﻿ADDITIONS 
  TO 
  THE 
  LIBKAKY. 
  12 
  1 
  

  

  M. 
  Davis. 
  The 
  Glacial 
  origin 
  of 
  Cliffs, 
  14.— 
  H. 
  V. 
  Winchell. 
  The 
  

   Diabasic 
  Schists 
  containing 
  the 
  Jaspilite-becls 
  of 
  North-eastern 
  Minne- 
  

   sota, 
  18. 
  — 
  R. 
  G. 
  M'Connell. 
  Note 
  on 
  the 
  Geology 
  of 
  Mt. 
  Stephen, 
  British 
  

   Columbia, 
  22. 
  — 
  S. 
  Calvin. 
  Some 
  Geological 
  Problems 
  in 
  Muscatine 
  

   County, 
  Iowa, 
  with 
  special 
  reference 
  to 
  the 
  rectification 
  of 
  the 
  supposed 
  

   Kinderhook 
  near 
  the 
  mouth 
  of 
  Pine 
  Creek, 
  25. 
  — 
  L. 
  E. 
  Hicks. 
  Soils 
  of 
  

   Nebraska 
  as 
  related 
  to 
  Geological 
  Formations, 
  36. 
  — 
  E. 
  W. 
  Claypole. 
  

   Glaciers 
  and 
  glacial 
  Radiants 
  of 
  the 
  Ice 
  Age, 
  73. 
  — 
  C. 
  L. 
  Herrick. 
  Notes 
  

   upon 
  the 
  Waverly 
  group 
  in 
  Ohio, 
  94. 
  — 
  F. 
  H. 
  Knowlton. 
  Fossil 
  Wood 
  

   and 
  Lignites 
  of 
  the 
  Potomac 
  formation, 
  99. 
  — 
  T. 
  M. 
  Reade. 
  Physical 
  

   Theories 
  of 
  the 
  Earth 
  in 
  relation 
  to 
  Mountain 
  formation, 
  106. 
  — 
  R. 
  R. 
  

   Rowley. 
  The 
  Chouteau 
  group 
  of 
  Eastern 
  Missouri, 
  111. 
  — 
  A. 
  S. 
  Tiffany. 
  

   The 
  Artesian 
  Well 
  at 
  City 
  Park, 
  Davenport, 
  Iowa, 
  117. 
  — 
  J. 
  Marcou. 
  

   Barrande 
  and 
  the 
  Taconic 
  System, 
  118. 
  — 
  A. 
  Winchell. 
  Conglomerates 
  

   enclosed 
  in 
  Gneissic 
  Terranes, 
  153, 
  253. 
  — 
  A. 
  C. 
  Lawson. 
  Foliation 
  and 
  

   Sedimentation, 
  169. 
  — 
  I. 
  C. 
  Russell. 
  The 
  Newark 
  System, 
  178. 
  — 
  R. 
  D. 
  

   Salisbury. 
  Mr. 
  Forster 
  on 
  Earthquakes, 
  182. 
  — 
  J. 
  Marcou. 
  The 
  original 
  

   locality 
  of 
  Gryphcea 
  Pitcheri, 
  188. 
  — 
  H. 
  S. 
  Williams. 
  On 
  the 
  relation 
  of 
  

   the 
  Devonian 
  Faunas 
  of 
  Iowa, 
  230. 
  — 
  E. 
  0. 
  Ulrich. 
  Preliminary 
  Descrip- 
  

   tion 
  of 
  new 
  Lower-Silurian 
  Sponges, 
  233. 
  — 
  G. 
  M. 
  Dawson. 
  Recent 
  

   observations 
  on 
  the 
  Glaciation 
  of 
  British 
  Columbia 
  and 
  adjacent 
  regions, 
  

   249. 
  — 
  C. 
  H. 
  Hitchcock. 
  Conglomerates 
  in 
  New-England 
  Gneisses, 
  253. 
  

   — 
  R. 
  T. 
  Hill. 
  A 
  portion 
  of 
  the 
  Geological 
  Story 
  of 
  the 
  Colorado 
  River 
  of 
  

   Texas, 
  287. 
  — 
  C. 
  D. 
  White. 
  Carboniferous 
  Glaciation 
  in 
  the 
  southern 
  

   and 
  eastern 
  Hemispheres 
  ; 
  with 
  some 
  notes 
  on 
  the 
  Glossopteris-Flom, 
  

   299. 
  — 
  C. 
  R. 
  Keyes. 
  Variation 
  exhibited 
  by 
  a 
  Carbonic 
  Gasteropod, 
  330. 
  

