Author Index - GeoScienceWorld

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Author Index Adams, John B., 1 Adams, William M., 344 Adler, Joel E. M „ 316 Agnew, Allen F., 269 Agogino, George A., 285 Albee, Arden L., 2, 79, 106, 159, 208, 215 Alexiades, C. A., 2 Alfors, J. T „ 224 Alger, George R „ 269 Allen, J. D„ 152 Allen, Victor T., 3 Allison, Edwin C., 204 Alsop, Leonard E., 338 Alt, David, 3, 241 Amstutz, G. C., 4 Anderson, Alfred T., Jr., 4 Anderson, D. H., 65 Anderson, Don L., 323, 337, 340 Anderson, Edwin J., 5 Anderson, John J., 5 Anderson, Thomas B., 270 Angino, Ernest E., 6 Antweiler, J. C., 270 Aoki, Harumi, 329 Appuhn, Richard A., 205 Arnold, Arthur B „ 6 Aronson, James L., 7 Aschmann, Homer, 307 Ayer, Nathan J., 193 Baars, D. L., 271 Back, William, 307 Badgley, Peter C„ 311 Baetcke, Gustav B., 271 Bailey, Edgar H„ 7 Bailey, Leslie F., 344 Bailey, Steve M., 221 Bain, George W., 8 Baird, A. K „ 193, 194, 219 Baird, Donald, 8 Bandy, Orville L., 9 Barghoorn, Elso S., 150 Barker, Fred, 272 Boroffio, James R., 9 Barth, Tom. F. W„ 272 Basler, Albert L., 273 Bassett, William A., 173 Bastien, Thomas W., 144 Bateman, P. C., 212 Bauleke, Maynard P., 155 Bayer, J. L., 44 Bayley, R. W„ 279 Be', Allan W. H „ 32 Beattie, Donald A., 10 Behrendt, J. C., 273 Belt, Charles B., Jr., 72 Ben-Menahem, Ari, 340 Bentley, C. R., 10 Berg, Joseph W., Jr., 238, 338, 345 Berkland, James O., 195 Berner, Robert A., 11 Berry, William F., 17 Bhattacharji, Somdev, 11 Biehler, Shawn, 261 Bikerman, Michael, 12 Bird, Allan G., 274 Birkeland, Peter W., 195 Bissel, H. J., 12 Bitz, Sister Mary Carol, 13 Black, B. A., 274 Blackstone, D. L., Jr., 275 Blanchard, Maxwell B., 13 Blayney, J. L., 328 Bluemle, John P., 275, 276 Bolt, Bruce A., 340 Bonis, Samuel B „ 241 Boos, Margaret Fuller, 276 Bostock, Hewitt H „ 14 Bott, M. H. P., 14 Bottino, M. L., 15, 61 Boucot, A. J., 15 Bowen, Richard L., 16 Bowen, Zeddie Paul, 68 Boyer, Paul S., 176 Braddock, William A., 127, 277 Branagan, David F., 16 Branson, W. T., 87 Bredehoeft, John D., 17 Breger, Irving A., 17 Brenner, Robert L., 277 Brew, David A., 196 Briggs, Louis I., 183 Brisbin, W. C „ 18, 186 Brock, Maurice, 190, 272 Broecker, Wallace S., 18, 176 Brookins, Douglas C., 19, 20 Brown, Bahngrell W., 241 Brown, George D., 19 Brown, John S., 20 Brown, Lawrence E., 20 Brown, William Randall, 21 Brownlow, Arthur H., 22 Brune, James N., 119, 324, 338, 341 Bryant, Bruce, 277 Bryant, Donald L., 200 Buchbinder, Goetz G. R., 326 Buffington, Edwin C., 22 Burbank, Lawrence, 130 Burch, Stephen H „ 196 Burdick, Charles P., 22 Burford, Arthur E., 242 Burgat, Virgil A, 23 Burkart, Burke, 23 Burns, Roger G „ 197 Burridge, R „ 330 (2) Butler, J. Robert, 242, 247 Byrne John V., 24, 212 Cain, J. Allan, 24, 25 Cain, Leila S., 25 Calkin, William S., 278 Callaghan, Eugene, 25 Cameron, Cornelia C., 26 Cameron, E. M., 26 Campbell, F. A., 54 Campbell, John A., 278 Cannon, R. S., Jr., 279 Cannon, R. T „ 279 Carder, Dean S., 323 Carlston, Charles W., 27 Carman, Max F., Jr., 28 Carozzi, Albert V., 28, 175 Carpenter, Alden B., 29 Carpenter, John R., 29 Carter, Bruce A., 228 Caspall, F. C „ 87 Castle, Robert O., 197, 198 Cater, F. W., 80 Centini, B. A., 247 Chadwick, Robert A., 280 Chander, Ramesh, 341 Chang, F. K., 10 Chang, Luke L. Y., 30 Chang, M. C., 44 Chao, E. C. T „ 30 Chaudhuri, S., 55 Chen, Chih Shan, 31 Chen, Chin, 32 Cheney, Eric S., 32 Chapman, Carleton A., 31 Cherry, Rodney N., 307 Chodos, A. A., 2 Christensen, Mark N., 33(2) Christiansen, R. L., 223 Chronic, John, 280 Clark, Andrew H., 308 Clarke, Otis M „ Jr., 243 Clarke, Robert T., 281 Cleary, John, 323 Cleaves, Emery T., 34 Clements, Thomas, 198 347 Downloaded from http://pubs.geoscienceworld.org/books/book/chapter-pdf/962256/spe87-bm.pdf by guest on 11 September 2022

