21] 
GEOLOGY— 
Ornithopoda of the American Ju- 
rassic, Marsh, viii, 85. 
Ouachita Mt. system, Hill, ii, 111. 
Palzaspis, Claypole, iv, 428. 
Palzobotany of the Cretaceous for- 
mation of Staten Island, Hollick, 
v, 437. 
“ae corallines, Whitfield, ix, 
crustacea, bibliography, 1698- 
1889, Vogdes, i, 436. 
fossil localities of Pa., N. J., 
and Vermont, Foerste, vi, 435. 
species of Lindley and Hutton’s 
Fossil Flora, Kidston, iii, 244. 
| Permian coal plants, Zeiller, ii, ‘75. 
of Texas, Tarr, iii, 9. 
Petroleum, asphaltum and bitumen, 
Jaceard, 1, 509. 
natural gas, etc., of west Ken- 
tucky, Orton, iv, 78. 
Phosphate fields of Florida, Darton, 
i, 102; Johnson, v, 497. 
Phosphates of America, Wyatt, iii, 
79. 
influence of swamp waters on 
formation, Reese, iii, 402. 
Pithecanthropus erectus, Marsh, ix, 
144, 
Pleistocene dislocations, of the U. 
2, Shaler, vii, 138. 
fluvial planes of Pennsylvania, 
Leverett, ii, 200. 
fossils, Winthrop, Mass., Dodge, 
vii, 100. 
history of N. EH. Iowa, McGee, 
Bayt. 
and pre-Pleistocene of Missis- 
sippi basin, Chamberlin and Salis- 
bury, i, 359. 
Portage of New York, Prosser, vi, 
212. 
Post-Hocene formations of Alabama, 
Smith, vii, 285. 
Post-glacial eolian action in So. New 
England, Woodworth, vii, 63. 
history of the Hudson River 
Valley, Merrill, i, 460. 
origin, faults of, Matthew, ix, 
O22. 
shore-line on Mackinac Is., 
Taylor, iii, 210. 
submergence, central Michigan 
and the, Mudge, 1, 442. 
subsidence of the middle Atlan- 
tic coast, Lindenkohl, i, 498. 
Post-Laramie deposits of Colorado, 
Cross, iv, 19. 
Pre-Cambrian organisms, Cayeux, 
1, 267. ; 
Pre-Olenellus fauna, Noetling, viii, 
VOLUMES XLI-L. 
535 
GEOLOGY— 
Protolenus fauna, Matthew, 1, 265. 
Quaternary carnivores of the Island 
of Malta, v, 74; deposits of Rus- 
sia, Nikitin on the, A. A. Wright, 
v, 459. 
era and deposits of flooded 
rivers, Uphan, i, 33. 
Quebec City, geology, Ami, iii, 75. 
Radiolarians, pre-Cambrian, Cay- 
eux, ix, 322. 
Raised reefs of Fernando de Nor- 
onha, Ridley, i, 406. 
aes sandstone of Iowa, Keyes, 
1, 278. 
Reptilian remains from the Triassic 
of No. California, Merriam, 1, 55. 
Resin, fossil, Smith, viii, 73. 
Rock-fracture at Appleton, Wis., 
Cramer, i, 432 ; Reade, i, 409. 
Rocky Mt. range in British America, 
elevation, since the close of the 
Cretaceous, Dawson, ix, 463; 
region in Canada, Dawson, ii, 
259. 
Saganaga syenite, Winchell, i, 386 ; 
Selwyn, iii, 319. 
Sandstone, columnar, Milne Curran, 
1, 425. 
Secular cooling, and earth strain- 
ing, Davidson, vii, 480. 
Seismic periods, Davison, vii, 155. 
Sharon, coal of N. E. Ohio, quartz 
bowlder in, Orton, iv, 62. 
Shasta-Chico series, Diller, vii, 141. 
Shasta region of California, meta- 
morphic series, Smith, 1, 346. 
Shawangunk Mtn., Darton, vii, 482. 
Shear-zone in the Adirondacks, 
Kemp, iv, 109. 
Siliceous beds in the Eocene of 
New Zealand, Hinde and Holmes, 
iv, 259. 
sinter formed by vegetation of 
hot springs, Weed, i, 158. 
Silurian limestone in No. Michigan, 
Seaman, viii, 173. 
sandstone of Keweenaw Pt., 
Wadsworth, ii, 170. 
Lower, fish remains in, Wal- 
cott, i, 245; Lamellibranchiata, 
new, Ulrich, iv, 79; limestone, 
Tennessee, Shaler, ix, 160. 
Silurian, upper strata near Penob- 
scot Bay, Me., Dodge and Beecher, 
iii, 412. 
Soils, origin and nature, Shaler, v, 
163. 
Sphenophyllum, Newberry, ii, 76. 
Steep Rock Lake, Ont., geology, 
Smyth, ii, 317. 
Stegosaurus, restoration of, Marsh, 
ii, 179 
