412 
Index. 
Note on the discovery of a sessile Con- 
ularia, R. Rudemann, 158. 
Notes of some syenitic rocks from Cali¬ 
fornia, H. W. Turner, 375. 
O 
Ohio Academy of Science, 124. 
Om OJandska Rankar, J. G. Andersson, 
55. 
On a supposed discovery of the antennae 
of trilobites by Linnaeus in 1759, C. E. 
Beecher, 303. 
On the correlation of the New York mor¬ 
aines with the raised beaches of lake 
Erie, Frank Leverett, 118. 
On the validity of the family Bohemilli- 
dae, C. E. Beecher, 360. 
Origin of Conglomerates, G. L. Collie, 
126. 
Ozarkian epoch, 389. 
P 
Palache, Charles, 121. 
Paleontologische Notizen, Carl Winan, 
119. 
Paleozoic terranes in the Connecticut 
valley, C. H. Hitchcock, 105. 
Patton, H. B., Stone capped pillars of 
earth, 122. 
Pavlow, A. P., Dikes of sandstone in the 
Neocomian clays of Alatyr, 251. 
Pearce, Richard, Some notes on the oc¬ 
currence of uranite in Colorado, 396. 
Petrology for students, A. Harker, 327. 
Phenomena of falling meteorites, O. C. 
Farrington, 82. 
Philadelphia Academy of Sciences, 261; 
346; 404. 
Philadelphia meeting of the Geological 
Society of America, W. Upham, 89. 
Physical conditions of the flow of gla¬ 
ciers, Warren Upham, 16. 
Physical features of the proposed canal 
between the St. Lawrence and lake 
Huron, Ells and Barlow, 250. 
Physical Geography of Southern New 
England, W. M. Davis, 250. 
Pirsson, L. V., A needed term in petrog¬ 
raphy, 94. 
Plains of Marine and subaerial denuda¬ 
tion, W. M. Davis, 96. 
Possible depth by mining and boring, A. • 
C. Lane, 100. 
Preglacial and Postglacial valleys of the 
Cuyahoga and Rocky rivers, Warren 
Upham, 105. 
Preglacial tributary of Paint creek, W. 
G.' Tight, 326. 
Preglacial valleys of the Mississippi and 
its tributaries. Frank Leverett, 118. 
Preliminary Notes on studies of the 
Great Lakes made in 1895, F. B.Taylor. 
Prestwich, Joseph, 191. 
Proofs of the rising of the land around 
Hudson Bay, Robert Bell, 99. 
Q 
Quarries in the lava beds at Meriden, W T . 
M. Davis, 189. 
R 
Rand, T. D., 346. 
Rauff, H., Ueber angebliche Organis- 
menreste aus pracambrischen Schich- 
ten der Bretagne, 396. 
Heade, T. M., British Geology, 248. 
Rebeur-Paschwitz, 123. 
Recent Publications, 56, 119, 190, 251, 336, 
402. 
Reid, H. F., Notes on glaciers, 101; 340. 
Reis, H., A visit to the bauxite mines of 
Georgia and Alabama, 263. 
Relation between ice-lobes south of the 
Wisconsin driftless area, Frank Lev¬ 
erett, 102. 
ReJations of Geologic science to educa¬ 
tion, N. S. Shaler, 95. 
Resum6 of general stratigraphic rela¬ 
tions in the Atlantic coastal plain from 
New Jersey to South Carolina, N. H. 
Darton, 108. 
Ruedemann, R., Notes on a sessile Conu- 
laria, 158. 
Rutimeyer, Ludwig, 259. 
S 
Saint Peter sandstone, F. W. Sardeson, 
390. 
Sardeson, F. W., The Saint Peter sand¬ 
stone, 390. 
Salisbury, R. D., 101,102. 
Schweinitz, E. A., 257. 
Schuchert, Charles, 59. 
Scott, W. B., 346. 
Scudder, S. H., Canadian fossil insects, 
189. 
Sekiya, S., 261. 
Shaler, N. S., Relations of geologic sci¬ 
ence to education, 95; 96; 100; 102; 104; 
Importance of volcanic dust and pum¬ 
ice in marine deposits, 93. 
Shell-bearing modified drift in Great 
Britain, 45. 
Silurisk Posidonomyaskiffer, en egen- 
domtig.utbildning af sk&nes Ofversi- 
lur, J. C. Moberg, 55. 
Simonds, F. W., Floating sand: an un¬ 
usual mode of river transportation, 29. 
Simpson, C. F., 404. 
Smith, E. A., 404. 
Smyth, C. H., 407. 
Smyth, H. L. (with Finlay), Geological 
structure of the western part of the 
Vermilion range, 247. 
Smycka, F., Beitrag zur Kenntniss der 
Trilobiten fauna im Mahrische Devon 
bei Celechovitz, 396. 
Smack, J. C., Geological Survey of New 
Jersey,186. 
Soils of Illinois, Frank Leverett, 119. 
Sollas, Prof., 192. 
Some fine examples of stream robbing in 
the Catskill mountains, N. H. Darton, 
98. 
Some notes on the occurrence of uranite 
in Colorado, R. Pearce, 396, 
Some stages of Appalachian erosion, 
Arthur Keith, 109. 
Some stages in the development of rivers 
J. M. Clements, 126. 
Spencer, J. W., 404. 
Spirif6res du Coblenzien Beige, Beclard, 
249. 
Stanton, T. W., 346. 
Stevenson, J. J., The Cerillos coal fields 
of New Mexico, 94,128. 
Stone capped Pillars of earth, 122. 
Story-Maskelyne, Crystallography: a 
treatise on the morphology of crystals, 
53. 
Structure of certain Paleozoic barnacles, 
J. M. Clarke, 137. 
Studies of Paleeechinoidea, R. T. Jack- 
son, 329. 
Studies of Melonites multiporus, R. T. 
Jackson and T. A. Jaggar, Jr., 326. 
Sublacustrine Till, W. Upham, 371. 
Summary of Progross in Petrography in 
1895, W. S. Bayley, 335. 
Summer courses in Geology at Havard, 
342. 
Szabo, Joseph, 192. 
