I inlay. 
407 
Lyellia glabra. 111. 
Microscopical fauna of the Cretaceous 
in Minnesota, 330. 
Mississippi series in Missouri. Si. 
New crinoids, Mastoids, and brachio- 
pods, 303. 
Orthoceras, Specific characters of, 232. 
Ozark series, Missouri, 79. 
Pala?osaccus dawsoni, 835. 
Phillipsastrea gigas. 108; P. billingei, 
111. 
Placoderms of Ohio. 89. 
Plants from the Trinity of Texas, 327. 
Plasmopora astraformis, 111. 
Protospongia rhenana, 335. 
Ptychophyllum expansum. 110. 
Ronvilligraptns richardsoni. 336. 
Scandinavian Hyolithida- and Conular- 
iidse, 334. 
Spongier) aus dem Archaicum. 261. 
Strombodes gigas. 111. 
Tertiary mammals from southern 
France and Italy, 159. 
Titanichthys, 95. 
Triarthras beckii. 193. 
Winchellia, The genus, 209. 
Fungus, a new, from the Coal Measures, 
H. Herzer. 289, 
Gas, natural, and Petroleum in Canada, 
120. 
Gasteropoda and Cepalopodaof the Rar- 
itan clays of New Jersey, R. P.Whit- 
field. 329. 
(jeer, Baron de, 225. 
Geikie, James, Glacial succession in the 
British Isles and northern Europe. 224. 
Genus Winchellia, The, Leo Lesquercux. 
209. 
Geologic Time ; as indicated by the sedi- 
mentary rocks of North America. C. D. 
Walcott, 343. 
Geological maps at the Columbian Expo- 
sition, 250. 
(ieological Society of America, 130, 165, 
206, 207. 
Geology, A. J. Jukes-Browne. 339. 
Georgia, Geol. Surv., J. W. Spencer, 267. 
Gilbert, G. K., Continental problems, 118, 
Glacial erosion, R. S. Tarr, 147. 
Glacial Man in America, 173, 1*7. 
(ilacial period, on unity of. G. F. Wright. 
178. 
Glacial phenomena about Madison. Wis., 
T. C. Chamberlin, 170. 
(ilacial stria; in Iowa. 205. 
Glacial succession in the British Isles, 
Sweden, Norway, Switzerland, Canada, 
and United States, 223. 
Glacialists' Magazine, 207. 
Glyptodendron, Claypole, An examina- 
tion of. and of other so-called Silurian 
land plants of Ohio, A. F. Foerste, L33. 
Gorgonichthys, 97. 
Graphic comparison of post-Columbia 
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Gee. ISO. 
Gravels of Glacier bay. Alaska. II. V. 
Reid. 172. 173. 
Gulliver. F. P., Ice-sleet on Newtonville 
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Gurley. W. F. B„ 206. 
H 
Hague, A., The geologj of the Eureka 
district with an atlas, 264. 
Hall. James. Letter relating to Prof. 
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90; 207: 273. 
Hamilton beds of Callaway county, Mo., 
R R. Rowley. 203. 
Hansen. Andrew 11., Succession of gla- 
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Harris, G. I).. Republication of Conrad's 
Fossi. shells of the Tertiary formations 
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Heim. Albrecht. (ilacial succession in 
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Hershey, O. H.. The Pleistocene rock 
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Herzer. Rev. H., 90: A new Fungus from 
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Hinde, G. J.. PalwosMccns dawsoni, 335. 
Hitchcock. C.H., 172. 
Hobbs, W. H., New occurrences of inter- 
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Holm, (ierard, Sveriges Kambrisk-silur- 
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Holmes, J. A.. 171. 
Horizon of Drutnlin, Osar and Kame 
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Hovey, H. ('.. 174. 
Howorth, Sir H. II.. The Glacial Night- 
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Hyatt. Alpheus.on ( 'Jassification of stages 
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I 
Ice aw at the World's Fair, Review of 
Papers. 223. 
Ice-blocks which gave rise to lakelets 
and kettle-holes. An attempt to esti- 
mate their thickness, J. B. Woodworth, 
279. 
Ice-sheet on Newtonville sand-plain, F. 
P. Gulliver. 177. 
Ice-sheets. Pleistocene and present, \\ . 
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Improvement of Geographical Teaching. 
W. M. Davis. 192. 
Indiana, Erosion in northwestern, ('. S. 
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International Commission of geological 
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Iowa. Glacial stria'. 205. 
Iowa. Unconformity of the Coal Meas- 
ures and the St. Funis limestone. ( '. R, 
Keyes. 99. 
Iowa Geol. Survey, 130; First annual re- 
port, S. Calvin and C. R. Keyes. 337. 
Iron-bearing rocks of the \dirondack 
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Joints. Origin of Parallel and Intersect- 
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Jones. T. R. land H. Woodward), Mon- 
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K 
Kame.-. Fskers. aud Moraines, derived 
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