BIBLIOGRAPHY OF JAMBS MERRILL SAFFORD 527 



1892. The Middleton formatiou of Tennessee, Mississippi, and Alabama, witb a 



note on the formation at Lagrange, Tennessee. American Geologist, 

 vol. 9, 1892, pp. 63-64. 



The Tennessee coal measures. U. S. Geological Survey, Mineral Re- 

 sources, pp. 497-506. 



The pelvis of a Megalonyx and other bones from Big Bone cave, Tennes- 

 see. Bulletin of the Geological Society of America, vol. 3, pp. 121-323. 



Notes on the Middleton formation of Tennessee, Mississippi, and Ala- 

 bama. Bulletin of the Geological Society of America, vol. 3, pp. 511- 

 512. 



1893. The topography, geology, and water supply of Sewanee, Tennessee. State 



Board of Health [of Tennessee] Bulletin, vol. 8, 1893, pp. 89-98. 

 Address on behalf of the faculty. Addresses delivered at inauguration 

 of Dr James H. Kirkland as chancellor of Vanderbilt University, pp. 

 11-14. Nashville, 1893. 



1894. Phosphate-bearing rocks in middle Tennessee : Preliminary notice. Amer- 



ican Geologist, vol. xiii, pp. 107-109. 



1895. Tennessee phosphate roclv. Report of Commissioner of Agriculture, pp. 



211-224. Nashville, 1895. 



1896. A new and important source of phosphate rock in Tennessee. American 



Geologist, vol. xviii, pp. 261-264. 



1898. [Report of] Department of Geology, Minerals, Mines, and Mining. Offi- 



cial History of Tennessee Centennial Exposition, pp. 366-385. Quarto. 

 Nashville, 1898. 



1899. Camden chert of Tennessee and its Lower Oriskauy fauna. American 



Journal of Science, vol. vii, pp. 429-432. 



1900. The elements of the geology of Tennessee. (Text-book for Tennessee 



schools.) Safford (J. M.) and Killebrew (J. B.). 204 pages, 45 fig- 

 ures. Nashville, 1900. 



1901. Horizons of phosphate rock in Tennessee. Bulletin of the Geological 



Society of America, vol. 13, pp. 14-15. 

 Classification of the geological formations of Tennessee. Bulletin of the 

 Geological Society of America, vol. 13, pp. 10-14. 



MEMOIR OF AlSfGELO HEILPRIN 

 BY HERBERT E. GREGORY 



With the death of Angelo Heilprin this Society has lost one of its 

 prominent members, Yale University one of its ablest instructors, and 

 geography its l)est known leader in America. While his work was largely 

 geographic, his contributions to geology were many and important. 



A glance at the life of Heilprin reveals an interesting career, in which 

 inherited aptitude, increased by constancy of effort, ripened into power 

 of an unusual sort. His grandfather, Phineas Mendel Heilprin (1801- 

 1863), was a prominent student of Hebrew and philosophy, and his 

 father, Michael Heilprin (1823-1888), likewise was a scholar of wide 

 repute. Owing to persecution in Poland, Angelo Heilprin's parents 