Transcript of Author Index - GeoScienceWorld

Author IndexAdams, John B ., 1 Adams, William M., 344 Adler, Joel E . M „ 316 Agnew, Allen F ., 269 Agogino, George A., 285 Albee, Arden L ., 2, 79, 106,

159, 208, 215 Alexiades, C . A., 2 Alfors, J . T „ 224 Alger, George R „ 269 Allen, J . D „ 152 Allen, Victor T ., 3 Allison, Edwin C., 204 Alsop, Leonard E ., 338 Alt, David, 3, 241 Amstutz, G . C ., 4 Anderson, Alfred T ., Jr., 4 Anderson, D. H., 65 Anderson, Don L ., 323, 337,

340Anderson, Edwin J., 5 Anderson, John J., 5 Anderson, Thomas B., 270 Angino, Ernest E ., 6 Antweiler, J . C., 270 Aoki, Harumi, 329 Appuhn, Richard A., 205 Arnold, Arthur B „ 6 Aronson, James L ., 7 Aschmann, Homer, 307 Ayer, Nathan J., 193

Baars, D. L ., 271 Back, William, 307 Badgley, Peter C „ 3 1 1 Baetcke, Gustav B., 271 Bailey, Edgar H „ 7 Bailey, Leslie F ., 344 Bailey, Steve M ., 221 Bain, George W., 8 Baird, A. K „ 193, 194, 219 Baird, Donald, 8 Bandy, Orville L ., 9 Barghoorn, Elso S., 150 Barker, Fred, 272 Boroffio, James R., 9 Barth, Tom. F . W „ 272 Basler, Albert L ., 273 Bassett, William A., 173 Bastien, Thomas W., 144 Bateman, P. C., 2 12 Bauleke, Maynard P., 155 Bayer, J . L ., 44 Bayley, R . W „ 279 Be', Allan W. H „ 32

Beattie, Donald A., 10 Behrendt, J . C ., 273 Belt, Charles B ., Jr., 72 Ben-Menahem, Ari, 340 Bentley, C. R ., 10 Berg, Joseph W., Jr., 238, 338,

345Berkland, James O., 195 Berner, Robert A., 1 1 Berry, William F ., 17 Bhattacharji, Somdev, 1 1 Biehler, Shawn, 261 Bikerman, Michael, 12 Bird, Allan G ., 274 Birkeland, Peter W., 195 Bissel, H. J., 12 Bitz, Sister Mary Carol, 13 Black, B. A., 274 Blackstone, D. L ., Jr., 275 Blanchard, Maxwell B ., 13 Blayney, J. L ., 328 Bluemle, John P., 275, 276 Bolt, Bruce A., 340 Bonis, Samuel B „ 241 Boos, Margaret Fuller, 276 Bostock, Hewitt H „ 14 Bott, M. H. P., 14 Bottino, M. L ., 15, 61 Boucot, A. J., 15 Bowen, Richard L ., 16 Bowen, Zeddie Paul, 68 Boyer, Paul S., 176 Braddock, William A., 127, 277 Branagan, David F ., 16 Branson, W. T ., 87 Bredehoeft, John D., 17 Breger, Irving A., 17 Brenner, Robert L ., 277 Brew, David A., 196 Briggs, Louis I., 183 Brisbin, W. C „ 18, 186 Brock, Maurice, 190, 272 Broecker, Wallace S., 18, 176 Brookins, Douglas C., 19, 20 Brown, Bahngrell W., 241 Brown, George D., 19 Brown, John S., 20 Brown, Lawrence E ., 20 Brown, William Randall, 21 Brownlow, Arthur H., 22 Brune, James N ., 119 , 324, 338,

341Bryant, Bruce, 277 Bryant, Donald L ., 200 Buchbinder, Goetz G . R ., 326

Buffington, Edwin C ., 22 Burbank, Lawrence, 130 Burch, Stephen H „ 196 Burdick, Charles P., 22 Burford, Arthur E ., 242 Burgat, Virgil A, 23 Burkart, Burke, 23 Burns, Roger G „ 197 Burridge, R „ 330 (2)Butler, J. Robert, 242, 247 Byrne John V., 24, 212

Cain, J. Allan, 24, 25 Cain, Leila S., 25 Calkin, William S., 278 Callaghan, Eugene, 25 Cameron, Cornelia C ., 26 Cameron, E . M ., 26 Campbell, F . A., 54 Campbell, John A., 278 Cannon, R . S., Jr., 279 Cannon, R . T „ 279 Carder, Dean S., 323 Carlston, Charles W., 27 Carman, M ax F ., Jr., 28 Carozzi, Albert V., 28, 175 Carpenter, Alden B., 29 Carpenter, John R ., 29 Carter, Bruce A., 228 Caspall, F . C „ 87 Castle, Robert O., 197, 198 Cater, F . W., 80 Centini, B . A., 247 Chadwick, Robert A., 280 Chander, Ramesh, 341 Chang, F . K ., 10 Chang, Luke L . Y ., 30 Chang, M. C., 44 Chao, E. C. T „ 30 Chaudhuri, S., 55 Chen, Chih Shan, 3 1 Chen, Chin, 32 Cheney, Eric S., 32 Chapman, Carleton A., 31 Cherry, Rodney N., 307 Chodos, A. A., 2 Christensen, Mark N ., 33(2) Christiansen, R . L ., 223 Chronic, John, 280 Clark, Andrew H., 308 Clarke, Otis M „ Jr., 243 Clarke, Robert T., 281 Cleary, John, 323 Cleaves, Emery T ., 34 Clements, Thomas, 198

