weeks] PALEONTOLOGY, PETROLOGY, AND MINERALOGY, 1901. 125 
Oklahoma— Continued. 
Geology of the Glass Mountains, White. 817. 
Kansas-Oklahoma-Texas gypsum hills, Gould, 
300. 
Oklahoma limestones, Gould, 304. 
Oklahoma salt plains, Gould, 303. 
Ouachita and Arbuekle Mountain sections, 
Taff, 735. 
Southern extension of the Marion and Well- 
ington formations, Gould, 302. 
Springs of Kansas and Oklahoma, Gould, 299. 
Oregon. 
Coos Bay folio, Diller. 231. 
Cretaceous fossils from John Day Basin, Stan- 
ton, 725. 
Fossil land shells of the John Day Basin, 
Stearns, 727. 
Geological section through John Day Basin, 
Merriam, 543. 
Geology of the John Day Basin, Merriam, 542. 
Geology of the Three Sisters, Fairbanks, 263. 
Minerals in gold quartz veins, Lindgren, 497. 
New fossil tapir in Oregon, Sinclair, 703. 
Oregon nickel prospects, Ledoux, 486. 
Report on the Clarno flora, Knowlton, 452. 
Report on the flora of the Mascall formation, 
Knowlton, 453. 
Trias in northeastern Oregon, Lindgren, 496. 
Paleontology. 
Algonkian: 
Sur les formations precambriennes fossilif- 
eres, Walcott, 774. 
Cambrian: 
Acrothyra and Hyolithes, Matthew, 531. 
Cambrian brachiopoda, Walcott, 771. 
Cambrian fossils of St. Francois County, 
Beecher, 52. 
Eurypterid remains in the Cambrian, 
Beecher, 53. 
Hyolithes gracilis, Matthew, 532. 
Les plus anciennes faunes Paleozoiques, 
MattheAv, 536. 
New species of Olenellus, Wanner, 776. 
Paleozoic rocks of northwestern New Jersey, 
Van Ingen, 764. 
Preliminary notice of Etcheminian fauna, 
Matthew, 529. 
Carboniferous: 
Border line between the Paleozoic and Me- 
sozoic, Smith, 710. 
Contributions to Indian paleontology, Greene, 
320, 321. 
Correlation of the Kinderhook formations, 
Weller, 801. 
Developmental stages of Orthothetes min- 
utus, Cumings, 182. 
Fauna of the Permian, Beede, 55. 
Fossils from the Red Beds, Gould, 297. 
Fossils from the Upper Paleozoic rocks, Row- 
ley, 658. 
Fossil plants in the Permian, Sellards, 689. 
Kinderhook fauna! studies, Weller, 804. 
Orthothetes minutus n. sp., from the Salem 
limestone, Cumings, 179. 
Paleobotanical aspects of the Upper Paleozoic, 
White, 814. 
Permo-Carboniferous sharks, Eastman, 252. 
Paleontology — Continued . 
( 'a rhoniferous— Continued. 
Possible new coal plants, Gresley, 327. 
Pottawattamie and Douglas formations, Rog- 
ers, 656. 
Prodromites. A new ammonite genus, Smith 
and Weller, 711. 
Tseniopteris of the Permian, Sellards, 688. 
Whittleseya and their systematic relations, 
White, 813. 
Cretaceous: 
A new dinosaur, Stegosaurus marshi, Lucas, 
502. 
Chondrodonta, Stanton, 726. 
Cretaceous fossils from the John Day Basin, 
Stanton, 725. 
Crustacea of the Cretaceous, Pilsbry, 613. 
Dakota Cretaceous of Kansas and Nebraska, 
Gould, 301. 
Dinosaurian genus Creosaurus Marsh, Willis- 
ton, 836. 
Geology of the John Day Basin, Merriam, 542. 
Lytoceras from the Cretaceous rocks, White- 
aves, 820. 
New species of Unio, Whiteaves, 819. 
New turtle from the Kansas Cretaceous, 
Williston, 837. 
Teleosts from the Cretaceous, Cragin, 167. 
Devonian. 
Amnigenia as an indicator of fresh-water de- 
posits, Clarke, 147. 
A new geological formation in the Devonian, 
Ami, 16. 
Are the St. John plant beds Carboniferous? 
Matthew, 535. 
Arthrodires from the Cleveland shale, Dean, 
227. 
Contributions to Indiana paleontology, 
Greene, 320, 321. 
Devonian fossils and stratigraphy of Indiana, 
Keyes, 442. 
Helderbergian fossils near Montreal, Schu- 
chert, 682. 
Knoydart formation of Nova Scotia, Ami, 20. 
Limestones interbedded with shales of Mar- 
cellus stage, Clarke, 145. 
Marcellus limestone, Wood, 855. 
New Agelacrinites, Clarke, 146. 
New crinoid from the Hamilton, Wood, 855. 
Opening address, geologic rection, Grant, 310. 
Paleozoic rocks of northwestern New Jersey, 
Van Ingen, 764. 
Silurian and Devonian limestone, Foerste, 
278. 
Silver Creek hydraulic limestone, Siebenthal, 
701. 
Jurassic. 
Dinosaur beds of the Grand River Valley, 
Riggs, 650. 
Fossil wood from the Newark formation, 
Knowlton, 454. 
Jura-fossilien aus Alaska, Pompeckj, 620. 
Jurassic dinosaur deposits near Canyon City, 
Hatcher, 345. 
Morrison formation, Lee, 487. 
Pleistocene. 
A new Califomian Bittium, Dall and Bartsch, 
189. 
