Index. 
411 
Glacial geology of Great Britain and 
Ireland, 253. 
Limit of postglacial submergence ea6t of 
Georgian bay. F. B. Taylor, 373. 
Lincoln, D. F., 201. 
Localities of Mesozoic and Paleozoic 
fossils in California, H. W. Fairbanks, 
25. 
Locke, John, Sketch of, N. H. Winchell, 
341. 
Lower Silurian Lamellibranchiata of 
Minnesota, E. O. Dlrich, 249. 
Lower Silurian Ostracoda of Minnesota, 
E. O. Ulrich, 333. 
M 
Madison type of Drumlins, Warren Up- 
ham,69. 
Manson, Marsden. Causes and conditions 
of glaciation, 192. 
Manual of the study of documents, P. 
Frazer, 118. 
March weather on the Greenland ice- 
sheet, 326. 
Marcou, Jules, Growth of knowledge con- 
cerning the Texas Cretaceous, 98 ; Note 
on the geological map of the state of 
New York, 257. 
Marsters, V. F., (and E. M. Kindle! Bib- 
liography of the geology of Indiana, 
395. 
Martin, D. S., 204. 
Matthew. G. F., Organic remains of the 
Little River group, 67 ; Fauna of the St. 
John group, 187. 
McGee, W J, The Lafayette formation, 
115; Extension of uniformitarianism to 
deformation, 199. 
Mesozoic echinodermata, W. B. ("lark, 
329. 
Meteorite, A new, 389. 
Mineral industry, 185. 
Mineral resources of the United States, 
David T. Day, 254. 
Minerals. 
Alunogen and bauxite, 196. 
Agyrodite and new sulphostannate, 53. 
Diamonds in Wisconsin, 31. 
Properties of Amphiboles, 195. 
Willyamite. from Broken Hill, 253. 
Mineralogical characters of certain New 
Jersey limestones. L. G. Westgat<\ ! 08. 
Mining royalties, their practical opera- 
tion and effect, C. A. James. 2b2, 
Missouri Paleozoic. G. C. Broadhead, 380. 
Mountain systems in Asia and Europe, 
328. 
Mudee, E. H.. Drainage systems of the 
Carboniferous area in Michigan, 301. 
N 
Nanno, a new cephalopodan type, J. M. 
Clarke. 205;4li2. 
Nason, F. L., Cambrian age of limestones 
of Sussex Co., N. J., 161. 
National Academy of Sciences, 108. 
National representation in the Interna- 
tional Congress of Geologists. 327. 
New and little known invertebrata from 
the Neocomian of Kansas, F. \Y. Cragin, 
1. 
New Liriodendron from the Laramie in 
Colorado. A. Hollick, 203. 
Newell, F. H.. 202, '.'"4. 
Niagara gorge, a measnre of the postgla- 
cial period, Warren Upham, 62. 
Nickel mine at Lancaster gap, J. F. 
Kemp, 195. 
Nickel Ores of Sudbury, Canada, J. D. 
Frossard. 252. 
Niobrara Chalk, S. Calvin. 140. 
Noetling, F.. Cambrian of the Eastern 
Salt range, 398 ; Clipped flints of Bur- 
ma, 399. 
North American continent during Cam- 
brian time. CD. Walcott, 116, 
Note on Nanno, F. W. Sardeson, 402, 
Note on the geologicnl map of the state of 
New York. Jules Marcou, 257. 
Notes on the Atlantic Miocene, W. H. 
Dall, 202. 
Notes on the Pleistocene west of Hudson 
bay. J. B. Tyrrell, 338. 
O 
Oldhamia, in N. Y.. 406. 
On certain astronomical conditions favor- 
able to glaciation, Geo. F. Becker, 191. 
On the occurrence of alargeareaof neph- 
eline syenite in the township of Dun- 
gannon, Ontario. F. D. Adams, 189. 
Orbicular growth from Rhode Island, J. 
F. Kemp, 53. 
Organic remains of the Little River group, 
G. F. Matthew. 67. 
Origin and nature of soils, N. S. Shaler, 
114. 
Origin of certain novaculites and quart- 
zites. Frank Rntley, 253. 
Origin of spheroidal basalt, 321. 
P 
Paleontology of Missouri, Part I, C. R. 
Keyes. 331. 
Paleozoic section at Three Forks, Mont., 
A.C. Peale.394. 
Papers and notes on the glacial geology 
of Great Britain and Ireland, H. C. 
Lewis. 253. 
Peale, A.C, Paleozoic section in the vi- 
cinity of Three Forks, Mont., 394. 
Penfield, S. L., Argyrodite and a new sul- 
phostannate, 53. 
Pittman, E. F., Willyamite, a new min- 
eral, 253. 
Placoderm. a new, from the Cleveland 
shale, E. W. Claypole, 379. 
Platycnemic man in New York, W. A. 
Sherzer, 197. 
Popular lectures and addresses, Lord 
Kelvin, 11^. 
Post-pliocene diastrophism of the coast 
of southern California, A. C. Lawson, 
336. 
Potsdam ami Calciferous in Quebec and 
Ontario, R. W. Ells. 67. 
Powell. J. W., Water resources of the 
Unitpd States. 202. 
Preliminary notice of Temnocyon, John 
Eyerma n. 320. 
Present condition of the earth"s interior, 
W. H. Sea mon. 20. 
Principes et methodes de correlation au 
moyen des plantcs fo>-siles, L. F. Ward. 
334. 
Proceedings of the Indiana Academy of 
Science, 395. 
Progress m thfl geological snrvey of the 
great lakes, J. W. Spencer, 2m: 289. 
Progress of investigation in S. W. Nova 
Scotia, L. W. Bailey, 67. 
Prneser.C. 8., 201; 840. 
Purington. ('. \V.. Geological features 
about Atlanta, 105. 
Quaternary time divisible into three pe- 
riods, Warren Cpham, 203. 
Quebec group about Quebec, H. M. Ami. 
66. 
R 
Recent publications, 55: 126; 254; too. 
