errs SERS aa eae ‘cagweorpse ay nn savawnns orotnma es an ee eae wn gts Ove one as eee oe peak earn enna eres Motors picie no ric one ome tern eyes nanaer ato Series title, Author title. Title for subject entry. LIBRARY CATALOGUE SLIPS. United States. Department of the interior. (U. 8. geological survey.) Department of the interior | — | Monographs | of the | United States geological survey | Volume XX | [Seal of the depart- ment] | Washington | government printing office | 1892 Second title: United States geological survey | J. W. Powell, director | — | Geology | of the | Eureka district | Nevada | with an atlas | by | Arnold Hague | [Vignette] | Washington | government printing office | 1592 4°, xvii, 419 pp. 8 pl. Hague (Arnold). United States geological survey | J. W. Powell, director | — | Geology | of the | Eureka district | Nevada | with an atlas | by | Arnold Hague | [Vignette] | Washington | government printing office | 1892 4°. xvii, 419 pp. 8 pl. (Unirep Srares. Department of the interior. (U. S. geological survey). Monograph XX.) United States geological survey | J. W. Powell, director | — | Geology | of the | Evreka district | Nevada | with an atlas | by | Arnold Hague | [Vignette] | Washington | government printing office | 1892 4°. xvii, 419 pp. 8 pl. (Univep States. Department of the interior. (U. S. geological survey.) Monograph XX.] ~ ' ¢ , ead 1 ‘4 : by pr - » f a > = oa ‘ . ADVERTISEMENT. [Monograph XX.] The publications of the United States Geological Survey are issued in accordance with the statute approved Mareh 3, 1879, which declares that— “The publications of the Geological Survey shall consist of the annual report of operations, geo- logical and economic maps illustrating the resources and classification of the lands, and reports upon general and economic geology and paleontology. The annual report of operations of the Geological Survey shall accompany the annual report of the Secretary of the Interior. All special memoirs and reports of said Survey shall be issued in uniform quarto series if deemed necessary by the Director, but otherwise in ordinary octavos. Three thousand copies of each shall be published tor scientific exchanges and for sale at the price of publication; and all literary and cartographic materials received in exchange shall be the property of the United States and form a part of the library of the organization: And the money resulting from the sale of such publications shall be covered into the Treasury of the United States.” The following joint resolution, referring to all government publications, was passed by Congress July 7, 1&82: “That whenever any document or report shall be ordered printed by Congress, there shall be printed, in addition to the number in each case stated, the ‘usual number’ (1,900) of copies for binding and distribution among those entitled to receive them.” _ Except in those cases in which an extra number of any publication has been supplied to the Sur- vey by special resolution of Congress or has been ordered by the Secretary of the Interior, this office has no copies for gratuitous distribution. ANNUAL REPORTS. I. First Annual Report of the United States Geological Survey, by Clarence King. 1880. 4°. 79 pp- 1 map.—A preliminary report describing plan of organization and publications. II. Seeond Annual Report of the United States Geological Survey, 1880-81, by J. W. Powell. 