Eighth International Geographic Congress 307 



3. OCEANOGRAPHY 



i. Currents and Climatology of trie North 

 Pacific. 



Prof. G. Davidson, San Francisco, Cal. 



2. Co-tidal Lines for the World. 



Prof R. A. Harris, Washington, D. C. 



3. European Polar Sea Investigations. 



Prof. Knipowitsch, 



St Petersburg, Russia. 



4. Deep Sea Deposits. 



Sir John Murray, 



Edinburgh, Scotland. 



5. New Theory of Tidal Undulations in Ocean- 



ography. 



O. T. Olsen, Grimsby, England. 



6. Border Seas of Japan. 



Prof. J. J. Rein, Bonn, Germany. 



7. Physical Character and History of the 



Baltic. 



Prof. J. J. Rein, Bonn, Germany. 

 S. Evidence of Land Near the North Pole. 



Prof R. A. Harris, Washington, D. C. 

 9. Fifty Years in Oceanography. 

 Prof. A. Lindenkohl, 



Washington, D. C. 



10. Stromungen der huft und des Wassers. 



Prof. E Witte, Brieg, Germany. 



11. Temperature Charts of the Azores. 



Prof. J. Thoulet, Nancy, France. 



12. La Methode Graphique en oceanographie. 



Prof. J. Thoulet, Nancy, France. 



13. Les travaux oceanographiques du labora 



toire de Nancy. 



Professor Thoulet, Nancy, France. 



14. Oceanographie Instruments. 



Lord Kelvin (absent), 



Glasgow, Scotland. 



15. Canadian Tidal Observations. 



Prof. W. B. Dawson (absent), 



Ottawa, Canada. 



4. VOLCANOES 



1. Hawaiian Geography. 



Prof. C. H. Hitchcock, Hanover, N. H. 



2. The Destruction of Pompeii as Interpreted 



by the Volcanic Eruptions of Martinique. 

 Prof. A. Heilprin, Philadelphia, Pa. 



3. The Tower of Mt Pelee. 



Prof. A. Heilprin, Philadelphia, Pa. 



4. The Volcanoes of Martinique, Guadeloupe, 



and Saba. 



Dr E. O. Hovey, New York City. 



5. The Volcanoes of St Vincent, St Kitts, and 



St Eustatius. 



Dr K. O. Hovey, New York City. 



6. Sur les characteres speciaux de la reparti- 



tion de la Mediterranie. 



Paid Vidal de la Blache, Paris, France. 



5. EARTHQUAKES 



1. Relations de la figure du globe avec la dis- 



tribution des volcans et tremblements de 

 terre. 



Prof. G. Lallemand (absent), 



Paris, France. 



2. The Seismical Distribution and Tectonic 



Connections of Earthquakes in the 

 United States of North America. 

 Count de Montessus de Ballore 



(absent), Abbeville, France. 



3. Ergebnisse der modernen erdbebenforsch- 



ung. 



Prof. E. Rudolph (doubtful), 



Strassburg, Germany. 



4. Submarine erdbeben und eruptionen. 



Prof. E. Rudolph (doubtful), 



Strassburg, Germany. 



5. Vertikale bodenbewegungen beobachtet 



mit dem trifilargravimeter. 



Prof. A. Schmidt, Stuttgart, Germany. 



6. The Energy of Large Earthquakes in Ab- 



solute Measure. 



Prof, de Kovesligethy, 



Budapest, Hungary. 



7. A New Geometrical Theory of Earthquakes 



and the Absorption of Earthquakes' 

 Energy by the Earth. 

 Prof, de Kovesligethy, 



Budapest, Hungary. 



8. Die Internationale Seismologische Staaten 



Association. 



Dr G. Gerland, Strassburg, Germany. 



9. Uber die moderne Seismologie. 



Dr G. Gerland, Strassburg, Germany. 



6. GEACIERS 



1. Glaciers of British Columbia. 



G. Vaux, Jr., Philadelphia, Pa. 



2. The Lewis Range of Northern Montana and 



its Glaciers. 



F. E. Matthes, Washington, D. C. 



3. The Jostedalbrae in Norway. 



Prof. M. Ebeling (absent), 



Berlin, Germany. 



4. Glacial Lakes and Pleistocene Changes in 



the St Lawrence Valley. 



Prof. A. P. Coleman, Toronto, Canada. 



5. Studies of the Snow Region of the High 



Mountains of Northern Sweden. 

 Dr Axel Hamberg, 



Stockholm, Sweden. 



6. The Reservoir Lag in Glacier Variations. 



Prof. H. F. Reid, Baltimore, Md. 



7. The Glaciers of Mt Hood and Mt Adams. 



Prof. H. F. Reid, Baltimore, Md. 



8. Chatter-marks or Crescentic Sub-Glacial 



Fractures. 



Prof. G. K. Gilbert, Washington, D. C. 



9. The Antarctic Glaciers. 



Henryk Arctowski, Brussels, Belgium. 



