^eeks.] PALEONTOLOGY, PETROLOGY, AND MINERALOGY, 1895. 101 
luratrias. 
Canada. 
Geological investigations in Nova Scotia, Bai- 
ley, L. W., 17. 
Report for the year 1893, Selwyn, 429. 
New England. 
New Red of Bucks and Montgomery counties, 
Pa., Lyman, 303. 
Appalachian Region. 
Dinosaur tracks in the Newark group, Wood- 
worth, 569. 
New Red of Bucks and Montgomery counties, 
Pa., Lyman, 303. 
Rocky Mountain region. 
Reptilia of the Baptanodon heds, Marsh, 
313. 
Sierra Nevada and Pacific Coast region. 
Age and succession of the igneous rocks of 
the Sierra Nevada, Turner, 475. 
Geology of the San Francisco peninsula, Law- 
son, 285. 
Reptilian remains from the Triassic of Cali- 
fornia, Merriam, 334. 
Stratigraphy of the California Coast ranges, 
Fairbanks, 138. 
Miscellaneous. 
Connecticut sandstone group, Hitchcock, 218. 
Belvidere heds, Cragin, 99. 
Classification of upper Paleozoic rocks of Kan- 
sas, Prosser, 379. 
Coal fields of Kansas, Haworth, 191. 
Comanche series in Kansas, Oklahoma, and 
New Mexico, Hill, R. T., 211. 
Dicotyledonous flora in the Cheyenne sand- 
stone, Hill, R. T., 210. 
Division of the Kansas Coal Measures, Ha- 
worth, 190. 
Fossil plants from Kansas, Knowlton, 272. 
[Invertehrate fossils from Belvidere, Kans.], 
Stanton, 459. 
Kansas River section of the Permo-Carbonif- 
erous, Prosser, 380. 
Natural gas and oil in Kansas, Bailey, E. H. 
S., 16. 
New leaves from the Cretaceous of Kansas, 
Hollick, 225. 
Oil and gas in Kansas, Haworth, 193. 
On the mandible of Ornithostoma, Williston, 
545. 
Public lands and their water supply, Newell, 
353. 
Semi arid Kansas, Williston, 544. 
Stratigraphy of the Kansas Coal Measures, 
Haworth, 189, 192. 
Stratigraphy of the Kansas Coal Measures, 
Keyes, 266. 
The Mentor beds, Cragin, 98. 
Water resources of the Great Plains, Hay, R., 
195. 
Kentucky. 
Clinton conglomerates of Ohio and Kentucky, 
Foerste, 145. 
Formation of stalactites, Merrill, G. P., 
340. 
Gravel and loam deposits of Kentucky rivers, 
Miller, A. M., 345. 
Labrador. 
Glacial phenomena of Newfoundland, Labra- 
dor, and Greenland, Wright, 573. 
Louisiana. 
Pleistocene mammalia from Louisiana, Cope, 
94. 
Section of the Eocene at Old Point Caddo 
Landing, Tex., Vaughan, 505. 
Stratigraphy of northwestern Louisiana, 
Vaughan, 504. 
Maine. 
Production of tin, Rolker, 402. 
Spherulitic volcanics at North Haven, Me., 
Bayley, 33. 
Maryland. 
Acidic eruptions of Maryland, Keyes, 263. 
Artesian well prospects in Virginia, Mary- 
land, and Delaware, Darton, 109. 
Cretaceous deposits of the northern half of 
the Atlantic Coastal Plain, Clark, W. B., 
78. 
Formation of sandstone concretions, Merrill. 
G. P., 341. 
Granitic rocks in the Piedmont plateau, Wil- 
liams, G. H., 541. 
Origin and relations of Maryland granites, 
Keyes, 251. 
Secular decay of granitic rocks, Keyes, 259. 
Massachusetts. 
Boston Basin, Massachusetts, Tilton, 469. 
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. 
Geology of the road-building stones of Mas- 
sachusetts, Shaler, 431. 
Glacial origin of channels on drumlins, Bar- 
ton, 30. 
Mineralogical lexicon of Franklin, Hamp- 
shire, and Hampden counties, Mass., Emer- 
son, 134. 
Stratigraphic base of the Cambrian, Winchell, 
N. H., 550. 
Mexico. 
Cretaceous of western Texas and Mexico, 
Dumble, 124. 
Quicksilver ores at Guadalcazar, Mexico, 
Rundall, 405. 
Review of " Boletin de la Comision geologica 
de Mexico," Stanton, 458. 
Silver district of Tehuilotepec, Mexico, Halse, 
184. 
The onyx marbles, Merrill, G. P., 339. 
Michigan. 
Central Michigan and the post-Glacial sub- 
mergence, Mudge, 349. 
Changes of level in the region of the Great 
Lakes, Taylor, 462. 
Dry dredging in the Mississippian Sea, 
Schuchert, 417. 
Marquette iron district, Michigan, Van Hise 
and Bayley, 503. 
Mineralogical notes, with analyses, Hobbs, 
221. 
Munuscong Islands, Taylor, 464. 
Native sulphur in Michigan, Sherzer, 435. 
