SANDSTONES. 183 
SANDSTONES FROM OHIO. 
A. Blue sandstone from near Cleveland. Analysis by T. M. Chatard, record No. 
214. 
B. Sandstone from Berea. Analysis by L. G. Eakins, record No. 914. 
C, D, E. Three samples of the ‘‘Peebles-Henley sandstone,’”’ from Portsmouth. 
Analyses by H. N. Stokes, record No. 1239. Alkalies, etc., undetermined. 
SANDSTONES FROM KENTUCKY, MISSISSIPPI, MISSOURI, AND ARKANSAS. 
A. Carboniferous sandstone adjoining the peridotite dike of Elliott County, Ken- 
tucky. See Diller, Am. Jour. Sci., 3d ser., vol. 32, p. 125. Analysis by T. M. Chat- 
ard, record No. 354. 
B. Fine-grained, fissile sandstone. Same locality and reference as A. 
C. ‘Glass sand,’’ near Iuka, Mississippi. Received from E. ('. Eckel. Analysis 
by G. Steiger, record No. 2268. 
D. From Jackson, Missouri. 
E. From Versailles, Missouri. 
F. From Everton, Arkansas. 
Rocks D, E, F are St. Peter sandstones, described by Burchard in Bull. 285, p. 459, 
and Bull. 315, p. 377. Analyses by Steiger, Nos. 2227, 2295. 
SANDSTONES FROM KANSAS. 
St. Peter sandstones described as ‘‘glass sands” by E. F. Burchard in Bull. 285, 
p.459, and Bull. 315, p. 377. Analyses by G. Steiger, record Nos. 2222, 2227, 2295, 
Partial only. 
A, B, C, D, from Fredonia. 
E, from Neodesha. 
F, from Havana. 
