wkeks] PALEONTOLOGY, PETROLOGY, AND MINERALOGY, 1895. 
99 
Glacial geology— Continued. 
Greenland. 
Glacial phenomena of Newfoundland, Labra- 
dor, and Greenland, Wright, 573. 
Glaciers of Greenland, Heilprin, 204. 
Greenland expedition of 1895, Salisbury, 413. 
Eecent glacial studies in Greenland, Chani- 
berlin, 73, 75. 
Illinois. 
Ancient outlet of Lake Michigan, Davis, W. 
M.,112. 
Columbia formation in Illinois, Hershey, 205. 
Hydro-geology of Illinois, Mead, 328. 
Iowa. 
Buried river channels in Iowa, Gordon, 168. 
Extension of the Illinois lobe of the ice sheet 
into Iowa, Fultz, 156. 
Geology of Keokuk County, Iowa, Bain, 19. 
Geology of Linn County, Iowa, Norton, 357. 
Geology of Mahaska County, Iowa, Bain, 
20. 
Geology of Montgomery County, Iowa, Lons- 
dale, 299. 
Geology of Van Buren County, Iowa, Gordon, 
169. 
Glacial scorings in Iowa, Keyes, 253. 
Glacial markings in Iowa, Fultz, 157'. 
Interloessial till near Sioux City, Iowa, Todd 
and Bain, 474. 
Kentucky. 
Gravel and loam deposits of Kentucky rivers, 
Miller, A. M., 345. 
Labrador. 
Glacial phenomena of Newfoundland, Labra- 
dor, and Greenland, Wright, 573. 
Michigan. 
Central Michigan and the post-Glacial sub- 
mergence, Mudge, 349. 
Missouri. 
Glacial drift in St. Louis, Mo., Wheeler, 531. 
New England. 
Dislocations in the Atlantic Coastal Plain, 
Hollick, 224. 
[Dislocations of the Cretaceous and Tertiary 
rocks of Marthas Vineyard], Shaler, 433. 
Geology of the Boston Basin, Crosby, 100. 
Glacial origin of channels on drumlins, Bar- 
ton, 30. 
High-level gravels in New England, Hitch- 
cock, 219. 
Newfoundland. 
Glacial phenomena of Newfoundland, Labra- 
dor, and Greenland, Wright, 573. 
Glaciation of Newfoundland, Chamberlin, 74. 
New Jersey. 
Dislocations in the Atlantic Coastal Plain, 
Hollick, 224. 
Lake Passaic, Salisbury and Kiimmel, 414. 
New Jersey eskers, Culver, 103. 
Surface geology, New Jersey, Salisbury, 408. 
New York. 
Correlation of New York moraines with raised 
beaches of Lake Erie, Leverett, 294. 
Dislocations in the Atlantic Coastal Plain, 
Hollick, 224. 
Drift bowlders between the Mohawk and 
\ Susquehanna rivers, Brigham, 57. 
Glacial geology— Continued. 
New York— Continued. 
Glacial lakes of western New York, Fairchild, 
141. 
Glacial phenomena between Lake Champlain, 
Lake George, and the Hudson River, 
Wright, 575. 
Kame-moraine at Rochester, N. Y., Fairchild, 
143. 
Rock Hill, Long Island, Bryson, 63. 
Ups and downs of Long Island, Bryson, 62. 
Ohio. 
Correlation of New York moraines with raised 
beaches of Lake Erie, Leverett, 294. 
Pennsylvania. 
Southern ice limit in Pennsylvania, Williams, 
E. H., 540. 
Wisconsin. 
Bowlder trains from the Waterloo quartzite 
area, Buell, 64. 
General papers. 
Cause of the movement of glaciers, Watts, 
519. 
Changes of level in the region of the Great 
Lakes, Taylor, 462. 
Classification of American Glacial deposits, 
Chamberlin, 76. 
Classification of European Glacial deposits, 
Geikie, 158. 
Climatic conditions shown by North Ameri- 
can inter-Glacial deposits, Upham, 490. 
Continuity of the Glacial period, Wright, 
574. 
Correlations of stages of the Ice age in North 
America and Europe, Upham, 492. 
Departure of the ice sheet from the Lauren- 
tian hills, Upham, 496. 
Discrimination of Glacial accumulation and 
invasion, Upham, 497. 
Divisions of the Ice age, Hitchcock, 217. 
Drurnlin accumulation, Upham, 489. 
Epochs and stages of the Glacial period, 
Upham, 488. 
Erosive action of ice, Cxilver, 104. 
Experimental application of the photo-topo- 
graphical method of surveying to the Baird 
glacier, Alaska, Klotz, 268. 
Experiments in ice motion, Case, 70. 
Formation of glacial terrace plains, Spencer, 
J. W.,451. 
Geological study of the Great Lakes, Spencer, 
J. W.,453. 
Glacial subsidence and reelevation of the St. 
Lawrence Basin, Upham, 487, 500. 
Influence of debris on the flow of glaciers, 
Russell, 407. 
Lake Newberry, Fairchild, 142. 
[Lake Newberry], Spencer, J. W., 452. 
Minor time divisions of the Ice age, Upham, 
499. 
Niagara and the Great Lakes, Taylor, 463. 
[On the use of the term " Erigan "], Taylor, 
467. 
Pre-Glacial valleys of the Mississippi and 
tributaries, Leverett, 295. 
Quaternary time divisible into three periods, 
Upham, 498. 
