DARTON.] 



NORTH AMERICAN GEOLOGY. 



677 



New Hampshire — Continued. 



1884. Microscopic structure of building 



stones, Merrill, G. P. 

 Distribution and origin of drum- 



lins, Davis, W. M. 

 Drumlins, Davis, W. M. 

 Azoic syslem and its .subdivisions, 



Whitney and Wadsworth. 



1885. Crystallines of Alabama, Hitch- 



cock, C. H. 



Glaoiation on Mount Kearsarge, 

 N. H., Putnam. 



Map of the United States, McGee. 



Green Mountain gneisses in east- 

 ern New England, Hitchcock, 

 C.H. 



Divisions du systfeme ^ozo'ique. 

 Hunt, T.S. 



History of Taoonic question and 

 relations of the rocks, Hunt, 

 T.S. 



Landslides in the White Moun- 

 tains, HitchcQck, C. H. 



1886. Marginal kames, Lewis, H. C. 

 Sections across New Hampshire 



and Vermont, Hitchcock, C. H. 



Geology of northern New Eng- 

 land, Hitchcock, C. H. 



New England Upper Silurian, 

 Dale. 



1887. Map of United States, Hitchcock, 



C.H. 



1888. Fossils from Littleton, Dana, J. 



D. ; Pumpelly. 



1889. Conglomerates in gneisses, Hitch- 



cock, C. H. 



Glaciation of mountains, Upham. 



Building stones, Merrill, G. P. 



Report — division of coast-line 

 geology. United States Geolog- 

 ical Survey, Shaler. 



1890. Archeau axes of eastern North 



America, Dana, J. D. 

 Granitoid areas in lower Lauren- 



tian, Hitchcock, C. H. 

 Maofarlane's Railway Guide, 



Hitchcock, C. H. 

 Madison bowlder, Crosby. 

 Studies of hornblende schist, 



Hitchcock, C. H. 

 Warren's Geography, Brewer. 



1891. American opinion on the older 



rocks, Winohell, A. 

 Cambrian of North America, Wal- 

 cott. 



New Hampshire — Continued. 

 1891. Criteria of englacial and subgla- 

 cial drift, Upham. 



Dates of origin of certain topo- 

 graphic forms, Davis, W. M. 



Lakes inclosed by modified drift, 

 Upham. 



Post-Pliocene subsidence versus 

 glacial dams, Spencer, J. W. 



Stones for building, Merrill, G. P. 



New Jersey. 

 1753. En resa til Norra America, Kalm. 

 1787. Mineralogisohe Kenntniss des iist- 

 lichen Theils von Nord-Amer- 

 ika, etc., Schoepf. 

 Observations on geology of United 

 States, with map, Maclure. 

 1814. The range of mountains extend- 

 ing across New Jersey, Mitchell, 

 S.L. 

 Zircon from Trenton, Conrad, 



S. W. 

 The blue earth of New Jersey, 

 Cutbush. 

 1818. Geology of the United States, 

 Maclure. 



1820. Geology of the Hudson River, 



Akerly. 

 Secondary regions. Pierce. 



1821. Geology and mineralogy of 



Franklin, Vanuxem and Keat- 

 ing. 



1822. Mineralized tree, rocking stone, 



etc., Green, .T. 

 Geology of the Highlands, Pierce. 

 Serpentine of Hoboken, Nuttall. 

 Minerals of Paterson and Sparta, 



Nuttall. 

 Volcanoes and volcanic sub- 

 stances, Cooper, T. 

 1834. Country near Easton, Pa., Finch, 



J. 

 Essay on Tertiary of America, 



Finch, J. 

 Extinct crocodile and geology of 



west Jersey, Harlan. 

 New Red sandstone of the United 



States, Finch, J. 



1827. Borings for water, Disbrow. 



1828. Nomenclature of North American 



rocks, Eaton. 



1829. Secondary, Tertiary, and alluvial 



of Atlantic Coast, Vanuxem. 

 Atlantic Secondary, Morton, S. G. 



