ADDITIONS TO THE LIBRARY. 



II 9 



the Farmington River at TariffVille, Conn., 430. — H. C. Lewis. Com- 

 parative Studies upon the Glaciation of North America, Great Britain, 

 and Ireland, 433. — I. P. Bishop. On certain Fossiliferous Limestones of 

 Columbia Co., IS". Y., and their relation to the Hudson River Shales and 

 the Taconic System, 438. — S. L. Penfield. Crystallized Vanadinite from 

 Arizona and New Mexico, 441. — S. W. Ford. Note on the Age of the 

 Swedish Paradoxides Beds, 473. 



New Haven. American Journal of Science. Ser. 3. Yol. xxxiii. 

 Nos. 193-197. 1887. 

 C. A. White. Age of Coal found in the region traversed "by the Rio 

 Grande, 18. — J. S. Diller. The latest Volcanic Eruption in Northern 

 California, and its peculiar Lava, 45. — G. F. Becker. The Texture of 

 Massive Rocks, 50. — G. F. Kunz. Fifth Mass of Meteoric Iron from 

 Augusta Co., Va., 58. — J. S. Emerson, L. L. Van Slyke, F. S. Dodge. 

 Kilauea after the Eruption of March 1886, 87. — J. D. Dana. Volcanic 

 Action, 102.— P. W. Huntington. The Coahuila, 115.— S. L. Penfield. 

 Phenacite from Colorado, with notes on the Locality of Topaz Butte by 

 W. B. Smith, 130. — G. H. Williams. The Norites of the " Cortlandt 

 Series " on the Hudson River, near Peekskill, N. Y., 135, 191.— A. N. 

 Ailing. On the Topaz from the Thomas Range, Utah, 146. — G. F. Becker. 

 Natural Solutions of Cinnabar, Gold, and associated Sulphides, 199. — 

 N. S. Shaler. Fluviatile Swamps of New England, 210. — \V. E. Hidden. 

 On the Mazapel Meteoric Iron, which fell November 27, 1887, 221. 

 — G. F. Kuntz. On two new Meteorites from Carroll County, Ken- 

 tucky, and Catozze, Mexico, 228. — J. J. Stevenson. The Faults of 

 South-west Virginia, 262. — J. D. Dana. On Taconic Rocks and 

 Stratigraphy, with a Geological Map of the Taconic Regions, 270. — G. 

 H. Kinahan. Irish Esker Drift, 276. — A. H. Chester. Mineralogical 

 Notes from the Laboratory of Hamilton College, 284.— R. T. Hill. "The 

 Topography and Geology of the Cross Timbers and surrounding regions in 

 Northern Texas, 291. — O. C. Marsh. American Jurassic Mammals, 327. 

 — C. A. White. On the Inter-Relation of Contemporaneous Fossil Faunas 

 and Floras, 364. — L. P. Gratacap. The Eozoonal Rock of Manhattan 

 Island, 374. — G. H. Stone. Terminal Moraines in Maine, 378. — C. R. 

 Van Hise. Note on the Enlargement of Hornblendes and Augites in 

 Fragmental and Eruptive Rocks, 385. — J. D. Dana. On Taconic Rocks 

 and Stratigraphy, with a Geological Map of the Taconic Region, 393. 



. Connecticut Academy of Arts and Sciences. Transactions. 



Vol. viii. Part 1. 1886. 



New York. Academy of Sciences. Annals. Vol. iii. Nos. 9-12. 

 1885. 



G. F. Kuntz. On remarkable Copper Minerals from Arizona, 275. — 

 G. F. Kuntz. The Meteorite from Glorieta Mountain, Santa Fe, New 

 Mexico, 329.— F. J. H. Merrill. On the Geology of Long Island, 341.— 

 A. A. Julien. On the Variation of Decomposition in the Iron Pyrites ; 

 its Cause and its relation to Density, 365. t 



■ . . Transactions. Vol. v. (1885-86). Nos. 2-8. 1886. 



J. S. Newberry. Description of some Gigantic Placoderni Fishes 

 recently discovered in the Devonian of Ohio, 25. — B. B. Chamberlin. 

 Minerals of Harlem and Vicinity, 74. — J. J. Friedrich. Notes on Local 

 Mineralogy, 121. — R. P. Stevens. On the San Juan Mountains of Colo- 

 rado, 121. — G. F. Kuntz. Rare Gems and interesting Minerals, 131. — 

 J. S. Newberry. The Cretaceous Flora of North America, 133. — G. F. 



