weeks.] PALEONTOLOGY, PETROLOGY, AND MINERALOGY, 1898. 81 
6S8 Schmidt (A.). [Eeview of "Die Goldlagerstiitten in Alabama," 
by William B. Phillips]. 
Zeit. fiir prak. Geol., 1898, heft 7, pp. 253-254, 1898. 
689 Schneider (Philip P.). The limestones of central New York. 
Stone, vol. xviii, pp. 26-29, 1898. 
Describes the character and occurrence of limestones from the sev- 
eral geologic formations of the region. 
690 Schuchert (Charles), White (David) and. Cretaceous series of 
the west coast of Greenland. 
See White (D.) and Schuchert (C.) No. 872. 
691 Scott (William B.). Memoir of Edward D. Cope. 
Geol. Soc. Am., Bull., vol. ix, pp. 401-408, 1898. 
Gives a sketch of the scientific work of Professor Cope. 
692 Preliminary note on the selenodont artiodactyls of the Uinta 
formation. 
Am. Phil. Soc, Proc, vol. xxxvii, pp. 73-81, 1898. 
Describes new genera and species. 
693 Scupham (J. R.). The buried river of California as a source of 
gold. 
Mines and Minerals, vol. xix, pp. 150-152, 1 fig., 1898. 
Describes former drainage systems and the occurrence of placer gold. 
694 Seward ( A. C). Fossil plants for students of botany and geology. 
Vol. I. 
University Press, Cambridge, England, 450 pp. ; Review by Henry C. 
Cowles, Jour, of Geol., vol. vi, pp. 436-438; Bot. Gazette, vol. xxvi, pp. 
59-61, 1898. 
695 Shaler (N. S.). Geology of the Cape Cod district [Massachusetts]. 
U. S. Geol. Surv., 18th Ann. Rept., Pt. II, pp. 503-593, pis. xcvii-civ, 
figs. 86-92, 1898. 
Describes the general relations of the sedimentary series, under- 
stracture, Glacial deposits and history, and other features of the Cape 
Cod region. 
696 Shattuck (George Burbank). Two excursions with geological stu- 
dents into the coastal plain of Maryland. 
Johns Hopkins Univ., Circ, vol. xviii, pp. 15-16, 1898. 
Describes Cretaceous and Tertiary sections in eastern Maryland. 
697 See Clark (W. B.), No. 152. 
698 Shephard (Edward M.). A report upon Greene County [Missouri]. 
Mo. Geol. Surv., vol. xii, Pt. I, pp. 15-245, 5 pis., 1 fig., and geologic 
map, 1898. 
Describes the physiographic features, the character, occurrence, and 
relations of the subdivisions of the Carboniferous, Devonian, and Silu- 
rian formations, the geologic structure and the occurrence of the 
economic products of the region. 
Bull. 162 6 