   — 
  J. 
  E. 
  Mills. 
  Quaternary 
  Deposits 
  and 
  Quaternary 
  or 
  Recent 
  elevation 
  

   of 
  regions 
  and 
  mountains 
  in 
  Brazil, 
  with 
  deductions 
  as 
  to 
  the 
  origin 
  of 
  

   Loess 
  from 
  its 
  observed 
  conditions 
  there, 
  345. 
  — 
  E. 
  W. 
  Claypole. 
  The 
  

   story 
  of 
  the 
  Mississippi-Missouri, 
  361. 
  — 
  E. 
  0. 
  Ulrich. 
  On 
  Lingulasma, 
  a 
  

   new 
  genus, 
  and 
  eight 
  new 
  species 
  of 
  Lingula 
  and 
  T?-ematis, 
  377. 
  — 
  J. 
  J. 
  

   Stevenson. 
  The 
  Mesozoic 
  rocks 
  of 
  Southern 
  Colorado 
  and 
  northern 
  New 
  

   Mexico, 
  391. 
  

  

  Montreal. 
  Natural 
  History 
  Society. 
  Canadian 
  Record 
  of 
  Science. 
  

   Vol. 
  iii. 
  Nos. 
  3-6. 
  1888-89. 
  

   Sir 
  J. 
  W. 
  Dawson. 
  On 
  Sporocarps 
  discovered 
  by 
  Prof. 
  Orton 
  in 
  the 
  

   Erian 
  Shale 
  of 
  Columbus, 
  Ohio, 
  137. 
  — 
  C. 
  Lapworth. 
  Note 
  on 
  Grapto- 
  

   lites 
  from 
  Dease 
  River, 
  British 
  Columbia, 
  141. 
  — 
  A. 
  T. 
  Drummond. 
  The 
  

   Great 
  Lake 
  Basins 
  of 
  Canada, 
  142. 
  — 
  F. 
  D. 
  Adams 
  and 
  A. 
  C. 
  Lawson. 
  

   On 
  some 
  Canadian 
  Rocks 
  containing 
  Scapolite, 
  with 
  a 
  few 
  notes 
  on 
  

   Rocks 
  associated 
  with 
  the 
  Apatite 
  deposits, 
  186. 
  — 
  Sir 
  J. 
  W. 
  Dawson. 
  

   JEozoon 
  canadense, 
  201. 
  — 
  Sir 
  J. 
  W. 
  Dawson. 
  On 
  the 
  Eozoic 
  and 
  Palae- 
  

   ozoic 
  Rocks 
  of 
  the 
  Atlantic 
  coast 
  of 
  Canada 
  in 
  comparison 
  with 
  those 
  of 
  

   Western 
  Europe 
  and 
  the 
  interior 
  of 
  America, 
  230. 
  — 
  J. 
  W. 
  Spencer. 
  The 
  

   St. 
  Lawrence 
  Basin 
  and 
  the 
  Great 
  Lakes, 
  232. 
  — 
  T. 
  Sterry 
  Hunt. 
  The 
  

   Study 
  of 
  Mineralogy, 
  236. 
  — 
  T. 
  Sterry 
  Hunt. 
  Mineralogical 
  Evolution, 
  

   242. 
  — 
  A. 
  T. 
  Drummond. 
  The 
  Great 
  Lake 
  Basins 
  of 
  the 
  St. 
  Lawrence, 
  

   247. 
  — 
  Sir 
  J. 
  W. 
  Dawson. 
  Note 
  on 
  Balanus 
  Hameri 
  in 
  the 
  Pleistocene 
  

   at 
  Riviere 
  Beaudette, 
  &c, 
  287. 
  — 
  Kavanagh. 
  On 
  modern 
  Concretions 
  

   from 
  the 
  St. 
  Lawrence, 
  292.— 
  G. 
  F. 
  Matthew. 
  On 
  the 
  Classification 
  of 
  

   the 
  Cambrian 
  Rocks 
  in 
  Acadia, 
  303. 
  — 
  R. 
  Chalmers. 
  Glaciation 
  of 
  

   Eastern 
  Canada, 
  319. 
  — 
  J. 
  B. 
  Tyrrell. 
  Gypsum 
  deposits 
  in 
  Northern 
  

   Manitoba, 
  353. 
  — 
  G. 
  F. 
  Matthew. 
  Supplementary 
  note 
  to 
  " 
  Classification 
  

   of 
  Cambriau 
  Rocks 
  in 
  Acadia," 
  371. 
  — 
  G. 
  J. 
  Hinde. 
  On 
  Archceocyathus, 
  

   Billings, 
  and 
  on 
  other 
  Genera 
  allied 
  thereto, 
  or 
  associated 
  therewith 
  from 
  

   the 
  Cambrian 
  Strata 
  of 
  North 
  America, 
  Spain, 
  Sardinia, 
  and 
  Scotland, 
  373. 
  

  

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