INDEX TO VOLUME 24 



729 



Page 



Kilauea Crater, Preliminary report of 

 certain physical and physicochem- 

 ical observations at the ; Arthur L. 

 Day 74, 573-603, 707 



' — lava, Tables of analyses of 586 



— -volcanic material, Chemical study of. 584 



Kindle, E. M. ; Note on a process of 

 fossilization in the Paleozoic Lyco- 

 pods 115 



Koken, E., Correspondent of the Pale- 

 ontologlcal Society, Death reported 

 of 102 



Knowlton, F. H. ; Memoir of W J Mc- 



Gee 18 



— ; Paleobotanical study of the coal- 

 bearing rocks of the Raton Mesa 

 region of Colorado and New Mexico 114 



— , Relation of vertebrate fauna in Red 

 Beds between Wichita Palls, Texas, 

 and Las Vegas, New Mexico, dis- 

 cussed by 52 



- — , Shinarump conglomerate discussed 



by 52 



Knoxville beds of the San Jose and 

 Mount Hamilton quadrangles, 

 Thickness of 96 



Lake Agassiz, The beginnings of ; Frank 



Leverett 71, 697 



— Minnewanka, or Devils Lake, Alberta, 



Location of 233 



■ — — , Permian, Pennsylvanian, Missis- 

 sippian, and Devonian formations 

 along 233 



— region, Present stability of 226 



— regions, No late earth-movements in 



the 227 



Lakes Superior, Michigan, Huron, and 



Erie, Niagara limestone and 232 



Lampson Hall, Yale University, Meet- 

 ings of Society held in 2 



Lane, A. C, A classification of marine 



deposits discussed by 74 



— , Climatic investigations on geological 



theories discussed by 70 



— , Deep boring near McDonald, Penn- 

 sylvania, discussed by 73 



— , New classification of natural water 



discussed by 73 



— ; New light on the Keweenawan fault 



76, 718 



— , Objects and methods of petrographic 



description discussed by 76 



— , Observations at the Kilauea Crater 



discussed by 74 



— ; Origin of granites as well as meta- 

 crystals by selective solution — a re- 

 cantation 73, 704 



Laramie formation and the Raton Mesa 



region 114 



Las Vegas, New Mexico, and Wichita 

 Falls, Texas, Relation of vertebrate 

 fauna in Red Beds between. . . . 52, (IT!) 



Laurentian (Labradorian) ice - body. 

 Limits, thickness, movement, and 

 recession in New York State of the. 



135-137 



Lawson, A. C, Attention called to work 

 of W. F. Jones in the Coalinga re- 

 gion by 129 



— , Coal resources of China discussed by. '.».{ 



— , Eocene of San Pedro Point, Califor- 

 nia, discussed by 126 



— .Eocene of the Coalinga-Cantua dis- 

 trict, California, discussed by 127 



— , First session of Cordilleras Section 



called to order by Chairman 92 



— .Fluting of crystalline rocks In the 



tropics discussed by 9 I 



— , On Committee on the Nomenclature 



of Faults 168 



Page 

 Lawson, A. C, Structure of the Sierra 

 Nevada bedrock complex discussed 

 by 98 



— ; The oldest fossils 97 



Lava, An explanation of the formation 



of Aa 509 



— from Kilauea and Halemaumau cra- 



ters, Analyses tables of 586 



— ■ of Starks Knob, Position of 347 



Lavas (Brun), Explosive 601 



— ■ of Hawaii and their relations ; Whit- 

 man Cross 54, 684 



Lemurs, especially Notharctus, Rela- 

 tions of the Tupaiidae and of Eo- 

 cene 117, 247 



Leverett, F., Glacial cirques discussed 



by 51, 678 



— , Piedmont terraces and post-Jurassic 

 history of the northern Appalach- 

 ians discussed by 70 



- — ■, Post-Glacial earth movements dis- 

 cussed by 74 



— ; Remarkable deformation of the Al- 

 gonquin Beach 71, 697 



■ — ■; The beginnings of Lake Agassiz. 71, 697 



— ; The Iowan drift 71. 69S 



— , The Pleistocene succession in Wis- 

 consin, by Samuel Weidman, pre- 

 sented by 71 



Lewis, J. V., The Northumberland (New 

 York) Volcanic Plug discussed by. 



54, 683 



Liassic flora of the Mixteca Alta, Ori- 

 gin of 115 



Limestone, Alteration processes and 



products within the Greenville. 76,717 



— , Faunas of the Girardeau and Edge- 

 wood 112, 358, 368 



— , The Great Lake basins in their rela- 

 tionship to Niagara 76, 22!) 



— of the Mexican Cretaceous terranes, 



Tamasopa oil-bearing 255 



Limestones of the Alexandrian series 



in Missouri and Illinois. . . 111. 357-372 



Longwood shales and sandstones 482 



Loomis, Frederick B. ; Preliminary dis- 

 cussion of the stratigraphy and age 

 of the Pyrotherium beds of Pata- 

 gonia 52, 107 



Louderback, George D., Coal resources 



of China discussed by 93 



— ■; General features of the structure of 

 the bedrock complex of the Sierra 

 Nevada 98 



— .Geological section of California coast 



ranges discussed by 93 



— , Gypsum and anhydrite Crom the 



Ludwig mine discussed by 94 



— , Indices of crystal faces discussed by. 93 



— , Iron-ore deposit at Barth, Nevada. 



discussed by !) ~ 



— , Remarks on the relations of the Mar 



tinez and Tejon by 127 



— .Ventura Count v oil fields discussed 



by 97 



Lower Ordovician and Upper Cambrian 

 sediments of Center County, Penn- 

 sylvania, Notes on origin of cer- 

 tain 11 •-' 



at Glenogle, British Columbia; 



L. i>. Burling "•- 



Ludwig mine, Lyon County, Nevada. 



Gypsum and anhydrite from the. . . 94 



Lull ' ft. s.. chairman Bectional meet 



lug on vertebrate Paleontology. . .. 117 



.Cuban fossil mammals discussed by. 109 



elected Treasurer Paleontologlcal So 



clety '" ' 



Paleontologlcal notes discussed bj L09 



'-. The rale expedition of 1912 H7 



LYCOPODS, Note on I process o\ lossill 



■JttlOn in the Paleozoic 115 



