606 
INDEX    TO    NORTH    AMERICAN    GEOLOGY 
Paleontology— Continued. 
Carboniferous — Continued. 
Osteology  of  skull  of  Dimetrodon,  Case, 
7. 
Paleobotanical    aspects    of    the    upper 
Paleozoic  in  Nova  Scotia.  White  (D.), 
Paleontologic  results  of  areal  survey  of 
Olean  quadrangle,  Clarke  (J.  M.),  7. 
Paleontology  of  the  Bingham  mining 
district,  (lirty,  12. 
Paleozoic  batrachian  footprints.  Mat- 
thew  (G.   V.).  25. 
Paleozoic  cockroaches,  Sellards,  5,  8. 
Paleozoic  ostracpds  from  Maryland. 
Jones   (T.  R.),  4. 
Paraphorb.yncb.us,  Weller,  9. 
Peculiar  modification  among  Permian 
dipnoans,  Eastman.  11. 
Pelycosaurierreste  von  Texas,  Broili,  4. 
Permian  life  of  Texas,  Sternberg,  2. 
Permian  Xiphosuran  from  Kansas. 
Beecher,  10. 
Permische  Stegocephalen  und  Reptilien 
aus  Texas.  Broili.  2. 
Permo-Carboniferous  sharks.  Eastman. 
2. 
Pleuroptyx  in  Iowa  Coal  Measures,  l'd- 
den,  7. 
Possihle  new  coal  plants.  Gresley,  1. 
Potsdam  sandstone  of  Lake  Champlain 
Basin,  Van  Ingen,  4. 
Pottawattamie  and  Douglas  forma- 
tions, Rogers.  1. 
Prodromites.  a  new  ammonite  genus, 
Smith  and  Weller,  1. 
Psaronius,  Herzer,  1. 
Relations  of  some  Carboniferous  faunas. 
Girty,  11. 
Report  of  State  geologist  of  Nebraska. 
Barbour  (  E.  II.  i.  s. 
Reproduction  of  lost  parts  in  a  fossil 
crinoid,  Whitfield.  !>. 
Revision  of  Paleozoic  Paleechinoidea, 
Klem,  1. 
Revision  of  Phyllocarida  from  Che- 
mung and  Waverly  groups  of  Penn- 
sylvania. Beecher.  8. 
Rhomhopora  lepidodendroides  Meek. 
Condra,  3. 
Six  new  species,  Knowlton,  13. 
Six  new  species,  including  two  new 
genera  of  fossil  plants,  Herzer.  2. 
Species  of  Whittleseya  and  their  sys- 
tematic relations.  White  (D.).  4. 
Stigmaria  structure,  Poole,  1. 
Structure  of  fore  foot  of  Dimetrodon. 
Case,  8. 
Ta?niopteris  of  the  Permian.  Sellards.  1. 
Triticites,  new  genus  of  Carboniferous 
foraminifers,  Girty.  '.». 
Two  Carboniferous  genera,  Cockerel  1.  3. 
Ueber  Diacranodus  texensis  Cope,  Bro- 
ili, 3. 
Upper  Permian  in  western  Texas,  Girty. 
2. 
Paleontology — Continued. 
Carboniferous — Continued. 
Validity  of  Idiophyllum  rotundifolium, 
Sellards.  4. 
Vertebrate  fossils  from  Permian  beds  of 
Oklahoma,  Case,  3. 
Vertebrates    from    Permian    of    Texas. 
Case,  5. 
Cretaceous. 
Atlantic  highlands  section.  Prather,  4. 
Ceratopsia  from  the  Laramie,  Wyoming, 
Hatcher,  22. 
Chondrodonta,  Stanton,  2. 
Coal  resources  of  Wyoming,  Trumbull, 
1. 
Corals  of  Buda  limestone,  Vaughan.  17. 
Correction  of  Professor  Osborn's  note, 
Hatcher,  13. 
Cretaceous  actinopterous  fishes,  Hay, 
10. 
Cretaceous  and  Tertiary  plants  of 
Canada,  Penhallow,  4. 
Cretaceous  and  Tertiary  section  in 
Montana,  Douglass,  3. 
Cretaceous  beds  of  Long  Island.  Hol- 
lick.  7. 
Cretaceous  deposits  of  Pacific  coast, 
Anderson  (F.  M.),  3. 
Cretaceous  fish  Portheus  molossus,  Os- 
born.  35. 
Cretaceous  fishes.  Williston,  1. 
Cretaceous  formations  and  faunas  of 
New  Jersey,  Weller,  7. 
Cretaceous  fossils  from  the  John  Day 
basin,  Stanton,  1. 
Cretaceous  fossils  of  the  Bisbee  quad- 
rangle. Stanton.  0. 
Cretaceous  turtles,  Wieland,  2. 
Cretaceous  turtles  of  New  Jersey,  Wie- 
land, 6,  7. 
Cretaceous  turtles  of  New  Jersey: 
Agomphus,  Wieland,  13. 
Crustacea  of  the  Cretaceous,  Pilsbry.  1. 
Dakota  Cretaceous  of  Kansas  and  Ne- 
braska, Gould,  5. 
Development  of  Scaphites,  Smith  ( W. 
D.),  1. 
Dinosaurian  genus  Creosaurus  Marsh, 
Williston,  2. 
Dinosaurs  from  the  Cretaceous  of  Al- 
berta, Lambe,  10. 
Dinosaurs  in  Fort  Pierre  shales,  Doug- 
lass. 5. 
Discovery  of  amber  on  Staten  Island, 
Hollick,  16. 
Distinctive  characters  of  the  mid-Cre- 
taceous fauna.  Osborn,  12. 
Elosaurus  parvus,  a  new  genus  and 
species  of  Sauropoda,  Peterson  and 
Gilmore,  1. 
Fauna  of  Cliffwood  clays.  Weller,  10, 
13. 
Flora  of  the  Matawan  formation,  Ber- 
ry. 5. 
Fossil  Cyrena  from  Alberta,  Whiteaves, 
6. 
