90  CONTRIBUTIONS    TO    ECONOMIC    GEOLOGY,  1906,  PART    I. 
Eldridge,  G.  H.     Reconnaissance  in  the  Sushitna  basin  and  adjacent  territory  it 
Alaska  in  1898.     In  Twentieth  Ann.  Rept.,  pt.  7,  pp.  1-29.     1900. 
Emmons,   S.   F.     Geology  and  mining  industry  of    Leadville,   Colo.;  with  atlas 
Monograph  XII.     870  pp.     1886. 
Progress  of  the  precious-metal  industry  in  the  United  States  since   IS80 
1 1!  Mineral  Resources  U.  S.  for  1891,  pp.  46-94.     1892. 
Economic  geology  of  the  Mercur  mining  district,    Utah.     In   Sixteentl 
Ann.  Kept.,  pt.  2,  pp.  349-369.     1895. 
The  mines  of  Custer  County.  Colo.     In  Seventeenth  Ann.    Rept.,  pt.  2 
pp.  411-472.     1896. 
Emmons,  \V.  II .     The  Neglected  mine  and  near-by  properl  ies,  Colorado.     In  I 'mile 
tin  No.  260,  pp.  121-127.     1905. 
Ore  deposits  of   Bear  Creek,  near  Silverton.     In    Bulletin    No.   285,  pp 
2:.  27.      1906. 
Notes  on  tin' Manhattan  district  [Nevada].     With  Ransome  and  Garreyj 
Bulletin  No.  303. 
Gai  k.  II.  s.     Eahns  Peak  gold  field.     In  Bulletin  No.  285,  pp.  28-34.     1906. 
Garret,  G.  II.     Notes  on  the  Manhattan  district   [Nevada].     With  Ransome  ami 
Emmons  in  Bullel in  No.  303. 
Graton,   I.    C.     Gold  and  tin  deposits  of  the  southern    Appalachians;  with  note 
on  the  Dahlonega  mines  by  Waldemar  Lindgren.     Bulletin  No.  293.     134  pp.     1906 
BaguEj    Arnold.     Geology   of   the    Eureka   district,    Nevada.     Monograph    XX 
U9pp.      1892. 
Ii.\n\.  0.   II.     The  smelting  of  argentiferous  lead  ores  in  the  Far  West.     In  Mir 
eral  Resources  U.  S.  lor  L882,  pp.  324  345.     L883. 
[rving,  J.  I>.     Ore  deposits  of  the  northern  Black  Hills,     [n  Bulletin  No.  225,  pj 
123   I  10.      M»<)  l. 
Ore  deposits  of  the  Ouray  district,  Colorado.     In   Bulletin   No.     260,  pi 
;»o  77.     L905. 
Ore  deposits  in  the  vicinity  of  hake  City,  Colo.     In  Bulletin  No.  260,  pj 
7s  m       L905 
Lindgren,  A  vldemar.     The  gold-silver  mines  of  Ophir,  <  !al.     In  Fourteenth   Am  . 
lie,,!.,  pt.  2,  pp.  243  284.      L894. 
The  gold-quartz  veins  of  Nevada  City  and  ( Irass  Valley  districts,  <  'alifornii . 
h,  Seventeenth  Ann.  Rept.,  pt.  2. .pp.  I   262.     L896. 
The  mining  districts  of  the  Idaho  basin  and#the  Boise  Ridge,  Idaho.    ]i 
Eighteenth  Ann.  Rept.,  pi.  3,  pp.  625  736.      L898. 
The  gold  and  silver  veins  of  Silver  City,  De   Lamar,  and  other  ininha 
districts  in  [daho.     In  Twentieth  Ann.  Kepi.,  pt  3,  pp.  7.j  256.     1900. 
'I'll-'    gold    bell    of    the    Blue   Mountains  of    Oregon.     In    Twenty-secoi 3 
Ann.  Kept.,  pt.  2,  pp.  .V>1   776.      1902. 
Neocene  rivers  of  the  Sierra  Nevada.     In  Bulletin  No.  21:;.  pp.  M  G5.    190'. 
Mineral  deposits  of  the  Bitterrool    Range  and  th<    Clearwater  Mountain 
Montana,      in  Bulletin  No.  213,  pp.  06-70.      190:!. 
Tests  for  gold  and  silver  in  shales  from  western  Kansas.     Bulletin  No.  2C  !■ 
21  pp.     1902. 
The  production  of  -old  in  the  United  States  m  1901.     In  Bulletin  No.  26) 
pp.  32-38.      1905. 
The  production  of  silver  in  the  United  Stales  in  L904.     In  Bulletin  No.  26 ) 
pp.  39   11.      1905. 
The    Annie    Laurie   mine.    Piute  County,  Utah.     In  Bulletin  No.  2£ ) 
pp.  87-90.     1906. 
Notes  on  the  Dahlonega  mines.     In  Bulletin  No.  293,  pp.  119-128.      19(  5 
