37] 



VOLUMES XXI-XXX. 



473 



MINERALS. 



Taranicllite, Italy, 28, 83. Tar- 

 l)Uttite, 28, 84. Terlinguaite, 

 Texas, 24, 270. Thorianite, 

 21, 187; 25, 521. Tremolite, 

 23, 31; water in, 26, loi. Tri- 

 dyniite, formation, ete., 22, 

 275. Tourmaline, Ellia, 24, 

 157; New York, 25, 123. 

 Tungstite, 25, 305. Turanite, 

 Central Asia, 30, 360. 

 Tychite, 22, 459. 



Uraninite, radio-active products, 

 23, 71; 25, 280. See Radio- 

 active. 



Vashegyite, Hungary, 30, 91. 

 Vesuvianite, New Jersey, .29, 

 184. Villiaumite, 25, 347. 



Warwickite, composition, 27, 

 179. Willemite, New Jersey, 

 23, 20; 29, 182. Wiltshireite, 

 Switzerland, 30, 359. Woh- 

 lerite, 23, 270. Wollastonite, 

 21, 89; formation, 22, 275. 



Yttrocrasite, Texas, 22, 515. 



Zincite, New Jersey, 29, 178. 



Zinnwaldite, Alaska, 24, 158. 



Zoisite crystals, Chester, 



Mass., 24, 249. 



Mines, Federal Bureau, 30, 292, 



419. 



— Department of, Canada, 30, 

 357- 



Mining Congress, American, 25, 



89; 28, 87. 

 Minnesota, divided lakes, Griggs, 



27, 388. 

 Mississippi geol. survey, 27, 264. 

 Missouri, copper deposits. Bain 



and Ulrich, 21, 160. 



— Devonian, Greger, 27, 374. 



— geol. Bureau, publications, 21, 

 181. 



— Pike County, geology, Row- 

 ley, 26, 514. 



— Shepard on underground 

 waters, Lane, 25, 452. 



Mixter, W. G., thermal constants 

 of acetylene, 22, 13; combus- 

 tion of silicon and silicon car- 

 bide, 24, 130; heat of combina- 

 tion of acidic oxides, 26, 125; 

 heat of oxidation of tin, 27, 229; 

 heat of formation of titanium 

 oxide, 27, 393; heat of forma- 

 tion of trisodium orthophos- 

 phate, etc., 28, 103; heat of for- 

 mation of molybdenum oxides, 

 etc., 29, 488; heat of formation 



of oxides of coI)alt and nickel, 

 etc., 30, 193. 



Molecular attraction, electric ori- 

 gin, Sutherland, 27, 487. 



Montana, geology of Marysville 

 district, 24, 85. 



Monteregian Hills. Canada, rare 

 rock type. Dresser, 28, 71. 



Moody, S. E., hydrolysis of salts 

 of iron, etc., 22, 176; of salts of 

 ammonium, 22, 379; iodometric 

 determination of liasic alumina, 

 22, 483; hydrolysis of ammo- 

 nium molybdate, 25, "j"] . 



Moon, effect of magnetic and 

 other forces on motion of, 

 Brown, 29, 529. 



— features of, Pickering, 23, 228. 



Moral Instruction in Schools, 

 Sadler, 26, 591. 



Morgan, T. H., Zoology, 23, 241. 



Morgan, W.C., Qualitative Analy- 

 sis, 23, 62. 



Morse, H. W., Chemistry, 28, 495. 



Moses, A. J., Mineralogy, 28, 563; 

 synthetic sapphires, 30, 271. 



Moulton, F. R., Astronomy, 22, 

 191; tidal and other problems, 

 28, 188. 



Mt. Pelee after its Eruptions, La- 

 croix, 26, 400. 



Mount Stephen rocks and fossils, 

 Walcott, 27, 414. 



Mount Weather Observatory, 

 bulletin, 25, 155, 532; 27, 270, 



492- 



Mountain building and igneous 

 injections, Daly, 22, 195. 



Mowbray, L., the cahow in Ber- 

 muda, 25, 361. 



Mumper, W. N., Physics, 25, 259. 



Munroe, Chas. E., artificial hema- 

 tite crystals, 24, 485. 



N 



Nantucket, glacial history, Wil- 

 son, 23, 6"]. 



— Pleistocene deposits, Cush- 

 man, 22, 187. 



Naphtha, natural, from Cuba, 

 Richardson and Mackenzie, 29, 



439- 

 National Museum, publications, 

 21, 260; report June 1904, 21, 



479- 

 Natural History Essays, Ren- 

 shaw, 25, 160. 