1882. 8°. lv, 588 pp. 62 pl. 1 map. III. Third Annual Report of the United States Geological Survey, 188182, by J. W. Powell. 1883. 8°. xvili,564 pp. 67 pl. and maps. IV. Fourth Annual Report of the United States Geological Survey, 1882-83, by J. W. Powell. 1884. 8°. xxxii, 473 pp. 85 pl. and maps. V. Fifth Annual Report of the United States Geological Survey, 1883~84, by J. W. Powell. 1385. 8°. xxxvi, 469 pp. 58 pl. and maps. VI. Sixth Annual Report of the United States Geological Survey, 1884—’85, by J. W. Powell. 1885. 8°. xxix, 570 pp. 65 pl. and maps. VII. Seventh Annual Report of the United States Geological Survey, 1885-86, by J. W. Powell. 1ss8. 8°, xx, 656 pp. 71 pl. and maps. VIII. Eighth Annual Report of the United States Geological Survey, 1886-’87, by J. W. Powell. 1889. 8°. 2v. xix, 474, xii pp. 53 pl. and maps; 1p. 1. 475-1063 pp. 54-76 pl. and maps. IX. Ninth Annual Report of the United States Geological Survey, 1887~88, by J. W. Powell. 1889. 8°. xiii,717 pp. 88 pl. and maps. X. Tenth Annual Report of the United States Geological Survey, 1888~’89, by J. W. Powell. 1890. 8°. 2v. xv,774 pp. 98 pl. and maps; viii, 123 pp. XI. Eleventh{Annual Report of the United States Geological Survey, 1889-’90, by J. W. Powell. 1891. 8°. 2v. xv, 757 pp. 66 pl. and maps; ix, 351 pp. 30 pl. and maps. XII. Twelfth Annual Report of the United States Geological Survey, 1890-91, by J. W. Powell. 1891. 8° 2yv. xili,675 pp. 53 pl.and maps; xviii,576 pp. 146 pl. and maps. MONOGRAPHS. I. Lake Bonneville, by Grove Karl Gilbert. 1890. 4°. xx, 438 pp. 51 pl. 1l map. Price $1.50, II. Tertiary History of the Grand Canon District, with atlas, by Clarence E. Dutton, Capt., U.S. A. 1882. 4°. xiv, 264 pp. 42 pl. and atlas of 24 sheets folio. Price $10.00. III. Geology of the Comstock Lode and the Washoe District, with atlas, by George F. Becker. 1882. 4°. xv, 422 pp. 7 pl. and atlas of 21 sheets folio. Price $11.00. IV. Comstock Mining and Miners, by Eliot Lord. 1883. 4°, xiv, 45l pp. 3 pl. Price $1.50. I II ADVERTISEMENT. V. The Copper-Bearing Rocks of Lake Superior, by Roland Duer Irving. 1883. 4°. xvi, 464 pp. 151. 29pl.and maps. Price $1.85. VI. Contributions to the Knowledge of the Older Mesozoic Flora of Virginia, by William Morris Fontaine. 1883. 4°. xi,144pp. 541. 54 pl. Price $1.05. VII. Silver-Lead Deposits of Eureka, Nevada, by Joseph Story Curtis. 1884. 4°. xiii, 200 pp. 16 pl. Price $1.20. VIII. Paleontology of the Eureka District, by Charles Doolittle Walcott. 1884. 4°. xiii, 298 pp. 241. 24pl. Price $1.10. IX. Brachiopoda and Lamellibranchiata of the Raritan Clays and Greensand Marls of New Jersey, by Robert P. Whitfield. 1885. 4°. xx, 338 pp. 35 pl. 1map. Price $1.15. X. Dinocerata. A Monograph of an Extinct Order of Gigantic Mammals, by Othniel Charles Marsh. 1886. 4°. xviii, 243 pp. 561. 56 pl. Price $2.70. XI. Geological History of Lake Lahontan, a Quaternary Lake of Northwestern Nevada, by Israel Cook Russell. 1585. 4°. xiv, 288 pp. 46 pl. and maps. Price $1.75. XII. Geology and Mining Industry of Leadville, Colorado, with atlas, by Samuel Franklin Em- mons. 1886. 4°. xxix, 770 pp. 45 pl. and atlas of 35 sheets folio. Price $8.40. XII. Geology of the Quicksilver Deposits of the Pacifie Slope, with atlas, by George F. Becker. 1888, 4°. xix, 486 pp. 7 pl. and atlas of 14 sheets folio. Price $2.00. XIV. Fossil Fishes and Fossil Plants of the Triassic Rocks of New Jersey and the Connecticut Valley, by John S. Newberry. 