INDEX TO VOLUME 29 



677 



Page 



ScHARDT, , cited on experimental 



geology 17G 



ScHRCEPrEL shale 350 



SCHUCHERT, Charles^ Acknowledgments 



to 330 



■ — - cited on Clinton basal shale 331 



— ; Age of the American Morrison and 

 East African Tendaguru forma- 

 tions 245 



— cited on Martville and Bear Creek 



faunas 342 



— ■ Mexican stratigraphy 601 



Scope and significance of paleo-ecology ; 



F. E. Clements 369 



Scott, . cited on ice-flowers 475 



Secretary's report 5 



-of the Paleontological Society. . . . 123 



Sedimentary rock composition study 



discussed by J. M. Clarke 85 



Sediments, Usefulness in studying earth 



history of 84 



Seely, Henry Martyn, Bibliography of 68 



— , Memorial of 65 



Seidel, , cited on uplifted coral 



islands 558 



Separation of salt from saline water 



and mud ; E. M. Kindle 471 



SHACKLETON3 E. H., Reference to work 



of 475 



Shaler, N. S.. cited on Marthas Vine- 

 yard submergence 188 



Mount Desert 212 



wave action 213 



Shaw, E. W. ; Ages of peneplains of the 



Appalachian province 575 



— ; Characteristics of the upper part of 

 the till of southern Illinois and 



elsewhere ' 76 



— ; Relation between occurrence and 

 quality of petroleum and broad 



areas of uplift and folding 87 



Shedd, C. B.. cited on Chicago blue clay 243 



land-level changes due to gla- 



ciation 240 



Shedd, Miss Lonie, Acknowledgments 



to 242 



Sherburne bar in Devonian stratigra- 

 phy 127 



Shirley, , cited on Amsden forma- 

 tion 309 



Shoreline in Maine and New Hamp- 

 shire, Late Pleistocene 74 



Significance of glass-making processes 



to the petrologist ; N. L. Bowen . . 102 



.: the Sherburne bar in the Upper 



Devonic stratigraphy ; A. W. Grabau 127 



Silicate melts. Hydrous 102 



Siliceous oolites in shale; W. A. Tarr. 103 



SiLicispoNGi^ of the Cretaceovis 142 



Silurian paleogeography, New points 



in 88 



SiLURic, Further studies in New York.. 92 

 fliphonalia suttcroiftifi zone of California 163 



Skeats, E. W.. cited on atolls 565 



Slosson, E. E., cited on Popo Agie 



beds '. ''>^'7 



Sluiter, C. P., cited on coral reefs. . . . 527 

 Smith, Burnett, cited on Brewerton 



shale 349 



Smith, Eugene Allen, Memorial of 



Robert Hills Loughridge by 48 



Smith, .T. P.. cited on Mesozoic fossils. 601 

 Sundance formation 257 



— ;Tropillda> of tlie Tipper Triassic of 



California 162 



Smith, R. A., cited on salt in rain- 

 water 474 



Page 

 Smith, W. D., cited on island subsi- 

 dence 518 



Smith, Warren du Pufi ; Salient fea- 

 tures of the geology of the Cas- 

 cades of Oregon, with some correla- 

 tions between the east coast of Asia 

 and the west coast of America. ... 81 



Smoker to the Society 130 



Smyth, , cited on Furnaceville iron 



ore 343 



Soda-syenites from Maine 463 



— , Relation of litchfieldite to 99 



Sodus shale 345 



Soil flow as a transporting agency in 



northern Greenland. Importance of 72 

 Some definite correlations of West Vir- 

 ginia coal beds in Mingo County, 

 West Virginia, with those of Letcher 

 County, southeastern Kentucky ; 

 I. C. White 96 



— observations on the osteology of Dip- 



lodocus ; W. .L Holland 130 



SoRBY, , cited on experimental geol- 

 ogy 175 



•Sosman, ; Reference to Avork of . . . 186 



South America, Age of certain plant- 

 bearing beds in 637 



— , Fresh-water fish faunas of 138 



— , Mesozoic floras of 129, 607 



■ reptiles of 138 



— , Paleozoic floras of 129 



— , Tertiary and Pleistocene formations 



of Peru 165 



South Dakota, A long-jawed mastodon 



skeleton from 133 



Southern Illinois, Characteristics of 



upper part of till of 76 



Spencer, A. C, cited on Pennsylvania 



Precambrian 376 



Spencer, J. W., cited on .Tames Bay 



uplift 203 



Spring, , cited on experimental 



geology 175 



Stanton, T. W., cited on California Eo- 

 cene 283 



the Morrison formation 248, 



251, 263 



Sundance formation 256 



— ; Mesozoic history of Mexico. Central 



America, and the West Indies. 138,601 



Stein MANX, , cited on age of Navi- 



dad flora 043 



Stephenson, L. W., cited on Coastal 



Plain deposits 583 



Sterling Station iron ore 345 



Stewartsville group, a newly recog- 

 nized division in the Eocene of Cali- 

 fornia ; B. L. Clark 94 



Stille, II., cited on Honda beds 640 



Stock, Chester ; Gravigrade edentates 

 in later Tertiary deposits of North 

 America 161 



— ; Minutes of the Eighth Annual Meet- 



ing of the I'acific Coast Section of 



the Paleontological Society 160 



Stone, G. II.. cited on deltas 190 



— glacial gravels and clays of 



Maine ' 198 



Maine coast 213 



submergence in Maine 211 



Stose, G. W., cited on Pennsylvania 



penei)hiins 577 



— , Reference to geologic map of 601 



Strand and undertow records of Upi)er 

 Devonian time as indications of the 

 prevailing climate; .1. M. Chirke. . S3 



