762 



NORTH AMERICAN INDEX FOSSILS. 



1896 Gurley, R. R. North American 

 graptolites, new species and vertical 

 range. Jour. Geol. 4: 63-102. 



1897 Simpson, G. B. A handbook of 

 the genera of the North American 

 Paleozoic bryozoa. N. Y. State geolo- 

 gist, Ann. Rept. 14: 407-608, plates. 



1897 Wachsmuth, C, and Springer, 

 F. The North American Crinoidea 

 Camerata. Harv. Coll., Mus. Comp. 

 Zool., Mem. 21, 837 pp., plates. 



1900 Simpson, G. B. Preliminary de- 

 scriptions of new genera of Paleo- 

 zoic rugose corals. N. Y. State Mus., 

 Bull. 8: 199-222, figs. 



1902 Ulrich, E. O., and Schuchert, C. 

 Paleozoic seas and barriers in eastern 

 North America. N. Y. State Mus., 

 Bull. 52 : 633-663. 



1903 Hambach, G. Revision of the 

 Blastoideae, with a proposed new clas- 

 sification and description of new spe- 

 cies. St. Louis Acad. Sci., Trans. 

 13 : 1-67, plates. 



1904 Klem, M. J. A revision of Pa- 

 leozoic Paleechinoidea, with a synop- 

 sis of all known species. Ibid. 14: 

 1-98, plates. 



1904 Girty, G. H. The typical species 

 and generic characters of Aviculo- 

 pecten McCoy. Am. Geol. 33 : 291-296. 



1904 Cumings, E. R. Development of 

 some Paleozoic bryozoa. A. J. S. 

 (4), 17 : 49-78, figs. 



1904 Ulrich, E. 0., and Bassler, R. S. 

 A revision of the Paleozoic bryozoa. 

 Parts I. and 11. Smith Misc. Coll. 

 45 : 256-294, plates ; 47 : is-55, plates. 



1905, 1908 Ruedemann, R. Grapto- 

 lites of New York II. ; Graptolites of 

 the higher beds. N. Y. State Mus., 

 Mem. II, 583 pp., plates. 



1907 Anderson, G. E. Development 

 of certain Paleozoic corals. Jour. 

 Geol. 15 : 59-69, figs. 



1908 Ulrich, E. 0., and Bassler, R. S. 

 New American Paleozoic Ostracoda. 

 Preliminary revision of the Beyrichi- 

 idae, with descriptions of new genera. 

 U. S. Nat. Mus., Proc. 35 : 277-340, 

 plates. 



1909 Willis, B. Paleogeographic mapl 

 of North America [correlation pa< 

 pers]. Jour. Geol. 17 : 203-208 (lower" 

 and late middle and upper Cam- 

 brian) ; 253-256 (middle Ordovician 

 and Silurian) ; 286-288 (middle De- 

 vonian and Mississippian) ; 342-343 

 (Carboniferous) ; 403-405 (latest Pa- 

 leozoic, Permian (?)). 



1909 Grabau, A. W. Physical and 

 faunal evolution of North America 

 during Ordovicic, Siluric and early 

 Devonic time [correlation paper 4]. 

 Jour. Geol. 17: 209-252. 



1909 Weller, S. Correlation of the 

 middle and upper Devonian and the 

 Mississippian faunas of North Amer- 

 ica [correlation paper 5]. Jour. Geol. 

 17: 257-285. 



TRIASSIC. 

 Eastern Canada. 



1902 Haycock, E. Fossils, possibly 

 Triassic, in glacial fragments in the 

 boulder-clay of Kings County, Nova 

 Scotia. Nova Scotia Inst. Sci,, Trans. 

 10: 376-378. 



Western Canada. 



1906 McConnel, R. G. [Report on the] 

 headwaters of White River. Can. 

 Geol. Surv., Summ. Rept. for 1905, 

 pp. 19-26. 



1906 Keele, J. Report on the upper 

 Stewart River region, Yukon [Trias- 

 sic fossils listed]. Ibid., Ann. Rept. 

 16, part C, 22> pp. 



Appalacnian and Atlantic. 



1892 Russell, I. C. Correlation pa- 

 pers : The Newark system. U. S. G. 

 S. Bull. 85, 344 pp., plates. 



1894 Lyman, B. S. Some new Red 

 horizons [in Conn., N. J., Pa., Va., N. 

 C.]. Am. Phil. Soc, Proc. 33: 192- 

 215, plates. 



1908 Darton, N. H. Passaic, New 

 Jersey-New York. U. S. G. S., Folio 

 157- 



