654 



CATALOGUE AND INDEX OF 



[BULL. 127. 



Missouri — Continued. 



1888. Macon County, McGee. 

 Building stones, Merrill, G. P. 

 Types of Devonian system in 



North America, Williams, H. S. 



1889. Carboniferous Eohinodermata, 



Keyes. 



Chouteau group, Eowley. 



History of Ozark uplift, Broad- 

 head. 



Missouri Elver, Broadhead. 



1890. Bibliography of geology, Samp- 



son. 



Brecciated character of St. Louis 

 limestone, Gordon. 



Building stones, clays, and sands, 

 Ladd. 



Coal beds of Lafayette County, 

 Winslow. 



Crinoids from Burlington lime- 

 stone, Eowley. 



Crystalline rocks of Missouri, 

 Haworth. 



Glacial boundary, Wright, G. F. 



Iron ores of the United States, 

 Hunt, T. S. 



Lineage of Lake Agassiz, Todd. 



Maofarlane's Railway Guide, 

 Broadhead. 



Tallow clays, Seamon. 



Warren's Geography, Brewer. 



Zinciferous clays, Seamon. 



Eeport — Lake Superior division. 

 United States Geological Sur- 

 vey [crystalline rocks]. Van 

 Hise. 



1891. Analyses of five Cherokee lime- 



stones, Eakins. 



Age and origin of crystalliue 

 rocks, Haworth. 



Bowlder of copper and glacial 

 striae, Kilpatrick. 



Cambrian of North America, Wol- 

 cott. 



Clays and building stones, Ladd. 



Devonian and Carboniferous, cor- 

 relation, Williams, H. S. 



Genesis of iron ores, Kimball. 



Lower Carboniferous crinoids. 

 Miller. 



Ozark series, Broadhead. 



Eeade's theory of the origin of 

 mountain ranges, Eoade. 



Relation of seoulnr rock disin- 

 tegration to certain schists, 

 PurapoUy. 



Missouri — Continued. 

 1891. Relationship of Pleistocene to 

 pre-Pleistooene, Chamberlin 

 and Salisbury. 

 Titanic oxide [in soils], Dunning- 



ton. 

 Stones for building, Merrill, G. P. 

 [Missouri Republican.] Geology of 

 Ozark range of Missouri. 



De Bow's Eeriew, vols. 37-38, pp. 985-967, 

 New Orleans, 1869. 



Mitchell, Elisha. Report on the geol- 

 ogy of North Carolina, conducted under 

 the direction of the board of agricul- 

 ture, part 3. 



Papers on agricultural subjects, pp. 1-27, 

 small 4°, Ealelgh, 1827. 



On the character and origin of the 



low country of North Carolina. 

 Am. Jour. Sci., vol. 13, pp. 336-348, 1828. 



Geological report on North Carolina. 



Papers on agricultural subjects, conducted 

 under the direction of tlie board of agricul- 

 ture, part 3, pp. 101-108, small 4°, Baleigb, 

 1828?. 



On the geology of the gold region 



of North Carolina. 



Am Jour. Sci., vol. 16, pp. 1-20 ; vol. 17, p. 400, 

 1829. 



Elements of geology, with an outline 



of the geology of North Carolina, 1842, 

 141 pages, map. 

 Mitchell, Henry. Notes concerning al- 

 leged changes in the relative elevations 

 of land and sea. 



IT. S. Coast Surv., Eeport for 1877, pp. 98-103, 

 4°, 1880. 



Abstract, Am. Jour. Sci., 3d series, vol. 21, 

 pp. 77-78 (-ft p.), 1881. 



Mitchell, Samuel L, The physical geog- 

 raphy of the first range of mountains 

 extending across New Jersey from the 

 Hudson to the Delaware [etc.]. 



Am. Mlneralogical Jour. (Bruce), vol. l,pp 

 70-79, 1814. 



An amendment proposed to the geo- 

 logical chart of the United States as 

 respects the character of the north side 

 of Long Island, which is shown to be 

 alluvial and not primitive, as therein 

 stated. 



Am. Mineralogioal Jour. (Bruce), vol, 1, pp. 

 129-133, 1814. 



— — A .sketch of the scenery of the region 

 around Harpers Ferry [etc.]. 



Am. Mineralogioal Jour. (Bruce), vol. 1, pp. 

 211-218, 1814. 



