ; Papers read at 

 the Washington Meeting of the Geological Society of America, 103; 

 Papers read at the Washington Meeting of the American Association for 

 the Advancement of Sciences, Section E, 113. 



Recent Publications . - . - - 132 



NUMBER 11. 



The Tin Deposits of the Malay Peninsula with Special Reference 



to Those of the Kinta District. R. A. F. Penrose, Jr. - - - 135 

 The Sierran Valleys of the Klamath Region, California. Oscar 



H. Hershey - - - - - - i55 



Anticlinal Mountain Ridges in Central Washington. George Otis 



Smith -------- 166 



Some Additions to the Carboniferous Terrestrial Arthropod 



Fauna of Illinois. Axel Leonard Melander 178 



Secondary Phenomena of the West Indian Volcanic Eruptions of 



1902. George Carroll Curtis - 199 



Glaciation in the Bighorn Mountains. Rollin D. Salisbury and Eliot 



Blackwelder ------- 216 



Notes on the Marine Sediments of Eastern Oregon. Chester Wash- 



burne - - ~-^ 



Reed City Meteorite. H. L. Preston 230 



Reviews: Report of the Vermont State Geologist, 1901-1902 (E. S. B.), 234; 



Mineral Resources of the United States, by David T. Day (W. H. E.), 235. 



