29 



PUBLICATIONS BY MEMBERS OF THE GEOLOGICAL 



DEPARTMENT. 



The following papers of a scientific nature have been published 

 during the year. 



By N. S. Shaler: — 



1. The Conditions of Erosion beneath Deep Glaciers, based upon a 

 study of the Boulder Train from Iron Hill, Cumberland, R. I. Bull. 

 Mus. Comp. Zool., XVI. No. 11, pp. 185-225. January, 1893. 4 

 plates, 1 map. 



2. The Interpretation of Nature. Houghton, Mifflin & Co., Boston 

 and New York, 1893. 16mo., pp. xi., 305. 



3. Report on the Work done in the Atlantic Coast Division of the 

 U. S. Geological Survey for the Year ending June 30, 1890. Eleventh 

 Annual Report of the Director of the U. S. Geological Survey, Part I. 

 pp. 62-64. Washington, D. C, 1891. 



4. Report of the Commission to improve the Highways of the Com- 

 monwealth of Massachusetts. Boston, 1893, pp. 238. [With Geo. S. 

 Perkins and W. E. McClintock.] 



5. On the Antiquity of Man in North America. Amer. Geol., 1893, 

 XL pp. 180-184. 



By W. M. Davis : — 



1. Geographical Illustrations. Suggestions for teaching Plrysieal 

 Geography, based on the Physical Features of Southern New England. 

 An Address delivered at Narragansett Pier, R. I., July 6, 1892. Proc. 

 Amer. Inst. Instruction ; also reprinted and for sale by the University. 



2. The Extension of Physical Geography in Elementary Teaching. 

 An Address delivered before the Middlesex Schoolmasters' Club in 

 Boston, October, 1892. School and College, December, 1892, I. pp. 

 599-608. 



3. Geography in the Schools. School Review, June, 1893, I. pp. 

 327-339. 



4. The Improvement of Geographical Teaching. Nat. Geogr. Mag., 

 July, 1893, IV. pp. 68-75. 



5. The Subglacial Origin of Certain Eskers. Proc. Bost. Soc. Nat. 

 Hist, 1892, XXV. pp. 477-499. 



