427 
INDEX TO VOL. XI. 
Abandoned strands of lake Warren, A 
C. Lawson, 177. 
A classification of the brachiopoda, 
Cliarles Sciiuchert, 141. 
Additional evidence bearing on tlie 
glacial liistoi-y of the upper Ohio val- 
ley, G F. Wright, 195. 
Adirondack region, lake filling in the, 
C. H. Smyth. 85. 
Ami, Henry M., Cambrian fossils from 
the Rocky Mt. region, 132. 
Alaska, John Muir, 287. 
American Meteorological Journal, 357. 
Ampyx, the genus, and new American 
species, A. W. Vogdes, 99. 
An introduction to the study of mam- 
mals, living and extinct, W. H. Flow- 
er, 353. 
Annals of British geology, 203. 
Anew coccosteau— Coccosteus cuyaho- 
giB, E. W. Claypole, 167. 
A new fungus from the Coal Measures, 
365. 
A new tfeniopteroid fern, D. White, 412. 
Antiquity of man in eastern North 
America, N. S. Slialer, 180. 
An extinct glacier of the Salmon River 
range, Geo. H. Stone, 406. 
Apatite in Norbotten, 364. 
A revision of the British fossil Caino- 
zoic echinoidea, J. W. Gregory, 360. 
Artesian and underground investiga- 
tion. Report of Robert Hay, 113. 
A single glacial epoch in New Eng- 
land. C. H. Hitchcock, 194. 
B 
Baldwin, S. Prentiss, Recent clianges 
in Muir glacier, 366. 
Barlow, A. E., Relations of the Lau- 
rentian and Huronian north of lake 
Huron, 138. 
Barrois, Charles. Sur la presence de 
fossiles dans le terrain azoique de 
Bretagne, 118 
Becker, G. F., Finite homogeneous 
strain, 411. 
Bell, Robert, The contact of the Lau- 
rentian and Huronian north of Lake 
Huron, 135; 174. 
Beltrami island of lake Agassiz, War- 
ren Uph am, 422. 
Bernard, Felix, Elements of paleontol- 
ogy, 410. 
Bibliography of North American verte- 
brate paleontology for 1892, John Ey- 
erman, 388. 
Blake. J. F., The cau.se of an ice age, 
202 : Annals of British geology, 203. 
Brachiopoda, Evolution of, Agnes 
Crane, 400. 
Broadhead, G. C, Correct succession of 
the Ozark series, 260, 
Brown coal and ligyite in Texas, E. T. 
Durable, 209. 
Brown, J. Allen, Continuity of the pal- 
eolithic and neolithic periods, 352. 
Brumell, H. P.. Natural gas and petro- 
leum in Canada, 131. 
Bry.son, John, Martha's Vineyard com- 
pared to Long Island, 210. 
Burrows, H. W. (and G. F. Harri.s), 
Eocene and Oligocene of the Paris 
basin, 359. 
California, Pre-cretaceous rocks of the 
Coast ranges, H. W. Fairbanks, 69. 
Calvin, S.. Tlie Cretaceous of Iowa and 
the subdivisions of Meek & Hayden. 
300. 
Cau.se of an Ice age, J. F. Blake, 202. 
Chalmers. R., Bay of Fundy in the Gla- 
cial period. 134; 176. 
Champlain Submergence, Warren Up- 
ham, 119. 
Channels over divides not evidence 
per se of glacial lakes,J.W.Spencer,58 
Cincinnati ice-dam, Jos. F. James, 199. 
Cladodont sharks of the Cleveland 
shale, E. W. Claypole, 325. 
Cladoduskepleri, clarki, sinuatus and 
rivi-petrosi, Claypole, 325. 
Classification of the brachiopoda, Chas. 
Schuchert, 141. 
Claypole, E. W., A new coccostean, 
coccosteus cuy ah ogfe, 167; Preglacial 
man not impo.ssible, 191; Cladodont 
sharks of the Cleveland shale, 325. 
Coccosteus cuy ah ogre, 167. 
Coal Deposits of Missouri, A. Winslow, 
271. 
Collenot, J. J., 363. 
Conrad's Tertiary fossils, 282. 
Contribution to the Geology of the 
(ireat Plains, Robert Hay. 56. 
Correct succession of the Ozark series, 
G. C. Broadhead, 260. 
Correspondence. 
The Higgiiisville sheet of the Mis- 
souri Survey, A. Winslow, 61. 
The Topographical work of the Na- 
tional Geological Survey, Henry 
Gannett, 64. 127. 
Prof. Salisbury's criticisms of "Man 
and the Glacial Period," G. F. 
Wright. 121 
A new locality for millerite, C. R. 
Keyes, 126. 
Reply to Prof. Hill, J. A. Taff, 128. 
The Glacial geology of Martha's 
Vineyard, compared with that of 
Long Island. John Bryson, 210. 
Remarks on the review of the Third 
Texas report, Jules Marcou, 212. 
Relation of the attenuated drift bor- 
der to the outer moraine in Ohio, 
Frank Leverett, 215. 
The Illinois State Museum, Josua 
Liiidahl, 216. 
The movement of Muir glacier, H. P. 
Cusliing, 276. 
The Artesian and Underflow investi- 
gation, Robert Hay, 278. 
Dall's collection of Conrad's works, 
G. D. Harris, 279. 
Geological Society of Wa.shington, J. 
S. Diller.281. 
The fauna of Tucumcari, A. Hyatt, 
281. 
The older drift of the Delaware val- 
ley, R. D. Salisbury. 360. 
Note on a fall of volcanic dust in the 
South Atlantic ocean, Chas. Pal- 
Mesozoic granite in Plumas county, 
California, and the Calaveras form- 
ation. H. W. Turner. 425. 
Crane, Agnes, (ieneric Evolution of the 
Paleozoic brachiopoda, 400. 
