BIBLIOGRAPHY OF JAMES HALL 439 



8. Remarks upon casts of mud furrows, wave lines, and other markings upon 



rocks of the New York sj'stem : Ibid , pp. 422-432. 



9. Niagara Falls. Their physical changes and the geology and topography of 



the surrounding country : Boston Journal of Natural History, vol. iv, Boston, 

 1842, pp. 106-134. 



10. Notes upon the geology of the western states : Am. Jour. Science and Arts, vol. 



xlii, New Haven, 1842, pp. 51-62. 



11. * Geographical distribution of fossils of the Palaeozoic strata of the United 



States: Proc. Am. Assoc. Geol. and, Naturalists (published in) Am. Jour. Sci. 

 and Arts, vol. 45, New Haven, 1843, pp. 157-160. 



12. * Ripple marks and casts of furrows:' Ibid., vol. 45, New Haven, 1843, pp. 148, 



149. 



13. *Sections at Portage: Ibid., vol. 45, New Haven, 1843, pp. 329, 330. 



14. Address before the Society of Natural History of the Auburn Tlieological 



Seminary, 1843 : Auburn, 1844, pp. 1-20. 



15. * Geographical distribution of fossils. Am. Jour. Sci., vol. 47, New Haven, 



1844, pp. 117, 118. 



16. Description of some microscopic shells from the decomposing mai-1 slate of 



Cincinnati: Ibid., vol. 48, New Haven, 1845, pp. 292-295. 



17. Notice of the geological position of the cranium of the Castoroides ohioensis : 



Boston Journal of Natural History, vol. v, Boston, 1846, pp. 385-391. 



18. * On the supposed impression in shale of the soft parts of an Orthoceras : Quar. 



Journal, Geological Society London, vol. v, London, 1848, pp. 107-111. 



19. On the parallelism of the Palaeozoic deposits of North America with those of 



Europe, followed by a table of the species of fossils common to the two con- 

 tinents, with indication of the positions in which they occur, and terminated 

 by a critical examination of each of these species, by Ed. de Vei'neuil (trans- 

 lated and condensed from the Bulletin of the Geological Society of France, 

 2d ser., vol. iv) : Am. Jour. Sci. and Arts, 2d ser., vol. v, New Haven, 1848, 

 pp. 176-183, 359-370; Ibid., 2d ser., vol. vii, New Haven, 1849, pp. 45-51, 

 218-231. 



20. Remarks on the observations of S. S. Haldeman "on the supposed identity of 



Atops trilineatus witb Triarthrus beckii": Am. Jour. Sci. and Arts, 2d ser., 

 vol. V, New Haven, 1848, pp. 322-327. 



21. Catalogue of specimens in the geological department of the Geological Survey 



of New York : First Ann. llept. N. Y. State Cab. Nat. Hist., Albany, 1848, 39 pp. 



22. Catalogue of specimens in the Palgeontological department of the Geological 



Survey of New York: Ibid., 15 pp. 



23. *Upon some of the results of the palseontological investigations in the state of 



New York: Am. Jour. Sci., 2d ser., vol. v. New Haven, 1848, pp. 243-249. 



24. List of minerals, geological specimens, and fossils added to the collections, 



1847, 1848: Second Ajin. Kept. N. Y. State Cab. Nat. Hist., Albany, 1849, 4 pp. 



25. On the trails and tracks in the sandstones of the Clinton group of New York ; 



their probable origin, etcetera, and a comparison of some of them with 

 Nereites and Myrianites : Proc. Am. Assoc. Adu. aSci., 2d meeting (Cambridge, 

 1849), Boston, 1850, pp. 256-260. 



26. On the Brachiopoda of the Silurian period; particularly the Leptsenidse: Ibid., 



pp. 347-350. 



