724 



BULLETIN OP THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA 



Page 

 Dinwiddie, J. G., Analyses by.... 202-203, 



230. 232 

 Diplodocus, Skeleton in Carnegie Mu- 

 seum of 153 



Dipnoans, Living 406 



Distribution and inferred migration of 



American Middle and Upper De- 



vonic corals ; Amadeus W. Grabau . 147 



Divisions and correlations of the Dun- 



kard series of Ohio ; Clinton R. 



Stauffer 86 



Dollo, — — , cited on dipnoans 40S 



— , Reference to "Sur la Phylogenie des 



Dinneustes" by 409 



Dolomite, Mendota 477 



— , Relation of calcite to 447 



Dominantly fluviatile origin, under 

 seasonal rainfall, of the Old Red 



Sandstone ; Joseph Barrell 39, 345 



Douville, A., Reference to Handbook 



by 574 



Downing, D. B., cited on modifications 



needed for Cairnes maps 676 



the Bearpaw as a marine de- 

 posit 682, 684 



Downtonian formations, Stratigraphy 



of 364 



Drainage changes in North Dakota, 



Pleistocene 295 



— features of Little Missouri tribu- 

 taries. Abnormal 301 



— - in northern Dakota, Pleistocene 80 



Drift in Iowa, Kansan 115 



Dry land in geology ; Presidential ad- 

 dress bv A. P. Coleman 175 



Dujible, E. T„ cited on Middle Mio- 

 cene mammal fauna 524 



Dunk." rt series of Ohio 86 



Dunn, E. J., cited on australites 52 



Durness limestone, Table of Ordovicic 



snecies from. 566 



Dutton, C. E., cited on monoclines. ... 90, 



91, 92 



Eastman, C. R., cited on Devonic fishes. 402 



— ostracoderms 393 



— , Reference to "Devonic fishes of the 



New York formation" of 402 



Economic geology of bedded deposits, 



Graphic presentation of 122 



Ediposite, Tirconiferous 223 



Editor's report 9 



Edmonton formation of Alberta Creta- 

 ceous 6S3 



Egleston, , Lectures in metallurgy 



l)y 515 



Election of Auditing Committee 11 



— - — Fellows 12 



— ■ — new members of Paleontological 



Society 145 



officers 11 



■ — members of Paleontological 



Society 144 



■ — of Pacific Coast Section of 



Paleontological Societv 169 



Elizabethtown group, Glacial lakes of. 664 



Ellis, , cited on quartz-feldspar.. 326 



Emerald deposits of Bluzo, Colombia ; 



Joseph B. Pogue 63 



Emerson, B. K., cited on glacial clays 



of Connecticut Ill 



Emerson, F. V. ; Occurrence of intra- 

 formational conglomerate and brec- 

 cia 93 



Engelmann, , cited on Lower Ches- 

 ter sandstone 157 



Environmental conditions surrounding 



the rise of amphibians 391 



Eocene of the Lower Cowlitz River Val- 

 ley, Washington ; Charles E. Weaver 174 



Page 



Epirotic deposition, Genetic relation to 



regolith of 57 



Erosional work of Laurentian ice-body. 648 

 Esthonia, Orthoceras limestone of.... 590 

 Btchegoin formation at Coalinga, Cal. 172 

 European Lower Ordovicic formation ; 



A. W. Graban 555 



Experiment in the graphic presenta- 

 tion of the economic geology of 

 bedded deposits ; George H. Ashley. 

 Extension of the Montana phosphate 

 deposits northward into Canada ; 

 Frank D. Adams and Wm. J. Dick. 

 Extinct animals, Reconstruction of . . . 



122 



62 

 153 



Fairchild, H. L., cited on elevation at 



close of Glacial period 191 



glacial lakes in the Adiron- 



dacks 653-654, 656-657. 664 



— Laurentian ice-body 647 



— ■ Pleistocene phenomena of New 



York 646 



— ■ post-glacial deformation . . . 668-669 



— , Harold L. Ailing introduced by.... 65 



— ■ ; Pleistocene features in the Schenec- 

 tady-Saratoga-Glens Falls section of 

 the Hudson Valley 65 



uplift of New York and adiacent 



territory 66, 235 



— , Reference to "The Pleistocene geol- 

 ogy of New York State" of 646 



— , Thanks rendered to 645 



— ; Vote of thanks proposed by 124 



Faerington, O. C, Remarks on meteor- 

 ites by 50 



Faulting in north-central Kentucky ; 



Arthur M. Miller 101 



Fauna from Deadmans Island, Mollus- 



can 173 



-New Zealand, Marine Triassic in- 

 vertebrate ." 172 



— , New Miocene mammalian 170 



— of Hawver Cave. Pleistocene mammal 169 

 ■ the rodeo Pleistocene ; John C. 



Merriam, Chester Stock, and C. L. 

 Moody 160 



Tejon group in the Cantua dis- 

 trict of the Coalinga quadrangle, 

 California ; Roy E. Dickerson 173 



in the San Diego County; 



Roy E. Dickerson 173 



Faunal studies in the Cretaceous of 

 the Santa Ana Mountains of south- 

 ern California; Earl L. Packard.. 174 



— succession of Chester group in Illi- 



nois and Kentucky 156 



— zones of Pliocene formations, Verte- 



brate 172 



Feldspar, Analyses of normative. . 200, 216 

 Fellows, Election of 12 



— of the Geological Society of America. 128 

 Fenneman, Nevin M., Walter A. Bucher 



introduced by 109 



Fenner, C. N., N. L. Bowen introduced 



by 48 



Fernie shales in Alberta Cretaceous. . . 677 



Ferrous iron content and magnetic 



properties of the natural oxides of 



iron as an index to their origin 



and history ; R. B. Sosman and 



J. C. Hostetter 00 



Fischer, P., Reference to "Sur quelques 



fossiles de l'Alaska" of 699 



Fishes of the Old Red Sandstone 399 



Fissure deposit. Hawver Cave a 169 



Fleck, H., Analyses by 640 



Fleming, John, cited on Old Red Sand- 

 stone •. . 349 



