522 



INDEX. 



Dinotheriutn 27 



D. bavaricum 26, 27, 32 



D. gii:;anteuin 32 



D. nimiitimi, Cuv 20 



Diorites 492 



Disintegration or wear on feather.. 78-82 



Dissaciis (Torrejon) lO 



Dodge, Prof. R. E.; ref 449, 502 



Dodge, R. E., Physiography of 



THE Region of the Colorado 



Canon 498, 501-2 



Dodge, R. E.; Recording Sec- 

 retary 441, 454 



DoUcJiopithecus '^^t^ 



Dollo, Louis, ref 53? 60 



Dolomite 419, 421, 437. 5^7 



Gray 420 



D'Orbigny; ref 8 



Doremus, Charles A.; ref,, 



441, 454, 464 

 Doremus, C. A.; Delegate Int'l 



Chem. Cong 442 



Dormice 57 



Douglass, James; Fellow 442,454 



Douville ; ref 26, 28 



Drift Deposits : Elizabeth Ids 401 



Dryopithecus 28 



Dudley, Henry; ref 441, 454 



Dui^oJigs 53 



Dumble, Prof.; ref 492 



Dumeril ; ref 8 



Dia-fort 38 



Duvernoy; ref 20 



Du Vivier, Charles L., Res. Mem. 443 

 Dwight, Jonathan, Jr.; Fellow, 



442, 454 

 Dwight, Jonathan, Jr., The Se- 

 quences OF Plumages and 

 Moults of the Passerine 



Birds of New York 73-360 



Dyar, Harrison G., Curator... 441, 455 



Easton, Penna., Preliminary 

 Notes on the Occurrence of 

 Serpentine and Talc at, F. 

 B. Peck 419-430, 435-436 



Eat Ilia 375 



E. medialis 372 



E sin;^iilaris 375 



Echinoderms, I^ermuda, F'urth- 



ER Notes ON, H. L. Clark. ..504, 505 

 Editor N. Y. Ac. Sc, Annual Re- 

 port 462-4 



Edentata II, 54 



Edentates, Earliest 23 



Effects of Special Training on 

 General Ability, E L. 

 Thorndike and R. S. Wood- 

 worth 509, 510 



Egerkingen and Lissien, Fissure 

 Formations, Younger than the 

 Wasatch 13-4 



Egerkingen Beds more recent than 



Puerco, Torrejon or Wasatch 11-12 



Egerkingen rich in Eocene primates, 1 1 



Egg of the Myxine Glutinosa, 

 On the, Bashford Dean 433, 435 



Elasmotherhan 32, 36 



Electricity, Effect on muscle 434 



Elephas Antiquus, 



36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 43 



E. internrediiis 39 



E. melitensis 37 



E. nieridionalis 33, 36, 38, 39 



E. priimgenuts ...T,6, 38, 41, 42, 43 

 E. trcgontherii 36, 39, 40 



Elgg 29 



Elimination of Lepidoptera, 



H, E. Crampton 513, 514 



Elizabeth Id., Origin of name 399 



Elizabeth Islands, A Recon- 

 noissance of the, a. Rol- 

 lick 357, 418 



Elizabeth Ids, Description 390, 400 



General Information 388-9 



Elizabeth Ids, Location and Names, 



387-8 



Part of N. E. Moraine 394 



Elkins, Dr.; ref 444 



Elni-epesskenhdni, Passamaquoddy 384 



Elothere 27, 58 



Elotheritim 22, 27 



Embryo of Fishes, Origin of 496 



Embryology of Lepas, M. A. 



Bigelow 477-9 



Engelhalde 26 



tlutelodon 22 



Eocene, French, Geographical 



Characteristics of. 17 



Eocene, Comparison of American 



and European 9-2 1 



Eocene, Lower, Wasatch and 

 Suessonien (Sparnacien Ypres- 



ien ) truly parallel 12-13 



Eocene, Middle, Bartonien, Equi- 

 valent to Lower Bridger 16 



Eocene, Middle, Lutetien, Paral- 

 lel with Wind River Fauna 14-16 



Eocene, Middle, Composite Im- 

 perfectly Stratified Fissure De- 

 posits of, to Middle Eocene Age. .19-21 

 Eocene, Upper, separates Nearctic 



from Palxarctic fauna 18 



Eog?ea one of zoological divisions 



of world 47 



Epidote 428, 516 



Eppelsheim beds 30 



Eqiddce of Bridger 1 6 



