850 The American Geologist. December, 18% 
Paleontologj' of Illinois. Descriptions of Invertebrates, (with A. H. 
Worthen). Geol. Surv. Illinois, vol. vr. Sec. 2, pp. 491-r)32: plates 23- 
32. Springfield. 
Notice of a very large Goniatite from eastern Kansas, (Carboniferous). 
Bull. U. S. Geol. Surv. Terr., No. 6, 2d Ser., vol. i, p. 445. Washington. 
1876. 
Descriptions and illustrations of fossils from Vancouver and Sucia 
islands and other northwestern localities. Bull. U. S. Geol. Surv. Terr., 
vol. II, No. 4, pp. 351-374, and 6 plates. Washington. 
Note on the new genus Uintacrinus, Grinnell. Bull. U. S. G^ol. Surv. 
Terr., vol. ii. No. 4, pp. 375-378, two wood cuts. Washington. 
Descriptions of the Cretaceous fossils collected on the San Juan ex- 
ploring expedition under Capt. J. N. Macomb, U. S.E ngineers. Report 
of the Exploring Expedition from Santa Fe, New Mexico, to the junc- 
tion of the Grand and Green rivers of the Great Colorado of the West, 
in 1859, pp. 121-133. plates 1 and 2. Washington. 
Report on the Paleontological collections of the expedition. Rep. 
Expl. Great Basin of Utah in 1859. By J. H. Simpson. Apendix J., 
pp. a37-373, plates i-iv. Washington. 
A report ou the Invertebrate Cretaceous and Tertiary fossils of the 
upper Missouri country. U. S. Geol. Surv. Terr., vol. ix, 4", pp. i-xiv% 
and 1-629, plates 1-45. Washington. 
1877. 
Paleontology. U. S. Geol. Expl. 40th Parallel, vol. 4, part 1, pp. 1- 
197, plates 1-17. Washington. 
Note. — This work was published after Mr. Meek's death, but he had 
completed it more than a year previously. 
STRATIGRAPHY AT SLATE'S SPRINGS WITH 
SOME FARTHER NOTES ON THE RE- 
LATION OF THE GOLDEN GATE 
SERIES TO THE KNOXVILLE. 
By H. W. Fairbanks, Berkeley, Cal. 
In the fall of 1895 the writer revisited Slate's Springs in 
company with Dr. Palaehe for the double purpose of deter- 
mining in greater detail the stratigraphic position of the 
slates and collecting better paleontological material. The 
important bearing of the fauna found there upon the correct 
determination of the age of the Golden Gate series is an ex- 
cuse for presenting the following notes. 
The beds in question occur as a narrow fringe along the 
most rugged portion of the Monterey coast, and rest against 
the crystalline complex of the Santa Lucia range. This sec- 
tion was first visited by the writer in 1893, when several frag- 