1888. 4°. xiv, 152 pp. 26 pl. Price $1.00. XV. The Potomac or Younger Mesozoic Flora, by William Morris Fontaine. 1889. 4°. xiv, 377 pp. 180 pl. Text and plates bound separately. Price $2.50. XVI. The Paleozoic Fishes of North America, by John Strong Newberry. 1889. 4°. 340 pp. 53 pl. Price $1.00, XVII. The Flora of the Dakota Group, a posthumous work, by Leo Lesquereux. Edited by F. H. Knowlton. 1891. 4°. 400 pp. 6€ pl. Price $1.10. XVIII. Gasteropoda and Cephalopoda of the Raritan Clays and Greensand Marls of New Jersey, by Robert P. Whitfield. 1891. 4°. 402 pp. 50 pl. Price $1.00. XX. Geology of the Eureka District, Nevada, with an atlas, by Arnold Hague. 1892. 4°. xvii, 419 pp. 8pl. Price $5.25. In press: XIX. The Penokee Iron-Bearing Series of Northern Wisconsin and Michigan, by Roland D. Irving and C. R. Van Hise. XXI, The Tertiary Rhynchopborous Coleoptera of North America, by S. H. Seudder. XXII. Geology of the Green Mountains in Massachusetts, by Messrs. Pumpelly, Wolff, and Dale. In preparation: —Mollusea and Crustacea of the Miocene Formations of New Jersey, by R. P. Whitfield. —Sauropoda, by O. C. Marsh. —Stegosauria, by O. C. Marsh. —Brontotherid, by O. C. Marsh. —Report on the Denver Coal Basin, by S. F. Emmons. —Report on Silver Cliff and Ten-Mile Mining Districts, Colorado, by 8. F. Emmons. —The Glacial Lake Agassiz, by Warren Upham. BULLETINS. 1. On Hypersthene-Andesite and on Triclinic Pyroxene in Augitic Rocks, by Whitman Cross, with a Geological Sketch of Buffalo Peaks, Colorado, by 8. F. Emmons. 1883. 8°. 42 pp. 2 pl. Price 10 cents. 2. Gold and Silver Conversion Tables, giving the coining values of troy ounces of fine metal, ete., computed by Albert Williams, jr. 1883. 8°. 8 pp. Price 5 cents. 3. On the Fossil Faunas of the Upper Devonian, along the meridian of 76° 30’, from Tompkins County, N. Y., to Bradford County, Pa., by Henry 8. Williams. 1884. 8°. 36 pp. Price 5 cents. 4, On Mesozoic Fossils, by Charles A. White. 1884. 8°. 36 pp. 9pl. 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Ellsworth Call, Introduced by a sketch of the Quaternary Lakes of the Great Basin, by G. K. Gilbert. 1884. 8°. 66pp. 6pl. Price 5 cents. 7 ADVERTISEMENT. II 12. A Crystallographic Study of the Thinolite of Lake Lahontan, by Edward S$. Dana. 1884. 8°. 34 pp. 38pl. Price 5 cents. 13. Boundaries of the United States and of the several States and Territories, with a Historical Sketch of the Territorial Changes, by Henry Gannett. 1885. 8°. 135 pp. Price 10 cents. 14. The Electrical and Magnetic Properties of the Iron-Carburets, by Carl Barus and Vincent Strouhal. 1885. 8°. 238 pp. Price 15 cents. 15. Ov the Mesozoic and Cenozoic Paleontology of California, by Charles A. White. 1885, 8°. 33 pp. Price 5 cents. 16. On the Higher Devonian Faunas of Ontario County, New York, by John M. Clarke. 1885, 8°, 86 pp. spl. Price 5 cents. 17. On the Development of Crystallization in the Igneous Rocks of Washoe, Nevada, with Notes on the Geology of the District, by Arnold Hague and Joseph P. Iddings. 1885, 8°. 44 pp. Price 5 cents. 18. On Marine Eocene, Fresh-water Miocene, and other Fossil Mollusca of Western North America, by Charles A. White. 1885. 8°. 26 pp. 3pl. Price 5 cents. 19. Notes on the Stratigraphy of California, by George F’. Becker. 1885. 8°. 28pp. Price 5 cents. 