GLACIAL WATERS IN THE LAKE ERIE BASIN 



7 



Latest and Lowest Pre-Iroquois Channels between Syracuse and Rome. 



N. Y. State Geol. 21st An. Rep't. 1903. p. 32-47. 

 Summary of Work in the Erie Basin, with Map of Lake Warren. N. Y. 



State Geol. 22d An. Rep't. 1904. p. 11. 

 Gilbert, G. K. History of Niagara River. N. Y. State Reservation at 



Niagara. 6th Rep't. 1890. p. 61-84. 

 Recent Earth-movement in the Great Lakes Region. U. S. Geol. Sur. 



18th An. Rep't. 1898. pt 2. p. 601-47. 

 Hall, James. Geology of New York: Report on Fourth District. 1843. 



6 75 P- 



Leverett, Frank. Correlation of New York Moraines with Raised Beaches of 



Lake Erie. Am. Jour. Sci. ser. 3. 1S95. 50:1—20. 

 Correlation of Moraines with Beaches on the Border of Lake Erie. Am. 



Geol. 1898. 21:195-99. 

 Glacial Formations and Drainage Features of the Erie and Ohio Basins. 



U. S. Geol. Sur. Monogr. XLI. 1902. 802 p. 

 Newberry, J. S. On the Origin and Drainage of the Basins of the Great Lakes. 



Am. Phil. Soc. Proc. 1883. 20:91—95. 

 Spencer, J. W. A Review of the History of the Great Lakes. Am. Geol. 1894. 



14:289—301. 



Tarr, R. S. Geology of the Chautauqua Grape Belt. Cornell Univ. Agric. 



Exp Sta. Bui. 109. 1896. p. 91— 122. 

 Taylor, F, B. Correlation of Erie-Huron Beaches with Outlets and Moraines 



in Southern Michigan. Geol. Soc. Am. Bui. 1897. 8:31—58.- 

 The Great Ice Dams of Lakes Maumee, Whittlesey and Warren. 



Am. Geol. 1899. 24:6-38. 

 Upham. Warren. Origin and Age of the Laurentian Lakes and of Niagara 



Falls. Am. Geol. 1896. 18:169-77. 



AREA. MAPS 



The area described in this paper may be denned briefly as that 

 part of New York State which drains into Lake Erie; but the his- 

 tory of the glacial waters involves territory far east of the present 

 Erie drainage, as the valleys of Oatka, Genesee, Hemlock and 

 Honcoye were forced to send their overflow westward into Lake 

 Warren for a time during the later stages of our history. 



The principal phenomena herein described lie in a belt parallel 

 to the present Erie shore and having a direction nearly northeast 

 and southwest [see pi. 1]. From the Pennsylvania state line to the 

 valley of Cattaraugus creek the belt is only 5 to 10 miles wide, and 

 from the Cattaraugus eastward the phenomena are not spread over 

 a much wider belt until near the Tonawanda valley. The distance 

 covered by the belt in direct course from State Line to Indian Falls 

 is about 90 miles. 



The territory is included in the counties of Chautauqua, Cattarau- 

 gus, Erie, Wyoming and Genesee. In plates 1-6 the readerwill have 

 before him the following sheets of the New York topographic map: 

 Westfield, Dunkirk, Cherry Creek, Silver Creek, Buffalo, Depew, 

 Attica, Batavia and Caledonia. 