347

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348 ABSTRACTSCoates, Donald R., 34 Coats, R . R ., 199 Cobb, James C., 34 Cohen, Lewis H., 35 Cok, Anthony E „ 164 Coleman, Don C „ 325 Coleman, James M „ 35 Coleman, Robert G ., 173 Coles, Joan Link, 36 Colquhoun, Donald J., 243 Colson, Calvin T „ 78 Colwell, Jane, 199 Colwell, Robert N ., 308 Conolly, J . R „ 36, 37 Cook, Douglas R „ 14 1 Cook, Kenneth L ., 338, 339 Cooper, Byron N., 244 Cooper, Hilton H., Jr., 17 Copenhaver, George C., Jr., 199 Corbett, Robert G ., 242 Costain, John K „ 338, 339 Cotton, William R ., 200 Cox, Allan, 41Craddock, Campbell, 37, 144 Craft, Jesse L ., 38 Craig, James R ., 38 Crandell, Dwight R ., 281 Crawford, R ., 334 Creasey, S. C „ 39 Criner, J . H „ 245 Croneis, Carey, 122 Crosby, Percy, 39 Crowder, D. F ., 80 Crowell, John C ., 40 Cruft, E . F ., 282 Cumming, L . M ., 40

Dachille, F ., 1 15 Dahlem, D. H., 77 Dalrymple, G . Brent, 41 Damon, Paul E ., 97, 103 Daniel, Habib, 69 Daniels, Grafton J „ 17 Daugherty, Franklin W., 41 Davies, Tudor T ., 42 Davis, Gregory A., 42 Davis, James F ., 43 Davis, Stanley N ., 309 Dean, Stuart L ., 242 Decker, R . W., 43 Degens, Egon T ., 44, 101 De La Montagne, John, 306 Dennis, John G ., 236 Dennison, John M ., 245 DeNoyer, John M ., 325, 326 Denton, G . H., 44 Derry, Duncan R ., 45 De user, Werner G ., 45

De Waard, Dirk, 14 1 Dicken, Samuel N ., 309 Dickson, F . W., 45 Dietrich, R . V., 246 Dietz, W. P., 144 Dill, R . F ., 180 Dirmeyer, R . D ., 282 Dodd, Robert T ., Jr., 46 Doehring, Donald O., 46 Doell, Richard R ., 41 Donaldson, Alan Chase, 246 Dort, Wakefield, Jr., 47 Dott, R . H., Jr., 47 Dowling, John J., 324 Downs, Theodore, 234, 310 Drew, Isabella M., 87 Driscoll, Egbert G ., 48 Dubin, David J „ 200 Duncan, Helen, 48 Dunn, David E ., 247 Durden, Christopher J., 49

Easterbrook, Don J., 201 Easton, W. H „ 201 Eaton, Gordon P., 49 Ebens, Richard J., 50, 282 Eberlein, G . Donald, 94 Eggler, David H., 283 Ehrreich, Albert L ., 201 El-Etr, Hasan, 132 Elison, James H., 293 Elliott, William J „ 202, 229 Ellison, Robert L „ 50 Emery, Philip A., 51 Emslie, Ronald F ., 51 Enos, Paul, 52 Erickson, Barrett H., 238 Ernst, W. G „ 52 Essene, E . J., 53 (2), 202 Evans, Bernard W., 54, 202 Evans, James R ., 202 Evans, T . L ., 54 Everett, A. Gordon, 54 Ewers, Ralph O., 3 1 1 Ewing, M ., 36

Fahnestock, Robert K ., 281 Fairbairn, H. W., 84 Fairley, William M ., 247 Farquhar, O. C., 55 Faure, G ., 55 Fenton, T . E „ 144 Ferguson, Harry, 56 Ferm, J. C., 267 Ferris, Clinton, S., Jr., 280 Feth, J . H „ 203 Fife, Donald L ., 203 Fischer, William A., 3 1 1

Fisher, Frederick S., 283 Fisher, Ray L ., 330 Fisher, Richard V., 204 Fletcher, N . H., 344 Flower, Rouseau H., 56 Foley, Frank C ., 57 Forbes, Warren C ., 57 Foster, R . L ., 58 Frakes, Lawrence A., 40 Frantti, Gordon E ., 334 Franz, G . W „ 58 Freeman, Tom, 59 French, Bevan M ., 59 Frerichs, William E ., 9 Friedman, Gerald M., 60 (2) Frost, Stanley H., 60, 93 Frye, J. K ., 61 Fuchs, Karl, 328, 329 Fullagar, Paul D „ 15, 61 Furlow, J. W., 290 Furumoto, Augustine S., 331 Fyfe, W. S., 53, 62, 202

Gangliano, Sherwood M., 35 Galvin, Cyril J „ Jr., 62 (2) Gamble, James C., 181 Ganguly, Jibamitra, 63 Gast, Paul W „ 287 Gastil, Gordon, 204 Gazzarrini, Franco, 110 Gerlach, George S., 327, 344 Gibbs, G . V., 107, 185 Gibson, Ian L., 205 Gilbert, Charles M „ 33 Gilby, J. M ., 17 1 Giles, Robert T „ 248 Gilman, Ralph, 328 Given, P. H., 63 Glass, Bill, 77Glover, Everett D., I l l , 158 Gluskoter, Harold J., 64 Gold, D. P., 64 Goldich, S. S., 65 Goode, Harry D ., 284 Goodman, Richard E ., 205 Goodwin, Alan M ., 65 Gordon, David W., 323 Gorsline, Donn S., 3 1 1 Graf, D. L., 66 Greeley, Michael N ., 284 Gresens, Randall L ., 66 Gross, M. Grant, 67 Grosvenor, Florence A., 68 Grosvenor, Niles E ., 68 Grybeck, Donald, 225 Guidotti, Charles V., 206 Guidroz, Ralph R ., 330 Gunn, Donald W., 162

