FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY. 
106 
196. Tuomey, M.— 
Notice of the Geology of the Florida Keys, and 
of the Southern Coast of Florida. 
Am. Jour. Sci. (2), XI, 390-394, 1851. 
197. United States Department of Agriculture, Office of 
Experiment Station. Ann. Kept, of Irrigation 
and Drainage, Investigations for 1904. 1905. 
Florida Everglades briefly discussed by C. G. Elliot, 
X>'. 714-717. 
/ 1 ’ . " 
198. United States, Department of the Interior— 
United States Geological Survey; The following 
papers issued by the U. S. Geol. Survey are listed 
under the names of the authors. The number fol¬ 
lowing the name refers to this bibliography. Clark 
25; Cope, 33; Dali and Harris, 45; Dali, 51; 
Darton, 57; Day, 62; Fuller, 72, 73; McGee, 136, 
138; Penrose, 157; Porter, 159; Pies, 163; Sanford, 
165; Shaler, 173, 174, 175, 180; Vaughan, 200, 
202. Other references to Florida will be found in 
U. S. Survey bulletins Nos. 177 and 215. 
199. Vaughan, T. Wayland— 
A Tertiary Coral Reef near Bainbridge, Georgia. 
Science (n.s.) XII, 873-875, 1900. 
200. Vaughan, T. Wayland— 
Fuller’s Earth of Southwestern Georgia and 
Western Florida. 
U. S. Geol. Sur. Min. Res. 1901, 922-934, 1902. 
201. Vaughan, T. Wayland— 
Evidence of Recent Elevation of the Gulf Coast 
along the Westward Extension of Florida. 
Science, (n.s.) XVI, 514, 1902. 
Rise of level of one and one-half feet believed to have 
occurred at St. Marks within the last 50 years. 
