406 
Index. 
Facts about the Kivat lalci's, P. Vodel, 
liiO. 
Fairbanks, H. W., The af?o of the Cali- 
fornia Coast ranges, 271 ; Stratigrapliy 
at Slati'V Springs, l-i.JO. 
Fauiial iclatiims of the Eocene and up- 
per ( 'retacfous on the Pacific coast, T. 
\V. Stanton, til. 
Fauna of the Cambrian of Tejrovic and 
Skrej in IJoheiuia, J. F. Pom peck j. 186. 
Fauna of tlie Magnesian series, F. W. 
Sardeson, 184. 
Formation of the Quaternary deposits of 
Missouri, J. M. lodd, ;i87. 
Fort Union Formations, W. H. Weed, 
2U1. 
Fossils. 
Carboniferous plants, 226. 
Dinichthys Frentis-Clarki, 199. 
Fishes of the Moray Firth area, 51. 
Mastodon, four-tusked, 194. 
Microdiscus schucherti, 80. 
Sessile Conularia, 6!!. 
Fossil fishes of the Moray Firth area, R. 
H. Traqair, .il. 
Fiazer, Persifor, 58. 
Fresli geological evidence of Glacial man 
at Trenton, N. J., G. F. Wright. 238. 
G 
Galena and Maquoketa series, F'. W. Sar- 
deson, 356. 
Geikie, Sir .\rch., •^8. 
Geologic atlas of tlie United States, 401. 
Geology and mining, 393. 
Geology in the colleges of the United 
States, T. C. Hopkins. 40 1. 
Geological Society of Washington, 61. 
Geological structure of the extra Austra- 
lian artesian basins, A. G. Maitland, 
265. 
Geological Survey of Kansas, 42 ; of Can- 
ada, 46; 386; of New York, 55 ; 392; of 
New Jersey, 186. 
Gilbert, G. K., The Algonquin river, 231 ; 
The Whirlpool — St. David's channel, 
232; Profile of the bed of the Niagara 
in its gorge, 2:i2. 
Girty, G. H., Mr. Sardeson and fossil 
tabulates, ;«2. 
Glacial flood deposits in the Chenango 
valley, A. P. Brigham, 229. 
Goode, J. Paul, 194. 
Good Ground, Long Island, John Bryson, 
329. 
Goodrich, H. B., 335. 
Grabau, A. W., The succession of the fos- 
sil faunas in the Hamilton group, at 
Eighteen-mile creek, N. Y., 220. 
Granite boulder near Pittsburg, W. S. 
Gresley, 331. 
Grant, U. S.. Volcanic ash from the north 
shore of lake Superior, (with N. H. 
Winchell), 211. 
(jreat valley of California, F. Leslie 
Rausome, 189 
Green, Alex. H., 334. 
Greenlee, W. B., The amount of water in 
the earth's crust, 'Xi. 
Gresley, W. S., Observations regarding 
the occurrence and origin of anthra- 
cite, 1 ; Granite boulder near Pittsburg, 
331. 
Grimsley, G. P., The origin and age of the 
gypsum deposits of Kansas, 58; 236. 
Griswold, L. S., 266. 
Gulliver, F. P., Post-Cictaceons (irade- 
plains in southern New Knglanil, 231. 
Gyi)sum bods in Southern Arizona, Sv. 
1'. Blake, 394. 
H 
Hall, C. W., Pre-Cambrian ba.sfi-levelling 
in tlie iiniih western states, 2:iS. 
Hall. Prof. James, 215. 
Hiindbook of Rocks, J. F. Kemp, 390. 
Hark(u-, .A., On certain granophyres mod- 
ified by tlie incorporation of Gabbro 
fragments, in Straith iSkye), 48. 
Harris, (j. 1)., Hiilletins of American pal- 
eontology, INJ; 193; The I'Jocone stages 
of Georgia, 236. 
Herrick, C. L., The so-called Socorro 
tripoli, 135. 
Herslipy, O. H., Preglacial erosion cy- 
cles in northwestern Illinois, 72. 
Hill, R. T. , ToiKigraphic nomenclature 
of .Spanish America, 62. 
Hohhs, W. H., Summary of progress in 
miiieraloi-'y in 1895, 50. 
Hollick, Arthur. The Cretaceous clay 
marl exposure at Clitt'wood. N. J., 230. 
Hopkins, T. ('., Origin of conglomerates, 
5.s;2:i(l; (Jcology in the colleges of the 
United States, 401. 
Hovey, E. O., Notes on the artesian well 
at Key West, 218. 
Hovey, H. C, The making of Mammoth 
cave, 228. 
Human relics in the drift of Ohio, E. W. 
('layi>ole, 302. 
Hydraulic gradient of the main artesian 
basin of the northwest, J. E. Todd, 219. 
I 
Ice-sheet in Glacial Narragansett bay, 
J. B. Wood worth, 391. 
Ice-work, present and past, T. G. Bon- 
ney, 44. 
Inland Educator, 400. 
Interglacial change of course, with gorge 
erosion, of ths St. Croix river in Min- 
nesota and Wisconsin, Warren Upham, 
223. 
International Congress of Geologists, 
program for 1897, 196. 
James, Jos. F., An allv of Daimonelix. 
193; Prof. Lesley's Final report, 323. 
Report of the State Geologist of New 
York for 1893, 392. 
Johnson, W. D., An early date for gla- 
ciation in the Sierra Nevada, 61. 
Judd, .J. W., Rubies of Burma and asso- 
ciated minerals, 49. 
K 
Kemp, J. F., 58; On the great quartz vein 
at Lantern Hill, near Mystic, Conn., 63; 
The Pre-Cambrian topography of the 
Adirondacks, 63; Handbook of rocks, 
390. 
Keyes, C. R., Serial nomenclature of the 
Carboniferous, 22 ; Orotaxis : a method 
of geologic correlation, 289: The origin 
and relations of central Maryland 
granites, 320. 
Kraatz (von), K., Note on the formatioin 
of gold ore, 100. 
Kunz, G. F., 64. 
L 
Lamellibranchiaten(die) des rheinisclien 
Devon, mit Ausschluss der Aviculiden, 
L. Beuschausen, 124. 
