Record oe Geology of Texas, 1887-1896. 
23 
PUBLICATIONS RELATING TO THE GEOLOGY OF TEXAS, 
1887-1896 INCLUSIVE, ARRANGED ALPHABETI- 
CALLY ACCORDING TO AUTHORS. 
1. Aldrich, T. H. 
A New Eocene Fossil from Texas. 
The Nautilus, VoL lY, No. 3, p. 25. Phila., July, 1890. 
Description of Omalaxis Singleyi n. sp. Locality: Lee County, Texas. 
“This is the second species now known from 'the lAtlaiitic Eocene. The 
first was descrihed by I. Lea from the Claiborne sand as ‘Orhis rotella.* 
For the generic synonomy, see Dali’s ‘IRqport nn the Molusca,’ 1889, part 2, 
p. 276. Discovered by J. A. 'Singley, Esq., and named in his honor.” 
2 . 
New or little known Tertiary Mollusea from Alabama and Texas. 
Bull. Am. Paleontology, Yol. I, No. 2, 30 pp., pis. 1-5. Ithaca, 
N. Y., June, 1895. 
“The fossils described in this paper were obtained by the writer between 
the years 1887 and 1889, and the plates and anost of the descriptions were 
prepared for publication early in 1890. The material, however, was never 
^published, and since then several of the forms illustrated have been de- 
scribed by others. A large num.ber of the species are from the Eocene 
of Alabama. They do noit by any means exhaust the subject, as the writer 
still has a number of new species from the prolific strata of Alabama and 
adjoining States. ' 
“Through the kindness of Professor Gilbert D. Harris, of Cornell Uni- 
versity, the writer is now able to publish the following descriptions. 
“All the types of the species herein described are in my collection unless 
otherwise stated.” P. 3. 
Only forms occurring in Texas are included in the following list: 
Scaphopoda: Cadulus juvenis, Mr., Mosley’s Perry, Burleson county; 
Lee county. Pteropoda : Greseis simplex ? Mr. Gastropoda : Borsoma 
{Scohinella) conradiana n. sp., Wheelock, Tex. B. plenta, Har. and Aid., 
Wheelock and other localities; Eucheilodon reticulata, Gabb, Wheelock; 
Glyphostoma harrisi n. sp., Wheelock, also Lee and Burleson counties; 
Pyramimitra costata, Lea, Texas; Pyrula {Fusoficula) texana, Harris, “oc- 
curs at Newton, Miss., Lisbon, Ala., and Texas.” Goniohasis texana Heilp., 
Wheelock and Lee County, Texas. 
3. American Naturalist. 
The Tertiary Formations of Western Texas. 
Yol. XXY, p. 49, Jan., 1891. 
A general note referring to the work of Prof. R. T. Hill. (Notes on the 
Geology of Western Texas, Geol. and Sci. Bull., Oct., 1888; The Geology 
of the Staked Plains of Texas, with a Description of the Staked Plains 
