796 



BULLETIN or THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA 



Page 

 Petterssox. O.. cited on connection be- 

 tween hydrograpliic and meteoro- 



logic phenomena 550-552 



— . Snn-spot hypo thesis of 552 



Philips, J. A., cited on oolitic iron ore. 770 



Phillips, . Reference to geological 



work of 166 



Philogexy of the titanotheres 403 



Pleistocexe cave deposit. Fauna of the 



Cumberland 142 



Phyletic relationship of the lemuroi- 



dea : W. K. Gregory 141 



Phylogexetic development of the 

 HccactineUifl dictiiosponges as In- 

 dicated by the ontogeny of an Fp- 

 per Devonian species : J. M. Clarke 138 

 Physical-chemical system, lime-alum- 

 ina-silica, and its geological signifi- 

 cance : F. E. Wright and G. A. Ran- 

 kin 92 



Physiograi'hic features of the Hay- 

 wards Rift : D. M. Durst 123 



— relations of serpentine, with special 



reference to the serpentine stock 

 of Staten Island. New York : W. O. 



Crosby ^7 



Pierre-Edmoxtox contact 368 



— . Near-shore phase of the 326 



Pillow lavas. Chronological table of. . 



629-633 



. Distribution of 595 



, Origin of 32, 591 



ProxEFRS in Gulf Coastal Plain geol- 



ogv : E. A. Smith 157 



Pishel. M. a., cited on geology of In- 

 dian reservations 350 



I'lataxia. G.. cited on globular basalt. 600 



origin of pillow lavas 653 



Pleistocexe beds in the Mohave Des- 

 ert region 156 



— glacial period. Reference to 589 



■ — marine submergence of the Connecti- 

 cut and Hudson valleys : H. L. 

 Fairchild 63. 219 



POCY. . cited on tropical hurricanes 494 



POGUE. J. E.. Discussion of fornite by. . 90 



— physical-chemical system by. . . 92 



Polarized "skvlight and the petrographic 



microscope : F. S. T. Smith 120 



PoxDviLLE arkoses of Narragansett se- 

 ries 447 



Pope. Johx. Reference to survey work 



by 165 



PosT-CRETACEors floras 334 



Postglacial deformation of the On- 

 tario region 65 



Post-Perm TAX diabase dikes in Dia- 

 mond Hill-Cumberland disti-ict. . . . 474 

 Powell. Captaix. Reference to expedi- 

 tion to Florida 162 



Powell. .T. W.. Reference to 177 



— . Fse of name "Finta" by 417 



Powers. S.. and C. H. Warren : Geol- 

 ogy of the Diamond Hill-Cumberland 

 district in Rhode Island-Massachu- 

 setts 435 



Pratt. -T. H.. State geologist of North 



Carolina . 160 



Pre-Camprt \x- igneous rocks of Dia- 

 mond Hill-Cumberland district. 449-452 



— metamornhic rocks of Alaska 184 



— rock<! : Blackstone series of Diamond 



Hill-Cumberland district 440 



— sedimentarv rocks of Alaska 187 



— unconformity in Vermont 39 



Precipitatiox. Historic changes in . . . . 542 

 Precise leveling and the nroblem of 



coastal subsidence : D. W. Johnson. 59 

 Preglacial Miami and Kentucky riv- 

 ers ; X. M. Fenneman 85 



Page 

 Prixdle, L. M.. cited on Devonian lime- 

 stone of Alaska 193 



— , Geological work in Alaska by 180 



Prior. G. T.. cited on pillow lavas. . . . 604 

 I'ROCEEDIXGS of the Fifth Annual Meet- 

 ing of the Paleontological Society, 

 held at Princeton. New .Tersey. De- 

 cember 31. 1913. and January 1. 



1914: R. S. Bassler. Secretary 127 



-Fourteenth Annual Meeting of 



the Cordilleran Section of the Geo- 

 logical Society of America, held at 

 Berkeley, California. April 11 and 

 12. 1913 : G. D. Louderback. Secre- 

 tary 119 



Twenty-sixth Annual Meeting 



of the Geological Society of Amer- 

 ica, held at Princeton. New Jersey. 

 December 30 and 31. 1913. and 

 January 1. 1914 ; E. O. Hovey. 



Secretary 1 



PuBLiCATiox i-ules of Geological Society 101 

 PiRDLE, A. H.. Discussion of Colorado 



glaciation by 32 



— . Geological work in Arkansas of . . . . 167 



Tennessee of 168 



PUERCO fauna compared with other 



faunas 387 



— formation 338. 382 



— without equivalent in Europe 396 



I'YROTHERiuM fauna. Analysis of 140 



— mammals. Restoration of 139 



Pyroxexe-bearixg artificial melts. Crvs- 



tallization of '. . 91 



QuATERXARY deposits of Alaska 202 



— fauna compared with other faunas.. 387 

 QuAXTiTATivE classification. Effusive 



and intrusive in the 43 



Quartz. Changes caused by rise of tem- 

 pera ture in 44 



— deposits of Diamond Hill 471 



— diorite of Diamond Hill-Cum1)erland 



district 452 



(JUEEXSTOX- shales 285 



QnxcY granite. Analysis of 466 



Raixfall in New Mexico and Arizona. 



Records of 535 



the Fnited States. Records of . . . . 538 



Raisix. C. a., cited on origin of pillow 



lavas 039 



spheroidal rocks GOl 



Raxcho La Brea. Fauna of 155 



— . Mammalian remains at 156 



Raxge of land vertebrates in typical 



American formations *..... 387 



Raxsome. F. L.. cited on origin of nil- 

 low lavas 618. 639, 653 



Ratox" formation 329 



. Correlation of the 384 



. Fossil flora of the 331-333 



Read, T. T.. Discussion of Park City 



minerals by , 47 



Recext earthquakes in Panama and 



their causes : D. F. MacDonald. ... 34 



— results in the phylogenv of the ti- 



tanotheres : H, F, Osborn 403 



Recoxxaissaxce of the Algonkian rocks 

 of south and east Newfoundland : 



A, F. Buddington • 40 



Rectigradatioxs and allometrons in 

 relation to the conception of the 

 "mutations of Waagen"' of species, 

 genera, and phvla : H. F. Osborn. . 



142, 411 

 Red beds of New ^fexico 81 



— Deer River canyon. Horizontal geo- 



logic section of 363 



. Generalized section of the Bad 



Lands of 364-365 



