APPENDIX. 



437 



1865, June 10. King and Rowney (Profs.), Question the organic nature 



of Eozoon, while Dr. Carpenter sustains it, supported by the au- 

 thority of Milne-Edwards. 



1866, Feb. 10. Carpenter (Dr. W. B.), Announces Eozoon from Australia 



and Bavaria, and controverts the position of Profs. King and Row- 

 ney. Noticed in Amer. Jour. Sci. [2], xli., 406. 

 1866, Aug. King and Rowney (Profs. ), " On the so-called Eozoonal rock," 

 denying its organic character. Quar. Jour. Geol. Soc. , Lond. , xxii. , 

 pt. ii. , 23. Their position is controverted in the same No. Their 

 " Summary" is reproduced Amer. Jour. Sci. [2], xliv., 375. 



1866. Giimbel (Dr.), " Occurrence of Eozoon in East Bavarian primitive 

 rocks." Sitzungsberichte d. K. Acad. d. W. in Miinchen, i., 1. Re- 

 produced Quar. Jour. Geol. Soc, Lond., xxii., pt. i., p. 185. No- 

 ticed Amer. Jour. Sci. [2], xliii., 398. Confirmed by Carpenter, 

 Proc. Roy. Soc, No. xciii., p. 508. 



1867, May. Dawson and Logan. Describe new specimens of Eozoon from 



Tudor, C. W. Quar. Jour. Geol. Soc 



1867. Carpenter (Dr. W. B.), Reasserts organic nature of Eozoon in op- 

 position to King and Rowney. Proc. Royal Soc, No. xciii. , p. 503. 



1867. Pusirevski (Prof.), Reports Eozoon Canadense at Hopinwara, Fin- 

 land. Bull. Acad. St. Petersburg, x., 151. Noticed Amer. Jour. 

 Sci. [2], xliv., 284. 



1867, Nov. Dawson (J. W.), Notes on Eozoon from Tudor, C. W., from 

 Long Lake and Wentworth, and from Madoc, with remarks by Dr. 

 W. B. Carpenter. Amer. Jour. Sci. [2], xliv., 367. Republished 

 Amer. Jour. Sci. [2], xlvi., 245 (Sept., Ii 



Note III. , page 76. 

 As the reader may frequently desire to refresh his memory in reference 

 to the order of superposition of the great groups of strata, the following 

 table is appended for reference. The groups follow each other in the 

 natural order of superposition. 



CLASSIFICATION OF THE STRATIFIED ROCKS OF NORTH AMERICA. 



a 5 

 m. 



<J1 



s 



Groups. 



Localities. 



Some leading Types 

 of Fossils. 



o 

 o 



N 



o 

 z 

 a 





Terrace. 

 Champlain. 



Glacial. 



The existing surface. 

 Lake and river ter- 

 races. 

 Deep-seated gravel and 

 clays. 



Existing animals. 

 Cave Bear, Hairy Elephant, etc. 



Primeval Man. 

 Cave Bear and associates. 



H 



Sumter. 

 Yorktown. 



Vicksburg. 

 Jackson. 

 Claiborne. 



S. C. ; Upper Missouri. 



Va. ; "Bad Lands," 



Dakotah. 



Mississippi. 



Southern Ala. and Miss. 



Southern Ala. 



Extinct mammals. 

 Great increase of mammals. 



Orbitoides ; Crocodiles. 



Zeuglodon (whale-like). 



Sharks; Sea-urchins; Shells. 