20. Contributions to the Mineralogy of the Rocky Mountains, by Whitman Cross and W. F. Hille- brand. 1885. 8°. 114 pp. 1pl. Price 10 cents. 21. The Lignites of the Great Sioux Reservation. A Report on the Region between the Grand and Moreau Rivers, Dakota, by Bailey Willis. 1885. 8°. 16 pp. Spl. Price 5 cents. 22, On New Cretaceous Fossils from California, by Charles A. White. 1885. 8°. 25 pp. 5 pl. Price 5 cents. 23. Observations on the Junction between the Eastern Sandstone and the Keweenaw Series on Keweenaw Point, Lake Superior, by R. D. Irving anc T. C. Chamberlin. 1885. 8°. 124 pp. 17 pl. Price 15 cents. 24. List of Marine Mollusea, comprising the Quaternary fossils and recent forms from American Localities between Cape Hatteras and Cape Roque, including the Bermudas, by William Healey Dall. 1885. 8°. 336 pp. Price 25 cents. 25. The Present Technical Condition of the Steel Industry of the United States, by Phineas Barnes. 1885. 8°. 85 pp. Price 10 cents. 26. Copper Smelting, by Henry M. Howe. 1885. 8°. 107 pp. Price 10 cents. 27. Report of work done in the Division of Chemistry and Physics, mainly during the fiseal year 188485. 1886. 8°. 80 pp. Price 10 cents. 28. The Gabbros and Associated Hornblende Rocks oceurring in the Neighborhood of Baltimore, Md., vy George Huntington Williams. 1886. 8°. 78 pp. 4 pl. Price i0 cents, 29. On the Fresh-water Invertebrates of the North American Jurassic, by Charles A. White. 1586 8°. dl pp. 4pl. Price 5 cents. ; 30. Second Contribution to the Studies on the Cambrian Faunas of North America, by Charles Doolittle Walcott. 186. 8°. 369 pp. 33 pl. Price 25 cents. 31. Systematic Review of our Present Knowledge of Fossil Insects, including Myriapods and Arachnids, by Samuel Hubbard Scudder, 1886. 8°. 128 pp. Price 15 cents. 32. Lists and Analyses of the Mineral Springs of the United States; a Preliminary Study, by Albert C. Peale. 1886. 8°. 235 pp. Price 2U cents. 33. Noteson the Geology of Northern California, by J.S. Diller. 1586. 8°. 23 pp. Prices cents. 34. On the relation of the Laramie Molluscan Fanna to that of the succeeding Fresh-water Eocene and other groups, by Charles A. White. 1886. 8°. 54 pp. 5 pl. Price 10 cents, 35. Physical Properties of the lron-Carburets, by Carl Barus and Vincent Strouhal. 1586. 8°. 62 pp. Price 10 cents. 36. Subsidence of Fine Solid Particles in Liquids, by Carl Barus. 1886. 8°. S8pp. Price 10 cents. 37. Types of the Laramie Flora, by Lester F. Ward, 1887. 8°. 354 pp. 57 pl. Price 25 cents. 3x. Peridotite of Elliott County, Kentacky, by J S. Diller, 1887. 8°. 3lpp. Ipl. Priced cents. 39. 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Nature and Origin of Deposits of Phosphate of Lime, by R. A. I. Penrose, jr., with an Intro- duction by N.S. Shaler, 1888. 8°. 143 pp. Price 15 cents. 47. Analyses of Waters of the Yellowstone National Park, with an Account of the Methods of Analysis employed, by Frank Austin Gooch and James Edward Whitfield. 1838, 8°. 34 pp. Price 10 cents. 48. On the Form and Position of the Sea Level, by Robert Simpson Woodward. 1888. 5°. 83 pp. Price 10 cents. IV ADVERTISEMENT. 49, Latitudes and Longitudes of Certain Points in Missouri, Kansas, and New Mexico, by Robert Simpson Woodward, 1889. 8°. 133 pp. Price 15 cents. 50. Formulas and Tables to facilitate the Construction and Use of Maps, by Robert Simpson Woodward. 1889. 8°. 124 pp. Price 15 cents. 