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AUTHOR INDEX 349

Gupta, Indra N ., 328, 330 Gutentag, E . D ., 69 Gutschick, R . C ., 163

Haddock, Gerald H „ 206 Haggerty, S., 237 Hales, Anton L ., 323 Hall, Frank W., 285 Hall, G . F ., 144 Hall, Leo M., 70 Hall, M . R „ 135 Hambleton, William W., 70 Hamblin, Kenneth W., 71 Hamil, M „ 71 Hamilton, Warren, 207 Hammond, Paul E ., 207 Hand, Bryce M „ 72 Hannon, James W., 326 Hanshaw, Bruce B „ 307 Hansink, James D., 72 Hanson, L . G ., 72 Harkrider, David G ., 340 Harris, D. V., 285 Harris, Rae L ., Jr., 73 Harrison, John A., 17 Hartsock, John K ., 73 Hathaway, J. C „ 101 Hawkins, Daniel B ., 74 Hay, R . L „ 74 Hay, William W „ 187 Hayes, Miles O ., 74 Haynes, C . Vance, Jr., 285 Hayward, O. T „ 75 Hazel, Joseph E „ 75 Healy, John H., 337 Heckel, Philip H., 76 Hedge, Carl E „ 127 Heezen, Bruce C., 37, 76, 77 Heinrich, E . Wm., 77 Helbig, Klaus, 341 (2) Helgesen, John O., 85 Helming, B. H., 86 Hemdal, John F ., 342 Hemley, J. J., 78 Henry, Vernon J., Jr., 82 Herman, George, 293 Heron, S. Duncan, Jr., 248 Heuer, R . E ., 93 Heyl, Allen V., 190, 251 Hibbard, M. J „ 208 Hill, David P., 43, 335 Hills, Alan, 287 Hinds, Robert W „ 248 Hoare, R . D „ 78 Hodge, Dennis S., 79, 286, 290 Holland, H. D., 146 Hollister, Charles, 76 Hollister, Lincoln S., 79, 208

Holmes, Charles W., 80 Hooke, Roger LeB., 209 Hoover, D. L ., 286 Hopson, Clifford A., 80, 209 Horne, John C ., 181 Hoskins, Donald M „ 81 Houston, Robert S., 287 (2) Howard, Arthur D „ 210 Howard, James D., 81, 288 Howard, Keith A., 210 Howell, Benjamin F., Jr., 328 Hoyt, John H., 82, 249 Hsu, K . Jinghwa, 82, 210 Hsu, Pa Ho, 83 Huang, Y . T ., 343 Hubert, John F „ 83 Huff, James R „ 249 Hurley, P. M „ 84 Hutchinson, R . A., 288 Hutchinson, J. Howard, 3 12 Hyndman, Donald W., 289

Ibrahim, Abou-Bakr, 325 Ignamels, C. O., 65 Ingle, James C „ Jr., 9 Irwin, William P., 2 13 Ito, Keisuke, 35

Jacka, Alonzo D., 84 Jackson, M . L ., 2 Janda, Richard J., 2 1 1 Jillson, Willard Rouse, 250 (2) Johnson, Emmett J., 260 Johnson, Henry S., Jr., 248 Johnson, J. G ., 15 Johnson, Rockne H., 343 Johnson, Robert W., Jr., 251 Johnston, R . H., 289 Jokela, A., 101 Jolly, Janice L ., 251 Jones, David L., 7 Jordan, James N., 323 Julian, Bruce R ., 323

Kaarsberg, Ernest A., 252 Kalliokoski, J., 85 Kane, Henry E ., 85 Karklins, Olgerts L „ 252 Karner, Frank R., 85 Kasey, Arthur R ., I l l , 252 Kauffman, Erie G., 86 Kays, M. Allan, 86 Kellberg, John M., 253 Keller, Allen, 87 Kelley, James C., 290, 298 Kelley, V. C „ 290 Kennedy, George C ., 35 Kent, Harry C „ 290

Kerr, Paul F ., 87, 266 Kilmer, Frank H „ 2 11 King, John S., 291 Kinoshita, W. T „ 43, 335 Kinsman, D. J . J., 88 Kisslinger, Carl, 328 Kistler, R . W „ 212 Klein, Cornelis, 88 Klein, George de Vries, 88 Klugman, M . A., 288 Kneller, William A., 89 Knopoff, Leon, 329, 330 (2),

335Kosanke, Robert M., 90 Koster Van Gross, A. F ., 90 Kottlowski, Frank E „ 91 Kovach, Robert L., 326, 337 Kozak, Virginia S., 91 Krasner, Saul, 191 Krinitzsky, E . L ., 92 Krouse, H. R „ 54 Kullerud, G „ 1 15 Kulm, L . D „ 212 Kulp, Laurence J., 105 Kume, Jack, 291 Kvenvolden, Keith A., 92

Lackey, Larry L „ 292 Lance, John F „ 3 13 Landisman, Mark, 335 Lane, N. Gary, 93 Langenheim, Ralph L ., Jr., 60,

