25 



VOLUMES XXXI— XL. 



701 



GEOLOGY. 



Tetrabclodon lulli, Barbour. 39, 



87 

 Thermal waters in the Yellow- 



ae Park. Hague, 31, 5 

 Thousand Island-. geology, 

 Lushing. Fairchild, etc., 32, 



Tietea singularis, Derby. 39, 



Tomistoma americana, Florida, 

 - lards, 40. 138. 



Tri.- anecticut, life of. 



Lull. 33. 



— oi the Himalayas. Diener. 35, 



— Massachusetts, Unios in, 



xell. 38, 460. 



— of No. America, coral reefs 

 in. Smith. 33, 02. 



Trilobites from Iowa. Slocum. 

 36. 



— Ordovician. Raymond. 31, 



79- 



••idoleptus zones of New 

 York Devonian. Williams. 36. 



Unios in Massachusetts Trias- 



sic, Troxell, 38, 460. 

 Vertebrate fossils of Texas. 



Lull. 39, 327: Troxell. 39, 613. 



— remains from Cuzco. Peru, 

 Eatnn. 36, 3. 



\"ertebrates. Permo-Carbonifer- 

 ous. New Mexico. Case. Wil- 

 liston and Mehl. 37, 117. 



Volcanoes, etc.. see Volcanoes. 



YYabana iron ore of Newfound- 

 land. Hayes, 40, ^22. 



Waverlyan period of Tennes- 

 ssler, 32, 323. 



Well, see Well. 



White Mountains, X. II.. glacial 

 cirques in. Goldthwait. 37, 



45L 



Williamsonian tribe, Wieland. 



32, 433- 

 \\ ustenbildung. das Gesetz der, 

 Walther, 35. 



dilla. Eocene am 1 

 Berry. 39, 2 

 Geometry, Descriptive, Church 

 rtlett, 32, 

 ur Dimensions, Man- 

 ning. 39, 127. 

 — I'!;ine. Palmer, and Taylor. 

 40. 



mith, 33, 168. 

 Georgia, A. E., Weeds, 40, 92. 



Georgia, coastal plain geology. 

 Veatch and Stephenson, 34, 486. 



— geol. survey, see Geological 

 Reports. 



Getman, F. H., Chemistry. 37, 



195. 

 Gibbs, Wolcott, ring burner of, 



1 ,ei ison, 38, 489. 

 Gibson, A. H., Sources of Energy, 



37, 480. 

 Gilbert, G. K., transportation of 



debris by running water. 39, 



1 28, 

 Girty, G. H., growth stages in 



Naticopsis altonensis, 34, 338. 

 Given, A., Sugar Analysis, 34, 01. 

 Glacial cirques near Mt. Wash- 

 ington. Goldthwait. 35, I. 



— deposits en the Navajo Reser- 

 vation, igneous origin of sup- 

 posed. Gregory, 40, 97. 



— fractures, crescentic origin of, 

 Lahee, 33, 41 • 



— geology of Catskill Mts., 

 Rich, 39, 13;. 



— lake. Hubbard, 37, 444; Lev- 

 erett. 38, 432. 



— man in England, Slater, 34, 



94- 



— moraine in New Hampshire, 



Foshay, 38, 345- 



Glaciation, Paleozoic, Lahee, 37, 



316. 

 Glaciers, Characteristics of, 



Hobbs, 32, 71. 



— periodic variations. 1900. 32, 

 72: to 10. 33, 288; 191 1, 35, 333; 

 191 2. 37, 282: 1913, 39, 608. 



Glasgow University, Geological 

 Papers, 40, 666. 



Glass, silica. devitrification, 

 ( rookes, 34, 397- 



Glass-blowing, 33, 380. 



Goddard, H. H., Feebleminded- 

 ness, 39, 229. 



Gold crystals, Graham, 31, 45. 



— with sillimanite, 33, 241. 



— See MINERALS. 



Goldman, M. I., origin of Cata- 

 houla sandstone of Texas, 39, 

 261. 



Goldsberry, J. P., composition of 



bornite, 37, 539. 

 Goldschmidt, V., Atlas der Krys- 



tallformen, prospectus, 35. 553; 



Vol. T. 36, 313; Vol. H. 37, 



— quartz from No ( arolina, 34, 



414. 



