KM) 
Tndex, 
The drift mounds of Olympia and of 
Long Island, John Bryson, 127. 
The osar gravels of the coasl of Maine. 
(i.-o. ii. si me. 200. 
The Hamilton beds of Callaway county, 
Mo., It. K. Rowley. 203. 
The reprodaotu t arms in crinoids, 
A. F. Foerste, 340. 
additional models at the Fair, W. M. 
Davis. 340. 
The St. John group, G. V. Matthew, 340. 
( Origin Of Peconic bay and of the Sliin- 
necock hills, John Bryson, 102. 
Cragin, F. W., S42. 
Cretaceous and early Tertiary of north- 
ern California and Oregon, J. S. Diller. 
119. 
Cretaceous, Correlation paper, ('. A. 
White, 398. 
Cretaceous in northern Minnesota. H. V. 
Winchell, 220; fossil plants from Minne- 
sota, L. Lesrjuereux, 330. 
Critical notice of the stratigraphy of the 
Missouri Paleozoic, G. C. Rroadhead, 
74. 
Crosby, W. O., The Origin of Parallel and 
Intersecting Joints, 309. 
Cummins, W. F., On Cerro Tucumcari, 
Hi:',; land E. T. Dnmble) The Kent sec- 
tion and Grypheea tucumcarii, 309. 
Cycad, A new, T. H. McBride, 248. 
D 
Dall, W. H., Marine Miocene shells from 
Okhotsk sea, 342; (and G. D. Harris) 
Correlation paper. Neocene, 399. 
Darton, N. H., Cenozoic history of east- 
ern Virginia and Maryland, 171. 
Uavis. James W., 341. 
Davis, W. M., Improvement of Geograph- 
ical Teaching, 192; Additional models 
at the Fair, 340. 
Day, David T., Mineral resources of the 
U. 8., 2(51). 
Description of new Crinoids. Blastoids, 
and Brachiopods, R. R. Rowley, 303. 
Devonian Fauna of the Altai, Th. Tscher- 
nyschew, 335. 
Diagonal Moraine, Fred. G.Plummer, 231. 
Dielasma, development of brachial sup- 
ports, C. E. Beecher and C. Schucheit. 
394. 
Dikes occurring near Lyon Mt., Clinton 
Co., N. Y., A. S. Eakle. 31. 
Diller, J. 8., Cretaceons and early Ter- 
tiary of northern California and Ore- 
gon,' 119. 
Dinichthys, 94; Three new species, Clay- 
pole, 27."). 
Dorpat university. 131, 
Drift, Englacial. Warren Upham, 36. 
Drift mounds of Olympia and of Long 
Island, John Bryson, 127. 
Drnmlin, Osar unci Kame formation, T. 
C. Chamberlin, 122. 
Dnmble, E T. (and \V. F. Cummins), The 
Kent section and Grypheea tucumcarii, 
809. 
Dutton, C. E„ 230. 
Eakle, A. S, Dikes near Lyon Mt.. Clin- 
ton Co., N. Y..31. 
Editorial Comment. 
Major Powell on Evidencesof Man in 
the Glacial gravels, 11"). 
The Glacial Nightmare and the Flood, 
181. 
Glacial Man in America, 187. 
Geological maps at the Columbian Ex- 
position, 2r>o. 
Auxology, 257. 
The Standard Oil Company'sexhibit of 
petroleum, 323. 
Professor Hyatt's rejoinder, 326. 
The Columbian Exposition, A glance at 
the exhibits in the Mines and Mining 
building, 376. 
Fnglacial Drift, Warren Uphain, 30. 
Eocene, Correlation paper, W B. Clark, 
399. 
Eozoon canadense, 131 
Erosion beneath deep glaciers, N. 8. Sha- 
ler, 191. 
Erosion, Glacial, R. S. Tarr. 117. 
Erosion of small basins in northwestern 
Indiana during the time preceding the 
Pleistocene period, C. 8. Beachler, 51. 
Erosion, Tertiary and Quaternary, of N. 
A.. W. Upham, 180. 
Etheridge, Robert, Jr. (and R. L. Jack). 
The Geology and Paleontology of 
Queensland, 266. 
Eureka district, Geology of the, A. Hague. 
264. 
Europe, Geological map, 66. 
Excursion of the Geol. Society, 200. 
Extra-Morainic drift in New Jersey. G. F. 
Wright, 160. 
Eyerman, John, On a collection of Ter- 
tiary mammals from southern France 
and Italy, 159. 
F 
Fairbanks, II. W., 65. 
Faunas of the Shasta and Chico forma- 
tions, T. W. Stanton, 120. 
Finger lakes of New York, A. P. Brigham, 
123; D. F. Lincoln, 177. 
Fishing Banks between Cape Cod and 
Newfoundland, W. Upham, 190. 
Flora of the Dakota group, L. Lesrjuer- 
eux, 328. 
Foerste, A. F., An examination of Glyp- 
todendron, Claypole. and of other so- 
called land plants of Ohio, 133; Specific 
characters in Orthoceras, 232; Repro- 
duction of arms in crinoids, 340. 
Fontaine, W. M., Plants from the Trinity 
division of the Comanche of Texas, 327. 
Forsyth-Major, Dr. C. J., Tertiary mam- 
mals, 159. 
Fossils. 
Arthrophycus harlani, 21)7. 
Bennettit.es dacotensis, 248. 
British Paleozoic Phyliopoda. 332. 
Castoroides ohioensis, 67. 
Cerionites dactyloidesOwen, 53. 
Chouteau fossils, range, 49. 
Conrad's Fossil shells of Tertiary of N. 
A., 60. 
Corals described by D. D. Owen (1839), 
108. 
Cretaceous plants from Minnesota, 330. 
Dactyloporus archa^us, 2*9. _ 
Devonian fauna of the Altai, 335. 
Dinichthys, 94; Three now species. 275. 
Eozoon canadense, 131. 
Fauna of the St. John group, 192. 
Flora of the Dakota group, 328. 
Gasteropoda and Cephalopoda of the 
Raritan clays of New Jersey, 329. 
Glyptodendron and other so-called Si- 
lurian land plants from Ohio, 133. 
Gorgonichthys clarki, 97. 
Larval forms of trilohites. 334. 
Lower Silurian of Minnesota, bryozoa, 
331; sponges, graptolites and corals, 
331 ; brachiopoda, 332. 