93Lanphere, Marvin A., 94, 2 13 Larson, E . E „ 238, 292 Latham, James P., 3 13 Laughlin, George R ., 253 Lawrence, John C „ 271, 293 Lee, Fitzhugh T ., 139 Lehner, Francis E., 326 Leighton, R. B., 152 Leonard, B . F „ 293 LeMasurier, Wesley E ., 94 Lepp, Henry, 95 Lerman, Abraham, 95 Leve, G . W., 148 Leveson, David J., 96 Levy, Paul W„ 191 Lewis, D. R „ 96 Lewis, George Edward, 96 Lewis, Thomas L „ 170 Lindsley, D. H., 97 Lineback, Jerry A., 19 Lipps, Jere H „ 213 , 235 Livingston, Donald E ., 97, 103 Lobdell, J., 344 Lobmeyer, D. H., 69 Loeblich, Alfred R ., Jr., 233

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350 ABSTRACTSLoepp, H. Richard, 98 Logan, Alan, 98 Long, L . Timothy, 345 Longwell, Stanley, 129 Loomis, Alden A., 99 Love, J. D ., 273 Lovejoy, Earl M. P., 214 Lowenthal, David, 3 13 Lowman, Paul D., Jr., 10 Lowry, W. D ., 254 Lumbers, S. B ., 156 Lustig, Lawrence K „ 99 Luth, W. C ., 147 Lutton, Richard J., 255

MacKevett, E . M ., Jr., 100 MacPhail, Donald D ., 294 Macurda, Donald B ., Jr., 100 Madlem, K . W „ 194 Major, Maurice W „ 337 Mai, A. K „ 329 Maloney, Neil J., 24, 101 Mandra, York T., 214 Manheim, F . T ., 10 1 Manos, Constantine, 181 Mantei, Erwin J., 22 Marie, James R „ 255 Marsh, Phyllis S., 266 Marshall, Monte, 229 Marvin, R . F ., 301 Masursky, Harold, 102 Mateker, Em il J „ Jr., 336 Matthews, Jerry L ., 95 Matthews, R . K ., 102, 103 Mauger, Richard L ., 103 Maxey, George B., 314 Mayo, Lawrence R ., 130 Maytum, James R ., 202 McAlester, A. Lee, 104 McCallum, M. E ., 280 McCammon, Richard B ., 104 McCartney, W. Douglas, 104 McCave, I. Nicholas, 105 McComas, Murray R ., 294 McDowell, Fred W., 105 McDowell, S. Douglas, 106,

215M cEvilly, Thomas V., 332 McFarlin, P . F ., 10 1 M cGill, G . E „ 161 McGregor, D. C., 106 McIntyre, D. B ., 193, 194 McKee, Bates, 215 McKee, James W „ 256 McKenna, Malcolm C., 314 McLaughlin, R . E ., 257 McLoughlin, Arthur G ., 98 McNair, Andrew H., 107

McNulty, C . L ., Jr., 256 Meagher, E . P., 107 Mears, Brainerd, Jr., 295 Medaris, L . Gordon, Jr., 108 Meents, W. F ., 66 Menard, H. W., 77 Mengel, Joseph T ., Jr., 108 Menzer, Fred J., Jr., 216 Merkle, Arthur B ., 109 Mesolella, Kenneth J., 103 Meyer, David L ., 109 Meyer, Walter, R ., 110 Middleton, Gerard V., 12 1 Mifflin, Martin D „ 314 Miller, Elliott W „ 146 Miller, Robert E ., 6 Modzeleski, Vincent, 110 Moench, Robert H „ 1 1 1 Mills, Rodger K „ 295 Mims, C. H „ 342 Minch, John A., 203 Misch, Peter, 216 Mitchell, Edward D., Jr., 217,

218Mitchell, W., 226 Moehl, William R „ 257 Moiola, R . J., I l l , 227, 296 Monahan, Charles J., 112 Moneymaker, Berlen C., 257 Mooney, Harold M „ 340 Moore, James G ., 218 Moore, John E ., 1 12 Moores, E . M ., 1 1 3 Morisawa, Marie, 1 13 Morris, Elliot C „ 219 Morton, D. M., 219 Mueller, Stephan, 335 (2) Muffler, L . J. Patrick, 196 Mumma, Martin, 257 Murata, K . J., 114 Murdock, James, 332 Murphy, Sister Mary T . J., 114 Murray, Bruce C., 1 15 , 152 Myers, W. Bradley, 207

Nafziger, R . H., 1 15 Nagy, Bartholomew, 13, 110 ,

114 , 122 Nakamura, Yosio, 337 Naldrett, A. J., 1 15 Neal, James T ., 116 Needham, H. D ., 37 Nelson, Bruce W., 116 Nelson, C. A., 220, 233 Nelson, Clifford M., 296 Neuman, Robert B „ 258 Neuschel, Sherman K ., 258 Newton, Robert C., 63

Niazi, Mansour, 339 Nishi, Charles K ., 299 Nitecki, Matthew H „ 117 Noble, Donald C ., 1 17 Nold, John L „ 297 Nordin, Carl F ., 297 Nordstrom, Charles E ., 221 Norford, B . S., 118 Norton, Matthew, F ., 118 Nuttli, Otto, 325 Nuzman, Carl E ., 119

Obregon, Cesar, 204 Ogden, Lawrence, 119 Oliver, J., 119 Oliver, William A., Jr., 120 Olson, Charles E ., Jr., 315 O ’Neill, A. L „ 120 Onions, Diane, 12 1 Onuma, Kosuke, 12 1, 189 O’Reilly, Mary Ellen, 122 Orlopp, Donald R., 181 Osmond, J. K ., 80 Otton, Edmond G ., 122 Outerbridge, W. F ., 259

