INDEX TO VOLUME 24 



725 



Page 

 Drainage in New York State, Glacial 



waters 147, 148 



Drake, N. F. ; Coal resources of China. 93 



— ; Dust storms in China 92 



Drift, Dawson "Albertan" and pre- 



Wisconsin, Montana, glacial . . 530, 542 

 — , Extent of upper and lower Keewatin 



ice-sheet 554 



— • in the region of Glacier Park, Mon- 

 tana, Pre- Wisconsin glacial. 71, 529-572 

 (See also vol. 23, pp. 087-708.) 



— of the mountain glaciers, Relation to 



Keewatin ice-sheet in Alberta 555 



— , The Iowan 71, 098 



Drumlins of New York State, Subgla- 



cial 143 



Dust storms in China ; N. F. Drake .... 92 

 Dutton, Edward Clarence, Bibliogra- 

 phy of 17 



— , Memoir of ; J. S. Diller 10 



Eakle, A. S., Indices of crystal faces 

 discussed by 



— ■ and George D. Douderback ap- 

 pointed tellers at election of om- 

 cers, Cordilleran Section 



Early Paleozoic physiography of the 

 southern Adirondack ; William J. 

 Miller 72, 



Earth-movements from the Lake re- 

 gion to the Saint Lawrence Valley, 

 Extended determination of post- 

 Glacial 74, 217-227, 



— recorded in the beaches, Triangula- 



tion of 



Eastman, C. R. ; Brain structures of 

 fossil fishes from the Caney shales. 



— elected Editor Paleontological Society 

 Eastport Quadrangle faunas, Facts con- 

 cerning 



, Maine, Correlation problems sug- 

 gested by study of tne faunas of 

 the 52, 



East River Mountain seccion, Virginia. 



Eaton, G. F., Cuban fossil mammals 

 discussed by 



Editor, Report of Joseph Stanley-Brown 



Edmunds fauna, General correlation of 

 and comparison of Rochester faunas 

 with 380, 



in the Silurian section of Eng- 

 land, Brachiopods of the 



Elasmosaurid^e, New Plesiosaurian 

 genus from Nebraska of the family. 



Emmons, W. H., New classification of 

 natural water discussed by 



England Silurian section, Brachiopods 

 of the Edmunds fauna in 



Entomolestes an Eocene Tupaiid 



Eocene lemurs, especially Notharctus, 

 Relations of the Tupaiidae and of. . 



117, 



— of the Bighorn Basin of Wyoming, 



Notes on ; W. K. Granger 



Coalinga-Cantua district, Fresno 



County, California ; J. A. Taff 



■ San Pedro Point, San Mateo 



County, California ; Roy E. Dicker- 

 son 



— Tupaiid, Entomolestes an 



Bpbiroqenic movement; Diastrophism, 



New York State 



Equid^e and ground sloths, Appearance 



of 



Erie outlet, Preglacial 



Erosion, Blackfoot peneplain, Montana, 



and cycles of 



— , The cycle of and Interruptions of 



the cycle of 188, 



93 



92 



701 



714 



221 



119 

 104 



377 



377 

 455 



109 



7 



381 



382 



120 



73 



382 

 249 



247 

 113 

 127 



120 

 240 



293 



2.U 



534 



189 



Page 



Erosional work of glacial streams in 



New York State 147 



Etchegoin formations, California 129 



Europe and North America, Compari- 

 son of the late Pleistocene fauna of 120 



Eurypterid fauna of the Pittsford 



shale, Described by Sarle 490 



Eurypterida, John M. Clarke and Ru- 

 dolph Ruedemann presented the 

 Paleontological Society with their 

 monograph on the 100 



Eurypterids, Distribution and occur- 

 rence of ; Summary by M. O'Con- 

 nell 499-514 



— of New York ; John M. Clarke and 



R. Ruedemann, quotation from .... 502 



— , Nebraska 113 



— , Review of the evidence of the distri- 

 bution of 515 



Expenditures, Secretary's office, fiscal 



year 1912 5 



Experimental geology, one of the large 

 subdivisions of geology ; Frederick 

 Eugene Wright 49, G71 



Fairbanks, H. W., Slates of Slate 



Springs, California, as described by. 131 



Fairchild, H. L., Deformation of the 



Algonquin Beach discussed by 71 



— , First session Twenty-fifth Annual 

 Meeting called to order by Presi- 

 dent 2 



— , Glacial cirques discussed by 51 



— , Presiding over first section 50, 70 



— , retiring President, Address by 54 



— , Speculative nature of geology dis- 

 cussed by 70 



— , The beginnings of Lake Agassiz dis- 

 cussed by 71 



Fault, New light on the Keweenawan . . 



76, 71S 



— , San Jose and Mount Hamilton Cala- 



veras-Sunol 06 



— translatory movements, General dis- 



cussion of terms of 1GS 



.Stratified rocks, slip, shift. 



separation, throw and heave, Ap- 

 parent displacements 168-176 



Fault-scarps, Examples of initial and 

 young and of maturely dissected . . . 



196, 200 

 Faulting, Physiographic evidence of . . . 198 

 Fault-line scarps, Imaginary example 



of resequent 211 



, Obsequent 203 



— valleys, Subsequent 202 



Faulted structures, An ideal series of 



forms on 191 



.Definition of terms used in de 



scribing forms on 214 



— . — .Forms produced by other than 



normal processes on 213 



, Initial and young forms on 192 



.Mature and old tonus on... 197,208 



, References to authors' work re 



lating to 216 



, Second-cycle forms and examples 



of. on 205, 209 



Faults and obsequent ravine heads. . . . 202 



, Classes Of strike 



— classified according to direction <>i' 



movement 17t*> 



, Extension of the words '•normal" 



and "reverse" to diagonal and dip.. 1 7 7 

 General classes of local movements 

 on 161 



terms of 168 



, Groups of ; Peripheral : Radial. . 



— in monoclluul structures, Traniver* 



