FOR   THE   YEAES   1901-1905,  INCLUSIVE. 
625 
Paleontology— Continued. 
Vertebrate — Continued. 
Structure  of  Dinichthys,  Wright  (A. 
A.),  1. 
Structure  of  forefoot  of  Diinetrodon, 
Case,   S. 
Structure  of  plesiosaurian  skull,  Wil- 
liston,  16. 
Structure  of  the  manus  in  Brontosau- 
rus,  Hatcher,  2. 
Structure  of  two  Dinichthyds,  Hussa- 
kof,  2. 
Studies  relating  to  the  origin  of  verte- 
brates, Patten,  2. 
Successors  of  certain  North  American 
primates,  Wortman,  7. 
Teleorhinus  browni,  Osborn,  33. 
Teleosts  from  the  Platte  Cretaceous 
series,  Cragin,  1. 
Teleosts  of  the  upper  Cretaceous. 
Stewart,  1. 
Ten  years'  progress  in  mammalian 
paleontology  of  North  America,  Os- 
born, 49. 
Tertiary  of  Montana,  Douglass,  9. 
Thalattosauria,  Merriam   (J.  C),  15. 
Tissu  osseux  chez  certains  poissons  des 
terrains  palseozoiques  de  Canyon 
City,  Vaillant,  1. 
Tooth  structure  of  Mesohippus  wes- 
toni  (Cope),  Lambe,  14. 
Tortoise  from  Colorado  Miocene,  Hay, 
17. 
Tortoise  from  the  auriferous  gravels 
of  California,  Sinclair,  4. 
Triassic  fishes  of  New  Jersey,  East- 
man, 20. 
Trissaic  Ichthyoterygia  '  from  Califor- 
nia and  Nevada,  Merriam   (J.  C. ),  4. 
Triassic  ichthyosaurs  from  California 
and  Nevada,  Osborn,  15. 
Triassic  Reptilia  from  northern  Califor- 
nia, Merriam  (J.  C.),  5. 
Triceratops  prorsus,  Gilmore,  4. 
Triceratops  prorsus,  Schuchert,  14. 
Trionychid,  Conchochelys  admirabilis, 
from  the  Puerco  beds.  Hay,  25. 
Trionyx  foveatus  Leidy  and  Trionyx 
vagans  Cope  from  Cretaceous  rocks 
of  Alberta,  Lambe,  5. 
Tritubercular  theory,  Osborn,  27. 
Turtle  from  Cretaceous  rocks,  Lambe, 
1. 
Two  islands,  Condon,  1. 
Types  of  limb  structure  in  Triassic 
Ichthyosauria,  Merriam.  (J.  C),  13. 
Tyrannosaurus  and  other  Cretaceous 
carnivorous  dinosaurs,  Osborn,  50. 
Leber  Diacranodus  texensis  Cope,  Bro- 
ili,  3. 
Lse  of  pneumatic  tools  in  preparation 
of  fossils,  Riggs,  5. 
Valley  loess  and  fossil  man  of  Lansing, 
Upham,  14. 
Vegetables  tissues  in  Dsemonelix,  Jen- 
nings (O.  E.),  1. 
Bull,  301—06 40 
Paleontology— Continued . 
Vertebrate — Continued. 
Vertebral  column  of  Brontosaurus, 
Riggs,  4. 
Vertebrate  fossils  from  Permian  beds  of 
Oklahoma,  Case,  3. 
Vertebrate  paleontology,  Lambe,  13,  15. 
Vertebrate  paleontology  at  the  Ameri- 
can Museum  of  Natural  History, 
Hay,  21. 
Vertebrate  paleontology  iu  the  U.  S. 
Geological  Survey,  Osborn,  25. 
Vertebrates  from  Permian  of  Texas, 
Case,  5. 
Vertebrates  from  the  Montana  Ter- 
tiary, Douglass,  8. 
Vertebrates  from  the  Trias  of  Arizona, 
Lucas  (P.  A.),  6. 
Weight  of  Brontosaurus,  Gregory  (W. 
K.),  1. 
Western  explorations  for  fossil  verte- 
brates, Osborn,  53. 
When  did  the  American  mammoth  and 
mastodon  be  ome  extinct?,  Lloyd,  1. 
Winged  reptiles,  Williston,  7. 
Pal9obotany. 
American  fossil  cycads,  Wieland,  1. 
Aralia  in  American  paleobotany,  Ber- 
ry. G. 
American  range  of  the  Cycadofilices, 
White    (D.),   24. 
American  species  of  Thinnfeldia,  Ber- 
ry, 3. 
Ancestors  of  big  trees,  Berry,  13. 
Autophytography,  White  (C.  IL),  2. 
Backward  step  in*  paleobotany,  Mat- 
thew (G.  P.),  0. 
Bog  plant  societies  of  northern  North 
America,  Transeau,  1. 
Brandon  clays,  Woodworth,  8. 
Buried  cypress  forests,  Bibb'.ns,  3. 
Carboniferous  ferns  from  Mazon  Creek, 
Illinois,  Sellards,  3. 
Carboniferous  fossils  in  Ocoee  slates, 
Smith  (E.  A.),  1. 
Chalcedony-lime  nuts  from  Bad  Lands, 
Barbour  (E.  II. ),  2. 
Coal  Measure  forest  near  Socorro,  Her- 
rick   (C.  L.),  3. 
Codonotheca,  new  type  of  spore-bear- 
ing organ  from  Coal  Measures,  Sel- 
lards, 6. 
Collection  de  vegetaux  fossils  des 
Etats-Unis,  Bureau,  1. 
Cretaceous  and  Tertiary  plants  of  Can- 
ada, Penhallow,  4. 
Cretaceous  beds  of  Long  Island,  Hol- 
lick,  7. 
Cretaceous  near  CI  iff  wood,  Berry,  8 
Cycad  investigation,  Wieland.  5. 
Cycads  from  Black  Hills,  Wieland,  10. 
Discovery  of  amber  on  Staten  Island, 
Hollick,  1G. 
Eocene  Plantae,  Hollick,  3. 
Example  in  nomenclature,  Ward  (L. 
F.),  6. 
