INDEX TO VOLUME 25 



787 



Page 

 EocEXE-Cretaceous contact in North 



America 342 



correlation in New Mexico, Wyo- 

 ming, Montana, Alberta 355 



— faunas. Progress in revision of 144 



— (middle and upper) fauna compared 



with other faunas 387 



— ■ Lemuroid, Skeleton of 141 



— of California. Martinez 154 



the Gulf region, Correlation of 



tlie marine 334 



Washington, Coal-bearing 332 



— ■ — western Europe 341 



— midway formations 332 



— shells "from Alabama, Reference to . . 161 



— time in North America, Opening of. 321 

 EoTiTAXOPS, New method of restoring. 



140. 406 

 Erosive potential of desert waters ; 



Charles Keyes 88 



Etage 5 formation of Norway 286 



Ettinger, a. E.. Photographs of glacial 



topography by [plate 9].. 215 



European Cretaceous and Eocene 341 



— storminess during sun-spot changes. 



Chart of 518 



maximum and minimum. 



Chart of 520 



— time scale 335 



Europe, Chart of storm tracks in 500 



storminess during sun - spot 



changes 516 



— , Effect of sun-spots on climate in. . . 549 



— , Record of storminess in . . 499 



Events leading up to the organization 

 of the Geological Society of Amer- 

 ica ; J. .T. Stevenson 15 



Ji^viDENCE of a glacial dam in the Alle- 

 gheny River between Warren, Penn- 

 sylvania, and Tionesta ; G. F. 



Wright 84. 215 



climatic oscillations in the Permo- 



Carboniferous beds of Texas ; E. C. 



Case 41 



the Paleocene vertebrate fauna on 



the Cretaceous-Tertiarv problem ; 



W. D. Matthew .381 



Eymar, , cited on demarcation be- 

 tween Cretaceous and Eocene 321 



Fairchild, H. L., Discussion of glacial 



deposits in Ontario by 72 



— ; Pleistocene marine submergence of 

 the Connecticut and Hudson val- 

 leys 63, 219 



— ; Review of the early history of the 



Society 17 



Faroe Islands, Pillow lavas of 610 



Farrington. O. C, Discussion of change 

 in quartz through rise of tempera- 

 ture by 44 



— oolites of Chimney Hill forma- 

 tion by 76 



— - — - — Park City minerals by 48 



Fassig, , cited on tropical hurri- 

 canes 494 



Faunal migrations and diastrophism . . 



397-399 



— relations of the San Lorenzo Oligo- 



cene to the Eocene in California.. 153 



— zones of the Martinez Eocene of 



California ; R. E. Dickerson 154 



Fauna of lower Fernando series ; W. A. 



English 151 



the Cumberland Pleistocene cave 



deposit ; J. W. Gidley 142 



-Oligocene (?) of Oregon; F. M. 



Anderson 154 



— San Pablo series 152 



Page 

 Fauna of the Hcntella hreweriana Zone 



of the Upper Monterey series 151 



Featherstonhaugh, G. W., Geological 



researches of 163 



Fellows, Election of 6 



Fenneman, N. M., Discussion of intra- 



formational corrugation 37 



— , Preglacial Miami and Kentucky 



rivers 85 



Fenner, C. N., cited on pillow lava 624, 628 

 — ; Mode of formation of certain 



gneisses in the highlands of New 



Jersey 44 



— , N. L. Bowen introduced by 91 



Fernando series. Fauna of Lower 151 



Final results in the phylogeny of the 



titanotheres ; H. F. Osborn 139 



Flattening of limestone gravel houl- 



ders by solution ; .1. A. Udden .... 66 

 Flett, .1. S., cited on origin of pillow 



lavas and structure 636, 644 



— — ^ pillow lava 604, 606-607 



Florida coral-reef tract compared with 



otlier coral-reef areas 41 



— , Geological work in. . 174 



FoERSTE, A. F., Cambrian houlders 



found by 460 



— cited on fauna of Brassfield forma- 



tion of 291 



fossiliferous localities of Dia- 

 mond Hill-Cumberland district. 444-446 

 — . Discussion of phylogeny of crinoids 



by 135 



- — , Work in the Diamond Hill-Cumber- 

 land district by. 438 



Fontaine, W. M., Bibliography of 10 



— . Memorial of 6 



— , Photograph of 6 



Formation names. Bibliography of.... 50 

 FoRSHEY, C. G, Geological work in L(>u- 



isiana of . 172 



I^ORT Union fauna. Characters of the . . 



389-390 



flora 334 



formation, Correlation of the .... 334 



Fossil deposits of Macclesfield, Eng- 

 land 211 



Moel Tryfaen, Wales 210-211 



— fucoids 272 



— graptolites from Alaska 194 



— localities of Diamond Hill-Cumber- 



land district 444 



— sponges 272 



Fossils from Belly River beds 370 



Edmonton-Pierre contact 368 



Red Deer River district, Canada . 362 



the Lance formation 352 



— Paskapoo beds in Alberta 389 



Upper Fort Union beds . . . 389-390 



— of Cataract fauna 281-285 



Cernaysian fauna 395 



Don River beds 210 



Edmonton formation 365-867. 



374-376 



Galena formation 270 



Hell Creek formation 357-359 



Medina fauna 288-290 



Ojo-Alamo beds 379-380 



Paleocene formations of Europe . . 322 



— — Paskapoo formation 371-373 



— — titanotheres 403-405 



— on Long Island, Reference to 242 



— , Paleocene vertebrate 383-385 



Foster. R. C, cited on riebeckite gran- 

 ite 470 



lM)WLE, F. E., cited on solar radiation. 83 

 — volcanic relation to climatic 



changes 483-484 



Fox, II., cited on pillow lava 603. 605 



Fox Hills formation. Relationship of 



the Pierre to the 35G 



