409 
INDLX TO A t OL. XIV 
Adams, Frank D., Nepheline syenite in 
Ontario, 68, 189. 
Age of the crystalline limestones of War- 
ren county, N. J., L. G. Westgate. 369. 
Age of the Galena limestone, N. H. Win- 
chell, 203. 
Age of Niagara Falls, J. W. Spencer, 135. 
Alaska : its physical geography, 1. 0. Rus- 
sell. 331. 
Alluvial river terraces, R. E. Dodge, 397. 
Alunogen and bauxite in New Mexico, 
W. P. Blake, 196. 
American Association for the Advance- 
ment of Science, 202. 
Ami, H. M., Quebec group about Quebec, 
66. 
A new meteorite. 389. 
Annual reports of the Geological Survey 
of Arkansas. J. ('. Branner, 394. 
Arctic expeditions, 272, 389. 
Argyrodite and a new snlphostannate 
from Bolivia. S. L. Penfield, 53. 
Arkansas, Tertiary geology, G. D. Harris, 
394. 
B 
Backstrom, Helge, Tvenne nyupptackta 
svenska klotgraniter. 53. 
Bailey, L. W., Progre-s of investigation 
in S. W. Nova Scotia, 67. 
Basic rock derived from granite, C. H. 
Smyth. Jr., 195. 
Becker, Geo. F., On certain astronomical 
conditions favorable to glaciation, 191. 
Bell, Robt., Glacial Kettle holes in Can- 
ada, 63. 
Bernard, Felix, Elements de paleontol- 
ogie. 334. 
Bibliography of the geology of Indiana, 
Mars' ers and Kinkle. 395. 
Blake, W. P., Trilobites in the oil-rock 
horizon of the Trenton limestone, 133; 
Alunogen and bauxite in New Mexico, 
196. 
Boyle, C. B., Catalogue of Mesozoic In- 
vertebrata, 330. 
Branner, J. C, Annual reports of the 
Geological Survey of Arkansas, 894. 
British Association for the Adv. Sci.. 271. 
Broadhead. G. C, History of the Missouri 
Palpozoic, 380. 
Brontichthys clarki. E. W. Claypole, 379. 
C 
Call, R. E., Indurated Tertiary of N. E. 
Arkansas, 395. 
Calvin, S., The Niobrara t 'halk, 140. 
Cambrian age of the limestones of Sus- 
sex county. N. J., F. L. Nason. 161. 
< Cambrian of the eastern Salt Range, F. 
Noetling, 398. 
Campbell. M. K, The Geology of the Big 
Stone Gap coal field. 892. 
Carboniferous of Shasta county, Califor- 
nia. J. P. Smith. 203. 
Catalogue and bibliography of N. A. Mes- 
ozoic Invertebrate, C. B. Boyle, 330. 
Causes and Conditions of Glaoiation, 
W . 1'i'h.im, 12; Marsden Maiison. 192. 
Cavuga lak« a rook bisin. Reply to Prttf. 
Tarr. F. W. Simonds. 58. 
Cherts of Missouri, E. O. Hovey. 196. 
Chipped flints, Upper Miocene, Burma, 
F. NoetliDg, 399. 
Cladodus magmficus, a new Selachian, E. 
W. Claypole, 137. 
Clark. W. B., Mesozoic Echinodermata of 
theU. 8., 329. 
Clarke, J. M., Early stages of Bactrites, 
37;Nanno. a new cephalopodan type. 
205. 
Claypole. E. W., Cladodus magnificns, a 
new selachian, 137 ; A new placoderm 
from the Cleveland shale, 379. 
Coast ranges of California, H. W. Turner 
andT. W. Stanton, 92. 
Coleman, A. P., Rocky mountains be- 
tween the Saskatchewan and the Atha- 
basca, 83. 
Columbia formation in northwestern Illi- 
nois, O. H. Hershey, 203. 
Cone-in-Cone, Devonian, Pa., W. 8. Gre6- 
ley, 399. 
Contribution to the knowledge of thepre- 
glacial drainage of Ohio, W. G. Tight, 
188. 
Colorado formation and its invertebrate 
fauna, T. W. Stanton. 51. 
Cragin, F. W., New fossils of the Neoco- 
mian of Kansai-, 1. 
Cretaceous fossils collected by James 
Hector. J. F. Whiteaves, 68. 
Crinoids, American, 407. 
D 
Dale. T. Nelson, The Rensselaer Grit pla- 
teau, 54. 
Dall, W. H., Notes on the Atlantic Mio- 
cene, 202. 
Darton, N.H., 198,201. 
Dawson, J. W., Land animals of the Pal- 
eozoic, 66 . 
Day, David T., Mineral resources of the 
United States. 254. 
Departure of the ice-sheet from the Lau- 
rentian lakes, Warren Upham, 199. 
Diamonds in Wisconsin, and their prob- 
able source, W. H. Hobbs, 31. 
Die fauna des untereu Devon am Ostah- 
hange dee Ural, ih. Tscherayschew,119. 
Differential faults, W. H. Hobbs. 35. 
Dislocations in the Atlantic Coastal Plain 
strata, and their probable causes. Ar- 
thur Hollick, 197. 
Distribution of earthquakes in tin' 
United States, N. 8. Shaler, 396. 
Dodge, R. E.. River Terraces, 397. 
Drainage systems of the Carboniferous 
area of Michigan, E. H. Mudge. 301. 
Dutfield. Gen. W. W.,840. 
E 
Early stages of liactrites. J. M. Clarke, 87. 
Earthquake at Constantinople, 340. 
Eastman, (has. K., 179. 
Editor] w. Comment. 
Death of Win. Pengelly. 43; Columbian 
exposition, il: K$; 108; the "Mineral 
Industry. " t8S ; The origin of spheroi- 
dal baaxit, :''-! i March weather on the 
Greenland ice-sheet. 326 ; National rep- 
resentation in the International Con- 
gress of geologists. 327; Mountain 
systems of Asm and Europe, 328; A 
