December, lyos. The American Geologist. 397 
erally, it can be shown that all the apparent irreligious and materialistic 
implications of science are reversed by this last child of science, or rather 
this daughter of the marriage of science and philosophy. During all my 
life I have striven earnestly to show this. My book on Evolution and its 
Relation to Religious Thought is the embodiment of the result of these 
strivings, although I believe that if I wrote it again I could add much 
to the argument. I began this line of thought in 1871, and believe, and 
therefore claim, that I was the pioneer in this reaction against the ma- 
terialistic and irreligious implication of the doctrine of evolution. I 
look with greater pleasure on this than on anything else that I have 
done." w. u. 
MONTHLY AUTHOR'S CATALOGUE 
OF AMERICAN GEOLOGICAL LITERATURE 
ARRANGED ALPHABETICALLY. 
ANDERSON, TEMPEST (and JOHN S. KEET). 
Preliminary report on the recent eruption of the Soufriers in St 
Vincent, and of a visit to Mont Pelee in Martinique. (Smith. Inst., 
Ann. Rep., 1902, pp. 309-330; Reprint from Proc. Roy. Soc. London, 
Vol. 70). 
BAILEY, J. F. 
Ore Deposits of Contact, Nevada. (Eng. Mining Jour., Vol. 71, 
No. 17, p. 612, Oct. 24, 1903). 
BROOKS, A. H. 
An Exploration to Mount McKinley, America's highest Mountain. 
(Jour. Geog., Vol. 2, No. 9, Nov. 1903). 
CLARKE, C. H. 
Notes on the Michipicoten Gold Belt. (Eng. Mining Jour., Vol. 
76, No. 20, p. 735, Nov. 14, 1903.) 
CLAYPOLE, E. W. 
The Devonian Era in the Ohio Basin (continued). Am. Geol., Vol. 
32, No. 5, pp. 312-323, Nov., 1903). 
DENNY, G. A. 
The Witwatersrand Ore Deposits. (Eng. Min'g Jour., Vol. 76, No. 
18, pp. 658-659, Oct. 31, 1903). 
ELLIS, MARY. 
Index to Publications of the New York State Natural History 
Survey and New York State Museum 1837-1902. (New York State 
Mus. Bull. 66, Misc. 2, pp. 653, 1903). 
EMERSON, B. K. (and JOS. H. PERRY). 
The Geology of Worcester, Massachusetts, pp. 160, illustrations, 
map, index, 1903. 
FARIBAULT, E. R. 
Deep Gold Mining in Nova Scotia. (Can. Geol. Sur., pp 16 mans 
1903). 
