98 The American Geologist. August, 1897 
Ueber den Metall fiihrenden Distrikt, am Obern See in Staate Michi- 
gan. Karsten's Archiv., xxv, 1853, pp. G56 667. 
Report vindicating the rights of C. T. Jackson to the discovery of the 
anaesthetic effects of ether vapor. (Appended to Morton, W. F. G. 
statement, etc., 1853, pp. 493-566.) (Not seen.) 
1854. 
Proc. Boston Sac. Nat. Hist., iv,1854. 
Remarks on the claim that Lord Sterling opened the "Sterling" 
mines in New Jersey, p. 308. 
Remarks on crystalline limestones, pp. 308-309. 
Remarks on the Wilkesbarre coal field, p. 328. 
Remarks on the geology of portions of North Carolina, Georgia and 
Tennessee, pp. 397-401. 
Ibid., V, 1H56. 
On the relations of Green river to the Mammoth cave in Kentucky, p. 
57. 
On gold, silver, lead and copper, at Bridgevvator. Vt., p. 62. Also 
notes on native iron from Sonora, Mexico. 
On fossiliferous erratic blocks at Mt. Katahdin, Me., and on the south 
shore of lake Superior, p. 85. 
Chemical researches on the composition of the scales of the gar-pikes, 
p. 92. Contain fluorine. 
Catalogue of rocks, minerals, and ores collected during the years 
1847 and 1848 on the geological Survey of the United States mineral 
lands in Michigan. Smithsonian report for 1854, pp. .338-367, 1855. 
1855. 
Proc. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist., v, 18.56. 
Analysis of Allophane from Tennessee, p. 120. 
Remarks on tides in lavas of volcanoes, pp. 139, 142. 
Remarks on effects of gradual transportation of earthy matters from 
elevated lands, p. 142. "When the difference of level had been suffi- 
ciently altered to be adequate to overcome the resistance of the earth's 
crust a paroxysmal elevation might take place with all the phenom- 
ena of an earthquake, as happened in Chili in 1834."' 
Remarks on the vievi's of Dr. A. A. Hayes and Dr. John Bacon con- 
cerning the cause of the taste and odor of Cochituate water, pp. 161- 
164. Hayes' rejoinder, pp. 169-175; Jackson's reply, pp. 175-176. 
(About this time, report of the Cochituate Water Board, by Horsford 
and Jackson. Not seen.) 
Remarks on the age of the red sandstones from Connecticut, p. 186. 
On the oxides of cerium, didymium, and lanthanium, in a large crys- 
tal, p. 189. 
On'raindrop impressions in foot-prints, p. 189. 
Remarks on the qualifications of Mr. Marcou in relation to his geo- 
logical discoveries in the Rocky mountains, p. 191. 
Translation (?) of extracts from a letter of M. Elie de Beaumont, dat- 
ed Paris, March 23d, 1855, p. 204 205. 
