Index. 
403 
Morgan, J. P., 130. 
Monthly American Journal of Ge- 
ology, 62. 
Monllily authors Catalogue, 65, 125, 
194, 265, 330. 391. 
N 
New Brvozoa from the Coal Meas- 
ures, G. S. Condra, 338. 
Newell, F. H., United States Geo- 
logical Survey, Hydrography, 322. 
New Madrid earthquake, G. C. 
Broadhead, 76; W. J. McGee, 200. 
New Mexico School of Mines, 72. 
Niles, W. H., 131. 
Newton, R. B. (and R. Holland), 
On some fossils from the island 
of Formosa and Riu-kiu, 122. 
Note on the so-called basal granite 
of the Yukon valley, R. G. Mc 
Connell, 55. 
Notice of a new Comatula from the 
Florida reefs, Frank Springer, 98. 
O'Harra; C. C, Mineral resources 
of South Dakota. 3S8. 
On Bacubirito or the great meteor- 
ite of Sinaloa, Mexico, 203. 
On the Crinoid genera, Sagenocrl- 
nus, Forbesiocrinus and allied 
forms, F)ank Springer, 88. 
On the deceptive fossilization of 
certain Pelecypod species and on 
the genus Eurymya, F. W. Sar- 
deson, 39. 
On some fossils from the island of 
Formosa and Kiu-kiu, R. B. New- 
ton and R. Holland, 122. 
On some Jurassic fossils from Du- 
rango, Mexico. D. W. Johnson, 
370. 
Ore deposits of Monte Cristo, 
Washington, 113. 
Origin of Eskers, W. O. Crosby, 1. 
Phalen, W. C, 201. 
Phillips, W^ B., 130. 
Pleistocene geology of western New 
York. H. L. Fairchild, 264. 
Portland Cement, 72. 
Powell, J. W. Notice of death and 
funeral, 272. 
Preservation of muscle-fibres in 
sharks of the Cleveland shale. 
Bashford Dean, 273. 
Prosser, C. S., Richard Burton 
Rowe, 128. 
Reitinger, J. (and E. H. Kraus), 
Hussakite, a new mineral and its 
relation to xenotime, 46. 
Ries, H., 71. 
Sardeson. F. W. On the deceptive 
fossilization of certain Pelecypod 
species and on the" genus Eurv- 
mya, 39; The Carboniferous form- 
ations of Humboldt, Iowa, 300 . 
Selwyn, A. R. C, 33C. 
Scott, A. C, A brief summary of 
glacier work, 215. 
Shimek, B., the loess at Natchez, 
Miss., 279. 
Shimer, H. W., Columbia Univer- 
sity Summer School, 69; 131. 
Smith, C. E., Cornell Summer 
School of field geology, 396. 
Smith, P. S., 336. 
Springer, Frank, On the crinoid 
genera Sagenocrinus, Forbesio- 
crinus and allied forms, 88; Notice 
of a new comutula fro<m the 
Florida reefs, 98. 
Spurr, J. E., 72, Ore deposits of 
Monte Cristo, Washington, 113. 
Story of the Prairies, or the land- 
scape geology of North Dakota, 
D. E. Willard, 123. 
Sutton mountain, 118. 
Syllabus of a course of lectures. 
J. C. Branner, 389. 
Todd, J. E., Mineral Resources of 
South Dakota, 388. 
Training and work of a geologist. 
C. R. Van Hise, 150. 
U 
Turner, H. W., 71. 
Uurich, E. O.. 171. 
United States Geological Survey, 
Hydrography, 322; Twentv-first 
report. 384. 
Uinversity of Texas mineral survey. 
130. 
Upham, Wan-en. Growth of the 
Mississippi delta. 103; Man in the 
Ice Age at Lansing, Kansas, and 
Little Falls, Minn., 135. 
Van Hise, C. R., The training and 
work of a geologist, 150. 
W 
Walcott, C. D. Twenty-first an- 
nual report, U. S. G. S., 120; 384. 
Ward, H. A., on Bacubirito or 
the great meteorite of Sinaloa, 
Mexico. 203. 
Was the development theory influ- 
enced by the "Vestiges "of the 
Natural History of Creation"' 
■ 262, 317. 
Weed, W. H., Influence of country 
rock on mineral veins, 170. 
Western interior coal field. H. Fos- 
ter Bain, 124. 
What constitutes clav? 318. 
Wright, G. F.. Asiatic Russia, 327. 
White, I. C, 132; Fossils from the 
Carboniferous, 211. 
Wilder. F. A.. 398. 
Willard, D. E.. The story of the 
prairies, or the landscape geol- 
ogy of North Dakota, 123. 
Williston, W. S., The characters of 
the Lansing skeleton, 190; An ar- 
rowhead with bones of Bison oc- 
cidentalis in Kansas, 313. 
Wilson, A. W. G., 131. 
Woodman. J. E.. 131. 
Woodward, R. S.. 130. 
