weeks.] PALEONTOLOGY, PETROLOGY, AND MINERALOGY, 1896. 151 
Tertiary 
Canada. 
Finlay and Omenica rivers, British Columbia, 
McConnell, No. 462. 
Kamloops sheet, British Columbia, Dawson, 
No. 174. 
Tertiary faunas from Vancouver, British 
Columbia, Merriam, No, 494. 
Tertiary plants from Vancouver, Dawson, No. 
176. 
Atlantic Coastal plain. 
Artesian well prospects, Darton, No. 161. 
Artesian wells, New Jersey, Woolman, No. 
780. 
Eocene deposits of Atlantic Slope, Clark, No. 
118. 
Erosion epochs, McGee, No. 466. 
Geological excursions of 1895, Clark, No. 120. 
Geology of Bordentown sheet, New Jersey, 
Shattuck, No. 613. 
Glacial brick clays of Rhode Island and Mas- 
sachusetts, Shaler, Wood worth, andMarbut, 
No. 612. 
Les variations des apatites, etc., Carnot, No. 
102. 
Miocene (Chesapeake) deposits of New Jersey, 
Clark, No. 123. 
Neocene marine Diatomacea3, Edwards, No. 
189. 
Nomini folio, Darton, No. 162. 
Phosphates and marls of Alabama, Smith, 
No. 624. 
Potomac River section of the Eocene, Clark, 
No. 119. 
Pelations of Coastal Plain series, Darton, No. 
165. 
Surface geology, New Jersey, Salisbury, No. 
390. 
Tennessee Valley region, McCalley, No. 459. 
Mississippi Valley. 
A question of priority, Scott, No. 605. 
Deposits in Spring River Valley, Kansas, 
Hershey, No. 309. 
Geology and paleontology of Louisiana, 
Vaughan, No. 698. 
Geology of Fort Riley Reservation, Hay, No. 
297. 
Late Neocene terranes, Cragin, No. 143&. 
Log-like«concretions, Todd, No. 672. 
Gulf States. 
A question of priority, Scott, No. 605. 
Cinnabar in Texas, Blake, No. 62. 
Geological sketch of Florida, Cox, No. 138. 
Midway stage, Harris, No. 279. 
New Tertiary Mollusca, Aldrich, No. 11. 
Eockij Mountain region. 
Aye of* igneous rocks of Yellowstone Park, 
Hague, No. 272. 
Castle Mountain district, Weed and Pirsson, 
No. 723. 
Fort Union formation, Weed, No. 719. 
Geology of the Denver Basin, Emmons, Cross, 
and Eldridge, No. 202. 
Laccolites in Colorado, Gilbert, No. 238. 
Localities for Laramie mammals and dino- 
saurs, Hataher, No. 284. 
I Tertiary — Continued. 
Rocky Mountain region — Continued. 
San Miguel formation, Cross, No. 152. 
Sedimentary rocks, Weed, No. 718. 
Tertiary floras of the Yellowstone Park, 
Knowlton, No. 418. 
Three Forks folio, Peale, No. 530. 
Vertebrate fossils, Marsh, No. 481. 
Great Basin region. 
Stratigraphic relations of the Brown Park 
beds, Irving, No. 356. 
Sierra Nevada and Pacific Coast region. 
Age of the California Coast ranges, Fair- 
banks, No. 209. 
Auriferous gravels of the Sierra Nevada, 
Lindgren, No. 449. 
Eocene and Cretaceous on the Pacific Coast, 
Stanton. No. 647. 
Geological reconuoissance in Oregon, Diller, 
No. 183. 
Geology of eastern California, Fairbanks, No. 
207. 
Geology of Point Sal, California, Fairbanks, 
No. 206. 
Geology of Sierra Nevada, Turner, No. 675. 
Gold quartz veins of California. Lindgren, 
No. 448 a. 
Nevada City special folio, Lindgren, No. 447. 
Pliocene Octracoda from California, Chap- 
man, No. 115. 
Pyramid Peak folio, Lindgren, No. 448. 
Alaska. 
Coal and lignite of Alaska, Dall, No. 157. 
Cuba. 
Geographical evolution of Cuba, Spencer, No. 
642. 
Geology of Cuba, Hill, No. 313. 
Yucatan. 
Geology of Yucatan, Sapper, Nos. 596, 597. 
Nomenclature. 
Geology and paleontology of Louisiana, 
Vaughan, No. 698. 
Correlation. 
Auriferous gravels of the Sierra Nevada, 
Lindgren, No. 449. 
Eocene deposits of Atlantic Slope, Clark, No. 
118. 
Midway stage, Harris, No. 279. 
Texas. 
A question of priority, Scott, No. 605. 
Choctaw and Grayson terranes of the Arietna, 
Cragin, No. 141. 
Cinnabar in Texas, Blake, No. 62. 
Copper ores of Texas, Schmitz, No. 601. 
Cretaceous at El Paso, Stanton and Vaughan, 
No. 649. 
Floating sand, Simonds, Nos. 618, 619. 
Fossil sponges in the Cretaceous of Texas, 
Merrill, No. 504. 
Invertebrate fossils from the Comanche, 
Cragin, No. 142. 
Jura of Texas, Marcou, No. 472. 
Midway stage, Harris, No. 279. 
Native sulphur in Texas, Smith, No. 625. 
Neocene Mollusca from Texas, Harris, No. 
278. 
