19] 



VOLUMES I-X. 



497 



GEOLOGY— 



Cretaceous foraminifera of New 

 Jersey, Bagg, 6, 509. 



— formations of the Black Hills, 

 Ward, 9, 70 ; of Nebraska, Gould, 

 9, 429 ; in Kansas, Gould, 5, 169. 



— paleontology of Pacific Coast, 

 Stanton, 1, 320. 



— section at El Paso, Texas, Stan- 

 ton and Vaughan, 1, 21. 



— and Tertiary plants of North 

 America, Knowlton, 7, 168. 



— turtles of South Dakota, Wie- 

 land, 9, 237. 



Ctenaeanthus spines from the Keo- 

 kuk limestone of Iowa, Eastman, 

 4,10. 



Currituck Sound, Virginia and No. 

 Carolina, Wieland, 4, 76. 



Cycad horizons in the Eocky Moun- 

 tain region, Marsh, 6, 197. 



Cycadean moncecism, Wieland, 8, 

 "164. 



Cycadofilices, Wieland, 8, 309. 



Cycads, American fossil, Wieland, 



7, 219, 305. 383 ; Ward, 9, 70, 

 384; 10, 327. 



Deposits from borings in the Nile 



Delta, Judd, 4, 74. 

 Devonian Ainphibian footprints, 



Marsh, 2, 374. 



— fauna of black shale of Ken- 

 tucky, Girty, 6, 384. 



— fishes, Eastman, 7, 314. 



— formation of Southern IT. S., 

 Williams, 3, 393. 



— interval in northern Arkansas, 

 Williams, 8, 139. 



— of North Missouri, Broadhead, 

 2, 237. 



— strata in Colorado, Spencer, 9, 

 125 



— Upper, Key to, Harris, 9, 156. 

 Dictyospongidse, Hall and Clarke, 



9, 69, 224. 



Dinichthyids, relations of body- 

 plates, Eastman, 2, 46. 



Dinosaurs of North America, Marsh, 

 2, 458 ; European, Marsh, 4, 413. 



Earth, ageof, Kelvin, 7, 160; Geikie, 



8, 387 ; Joly, 8, 390. 



— movement, Van Hise, 5, 230 ; in 

 the Great Lakes region, Gilbert, 

 7, 239. 



Edwards plateau, geology, Hill and 



Vaughan, 7, 315. 

 Eocene of Atlantic Coast, Potomac 



river section of, Clark, 1, 365 ; 



— deposits of the Middle Atlantic 

 slope, Clark, 3, 250. 



— carnivore, Marsh, 7, 397. 



GEOLOGY— 



Eopaleozoic hot springs and sili- 

 ceous oolite, Wieland, 4, 262. 



Etcheminian fauna of Cape Breton, 

 Matthew, 9, 158. 



Face de la Terre, Suess-Margerie, 



5, 152 ; 10, 167. 



Fault at Jamesville, N. Y., Schnei- 

 der, 3, 458; in Meade Co., Kan- 

 sas, Haworth, 2, 368. 



Fauna of the Ithaca group, relation 

 of, Kindle, 3, 159. 



— prehistoric, of Block Island, 

 Eaton, 6, 137. 



Felidse of North America, extinct, 



Adams, 1, 419 ; 4, 145. 

 Flora of Lower Coal measures of 



Missouri, D. White, 10, 166. 

 Floras of North America, Newberry, 



8, 394. 

 Flore des couches permiennes de 



Trienbach, Zeiller, 3, 74. 

 Florencia formation, Hershey, 4, 



90 ; Pilsbry, 5, 232. 

 Foramina in cranium of a Permian 



reptile, Case, 3, 321. 

 Fossil fishes in British Museum, 



catalogue, Pt. Ill, Woodward, I, 



396. 



— insects of New Brunswick, Mat- 

 thew, 4, 394. 



— invertebrates and plants in 

 British Museum, 3, 489. 



— Medusae, Walcott, 6, 509. 



— plants, Seward, 5, 472. 

 Fossils from Canada, two new, 



Whiteaves, 6, 198. 



— invertebrate, from So. Pata- 

 gonia. Ortmann, 10, 368. 



— of the Midway Stage, Harris, 2, 

 86. 



— for the National Museum, Marsh, 



6, 101. 



— use of, in determining geological 

 age, Marsh, 6, 483. 



— vertebrate, of the Denver basin, 

 Marsh, 3, 349. 



Fox Islands, Me., geology, G. O. 

 Smith, 3, 161. 



Franklin white limestone. New Jer- 

 sey, Wolff and Brooks, 7, 397. 



Franz Joseph Land geology, 5, 233. 



Galeodidae, comparative rnorphol- 

 ogy, by Bernard, Beecher, 1, 491. 



Geothermal data from artesian wells 

 in the Dakotas, Darton, 5, 161. 



— gradient in Michigan, Lane, 9, 

 434. 



Glacial, glaciers, see Glacial, etc. 

 Glyphioceras and phylogony of the 

 Glyphioceratidae, Smith, 5, 315. 



