135 



DONATIONS 



TO THE 



LIBEARY OE THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY 



From July Ist^ 1856, to October ZXst^ 1856. 



I. TRANSACTIONS AND JOURNALS. 



Presented by the respective Societies and Editors. 



American Journal of Science and Arts. 2nd Ser. Vol. xxii. No. 64. 

 July 1856. From Prof, Sillifnany For. Mem. G.S. 



J. Henry. — Testing building-materials, marbles, &c., 30. 

 J. D. Witney. — Occiu'rence of the ores of iron in the Azoic Sys- 

 tem, 38. 

 Explorations and Surveys for the Pacific Railroad, ^7 . 

 C. N. Shepard. — New minerals, 96. 



J. B. Trask.— Eai'thquakes in California from 1812 to 1855, 110. 

 J. Leidy. — Fossil Reptiles and Fishes from Nebraska, 118. 



B. F. Shumard and L. P. Yandell. — Eleutherocrinus from the 



Devonian limestone of Kentucky, 120. 



I. Lea. — Reptilian remains in the New Red Sandstone of Penn- 

 sylvania, 122. 



H. Wm-tz. — Analysis of the water of the Delaware River, 124. 



C. Lyell. — Successive changes of the Temple of Serapis, 126. 

 J. Safford. — Geological survey of Tennessee, 129. 



No. 65. September 1856. From Prof. Silliman, 



For. Mem. G.S. 



J. W. Mallet.— A Zeolitic Mineral (allied to Stilbite) from the 

 Isle of Skye, 129. 



R. I. Murchison. — Letter on the Museum of Practical Geology 

 of Great Britain, 232. 



J. M. Saflford. — The genus Tetradium (a Silurian coral), 236. 



E. Hitchcock, Jun. — A fossil shell from the Connecticut Sand- 

 stone, 239. 



T. Coan.— The Eruption at Hawaii, 240. 



J. D. Dana. — Third Supplement to Dana's Mineralogy, 246. 



Mitscherlich. — Selenium and Iodine, 2/1. 



W. Eberhard. — Meteoric Iron of Thuringia, 2/1. 



Uricoechea and Bocking. — Meteoric Iron of the Cape of Good 

 Hope, 272. 



