150 
BIBLIOGRAPHY AND INDEX OF N. A. GEOLOGY, [bull. 149. 
Silurian— Continued. 
New England — Continued. 
Paleozoic terranes in Connecticut Valley, 
Hitchcock, No. 322. 
Appalachian region. 
A new phosphate rock in Tennessee, Safford, 
No. 589. 
A phosphate prospect in Pennsylvania, Ihl- 
seng, No. 354. 
Briceville folio, Keith, No. 368. 
Chazy of Lake Champlain, Brainerd and 
Seeley, No. 69. 
Faunas of Ordovician strata at Trenton Falls, 
N. T. , White, No. 745. 
Franklin folio, Darton, No. 163. 
Gadsden folio, Hayes, No. 301. 
Geological excursions of 1895, Clark, No. 120. 
Geology of Massanutten Mountain, Spencer, 
No. 641. 
Loudon folio, Keith, No. 366. 
Morristown folio, Keith, No. 367. 
Original Trenton rocks, White, No. 744. 
Piedmont folio, Darton and Taff, No. 166. 
Pocahontas folio, Campbell, No. 96. 
Section of Rich Patch Mountain, Virginia, 
Schmitz, No. 600. 
Summer's work on Lake Champlain, Van 
Ingen and White, No. 696. 
Tennessee phosphates, Hayes, No. 301a. 
Tennessee Valley region, McCalley, No. 459. 
Great Lakes region. 
Geology of lower Michigan, Lane, No. 435. 
Mississippi Valley. 
Anomalies of stratification, Calvin, No. 94. 
Cedar Valley quarry, Iowa, Calvin, No. 95. 
Characteristics of the Ozark Mountains, 
Keyes, No. 382. 
Disseminated lead ores of Missouri, Winslow, 
No. 767. 
Geology of Jones County, Calvin, No. 89. 
Iron Mountain sheet, Winslow, Haworth, and 
Nason, No. 771. 
Le Claire limestone, Calvin, Nos. 90, 91. 
Middle Silurian rocks of Ohio and Indiana, 
Foerste, No. 224. 
Paleozoic rocks at Rock Island. 111., Udden, 
No. 679. 
Paleozoic sediments in Arkansas, Branner, 
No. 71. 
Rocky Mountain region. 
Castle Mouutaiu district, Weed and Pirsson, 
No. 723. 
Geology of Sangre de Cristo range, Van Diest, 
No. 689. 
Geology of the Little Rocky Mountains, Weed 
and Pirsson, No. 727. 
Sedimentary rocks, Weed, No. 718. 
Alaska. 
Coal and lignite of Alaska. Dall, No. 157. 
Nomenclature. 
Faunasiof Ordovician strata at Trenton Falls, 
N. Y., White, No. 745. 
Galena and Maquoketa series, Sardeson, No. 
598. 
Correlation. 
Galena and Maquoketa series, Sardeson, No. 
598. 
Silurian— Continued. 
Correlation — Continued. 
Kamloops sheet, Dawson, No. 174. 
Middle Silurian rocks of Ohio and Indiana, 
Foerste, No. 222. 
South Carolina. 
Artesian well prospects, Darton, No. 161. 
Gold mining in southern Appalachian States, 
Thies, No. 663. 
Gold mining in the Appalachians, Nitze and 
Wilkens, No. 522. 
Les variations des apatites, etc., Carnot, No. 
102. 
Monazite district of North and South Caro- 
lina, Mezger, No. 505. 
rotable waters in the Piedmont Plateau, 
Holmes, No. 339. 
Relations of Coastal Plain series, Darton, No. 
165. ^ 
South Dakota. rCX~ Al)A^- 
Artesian waters of South Dakota, Shephard, 
Nos. 614, 615. 
Artesian waters of the Dakotas, Darton, No. 
159. 
Gold in granite and plutonic rocks, Blake, 
No. 64. 
Igneous intrusions in the Black Hills, Rus- 
sell, No. 587. 
Log-like concretions, Todd, No. 672. 
Moraines of the Missouri couteau, Todd, No. 
668. 
New cryptodire from the Cretaceous, Wie- 
band, No. 755. 
On the nature of igneous intrusions, Russell, 
No. 588, 
Recent and fossil tapirs, Hatcher, No. 283. 
Siluri an strata in Wyoming and South Dakota, 
Beecher, No. 52. 
Tellurium in gold ores, Smith, No. 626. 
Tennessee. 
Association of Cyclora with phosphate of 
lime, Miller, No. 507. 
Briceville folio, Keith, No. 368. 
Ducktown ore deposits, Henrich, No. 304. 
Embreville estate, Tennessee, Johnson, No. 
363. 
Hamblen County, Tenn., meteorite, Merrill, 
No. 502. 
Loudon folio, Keith, No. 366. 
Midway stage, Harris, No. 279. 
Mineral resources along the Southern Rail- 
way, Brewer, No. 77. 
Mineral resources of Georgia and North Caro- 
lina, Blake, No. 63. 
Morristown folio, Keith, No. 367. 
Oil boom of Tennessee, Schmitz, No. 602. 
New phosphate rock in Tennessee, Safford, 
No. 589. 
Phosphate deposits in Tennessee, Ki Hebrew, 
No. 404. 
Southern magnetites, Chase, No. 116. 
Stages of Appalachian erosion, Keith, No. 
369. 
Tennessee phosphates, Hayes, No. 301a. 
White phosphates, Hayes, No. 302. 