Page, Oliver, 298 Palmer, Leonard, 221 Papadopulos, Istavros S., 17 Parea, Giandemente, 15 1 Park, David E ., Jr., 122 Parker, Robert H., 44 Parker, Ronald B ., 290, 298 Parry, W. T „ 123 (2)Passer, Moses, 124 Pasteels, Paul, 124 Patraw, James, 300 Patten, Eugene P., Jr., 51 Pauli, Richard A., 125 Peach, P. A., 125 Peck, Dallas L., 218 Perkins, Bob F ., 125 Perry, Kenneth, Jr., 126 Pestrong, Raymond, 222 Peterman, Zell E ., 126, 127 Peterson, Gary L ., 127, 128,

222Peterson, M . N. A., 128 (2),

129Pettyjohn, Wayne A „ 129 Pevear, David R ., 129 Pewi, Troy L ., 130 Pierce, A. P., 279, 299 Pilant, W. L „ 335 Pilkey, Orrin H „ 248 Pilkey, Orrin M., 129 Pinson, W. H „ Jr., 84,146 Pitts, M. Michael, Jr., 259

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AUTHOR INDEX 351

Piwinskii, A., 130 Place, John L ., 3 15 Plane, M . D., 223 Poole, F . G ., 223 Pooser, W. K „ 248 Porter, Stephen C ., 13 1 Powell, J . Dan, 256 Pratt, Richard M ., 13 1 Press, Frank, 325, 326 Priddy, Richard R ., 260 Prill, Robert C ., 132 Privett, Donald R ., 260 Proctor, Paul Dean, 132 Prokopovich, Nikola P., 224,

299Putman, G . W., 224

Qualls, Bob, 335

Raab, W. J „ 45 Rafay, Tariq, 300 Ragan, Donal M ., 132, 225 Rahn, Perry H., 133 Randazzo, Anthony F., 133 Rapp, George, Jr., 300 Rappenecker, Casper, 134 Ray, Louis L., 261 Reed, John C., Jr., 300 Reeves, C. C „ Jr., 12 3 ,13 4 Regis, A. J., 145, 167 Reitan, Paul H., 135, 226 Reynolds, Mitchell W., 226 Ribbe, P. H „ 135 Richards, Adrian F ., 136 Richardson, E . V., 297 Richter, Raymond C., 136 Rigby, J. Keith, 1 1 7 , 1 3 7 , 261 Rinehart, John S., 333 Roberts, George D., 137 Roberts, Wayne A., 3 15 Robertson, B „ 64, 138 Robertson, Forbes, 138, 139 Robertson, Herbert, 333 Robinson, Charles S., 68, 139 Robinson, G . D ., 301 Robinson, Paul T ., 227 Robinson, James H., 227 Robison, Richard A., 140 Roddy, David J ., 261 Roedder, Edwin, 140 Rogers, John R „ 262 Roland, George W „ 140 Romero, John C „ 301 Romey, William D „ 141 Rose, Arthur W., 141 Rose, Robert L ., 227 Rosenberg, Philip E „ 142 Rosfelder, A., 180

Ross, David A., 142 Rouser, George, 114 Rubel, Daniel N ., 143 Rucker, James B., 143 Ruhe, R . V., 144 Rukavina, Norman A., 144 Russell, R . D „ 159 Rutford, Robert H., 144 Ryall, Alan, 119 , 336 Ryan, J . A „ 3 16

Sadlick, Walter, 145 Saenz, Rodrigo, 114 Salisbury, John W., 316 Sand, L. B „ 145 Saul, John M ., 146 Sawkins, Frederick John, 146 Sax, Robert L., 342 Scafe, Don, 147 Scarfe, C . M „ 147 Scharon, LeRoy, 336 Schein, R., 63 Schenk, Paul E ., 148 Schlee, John, 148 Schmincke, Hans-Ulrich, 149 Schneer, Cecil J., 149 Schnetzler, C . C., 15 Scholl, David W., 228 Schopf, J. William, 150 Schopf, Thomas J. M., 183 Schultz, C . Bertrand, 262 Schwarcz, Henry P ., 152 Scott, J. B „ 120 Scott, Robert B ., 150 Secor, Donald T ., Jr., 15 1 Segar, Robert L., 336 Sellers, George A., 15 1 Sestini, Julian, 15 1 Sharp, R . P., 152 Shaw, Denis M ., 152 Shaw, Frederick C., 153 Shawa, Monzer S., 221 Shea, James H „ 245 Shepard, F . P., 180 Sheppard, Simon M. F ., 152 Shideler, Gerald L., 153 Shimp, N. F ., 66 Short, Heber L., 74 Shreve, Ronald L ., 154 (2) Shuter, Eugene, 148 Sibley, Earl A., 1 12 Siegel, Frederic R „ 155 Siever, Raymond, 155 Silva, Ruben, 149 Silver, Leon T „ 124, 156,

228Silverman, M . L ., 173 Silverman, S. R ., 163

Simmons, Gene, 156 Simons, D. B ., 297, 300 Simons, P. Y ., 156 Simoons, Frederick J., 3 17 Simpson, Dale R ., 157 Simpson, Thomas A., 263 Sippel, Robert F ., 158 Skehan, James W., S. J., 158 Skinner, M . M., 282 Slaughter, M ., 7 1, 109 Slawson, W. F „ 159 Slemmons, David B „ 119 , 331 Sloan, R . K „ 152 Slyker, Robert G ., 229 Smiley, Charles J., 229 Smith, Douglas, 159 Smith, Gilbert E ., 263 Smith, H. T . U „ 160 Smith, Stewart W „ 327 Smith, William G ., 35 Smithson, Scott B ., 14, 50,

