750 



BULLETIN OF THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA 



Page 

 BuwALDA, J. P. ; Miocene age of the 



oil fields at Ellto, Nevada 118 



California. Fault map of 58 



— , Faults of the coast ranges of 58 



— , Geographic nomenclature of south- 

 ern 67 



— , Pleistocene vertebrates from Cali- 

 fornia asphalt deposit 119 



— . Reconnaissance traverse from Mo- 



jave Ulojane 74 



— , Sand rivers of 95 



Calvin Lake, Iowa, Origin and history 



of 93 



Cambko-Okloviciax section near Mount 

 Robson, British Columbia ; L. D. 



Burling 721 



Canada, Cretaceous dinosaurs of Al- 

 berta 407 



— , EUsworthite from Hybla, Ontario.. 150 

 — , Pleistocene glaciation in Alberta. . . 41f 

 Canadian and Ozarliian systems 181 



— Pleistocene concretions QO*J 



Capillary relationships of oil and 



water 100 



— relations of oil and water ; C. W. 



Cook 145 



Carlili: shale and Timpas limestone. 



Merging of 495 



of Colorado 74 



Carman, J. E. ; Preliminary report con- 

 cerning some new Ostracoderms 



from Ohio 138 



Carnivorots Saurischia in Europe 



later than the Trias ; F. von Huene 133 



since the Triassic ; F. von 



Huene 449 



Carnotite of the uranite group 150 



Catapelite from Magnet Cove ; W. F. 



Foshag 149 



Cebu, Tertiary and Quaternary dias- 



trophism in 59 



Cexozoic mammals of America 408 



Chadwick, G. H. ; Glacial lake prob- 

 lems 92, 499 



— ; Chemung stratigraphy in western 



New York 68 



— ; Successful method of teaching his- 



torical geology 67 



Chaney, R. >Y. ; Paleobotanical contri- 

 butions to the stratigraphy of cen- 

 tral Oregon 129 



Chemical suggestions concerning the 

 origin of Lake Superior copper 

 ores ; R. C. Wells 100, 144 



Chemung stratigraphy in western New 



York ; G. H. Chadwick 68 



China, Geological sketch of the Tsin- 



ling-shan 119 



— , Pliocene mammals of southern 128 



Chalcocite from Bristol copper mine, 



Connecticut 146 



Cincinnati province, Basal Richmond 

 • of the 132 



Clark, B. L. ; Boreal marine fauna 

 from the Upper Oligocene or Lower 

 Miocene of Alaska 118 



— ; Myadesma, a new genus of pelecy- 

 poda from the marine Oligocene of 

 the west coast 118 



— and Ralph Arnold ; B^auna of the 



Sooke formation 118 



Clark. Bruce ; Marine Eocene horizons 



of western North America 134 



Clarke. J. M. ; Boom Beach (Isle-au- 



haut) : A sea-mill 65 



— ; Pyorrhea in the Cohoes mastodon . . 127 



— ; Restoration of the Cohoes mastodon 127 



— ; Temple Hill mastodon 127 



— ; The Burton Dictyosponge 127 



Page 



Clarke, N. T. ; Restoration of masto- 

 don by 127 



Climates, Problem of mild geological. 81 

 Coast ranges and Sierra Nevados ; Bai- 

 ley \Yillis 53 



of California, Faults of 58 



Cohoes mastodon 127 



Colorado and Wyoming oil-bearing- 

 rocks. Correlation of 145 



— Front Range, Physical history of... 87 

 — , Merging of Carlile shale and Timpas 



limestone formation in 74, 495 



— Plateau, Origin and structural fea- 



tures of 88 



Columbia Plateau, Glacial drainage on 



the 573 



of Washington, Glacial drainage 



on 92 



^, Topography and geology of 75 



Committee, Appointment of Paleonto- 



logical Society's Auditing 124 



— of Cordilleran Section on Nomina- 



tions 120 



— on Teaching Geology, Report of.... 14 

 Composition of Thomsonite ; E. T. 



Wherry 150 



Concentration and circulation of the 

 elements from the standpoint of 

 economic geology ; Presidential ad- 

 dress by W. Lindgren 144 



Concretions, Canadian Pleistocene. . . 64 



Congo, Schoepite from the 150 



Connecticut chalcocite 146 



— granite. Xenoliths in the Stony 



Creek 96 



Constitution of Geological Society, 



Amendment of 18 



Continental links, Possible 120 



Contribution to the hypotheses of 

 mountain formation ; E. C. An- 

 drews 61, 381 



— • — — vomer - parasphenoid question ; 



F. von Huene 133, 459 



Cook, C. W. ; Attempt to study the 

 actual capillary relationships of 

 oil and water 100 



— : Capillary relations of oil and water 145 

 Coi'per-bearing rocks of Wisconsin.... 145 



Copper deposits of Michigan 144 



— and Bolivia compared 145 



southern Atlantic States 



compared 145 



— ■ — — New Jersey and Michigan con- 

 trasted 145 



— ores of Lake Superior, Origin of 100, 144 

 — , Solvents and precipitants of metallic 144 

 Correlation of oil-bearing rocks in 



Colorado and Wyoming ; W. T. Lee 145 

 the Pottsville and lower Alle- 

 gheny formations in western Penn- 

 sylvania ; B. C. Renick 



Correspondence between the Gond- 

 \^ana system of Hindustan and 

 Newark svstem of the eastern 



Vniied States ; W. H. Hobbs 82 



Council of the Geological Society, Re- 

 port of 



Council^s report of Paleontological 



Society 123 



Cox. Guy H., Memorial of 15 



CRET.^CEOus age and early Eocene u[)- 

 lift of a peneplain in the southern 

 interior of British Columbia and 

 the development of the North 

 Thompson River trench ; W. L. 

 Uglow , 99, 561 



— dinosaurs of Alberta, Montana, and 



New Mexico 407 



— of Texas and northern Mexico 72 



Criteria by which to determine the di- 

 rection of faults; Bailey Willis... 144 



68 



6 



