Glaciation of Mountains^ etc. — W. Upham. 209 
about 5,000 feet. Some of the courses of stria; reported by 
professor Hitchcock on other mountains in New Hampshire 
are as follows : — 
Mt. Adams, west side, at bight of 5,500 feet S. 58° E. 
Near the gap between Adams and Jeflerson S.33°E. 
Lake of the Clouds intersecting S. 22° E. and S. 52° E. 
Between Mts. Franklin and Pleasant and the same 
between Mts. Pleasant and Clinton S. 30° E. 
Near the top of IMt. Clinton, north side S. 47° to 52° E. 
Mt. Clinton, south peak S. 50° E. 
Mt. Webster S. 30° and 37° E. 
Mt. Wiley, top S. 42° E. 
Mt. Field, top S. 50° E. 
Mt. Field, side towards Mt. Willard S. 37° E. 
Mt. Willard, top S. 23° E. 
Mt. Pequawket (Kearsarge North), two-thirds of the 
waj' from top to saddle between it and Bartlett 
mountain, at hight of 2,500 feet S. 42° E. 
Mt. Baldface, top S. 23° to 28° E. 
Chocorua, side S. 42° E. 
Mt. Whittier, West Ossipee, top S. 47° E. 
Red Hill, near summit S. 02° E. 
Mt. Prospect, Holderness, summit S. 37° E. 
Mt. Gunstock, Gilford, top S. 62° E. 
Teneriflfe mountain, Milton, top S. 42° E. 
Pawtuckaway, north side S. 72° E. 
Dixville mountain, top S. 54° E. 
Mt. Agassiz, Bethlehem, top S. 8° W. 
Mt. Lafayette, above the Eagle Lakes, also S. 8° W. 
Moosilauke, top S. 22° E. 
Moosilauke, twenty rods east of summit S. 27° to 32° E. 
Gardner's mountain, top S. 12° E. 
Mt. Cuba, top S. 28° E. 
Kearsarge mountain, Warner, top S. 46° to 51° E. 
Ragged mountain, top S. 23° E. 
Monadnock, top S. 21° E. 
Deflected strife are remarkably well shown on the sides of 
Monadnock, where the divided glacial current passed around 
and over it. 
An inspection of this list, and of the far more numerous 
observations of strire on the lower lands, published in the 
third volume of the "Geology of New Hampshire,'' shows that 
the prevailing direction of the ice movement was to the S. E. 
and S. S. E., bearing more toward the south in the southern 
and southwestern portions of the state and in the Connecticut 
valley. 
