616 
INDEX    TO    NORTH    AMERICAN    GEOLOGY 
Paleontology— Continued. 
Invertebrate — Continued. 
Development  of  Fenestella,  Cumings, 
10. 
Development  in  size  of  the  inarticulate 
brachiopods  of  the  basal  Cambrian, 
Matthew   (G.  F.),  17. 
Development  of  biserial  arm  in  certain 
crinoids.   Gtrabau,  8. 
Development  of  Scaphites,  Smith  (W. 
D.).  1. 
Development  of  septa  in  Paleozoic  cor- 
als, Duerden,  5. 
Development  of  some  Paleozoic  bryozoa, 
Cumings,  0. 
Developmental  changes  in  Devonian 
brachiopods,  Raymond   (P.  E.),  •">• 
Developmental  stages-  of  Orthothetes 
minutus,  Cumings,  5. 
Devonian  era  in  Ohio  basin,  Claypole,  5. 
Devonian  fauna  of  Kwa.taboab.egan, 
Parks.  5.  . 
Devonian  fossils  of  Bisbee  quadrangle, 
Williams    (II.  S.),  6. 
Devonian  paleontology,  Schucbert,  13. 
Devonic  crinoids.  Wood   (Elvira),  3. 
Devonic  worms.  Clarke   (J.  M.),  18. 
Diatom-earth  in  Arizona,  Blake  i  W. 
P.),   10. 
Did  the  upper  Etcheminian  fauna  in- 
vade eastern  Canada  from  the  south- 
east?   Matthew   (G.  P.),   18. 
Distribution  and  syonymy  of  Ptycho 
spira    sexplicata,   Greger,   1. 
Drift  fossils,  Hollick,  8. 
Dwarf  fauna  of  Tully  limestone, 
Loom  is.  4. 
Earliest  Tertiary  coral  reefs  in  An- 
tilles and  United  States,  Vaughan,  10. 
Early  stages  of  some  Paleozoic  corals, 
Gordon    (C.   E.),  1. 
Echinodermata  of  the  Missouri  Silu- 
rian, Rowley,  3. 
Eocene  Arthropoda,  Ulrich,  1. 
Eocene   Bryozoa,    Ulrich,    2. 
Eocene  Coelenterata,  Vaughan,  1. 
Eocene  Echinodermata.  Clark  and  Mar- 
tin, 4. 
Eocene  Mollusca.  Clark  and  Martin,   2. 
Eocene  Molluscoidea  (Brachiopoda ), 
Clark  and  Martin,  3. 
Eocene  Pisces,   Eastman,   1. 
Eocene  Protozoa,   Bagg,   1. 
Eocene  Turbinella,   Dall,   12. 
ETurypterid  fauna  from  the  Salina, 
Sarle,  2. 
Eurypterid  remains  in  the  Cambrian  of 
Missouri,  Beecher,  3. 
Evolution  of  some  Devonic  spirifers, 
Grabau,  18. 
Fasciolaria  from  the  Eocene  green 
marls  at  Shark  River,  N.  J.,  Whit- 
field, 13. 
Fauna  of  Cliffwood  clays,  Weller,  10, 
13. 
Fauna  of  magnesian  series,  Sardeson,  2. 
Paleontology — Continued. 
In  vertebrate — Continued. 
Fauna    of    Stafford    limestone    of    New 
York,   Talbot,   1. 
Fauna   of   the   Agoniatite   limestone   of 
Onondaga  County,  N.  Y.,  Wilson    (J. 
D.),  1. 
Fauna  of  the  Chazy  limestone  on  Val- 
cour  Island,  Hudson,  1. 
Fauna    of    the    Chazy    limestone,    Ray- 
mond  (P.  E.),  7. 
Fauna  of  the  Mentor,  Jones  (A.  W. ),  2. 
Fauna  of  the  Permian,  Beede,  2. 
Faune    marine    du    Trias    Superieur   de 
Zacatecas,  Burckhardt  and  Scalia,  1. 
Foraminifera      from      Santa      Barbara, 
Bagg,  7. 
Foraminifera  of  Trinidad,  Guppy,  4. 
Fort    Cassin    beds    in    the    Calciferous 
limestone,  Dwight,  1. 
.    Fossil    corals    from    reefs    of    Curacao, 
Arube,  and  Bonaire,  Vaughan,  2. 
Fossil  Cyrena  from  Alberta,  Whiteaves, 
6. 
Fossil  crabs  of  the  Gay  Head  Miocene, 
Cushman,  6. 
Fossil   form   of  Orohelix  yavapai   Pils- 
bry,  Cockerell,  2. 
Fossil    fresh-water    shells    of    Colorado 
Desert,  Stearns  (R.  E.  C),  2. 
Fossil    insects    in    Permian    of   Kansas, 
Sella rds,  7. 
Fossil  land  shells  of  Bermuda,  Gulick, 
1. 
Fossil  land  shells  of  old  forest  bed  of 
Ohio  River,  Billups,  1. 
Fossil  land  shells  of  the  John  Day  re- 
gion, Stearns  (R.  E.  C).  1. 
Fossil   shells  of  the  John  Day   region, 
Stearns  (R.  E.  C),  3. 
Fossil  Unio  from  Wisconsin,  Wagner,  2. 
Fossils  and  age  of  Yakutat  formation, 
Ulrich,  4. 
Fossils   from   Mount   Noyes    (Canadian 
Rockies),  Woodward   (H.),  2. 
Fossils  from   Sankaty  Head,  Cushman, 
5. 
Fossils  from  Subcarboniferous  rocks  of 
northeastern  Missouri,  Rowley,  2. 
Fossils   from    the    Hackberry   group    of 
Iowa,  Webster,  2. 
Fossils  from  the  Silurian  rocks  of  Ek- 
wan  River,  Whiteaves,  17. 
Fossils  from  the  upper  Paleozoic  rocks 
of  Missouri,  Rowley,  1. 
Fossils     from     the     Vancouver    Creta- 
ceous, Whiteaves,  12. 
Fossils     in    the     St.     Peter    sandstone, 
Sardeson,  6. 
Fossils   of    the    Bahama    Islands,    Dall, 
15. 
Fossils  of  the  Bahamas,  Dall,  16. 
Fossils  of   the   Texas   Cretaceous,   Pra- 
ther,  1. 
Fossula  in  rugose  corals,  Duerden,  12. 
Fresh-water     molluscan     faunule     from 
Cretaceous  of  Montana,  Stanton,  4. 
