﻿490 



INDEX. 



Geology — 



Palaeontology, Contributions to, Ul- 

 rica, 78; Paradoxides beds, age of 

 Swedish, Ford, 47 3 ; Petroleum and 

 gas of Ohio, 241. 

 River beds, California, LeConte, 161. 

 Schists, origin of ferruginous, Irving, 

 255; Sediments, origin of Ameri- 

 can, Hull, 407 ; Sierra Nevada, 

 elevation of, LeConte, 167 ; Strepho- 

 chetus, Seely, 31 ; Stroma topora, 78. 

 Taconic stratigraphy and fossils, 

 Dana, 236; relations of, Bishop, 

 438 ; Temperature in mines, Wheeler, 

 125 ; Tertiary and Grand Gulf, 

 Meyer, 20 ; Tertiary on Long Island, 

 324; Trap range, Holyoke, 323; 

 Trap and sandstone in gorge of 

 Farmington R., Conn., Rice, 430 ; 

 Triassic of Connecticut valley, struc- 

 ture of, Davis, 321, 342. 

 Glaciers of Alps, enlargement and dimi- 

 nution in, 77. 

 Glass, devitrified, 78; strain-effect of 

 sudden cooling, Barus and Strouhal, 

 181. 

 Goldschmidt, Y., Index der Krystall- 



formen der Mineralien, 485. 

 Goodale, G. L., botanical notice, 486. 

 Gould, B. A., photographic determina- 

 tions of stellar positions, 369. 

 Gray, A., Edward Tuckerman, 1 ; Bo- 

 tanical notices, 79, 164, 244, 325, 411 

 473, 485. 



H 



Hague, A., volcanic rocks of Salvador, 

 26. 



Harper, D. A"., herderite and beryl, 107 ; 

 composition of ralstonite, 380. 



Herman, D., devitrified glass, 78. 



Hidden, W. E , contributions to miner- 

 alogy, 204; meteoric iron from Texas, 

 304 ; emeralds and hiddenite from N. 

 Carolina, 483. 



Hooker, J.. Icones Plantarum, 166, 486; 

 Flora of India, 325. 



Hull, E., age of North Atlantic basin 

 and origin of eastern American sedi- 

 ments, 407. 



Hunt, T. S., Classification in Mineralogy, 

 410 ; Mineral Physiology, 485. 



Huntington, 0. W., crystalline structure 

 of iron meteorites, 284. 



Ice, conductivity, etc., of, 481. 



Iddings, J. P., volcanic rocks of Salva- 

 dor, 26. 



Irving, R. D., origin of ferruginous 

 schists and iron ores of Lake Supe- 

 rior region, 255. 



Kunz, G. F., meteoric iron from New 

 Mexico, 311. 



Langley, S. P., unrecognized wave- 

 lengths, 83. 



Lavallee, A., Notice biographique sur, 

 326. 



LeConte, J., elevation of the Sierra 

 Nevada, shown by river beds, 167. 



Lewis, H.C., studies upon glaciation in 

 Great Britain, 433. 



Liquids, compressibility and surface ten- 

 sion, 481. 



Lotti, B., Ophiolitic rocks of Italy, etc., 

 239. 



Lubbock, J., Flowers, fruits, and leaves, 

 411; forms of seedlings, 485. 



M 



Marcou, J. B., Bibliography of fossil 



Invertebrates, 246. 

 Mayer, A. M., well-spherometer, 61. 

 Measurements, potential strengthener 



for, 481. 

 Meem, J. G., limonite pseudomorphs 



after pyrite, 274. 

 Mendenhall, T. C electrical resistance 



of soft carbon, 218. 

 Merrill, G. H, composition of Pliocene 



sandstones, 199. 

 Meteoric iron, New Mexico, Kunz, 311. 

 Meteoric iron from Texas, Hidden, 304. 

 Meteorites, catalogue of. in Museum of 

 Yale College, Dana, Appendix; gase- 

 ous constituents of, 482 ; iron, crystal- 

 line structure of, Huntington, 284; from 

 Utah and Missouri, Dana and Penfield, 

 226. 

 Meteorology, work on Mexican, 246. 

 Meyer, O., Tertiary and Grand Gulf, 20. 

 Milne, J., Yolcanoes of Japan, 233. 

 Minerals — 



Argyrodite, 163; Arkansite, 314; 



Arminite, 163. 

 Beryl, Penfield and Harper, 107 ; 

 Biotite, analysis, Claassen, 244; 

 Brookite, Arkansas, Dana, 314. 

 Cerussite, crystallized, Brown, 380; 

 Columbite, Do/na, 386; Copper, 

 artificial crystals, Brown, 377 ; Crys- 

 tallization of native, Dana, 413 ; 

 Cuprite, artificial crystals, Brown, 

 379. 

 Diaspore, Dana, 388. 

 Emeralds, North Carolina, 483. 

 Garnets, pseudormorphs of, Penfield 



and Spetry, 307. 

 Gold, crystallization of, Dana. 132. 



