144 The American Geologist. September, 1895 
1842. Description of the Scenery of the White Mountains, N. H. Bos- 
ton Recorder. 
1842. Review of a Muck Manual for Farmers. By S. L. Dana; 6 pages. 
Am. Jour. Sci., vol. XLIII. 
1842. Remarks upon Mr. Murchison's ^Anniversary Address before the 
London Geological Society. Three pages, Am. Jour. Sci., 
vol. XLIII. 
1842. The Waste of Mind. Address at the Anniversary Exercises at 
the Mt. Holyoke Seminary; 66 pages. 
1843. The Phenomena of Drift or Glacio- Aqueous action in North 
America between the tertiary and alluvial periods. Reports 
of the Association of American Geologists and Naturalists at 
Philadelphia in 1810 and 1841, and at Boston in 1842; 58 pp. 
1843. Description of five new species of Fossil Footmarks from the 
New Red Sandstone from the Valley of Connecticut River. 
Id., 10 pages. 
1843. Description of several species of Fossil Plants from the New Red 
Sandstone Formation of Connecticut and Massachusetts. 
Id., 9 pages. 
1843. Notes on the Geology of several parts of Western Asia; founded 
chiefly on specimens and descriptions from American mission- 
aries. Id., 74 pages. 
1843. Exhibition of casts of all the Fossil Footmarks of the Connecti- 
cut valley. 
Copper in the drift of Mass. and occurence of Yttrocerite. 
Discussion of C. T. Jackson's paper on the Drift; 4 pages. Proc. 
Amer. Assoc. Geol. and Nat. Albany meeting. 
1843. Vibrating Dams. Am. Jour. Sci., vol. XLV, 2 pages. 
N. D. Obituary notice of Mrs. Prof. W. C. Fowler. N. Y. Observer. 
1843. Letter introducing a communication from Peter Dobson on the 
Iceberg Theory of Drift. Am. Jour. Sci., 1 page, vol. XLVI. 
1844. Analysis of Wines from Palestine, Syria and Asia Minor, and of 
specimens of American Cider. Am. Jour. Sci., vol. XLV, 
9 pages. 
1844. Upon Lincolnite. Amer. Jour. Sci., 1 page, vol. XLVII. 
1844. Washington meeting of A. A. G. and N. New York Journal of 
Commerce. 
1844. Report on Ichnolithology or Fossil Footmarks, with a descrip- 
tion of several new species and the coprolites of birds, from 
the valley of Connecticut River, and of a supposed footmark 
from the valley of the Hudson River. Read before Amer. 
Assoc. Geol. and Nat., and published in Amer. Jour. Sci., 
vol. XLVII, 31 pages, 2 plates. 
1844. Discovery of more native Copper in the town of Whately in 
Massachusetts in the valley of Connecticut River, with re- 
marks upon its origin. Id., vol. XLVII, 2 pages. 
1844. Trap Tufa or Volcanic Grit of the valley of Connecticut River 
with inferences as to the relative age of the trap and sand- 
stone . 