160, 272, 289 Snow, Geoffrey G ., 230 Snyder, Charles T ., 230 Sommers, D. A., 161 Sopher, David E ., 3 17 Sorauf, James E ., 161 Sorem, Ronald K ., 162 Spackman, William, 162, 177 Speed, Robert C ., 231 Spencer, J . E „ 3 17 Spotts, J. H „ 163 Sprinkle, James, 163 Squires, Donald F ., 164 St. Amand, Pierre, 228 Stallard, Alvis H., 164 Stanley, Daniel J., 164 Stanley, George M „ 165 Stanton, Robert J., Jr., 165 Stearns, Charles E „ 176 Stearns, Richard G ., 266 Steece, Fred V., 166 Stehli, Francis G ., 166 Steinbrugge, Karl V., 334 Stephens, James D., 167 Stephenson, Donald A., 167 Stern, T . W „ 239, 279, 293 Stirton, R . A., 231 Stockton, Charles W., 285, 302 Stoiber, Richard E ., 168 Stokes, Wm. Lee, 302 Stone, George T., 168 Stone, Richard O., 182 Story, James A., 303 Stout, Martin L ., 169, 232 Stoyanow, Alexander, 232 Stumm, Erwin C., 169 Sturgeon, Myron T ., 78

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352 ABSTRACTSSuhr, N . H., 65 Surdam, Ronald C ., 169 Susuki, Takeo, 232 Sutherland, Patrick K ., 170 Sutton, Robert G ., 170 Swain, F . M ., 17 1 Swanson, Donald A., 149 Swanson, Jack G ., 327 Sweet, Walter C ., 183 Swett, Keene, 17 1, 172 Swift, Donald J. P., 264 Sykes, Lynn R ., 332 Sylvester, A . G „ 220, 233 Szekely, Thomas S., 173

Tabor, R . W „ 80 Taggart, James, 332 Takahashi, Taro, 173 Talent, John A., 15 Tanner, Lloyd G ., 262 Tanner, William F ., 264 Tappan, Helen, 233 Taylor, Hugh P., Jr., 173 Tedford, Richard H., 174,

234, 318 Tennissen, Anthony C ., 174 Textoris, Daniel A., 28, 175 Thom, Bruce G ., 175 Thomas, H. H „ 190, 239 Thomas, John J „ 186 Thorman, Charles H., 234 Thrailkill, John, 176 Thurber, David L ., 18, 176 Tibbetts, B . L „ 273 Tiedemann, Herbert A., 266 Tillman, C . G ., 265 Ting, F . T . C „ 177 Titley, Spencer R ., 303 Tocher, Don, 332 Tombaugh, Clyde W., 319 Toomey, Donald Francis, 177,

178Tracey, J . I., Jr., 67 Trembly, Lynn D ., 338

Troxel, Bennie W., 188 Tryggvason, Eysteinn, 331,

335Turcotte, Thomas, 343 Turnbull, W. J., 92 Turner, F . J., 53, 62 Tuttle, O. F ., 147 Tweto, Ogden, 304

Valentine, James W., 235 Van Lopik, Jack R ., 319 Vernon, James W., 178 Vine, F . J., 179 Voight, Barry, 179 Von der Borch, C . C., 128, 129 Von Huene, Roland, 228 Von Rad, U., 180 Voorhies, M . R ., 304 Vorhis, Robert C ., 265

Wähler, William A., 180 Wait, R . L „ 148 Walker, Charles T „ 235, 236 Waller, James O., 139 Walter, Edward J., 333 Wanless, Harold R ., 9 , 1 5 3 ,18 1 Ward, Albert N „ Jr., 305 Ward, H. S., 334 Warme, John E ., 181 Warner, Lawrence A., 305 Warnke, Detlef A., 182 Warren, John S., 236 Wasserburg, G . J., 7 Watkins, N. D ., 237, (2), 238 Watkinson, David H., 182 Watson, R . A., 320 Weaver, F . J., 92 Webb, S. David, 320 Webb, William M „ 183 Weber, W. Mark, 306 Webers, Gerald F ., 183 (2) Welby, Charles W., 184, 265 Welday, E . E ., 193, 194, 219 Wellen, J. B „ 344

Wells, John W „ 184 Wessels, Vincent E „ 303 Wheeler, Walter H „ 133 Whelan, James A., 36 Whetten, J . T ., 72, 185 Whitcomb, James H „ 238 White, E „ 185 White, John A., 310 Whitmore, Frank C ., Jr., 262 Whitney, Philip R „ 185 Whitten, E . H. Timothy, 186 Wier, Charles E ., 16 Wilcox, J . T ., 266 (2)Willden, Ronald, 239 Willis, David E „ 325, 326 Wilson, Charles W., Jr., 266 Wilson, H. D. B ., 186 Wilson, J . Tuzo, 187 Wilson, James Lee, 187 Wise, Sherwood W „ Jr., 187 Wise, W. S., 80 Witkind, Irving J., 306 Wolfe, John A., 303 Wood, Leonard A., 1 12 Woodburne, Michael O., 239 Woodrow, Donald L ., 188 Worl, Ronald G „ 286 Wright, Cynthia R ., 181 Wright, Lauren A., 188 Wu, Francis T ., 340 Wyllie, P . J., 58, 90, 130, 182

Yagi, Kenzo, 12 1, 189 Yasso, Warren E ., 267 Young, Chapman, 240 Young, Edward J., 189 Ypma, Peter J . M ., 190