51. On Invertebrate Fossils from the Pacific Coast, by Charles Abiathar White. 1889. 8°. 102 pp. Mpl. Price 15 cents. 52. Subaérial Decay of Rocks and Origin of the Red Color of Certain Formations, by Israel Cook Russell. 1889. 8°. 65 pp. 5pl. Price 10 cents 53. The Geology of Nantucket, by Nathaniel Sonthgate Shaler. 1889. 8°. 55pp. 10pl. Price 10 cents. 54. On the Thermo-Electric Measurement of High Temperatures, by Carl Barus. 1889, 89°, 313 PP: incl. Lpl. 11 pl. Price 25 cents. 55. Report of work done in the Division of Chemistry and Physics, mainly during the fiscal year 1886—87, Frank.Wigglesworth Clarke, chief chemist. 1889. 8°. 96 pp. Price 10 cents. 56. Fossil Wood and Lignite of the Potomac Formation, by Frank Hall Knowlton. 1889. 8°. 72 pp. 7pl. Price 10 cents. 47. A Geological Reconnaissance in Southwestern Kansas, by Robert Hay. 1890. 8°. 49 pp. 2pl. Price 5 cents. 58. The Glacial Boundary in Western Pennsylvania, Ohio, Kentucky, Indiana, and Illinois, by George Frederick Wright, with an introduction by Thomas Chrowder Chamberlin. 1890. 8°. 112 pp. incl. 1 pl. 8pl. Price 15 cents. 459. The Gabbros and Associated Rocks in Delaware, by Frederick D. Chester. 1890. 8°. 45 pp. 1 pl. Price 10 cents. 60. Report of work done in the Division of Chemistry and Physics, mainly during the fiscal year 1887-88. F. W. Clarke, chief chemist. 1890. 8°. 174 pp. Price 15 cents. 61. Contributions to the Mineralogy of the Pacific Coast, by William Harlow Melville and Wal- demar rn ee 1890. 8°. 40 pp. 3pl. Price 5 cents. 62. The Greenstone Schist Areas of the Menominee and Marquette Regions of Michigan, a contri- bution to the subject of dynamic metamorphism in eruptive rocks, by George Huntington Williams, with an introduction by Roland Duer Irving. 1°90. 8°. 241 pp. 16 pl. Price 30 cents. 63. A Bibliography of Paleozoic Crustacea from 1698 to 1889, including a list of North Amer- ican species and a systematic arrangement of genera, by Anthony W. Vogdes. 1800. 8°. 177 pp. Price 15 cents. 64. A Report of work done in the Division of Chemistry and Physics, mainly during the fiseal year 188889. EF. W. Clarke, chief chemist. 1690. 8°. 60 pp. Price 10 cents. 65. Stratigraphy of the Bituminous Coal Field of Pennsylvania, Ohio, and West Virginia, by Israel C. White. 1891. 8°. 2l2pp. 11 pl. Price 20 cents. 66. On a Group of Voleanic Rocks from the Tewan Mountains, New Mexico, and on the occurrence of Primary Quartz in certain Basalts, by Joseph Paxson Iddings. 1890, 8°. 34 pp. Price 5 cents. 67. The relations of the Traps of the Newark System in the New Jersey Region, by Nelson Horatio Darton. 1#90. 8°. 82pp._ Price 10 cents. 68. Earthquakes in California in 1*89, by James Edward Keeler. 1590. 8°. 25 pp. Price5cents. 69. A Classed and Annotated Bibliography of Fossil Inseets, by Samuel! Hubbard Scudder. 1890. 8°. 101 pp. Price 15 cents. 70. Report on Astronomical Work of 1889 and 1890, by Robert Simpson Woodward. 1890. 8°. 79 pp. Price 10 cents. 71. Index to the Known Fossil Insects of the World, including Myriapods and Arachnids, by Samuel Hubbard Scudder. 1891. 8°. 744 pp. Price 50 cents, 72. Altitudes between Lake Superior and the Rocky Mountains, by Warren Upham. 1891. 8°. 229 PP... Price 20 cents. The Viscosity of Solids, by Carl Barus. 1891. 8°. xii, 139 pp. 6pl. Price 15 cents. i. The Minerals of North Carolina, by Frederick Angustus Genth. 1891. 