INDEX. 



463 



Page. 

 Moriere, J 245 



Morris, John j catalogue of Britiali fossils ., 415 



Morrison County, Minnesota 200, 208 



Moscardus, Ludovicua, national Tiews of, on 



the nature of fossils 393 



Mougeot, A 375^ 4] 5 



Mountain Lake graywacke 233 



Mount Baker glaciers 341 



Conness 315 



Dana 314-317 



glacier 315 



Hood glacier 339-340 



Mount Hiimphreya 314 



Jefferson glacier 341 



E.ing 314 



Lincoln 342 



Lyell , 314,315 



glacier :-Jl&-317, 318, 319, 320,324 



McClure 315,316 



glacier 322, 324 



rate of flow 322 



Moran glaoiers 34G 



Eainior glacier 334, 335 



Eitter 314, 315 



glacier 325, 326 



Shasta glacier 329-334 



red snow 323 



St. Elias glaciers 348, 353 



Tachoma. {See Rainier.) 



"Whitney 314 



Whittlesey quartzite 232 



Muir, John, on California glaciers 324, 325,326 



rate of flow of Mount Mc- 

 Clure glacier 322 



Miinster, Count of; " Beiti age zur Petrefac- 



tenkunde " 412 



Murlin, A.B 57 



Murray, A. , cited on Huronian 188 



Murray and Logan 187 



Murrish,J 220 



Mylius, G. F., on the diluvian origin of fos- 

 sil remains 392, 398 



Myrrh j supposed fossil 396 



Nathorst, G. ; investigations into the fossil 



flora of Sweden 424 



Natural method in botanical classification. . 431 



Nature-printing, Invention of 380 



Naturselbstdruck, Invention of 380 



Nau, B. S. von. Contributions of, to paleo- 

 botany 404 



Naumann, C. F 219 



Neebish Island, Saint Mary's Hiver, quartz- 



ite , 



231 



Neptunian theory of Werner 398 



Nervation of leaves, Study of .... 380, 412, 419, 420 



Nerves, The cranial 285 



N6v6 defined 318 



Newberry, Dr. J. S 54, 369 



; observed glaciers iu Oregon 341 



, Paleobotanical investigations of 424 



, Sketchof 381 



New England Division, The 3,4 



LisboDjWis.; Potsdam sandstone 220, 223, 235 



TJlm, Minn 200,202 



Newman, W. G 6 



Page, 



Nicollet County, Minnesota 202, 223, 238, 235 



Nilsson, Sveno, on the fossil plants of 



Sweden 4 03, 405 



N ipigon Bay, Lake Superior ; sftndstone 234 



Nisqually Eiver runs from a glacier 335 



glacier 336 



Noachian deluge. Fossils supposed to bethe 



remains left by the 390, 398 



, Phillips on the effect of 



the 408 



Noerr, A 13 



Nonesuch belt 228 



Norite defined 215 



North Atlantic district xvm 



Lake 204 



NoDggeralh, Jacob, on the mode of growth 



of coal plants 400 



Noeggerathia 428, 430, 447 



Nomenclature and classification of fossil 



plants 425-431 



Nuraakagon, Lake 194 



Number of species of fossil plants. Evidence 



furnished by tbe 439 



reported at different dates. . . 407, 416, 417, 

 421, 422, 424, 428 



Oak openings 100 



Ogiahkiemuncie Lake 207 



Oken, L., on petrified wood 402 



Oldhamia 444 



Old Eiver Bed, Utah 96 



Olivine-diabase defined 215 



Oliviue-gabhro defined 215 



Ontonagon Eiver saodstone 235 



Oqnirrh Eange, Utah 110 



Orbit of pariicle in wave motion 82 



Oreodon beds 254 



Oreocyon 255 



Oriebar glacier, Alaska 352 



Orohippus 255 



Oithoelase-diabase defined 215 



Orthoclase-gabbro defined 215 



Osar or Kame, The 121 



Osmunda 428 



; supposed fossil 396, 402 



Owen,D.D 206 



; a source of compilation 183 



Owen's Lake 314 



River 315 



Pacific, Division of the, administrative re- 

 port of 47^9 



Pack waukee, "Wis., Potsdam sandstone 224 



Palseayops 255 



Paleobotanical discovery, Historical review 



of 368 



Paleobotany, Compendium of 363 



, Future prospects of 365 



hitherto studied as distinct 



from botany proper 367 



, Interdependence of botany and 366 

 , List of the principal culti- 

 vators of 309 



, Need of a condensed exhibit 



of 364 



, On the term 363 



