BIBLIOGRArHY OF C. H. HITCHCOCK 75 



Cjitalou'iio of iniiHM-Jil UK-nlities in New Hampshire, by G. W. lljuves. 

 If) pages ; information furnished by C. H. Hitchcock. 



Existence of glacial action upon the snnnnit of Mount Washington, 

 New Hampshire. Proceedings of the American Association for the 

 Advancement of Science, Detroit meeting; 5 pages. 



Cambrian and Cambro-Silurian rocks in the Champlain valley. Pro- 

 ceedings of the Boston Society of Natural History, volume XVIII, 



3 pages. 



1S76. Lenticular hills of glacial drift. Idem, volume XIX, 5 pages. 



Atlantic system of mountains. Appalachia, volume I ; abstract, 3 



pages. 

 Geology of the White Mountains. Idem, 7 pages. 

 The century of geology in the United States. In The Independent,. 



New York, September 21 and 28; 2 folio pages. 

 The relations of the geology of New Hampshire to that of the adjacent 



territory. Chapter I of volume II, Geology of New Hampshire. 

 Sketch of United States geology, accompanying geological map in 



O. W. Grey's Atlas of the United States ; Philadelphia, 2 folio pages. 



1877. (ilacial markings among the White Mountains. Appalachia, volume I, 



4 pages. 



Physical history of New Hampshire. In report of the State P>oard of 



Agriculture, 15 pages. 

 On the White Mountains. Bulletin of the Essex Institute, volume IX, 



3 pages. 

 Geology of New Hampshire. Part II, forming volume II, by several 



authors. 693 pages, 40 plates. 

 Rer)ort of Gardner Mountain Mining Company. 2 pages. 

 Helderberg rocks in New Hampshire. American Journal of Science,. 



series 3, volume XIII ; one page. 

 Topography and geology of New Hampshire. In State Atlas, Com- 



stock and Kline, New York; 12 folio pages. 

 The earlier forms of life. Popular Science Monthly, June ; 16 pages. 



1878. The geology of New Hampshire, Part III. 386 pages, 7 plates, and 64 



figures in the text; with Warren Upham, joint author. 

 The geology of New Hampshire, I'arts IV and V. 365 pages, 13 plates; 



with George W. Hawes, joint author. 

 Atlas of the geology of New Hampshire. Large folio, 17 sheets. 

 The geology of the Ammonoosuc gold field. Extracted from the Geol- 



(»gy of New Hampshire ; 121 pages, with 2 maps. 

 1S79. Ile<*ently discovered cupreous veins at Bluehill, Maine. Kead at the 



Saratoga meeting of the American Association for the Advancement 



of Science ; printed in the Boston Advertiser, September. 

 Resumption of the Maine Geological Survey. Printed in 'JMie Maine 



P'arnier. 

 The I»raine group. Science News, volume I ; 2 pages. 

 The glacial jicriod in eastern America. Geohtgical Magazine, June;. 



3 pages. 