8°. 119 pp. Price 15 cents. 75. Record of North American Geology for 1887 to 1889, inclusive, by Nelson Horatio Darton. 1891. 8°. 173 pp. Price 15 cents. 76. A Dictionary of Altitudes in the United States (second edition), compiled by Henry Gannett, chief topographer. 1891. 8°. 393 pp. Price 25 cents. 77. The Texan Permian and its Mesozoic types of Fossils, by Charles A. White. 1891. 8°. 51 pp. 4 ‘al Price 10 cents. 78. Areport of work done in the Division of Chemistry and Physics, mainly during the fiscal year 1889-90. FE. W. Clarke, chief chemist. 1891. 8°. 131 pp. Price 15 cents. 79. A Late Voleanic Eruption in Northern California and its peculiar lava, by J. 8. Diller. 80. Correlation papers—Devonian and Carboniferous, by Henry Shaler Williams. 1891. 8°. 279 pp. Price 20 cents. 81. Correlation papers—Cambrian, by Charles Doolittle Walcott. 1691. 8°. 447 pp. 3 pl. Price 25 cents. 82. Correlation papers—Cretaceous, by Charles A. White. 1891. 8°. 273 pp. 3 pl. Price 20 cents. 83. Correlation papers—Kocene, by William Bullock Clark. 1891. 8°. 173 pp. 2pl. Price 15 cents. 91. Record of North American Geology for 1590, by Nelson Horatio Darton. 1891. 8°. §&8 pp. Price 10 cents. ADVERTISEMENT, MW In press: 84. Correlation papers—Neocene, by W. H. Dall and G. D. Harris. 85. Correlation papers—The Newark System, by I. C. Russell. 86. Correlation papers—Algonkian and Archean, by C. R. Van Hise. 87. Bibliography and Index of the publications of the U. S. Geological Survey, 1879-1892, by P. C. Warman. 90. A report of work done in the Division of Chemistry and Physics, mainly during the fiscal year 1890-91. F. W. Clarke, chief chemist. 92. The Compressibility of Liquids, by Carl Barus. 93. Some Insects of special interest from Florissant, Colorado, by S. H. Seudder, 94. The Mechanism of Solid Viscosity, by Carl Barus. 95, Earthquakes in California during 1890-91, by E. S. Holden. 96. The Volume Thermodynamics of Liqnids, by Carl Barus. 97. The Mesozoic Echinodermata of the United States, by W. B. Clark. 98. Flora of the Outlying Coal Basins of Southwestern Missouri, by David White. 99. Record of North American Geology for 1891, by Nelson Horatio Darton. Tn preparation : 88. Correlation papers—Pleistocene, by T. C. Chamberlin. 100. The Eruptive and Sedimentary Rocks on Piveon Point, Minnesota, and their contact phe- nomena, by W. S. Bayley. 101. Insect fauna of the Rhode Island Coal-field, by Samuel Hubbard Sendder. 102. A Catalogue and Bibliography of North American Mesozoic Invertebrata, by C. B. Boyle. 103. The Trap Dikes of Lake Champlain Valley and the Eastern Adirondacks, by J. F. Kemp. — High Temperature Work in Igneous Fusion and Ebullition, chiefly in relation to Pressure, by Carl Barus, — Glaciation of the Yellowstone Valley, by W. H. Weed. — The Laramie and the overlying Livingstone Formation in Montana, by W. H. Weed, with Report on Flora, by F. H. Knowlton, — The Moraines of the Missouri Coteau and their attendant deposits, by James Edward Todd. — A Bibliography of Paleobotany, by David White, STATISTICAL PAPERS. Mineral Resources of the United States [1882], by Albert Williams, jr. 1883. 8°, XVii, 813 pp. Price 50 cents. Mineral Resources of the United States, 1883 and 1884, by Albert Williams, jr. 1885. 8°. xiv 1016 pp. Price 60 cents. Mineral Resources of the United States, 1885. Division of Mining Statistics and Technology. 1886. 