758 



BULLETIN OF THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA 



Page 

 Vaughax. T. Waylaxd : Physical condi- 

 tions under which organic and 

 chemically precipitated limestones 



are formed 82 



Vertebrate paleontologists, Formations 



named and described hy 262 



— paleontology. Symposium on the ten 



years' progress in 85, 155-266 



Vertebrates of the Pleistocene, Estab- 

 lishment of faunal divisions among 



the 87 



Virginia. Mississippian delta in 



48. 447-4r>.^. 743 



Volcanoes of Hawaii, Succession in _ 



age of the 747 



Walcott. Charles D. : Fossils of lower 



limestone of Steep Rock series. 46,723 

 — . F. AV. True introduced by 85 



— : Middle Cambrian crustaceans from 



British Columbia 84 



— . Secretary Smithsonian Institution, 



I'aleontological Society welcomed by. 77 



— . The Ozarkian fauna discussed by. . . 84 



— . W. H. Holmes, and H. C. Rizer, 

 Committee on Powell National 

 Park 45 



Washington. Henry S. : Suggestion for 



mineral nomenclature 51, 729 



— . Plains and valleys of eastern 533 



Watkins Glen and its pre-Glacial 



equivalent 483 



Well records. Ontario 375 



Weaver. Charles E. ; Notes on the 

 pre-Glacial geology of the Puget 

 Sound basin 75 



Weber. Max. Reference to "Die Sauge- 



tiere" books of 187 



Wherry, E. T.. Delta deposits discussed 



by 4S. 745 



Whetstone Gulf and its pre-Glacial 



valley 484 



Westgate. L. G.. and E. B. Branson; 

 Cenezoic history of the Wind River 

 Mountains. Wyoming 49, 739 



White. David : Characters of Cala- 



niitcs itioniatiis Dawson 88 



— . Correlation of Paleozoic faunas dis- 

 cussed by 83 



— . Delta deposits discussed by 48. 744 



— elected Second Vice-President Geo- 



logical Society for 1912 2 



— : Resins in Paleozoic coals 37, 728 



White. Israel C. Discussion of origin 



of sediments and coloring matter 

 of the eastern Oklahoma Red Beds 

 by 36, 724 



— elected First Vice-President Geologi- 



cal Society for 1912 2 



Page 



Whitxey. .7. D. ; Report on iron ore of 



Lake Superior region 317 



Whittlesey. Charles ; Iron ores of 



Lake Superior result of segregation. 320 



WiLKiE. , of Palo Alto, California, 



Tourmalines, benitoites, etcetera, 

 exhibited by 75 



Williams. H. S. ; Correlation of the 

 I'aleozoic faunas of the Eastport 

 Quadrangle, Maine 83,349-352 



— . Paleontology of a voracious appe- 

 tite discussed by 83 



Willis, Bailey, quoted on the "Stra- 

 tigraphy and structure of the 

 Lewis and Livingston ranges" 690 



WiLLiSTOX. S. W. : Evolutionary evi- 

 dence 86, 257 



Wixchell. a. N., J. Howard Mathews 



introduced by 51 



— . Memoir of Auguste Michel-Levy by. 32 



Christopher Webber Hall by . . . 28 



— ; Progress of opinion as to the origin 

 of the iron ores of the Lake Supe- 

 rior region 51. 317-324 



— : Saponite. thalite, greenalite. and 



greenstone 51. 329-332 



WixD River Mountains, Wyoming, Ceno- 



zoic history of 4(>, 739 



Wind-scour, Arid region of the South- 

 west 717 



Wisconsin drift and loess, Des Moines 



section 712 



AVoodworth. J. B. ; Boulder beds of the 

 Canev shale at Talihina. Oklahoma. 



50, 457-462 



— . Coastal marshes south of Cape Cod 



discussed by •">'>. "42 



— . Covey Hill revisited discussed by. 36, 722 



— . Structure of the Helderberg Front 



discussed by 50, 747 



Wright. Fred. E. : Granularity limits 

 in petrographic-microscopic work. . 



37, 726 



AA'right. George Frederick, Pleisto- 

 cene formations and "loess" dis- 

 cussed by 48. 738 



— : Post-Glacial erosion and oxida- 

 tion 47, 277-296 



Yukon-Alaska geological formations... 334 



-international boundary. Area of 



studies along 334 



— plateau 337 



— and Alaska. Differential erosion and 



equiplanation in portions of . . . 333-345 



Zeolites, Paragenesis of the 37 



Zones, New Mexico Gastropod, Tres 

 Hermanos sandstone, Septaria, and 

 Cephalopod 595 



