04 The American (ieoloyist. July, 1895 
of Ncwniim hill. .1. I>. Farisli; Notes on Moiitaiia sapphires, A. S. 
Dwi-rlit; The ixisl-ljaramie beds of Middle Park, Colo., Whilman Cross; 
Notes on Ihe <;eology of Palmer Lake, Colo., and the Pala30Zoic exposures 
alon«f the Front range, (a. \j. Cannon, Jr.; The jreology of Denver and 
vicinity, G. L. Cannon, Jr.; On a series of peculiar schists near Salida, 
( 'olo., Whitman Cross; Informal notes on slag crystals, A. Ruht; Certain 
dissimilar occurrences of gold-bearing quartz, T. A. Rickard; Evidence 
bearing on the formation of ore deposits by lateral secretion, P. H. van 
Diest; Eruptive dikes near Manchester, Mass, Richard Pearce; Nickel 
— historical sketch. W. L. Austin: Nickel — occurrence, geological dis- 
tribution and genesis of ore deposits, Philip Argall; Informal notes on 
Independence mine, F. E. Schwartz. 
Trans. Wagner Free Inst. Sci., vol. 3, part 3. Contributions to the 
Tertiary fauna of Florida, pt. iii, A new classification of the Pelecy- 
poda.AV. II. Dall. Pp. 47!)-r)70, March, ISi)."). 
///. Papers iit Scientific JimriKtls. 
Science. May 21, lSi).3. Current notes on ))hysi()graphy (VII), W. M. 
Das is. 
Science, May ?>\, ISO."). Current noleson physiography (VIII), W. M. 
Davis. 
Amer. Jour. Sci., June, 1S95. Crystal form of borneol and isoborneol, 
W. H. Hobbs; Synopsis of the mode of growth and development of the 
grai)tolitic genus Diplograptus, R. Ruedemann; Newly discovered dike 
at DeWitt, near Syracuse, N. Y., N. H. Darton and J. F. Kemp; Note 
on the amount of elevation which has taken place along the Rocky 
Mountain rangt> in British America since the close of the Cretaceous 
period, (J. i\I. Dawson; Three new analyses of sodalite from three new 
localities, L. McI. Luquer and G. J. Volckening. 
Scliool of Mines Quarterly, April, 1895. Contributions from the niin- 
eralogical department of Columbia College, XXI, A. J. Moses; Mona- 
zite and orthoclase from South Lyme, Conn., W. D. Matthew. 
Ottawa Naturalist, June, ]8!)5. Notes on the stratigraphy of the 
Cambro-Silurian rocks of eastern Manitoba, I). B. Dowling. 
- Am. Naturalist, June, 189.5. Is Diemonelix a burrow? A reply to Dr. 
Theodor Fuchs, E. H.Barbour; Spong(!s, recent and fossil, J. F. James 
IV. Excerpts and Individual Publications. 
Notes on some eruptive rocks from Gallatin, Jefferson and Madison 
comities. Montana, G. P. Merrill. Proc. U. S. Nat. Museum, vol. 17, i)p. 
g:{7-(j7:5, (No. 1031), 1895. 
The rocks of the Sierra Nevada, II. W. Turner. 11th Ann. Rept. U. 
S. G. S.. pp. 435-495, pis. 48-59, 1895. 
Tennessee phosi)hate rocks, J. M. SatTord. Reprint from Rept. Com. 
of Agriculture. 10 pp., 1895. 
On the structure of the ridge between the Taconic and Green Moun- 
tain ranges in Vermont, T. Nelson Dale. 14tli Ann. Rept. U. S. G. S., 
pp. 525-549, pis. G(5-70, 1895. 
