750 
INDEX    TO    NORTH    AMERICAN    GEOLOGY 
Physiographic  geology— Continued. 
General — Continued. 
Development  of  profile  of  equilibrium 
of  subaqueous  shore  terrace,  Fenne- 
man,  2. 
Distribution  of  fresh-water  faunas  as 
an  evidence  of  drainage  modifica- 
tions,  Johnson    (D.  W. ),  8. 
Drainage  of  cuestas,  Davis  (W.  M.),  24. 
Field  work  in  physical  geography, 
Davis    (W.   M.),   27. 
Fiords  and  hanging  valleys,  Upham, 
30. 
Formation  and  geology  of  salt  deposits, 
Jones  (F.  O.),  1. 
Frontier  of  physiography,  Hobbs,  17. 
Gaspee  Toint  :  a  type  of  cuspate  fore- 
land, Brown    (R.  M.),  2. 
Geographic  distribution  of  metallifer- 
ous ores  within  the  United  States. 
Ransome,   12. 
Geographical  cycle,  Davis   (W.  M.),  22. 
Geographical  cycle  in  an  arid  climate, 
Davis  (W.  M.),  55. 
Geology  and  water  resources  of  east- 
central   Washington,   Calkins.   .'!. 
Hanging  valleys,  Russell,  20. 
Influence  of  caverns  on  topography, 
Russell,  19. 
Influence  of  underlying  rocks  on  veg- 
etation,  Cowles,  2. 
Introduction  to  physical  geography. 
Gilbert  and  Brigham,   1. 
Laboratory  manual  of  physical  geogra- 
phy. Brigham.  2. 
Lessons  in  physical  geography,  Dryer, 
2. 
Leveling  without  base-leveling,  Davis 
(  W.  M. ) .  GO. 
Limiting  width  of  meander  belts,  Jeffer- 
son,  1. 
Mountain  growth  and  mountain  struc- 
ture, Willis,  15. 
New  physical  geography,  Tarr,  4. 
Nordhavets  bund  og  den  gamle  landbro 
mellem  Island  og  Groenland,  Kold- 
erup,  2. 
North  America,  Russell,  15. 
Physical  conditions  in  America  during 
man's  early  occupancy,  Wright  (G. 
F.),  13. 
Physical  geography,  Tarr,  4. 
Physiographic  improbability  of  land  at 
the  North  Pole,  Spencer   (J.  W.),  14. 
Physiographic  problems  of  to-day,  Rus- 
sell. 14. 
Physiography  in  the  university,  Mar- 
but,  5. 
Physiography — its  scope  and  applica- 
tions, Eggleston,  2. 
Relation  between  base-leveling  and 
plant  distribution,   Cowles,   1. 
Relation  of  faults  to  topography,  Spurr, 
16. 
Relation  of  physical  geography  to  other 
science  subjects,  Norton,  2. 
Relief  of  the  earth's  surface,  Curtis,  3. 
Physiographic  geology— Continued. 
General — Continued. 
River  terraces  in  New  England,   Davis 
(W.  M.),  29. 
Submarine    canyon    of    Hudson    River, 
Spencer  (J.  W.).  13. 
Terraces  of  Westfield  River,  Massachu- 
setts, Davis   (W.  M.),  28. 
Three   new   physiographic   terms.    Salis- 
bury,   5. 
Types  of  sedimentary  overlap.  Grabau, 
19. 
Unconformity    in    mountain    elevations, 
Heilprin,  11. 
Value   of   topographic   maps,   Chapman, 
2 
Youth,    maturity,   and   old   age  of  topo- 
graphic forms,  Johnson   (D.  W.),  11. 
Quaternary. 
Alaska. 
Alaska  glaciers  and  glaciation,  Gilbert, 
13. 
Geological  section  of  Rocky  Mountains 
in  northern  Alaska,  Schrader,  1. 
Geology   of  Copper   River   region,   Men- 
denhall,  8. 
Reconnaissance  in  Alaska,  Schrader,  3. 
Search   for   mammoth   and   other   fossil 
remains,  Maddren,  1. 
Appalachian  region. 
Accounting  for  the  depth   of  the  Wyo- 
ming buried  valley,  Lyman,  1. 
Beaver  folio,  Pennsylvania,  Woolsey,  3. 
Brownsville-Connellsville    folio,    ('amp- 
bell    (M.  R.),  8. 
Charleston  folio,   Campbell    ( M.   R.),   2. 
(Mays  of  upper  Ohio  and  Beaver  River 
region,  Hice,  2. 
Elders  Ridge  folio,  Stone  (R.  W.l,  7. 
Geology  of  Garrett  County,  Martin   (G. 
C.),l. 
Geology    of    Pittsburg    district,    White 
(I.  C),  6. 
Glacial  gravels  of  the  Kittanning  quad 
rangle,  Leverett,  10. 
Kittanning  folio.  Butts,  4. 
Latrobe  folio,  Campbell    (M.  R.),  18. 
Masontown-Uniontown    folio,    Campbell 
(M.  R.),  6. 
Rural  Valley  folio,  Butts,  6. 
Waynesburg  folio.  Stone  (R.  W.),  6. 
Atlantic  coast  region. 
Crania  of  Trenton,  N.  J.,  Hrdlicka,  1. 
Geological  notes,  Hollick,  13. 
Geology    of    Coastal    Plain    formations, 
Shattuck,  5. 
Geology  of  Long  Island,  Veatch,  5. 
Glacial    geology    of   New   Jersey, '  Salis- 
bury and  others,  1. 
New     York     City     folio,     Merrill     and 
others,  1. 
Norfolk  folio,  Darton,  7. 
Pleistocene  problem  in  Maryland,  Shat 
tuck,  7. 
Pleistocene   problem    of   the    North    At- 
lantic coastal  plain,  Shattuck,  1. 
