INDEX TO VOLUME 22 



741 



^ Page 



Dolomites, Are the fossils of, indicative 

 of shallow, highly saline, and warm 



seas? Stuart Weller 93,227 



Drainage networks 133 



Drift, The lowan 65, 729 



Drumlin formation, Radiation in gla- 

 cial flow as factor in 66, 733 



Drygalski, E. vox ; Greenland expedi- 

 tion. Reference to 133, 135 



Dusts from desert tracts, Disposition 



of 697 



Earthquake, The great Japan, 1891. . . 173 



— waves. The propagation of, bv Harry 



Fielding Reid (read by title) 54 



Edentates, Aftonian mammalian fauna 215 



Editor^s report 60 



Election of officers. Fellows, etc 2 



Emerson, B. K. ; Cirques and rock-cut 



terraces of Mount Toby 681 



Eocene and Oligocene of the Wind 

 River and Big Horn basins ; Wil- 

 liam J. Sinclair and Walter Gran- 

 ger. (Abstract.) 63, 722 



— igneous rocks 104 



Eolation, Mid-COntinental ; Charles R. 



Keyes 54, 687-714 



Eolic continental deposits. Origin of . . . 695 



— deposits. Authorities cited on... 697-699 

 , Characteristics of 699 



Fairchild, H. L., and G. H. Chad- 

 wick ; Iroquois and inferior waters 

 in northern New York (extempore). 64 



Farrington, Oliver C. ; Quantitative 

 classification of meteorites. (Ab- 

 stract.) 67, 736 



Fault, Inherited conception of a 166 



— maps, Difficulties in the way of se- 



curing 165 



— , Neo Valley (Japan) earthquake. . . . 178 



— system. Example of 168 



• — , The Baishiko, Formosa 173 



Faults and joints comprised in one sys- 

 tem 166 



— , Deductions concerning the nature of 165 

 — , Evidence furnished from earth- 

 quake 173 



— , Sudden changes of throw on 171 



— , The nomenclature of bv Harry 



Fielding Reid (read by title) 54 



Faunas. On the derivation of Paleo- 

 zoic 96 



— , Ordovician and Silurian polar 92 



Fellows deceased during year 1910.... 3 

 — , Election of 3 



— of the Society deceased, Names of . . . 82 



for 1911 72 



Fern, A new generic type of fossil 91 



Flora of Alaska, Results of a prelimi- 

 nary investigation of the Kenai ; 

 Arthur Ilollick 91 



Floral evidence in marine strata. The 

 value of. as indicative of nearness 

 of shores ; David White 98, 221 



Fluviatile hypothesis of origin of 



Great Plains deposits, Weakness of 711 



Fossil fern, A new generic type of . . . . 91 



— medusiT from Cambrian rocks of 



British Columbia; Charles I). Wal- 



cott 95 



Fossil turtles accredited to the Judith 



River formation, Remarks on 95 



Fracture fields. Disorderly 155 



of North America, Controlled.... 148 



, The correlation of 148 



which exhibit control, European.. 158 



— pattern of the earth's shell, The pri- 



mary 163 



— system model, A 171 



. The African 162 



Page 



bRACTURE systems and planetary dislo- 

 cations. Reference to transactions 

 of the Wisconsin Academy of Sci- 

 ence on 151 



Frankfort and Utica (The) shales of 

 the Mohawk Valley (abstract) ; 

 Rudolf Ruedemann 63, 720 



Freight classification. Resolution con- 

 cerning 91 



Freight rates. Resolution adopted con- 

 cerning 53 



Frew, W. N., Address of welcome given 



by 2 



Futterer. Karl, Predominance of 



faults in southern Alps shown by.. 162 



Gardiner. J. Stanlev ; Fauna and 

 geography of the Maldive and Lac- 

 cadive archipelagoes, Reference to. 239 



Geologic atlas of the United States, 

 Geographic descriptions in the 

 folios of the; W. M. Davis. (Ab- 



^ stract.) 66, 736 



Geological Congress (International), 



Report of delegates to (oral) 62 



— Nomenclature Committee, Report of. 53 

 Geyser reservoirs, Temperature of 



underground 116 



GiGANTOPTERis Schenk, Its character 

 and occurrence in America ; David 



White. 91 



Gilbert. G. K. : Monograph I. U. S. 

 Geological Survey, 1890, Reference 



to 165 



— ; Post-glacial .joints. Reference to... 153 

 Glacial and Physiographic Section. 



Meeting of 64 



— (The) epoch, Notes on a new method 



of calculating the date of the ; 



Rufus M. Bagg, Jr 66, 735 



— ^ lake (New York), Warrensburgh. . . . 185 



— lobe. The Mohawk 64, 183, 725 



Glaciers (Two) in Alaska (abstract) ; 



Lawrence Martin 66. 731 



Goldthwait. .Ta.mes Walter; The 

 twenty-foot terrace and sea-cliff of 

 the lower Saint Lawrence. (Ab- 

 stract.) 64, 723 



Gooch, F. a., and J. E. Goodrich ; 

 Analyses of waters of Yellowstone 

 National Park. Reference to 114 



Grabau. a., quoted on the Devonian 



reefs of Wisconsin and New York.. 247 



Granger, Walter, and William J.Sin- 

 clair ; Eocene and Oligocene of 

 Wind River and Big Horn basins. 

 (Abstract.) 63, 722 



— ; The Lambdotherium zone in 



the Big Horn basin. Wyoming 95 



Graptolites, The stratigraphic signifi- 

 cance of ; Rudolf Ruedemann . . 93, 231 



Great Plains. Dominant characteris- 

 tics of the 689 



fashioned mainly by eolative 



processes. Recapitulation showing. 713 



■ features, Eolic significance of 



certain 703-710 



.formations. Authorities support- 

 ing the lake hypotheses of 692 



various hypotheses of . . . 



692-695 



Grit, Facial relationships of the Sha- 



wangunk 55 



GuNTiiER. A., quoted on the dislocation 



of Iliddensoe, Friedliinder 159,165 



Hague, Arnold, Annual address of the 



President 103 



— ; Early Tertiary volcanoes of the Ab- 



saroka Range, Reference to 106 



