ANNUAL REPORT—BIBLIOGRAPHY. 
95 
to “Fossil Vertebrates from tbe Alachua Clays of 
Florida,” by Joseph Leidy.) 
Wag. Free. Inst. Sci. Trans. IV, 1896. 
133. MeOallie, S. W.— 
A Preliminary Report on the Phosphates and 
Marls of Georgia. 
Geol. Sur. Georgia. Bull. No. 5-A, 1896. 
The phosphates of Florida are briefly described on pp. 
25-28. 
134. McCrady, J.— 
(Remarks on the Eocene Formation in the Neigh¬ 
borhood of Alligator, Florida.) 
Elliot, (S. C.) Soc. Nat. Hist. Proc. I, 282-283, 
1859. 
Notes the presence of sinks and disappearing streams at 
Alligator (Lake City) and describes the new genus of 
echinoderms Ravenelia. 
135. Macfarlane, James— 
An American Geological Rail-way Guide, giving 
the Geological Formation at every Railway Sta¬ 
tion and a description of each of the formations. 
New York, 219 pp. 1879. 
136 McGee, W. J.— 
Map of the United States exhibiting the Present 
status of Knowledge Relating to the Area! Distri¬ 
bution of Geologic Groups. 
U. S. Geol. Sur. 5th. Ann. Rept, 1885. 
137. McGee, W. J.— 
(Discussion following paper by J. B. Tyrrell). 
Geol. Soc. Am. Bull. I, 409, (1-4 p.) 1890. 
Not only all Florida, but two-thirds of Georgia and the 
greater part of South Carolina submerged during early 
Pleistocene time. 
