Ee ——————E————— 
19] 
GEOLOGY— 
Dolomite-making, Hogbom, ix, 427; 
Klement, ix, 426. 
Drainage features of Upper Ohio 
basin, Chamberlin and Leverett, 
vil, 247; correction, vii, 483. 
Drift bowlders in Central New 
York, Brigham, ix, 213. 
extra-moraine of New Jersey, 
Wright, vi, 304. 
EKarth Lore, fragments of, Geikie, 
vii, 147. 
straining and secular cooling, 
Davidson, vii, 480. 
Karth’s age, King, v, 1; Fisher, v, 
464. 
‘Elotherium, Marsh, vii, 407. 
Eocene and Chattahoochee Miocene 
in Georgia, time break between, 
Pumpelly, vi, 445. 
mammals, new order, Marsh, 
iii, 445. 
of Maryland and _ Virginia, 
Harris, vii, 301. 
and Miocene of Georgia and 
Florida, Foerste, viii, 41. 
of the U. S., Clark, iii, 539. 
Kureka district, geology, Hague, v, 
161. 
Extra-moraine fringe in Kast. 
Pennsylvania, Williams, vii, 34. 
Fauna at the base of the Burling- 
ton limestone in Missouri, Keyes, 
iv, 447. 
of the St. John Group, Mat- 
thew, ii, 78; viii, 72. 
Feldspaths des roches volcaniques, 
Fouqué, ix, 477. 
Fiord of the Hudson River, Ed- 
wards, iii, 182. 
Flora of the Great Falls Coal Field, 
Montana, Newberry, i, 191. 
tertiaria Italica, Meschinelli and 
Squinabol, v, 488. 
Florida phosph. deposits, Darton, 
i : 
Folds and faults, underthrust, 
Smith, v, 309. ce 
Fossil Botany, Solm-Laubach, iii, 
537. 
Cephalopoda in the British Mu- 
seum, Pt. II, Foord, i, 488. _ 
of the Coal measures, William- 
son, v, 437. . 
faunas at Springfield, Missouri, 
Weller, ix, 185. 
flora of the Bozeman coal field, 
Knowlton, iv, 334; von Schénegg, 
Ettingshausen, i, 331. 
insects of North America, Scud- 
der, i, 330; of the world, index to 
known, Scudder, ii, 516 ; iil, 244. 
VOLUMES XLI-L. 53a 
GEOLOGY— 
Fossil mammals, North American, 
v, 159. 
plant remains from Argentine 
R., Szajnocha, iii, 538. 
plants of the Coal measures, 
Williamson, i, 437; in glaciated 
regions, Nathorst, iv, 336: plants 
as tests of climate, Seward, v, 
438. 
shells in the drumlins of the 
Boston basin, Crosby and Ballard, 
viii, 486. 
wood of Sweden, Conwentz, 
vii, 320. 
Fossils, Cretaceous of Syria, Whit- 
field, iii, 159; post-Glacial, near 
Boston, Upham, iii, 201; St. 
ch ol sandstone, Sarderson, iii, 
539. 
Fulgurite, Maine, Bayley, iii, 327. 
Galveston, deep well, Dumble and 
Harris, vi, 38. 
Geologic time, discussed, King, v, 
1; Upham, v, 209; Fisher, v, 
464 ; Walcott, vi, 307. 
Geological classifications, dual 
nomenclature, Williams, vii, 143. 
Geology of Angel Island, Ransome, 
ix, Ta 
recent discussions, Dawson, 
vii, 135. 
of the Taylorville region, Cali- 
fornia, Diller, iv, 330. 
glaciers, see Glacial, Glaciation, 
Glaciers. 
Gold deposit at Pine Hill, Califor- 
nia, Lindgren, iv, 92. 
fields of the So. Appalachians, 
Becker, 1, 425. 
Grand River, Labrador, Cary, ii, 
419, 516. 
Great Lakes, changes of levelin the 
region of, Taylor, ix, 69. 
Green Mts. main axis, Whittle, vii, 
347. 
Greylock synclinorium, Dale, ii, 
347. 
Gulf of Mexico as a measure of isos- 
tasy, McGee, iv, 177. 
Harrisburg terraces, Bashore, vii, 98. 
Helderberg limestone of Mt. Bob, 
Harris, iii, 236. 
Hematite and martite iron ores in 
Mexico, Hill, v, 111. 
High level shores of the Great Lakes, 
Spencer, i, 201. 
Holonema of Newberry, ventral 
plates, Williams, vi, 285. 
Horned Artiodactyle, Marsh, i, 81. 
Horses, recent polydactyle, Marsh, 
iii, 339. 