8°. vii, 576 pp. Price 40 cents. Mineral Resources of the United States, 1886, by David T. Day. 1887. 8°, viii, 813 pp. Price 50 cents. Mineral Resources of the United States, 1887, by David T. Day. 1888. 89, vii, 832 pp. Price 50 cents. Mineral Resources of the United States, 1888, by David T. Day. 1890. 8°. vii, 652 pp- Price 50 cents. Mineral Resources of the United States, 1889 and 1890, by David T. Day. 1892. 8°. viii, 671 pp: Price 50 cents. ’ The money received from the sale of these publications is deposited in the Treasury, and the Secretary of that Department declines to receive bank checks, drafts, or postage-stamps; all remit- tances, therefore, must be by post\L NOTE or MONEY ORDER, made payable to the Librarian of the U.S. Geological Survey, or in curRENcy for the exact amount. Correspondence relating to the pub- lications of the Survey should be addressed To THE DirEcToR or THE UNITED STaTEs GEOLOGICAL SURVEY, WASHINGTON, D. C. WaSHINGTON, D. C., September, 1892. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR MONOGRAPHS OF THE Unirep States GEOLOGICAL SURVEY lif wASHINGTON GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 1892 SH & UNITED STATES GEOLOGICAL SURVEY J. W. POWELL, DIRECTOR GHOLOG Y OF THE Pies DISTRICT, NV ADA: WITH AN ATLAS BY Zein OL). EEA.G UE WASHINGTON GOVERNMEN'’ PRINTING OFFICE 1892 , > -. 7 yy 2 ao © os _,. =— 2 C20) NalinEsINSE Ss... TG MET HO RULRANSNMUDUAT Cae een o a aeons imine wan in nie oe meas smimniwiaininninns mn ininin TET WEIe pemine somes Rene BOs ROUSE ERE SE be Ser ericSe Se AAS aber Se = SE OCOC CEC OCC Ee OOO a sac OUMEUNI LORY WHIS | VODUME «222 sone 8 c= oo ere ame = aan ee am en oe ne Fen mean Cuarter I.—General description. -.-------------------------------20--2 22522 terre CuHaptrer Il.—Geological sketch of the Eureka District... .-~------------------+55 2-72 -70--> CHaprer III.—Cambrian and Silurian rocks .--.--------------------------25rrr crc Cuarter IV.—Deyonian and Carboniferous rocks. ..----------------------- +5222 serrt re CHAPTER V.—Descriptive geology -----------------------------+----22-222 err ort nnn CuapterR VI.—General discussion of the Paleozoic rocks. .-----------------+---++-+---+++-77> CHAPTER VII.—Pre-Tertiary igneous rocks ..--------------------------- +005 crrrctrt ect Craprer VII.—Tertiary and post-Tertiary voleanic rocks..---.---------------+-++2--+ 5-777 (Cheawemoty 1OG=0nty Gy etre co eseees ese e soscic Sete ne nO aaa Se cient ee OO Ste Ibis APPENDIX A.—Systematic lists of fossils of each geological horizon. By C. D. Walcott. - -- AppENDIx B.—Microscopical petrography of the eruptive rocks. By dis EA WGI Coe eae TESTS 2 + GaSe Cer OCS BEBO SURO CR ESE S CEP IEr eB DOCS SU SED EGOS CSCIC ROIS C i eC SSES ats Pes teat TONS. PLate I. Geological Map of Ruby Hill Il. Geological Cross-sections III. Minerals in section IV. Quartz grains in section V. Feldspars in section VI. Micropegmatite and andesite VII. Andesite and basalt Fig. 1. Silurian quartzite west of Castle Mountain..--------------- 2. Section across Lone Mountain 3. Nevada limestone, Modoc Section 4. Section across Pinon Range --------------------- 5. Granite porphyry dikes 6. Vertical Cross-section—Phenix mine 7. Carlsbad twinn of labradorite 8. Diagram exhibiting extinction angles of a Carlshad twin of labradorite 9. Carlsbad twin of plagioclase a (ie ¢ 7 ; - — . _ @ P : 7 if - = 7 } Mitleteer pct