DAKTOW. ] 



NORTH AMERICAN GEOLOGY. 



451 



Hall, James — Continued. 

 Nature of the geological forma- 

 tions occupying a portion of Oregon 

 and northern California. 



Eeport of the exploring expedition to the 

 Eocky Mountains in 1842 and to Oregon and 

 northern California in 1843-44 hy I'remont, 

 pp. 295-303, House Ex. Doc. No. 166, Wash- 

 ington, 1845. 



Ahstract, Am. Jour. Sci., 2d series, vol. 3, 

 pp, 273-274 (i p.), 1847. 



Nature of the strata and geograph- 

 ical distribution of the organic remains 

 in the older formations of the United 

 States. 



Boston Jour. Nat. Hist., Tol. 5, pp. 1-20, 

 1847. 



Notice of the geological position of 



the cranium of the Castoroides Ohio- 

 ensis. 



Boston Jour. Nat. Hist., vol. 5, pp. 385-391, 

 1847. 



Paleontology of New York, volume 1, 



containing descriptions of the organic 

 remains of the lower division of the 

 New York system (equivalent of the 

 lower Silurian rocks of Europe), pp. 

 xxiii, 333, plates l-87j 4°, Albany, 

 1847. 



Beviewed hy F. Eoemer, Neues Jahrhuch, 

 1848, pp. 169-181. 



Abstracts hy Vemeuil, Soc. G6ol. France, 

 Bull., 2d series, vol. 5, pp. 374-380, 1848. 



Catalogue of specimens in the geo- 

 logical department of the geological 

 survey. 



Ne"\v York, First Annual Keport of the Re- 

 gents of the University on the State Cahinet 

 of Natural History, pp. 1-39, 1848. 



[Deposit at Clyde, N. Y., holding 



cranium of Casteroides ohioensis.] 



Boston Soc. Nat. Hist., Proc, vol. 2, pp. 167- 

 168, 1848. 



On the parallelism of the Paleozoic 



deposits of North America with those 

 of Europe, followed by a table of the 

 species of fossils common to the conti- 

 nents, with indication of the positions 

 in which they occur, and terminated 

 by a critical examination of each of 

 the species, by Ed. de Vemeuil [trans- 

 lated and condensed from Bull. Geol. 

 Soc. France, 2d series. Vol. IV, for 

 this journal]. 



Am. Jour. Soi., 2d series, vol. 5, pp. 176-183, 

 359-370; vol. 7, pp. 45-51, 218-331, 1819. 



Hall, James — Continued. 



Upon some of the results of the 



paleontological investigations in the 

 State of New York. 



Am. Jour. Sci., 2d series, vol. 5, pp. 243-249, 

 1848. Kead to Assoc. Am. Geol. 



[ j [Drift from the southward in the 



St. Lawrence Valley.] 



Am. Assoc, Proc, vol. 2, p. 311 (5 p.), 1850. 



Upper Silurian and Devonian se- 

 ries. 



Eeport on the geology of the Lake Superior 

 land district, part 2, the iron region, together 

 ■with the general geology, hy Foster and Whit- 

 ney, special sees., March, 1851, Senate Ex. 

 Doc. No. 4, pp. 152-166, Washington, 1851. 



[Geological investigation on Drum- 



monds Island and the north shores of 

 lakes Huron and Michigan.] 



Am. Acad., Proc, vol. 2, pp. 253-254, 1851. 



Remarks on an analysis of lower 



Silurian limestones. 



Eeport on the geology of Lake Superior land 

 district, part 2, the iron region, together with 

 the general geology, by Foster and Whitney, 

 special sess., March, 1851, Senate Ex. Doc. No. 

 4, pp. 194^195, Washington, 1851. 



Description of new or rare species 



of fossils from the Paleozoic series. 

 Eeport on the geology of the Lake Superior 

 land district, part 2, the iron region, together 

 ■with the general geology, hy Foster and Whit- 

 ney, special sess., March, 1851, Senate Ex, Doc. 

 No. 4, p. 203, Washington, 1851. 



Lower Silurian system. 



Eeport on the geology of the Lake Superior 

 land district, part 2, the iron region, together 

 ■with the general geology, by Foster and Whit- 

 ney, special sess., March, 1851, Senate Ex. Doc. 

 No. 4, pp. 140-151, Washington, 1851. 



Am. Jour. Sci., 2d series, vol. 17, pp. 181-194, 

 1851, under title, "On the Silurian system of 

 the Lake Superior region." 



Parallelism of the Paleozoic deposits 



of the United States and Europe. 



Eeport on the geology of Lake Superior land 

 district, part 2, the iron region, togetljer ■with 

 the general geology, by Foster and Whitney, 

 special sess., March, 1851, Senate Ex. Doc. No. 

 4, pp. 285-318, Washington, 1851. 



Key to a chart of the successive 



geological formations, with an actual 

 section from the Atlantic to the Pacific 

 oceans, illustrated by the character- 

 istic fossils of each formation, 12", 

 Boston, 1852. 