Zardini, R . A., 62 Zartman, R . E ., 190 Zeller, Edward J., 191 Zenger, Donald H., 191 Zimmermann, R . A., 4 Zimmerman, R . K „ 267

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Title IndexAccuracy o f land-use interpretation from in­

frared imagery in the 4.5-5.5 micron band 3 15 Affinities o f the Paleozoic amphibian sub­

class Lepospondyli...................................... 8Age and origin o f Quaternary alluvium near

Friant, C a lifo r n ia ...................................... 2 1 1Age of major mineralizations in Ontario,

Canada........................................................... 159Age of ore deposition associated with some

Cordilleran intrusions.................................. 105Age of the Punchbowl Formation, Los

Angeles and San Bernardino counties,California....................................................... 234

Air and sand movements to the lee of dunes 249 Age of thrust faulting and ultramafic intru­

sion in the south-central Klamath Moun­tains, C a lifo rn ia ...................................... .... 42

Airborne geophysical surveys: A valuable aid in geologic mapping in the eastern Vir­ginia P ie d m o n t..................... v . . . . 258

Air-layer lubrication o f large avalanches . , 154 Aleutian Islands seismic experiment: 1964 . 332 Aligned intrusive complexes in northern

Coahuila, M e x ic o ...................................... 41Alkaline granite amidst the calc-alkaline in­

trusive suite o f the northern Cascades,Washington................................................... 216

American Tritylodontidae from the KayentaFormation of Arizona..................................96

Amplitudes and energies of primary seismic waves near Hardhat, Shoal, and Hay­maker nuclear explosions ^ . 338

An extensive lahar in central Chile . . . . 294 An occurrence o f Oligocene strata east of

San Jose, California...................................... 227An unusual occurrence of Recent gypsum,

Park County, Wyoming............................. 283Analcime-wairakite mineral series.................169Analog model evaluation o f the Arkansas

River Valley in eastern Colorado . . . . 1 12 Analysis o f a caprotinid rudist growth series 125 Analysis o f quakes recorded at Mount Vesu­

vius ................................................................333Analysis of surface focus travel times . . . 323 Analysis o f travel times of P waves recorded

at North American sta tio n s..................... 323Ancient rocks and ores in south-central

W yoming....................................................... 279Anomalous grain orientation in the Norman-

skill graywackes, Hudson Valley, NewY o rk ............................................................... 12 1

Anomalous metamorphism of Jurassic rocks, Klamath Mountains, southwestern Ore­gon ................................................................86

Apparent structural control of Tully Lime­

stone deposition in the Devonian Catskill delta complex o f New York State . . . 76

Application o f laser devices to ultra-hightemperature X-ray studies..........................167

Application of linear algebra to petrologic problems, Part I : Mineral classification . 126

Application of physical observations to thegeology of the Lunar surface..................... 115

Application o f remote sensors to geologicstudy................................................................ 311

Applications o f multispectral sensing . . . 308 Archean volcanism: Patterns and problems. 65Areal variation in constituent particle com­

position of lime mud in southern BritishHonduras....................................................... 102

Arid Miocene climate of the southeasternUnited S t a t e s ............................................... 3

Ash deposit o f the 1963-1965 eruption ofIrazu volcano, Costa R ic a ......................... 114

Aspects o f skeletal growth in Scleractinian corals and its significance in systematicsand ecology...................................................164

Association of andesitic volcanoes in the Cascade Mountains with Late Tertiaryepizonal p lutons...........................................80

Athabaskan expansion in the Southwest. . 307 Atlas of Paleozoic carbonate microfacies of

the Eastern Stable I n te r io r .....................28Attenuation and spectral measurements from

controlled underwater sh o ts ..................... 326Automated bulletin program......................... 344Basalt-andesite-rhyolite differentiation in

Santa Rosa Range, N e v a d a ..................... 94Bathymetry of Mono Lake, a remnant Sier-

ran Pleistocene l a k e .................................. 228Beach and dune sands o f the southern Unit­

ed States Atlantic coast ..........................248Bearing o f stable sulfur and carbon isotopes

on the formation o f uranium ore rolls inW yom ing....................................................... 32

Bedding-plane anastomoses and their rela­tion to cavern passages ..............................311

Biangular faulting in the Outer Bluegrass re­gion of northern K e n tu c k y ..................... 250

Biostratigraphy o f the Niobrara-equivalent portion o f the Mancos Shale in northwest­ern C o lo ra d o ...............................................290

Biostratonomy of a Miocene bone bed atSharktooth Hill, C a lifo rn ia ..................... 217

Blastoids from the Sappington Formation ofsouthwestern M o n ta n a ..............................163

Blessing from the sea: A story o f phosphate 134Brevard fault zone, North Carolina: New

interpretation...............................................247

353

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354 ABSTRACTSBryozoa distribution in Venezuela-British

Guiana shelf sedim ents..............................143Cambrian formations west o f Missoula, Mon­

tana ................................................................ 285Carbon and oxygen isotopic composition of

limestones and dolomites, Bikini andEniwetok a t o l ls ...........................................67

Cartersville thrust, Georgia, and strati- graphic correlations between the Pied­mont and Appalachian V a l le y ................. 247

Central Kentucky karst hydrology . . . . 320Character o f refracted arr iva ls ..................... 345Chazy Group trilobites o f New York and

V e rm o n t....................................................... 153Chemical and biochemical study o f recent

organic sed im en ts ...................................... 63Chemical composition and origin o f saline

formation waters in the Illinois and Michi­gan basins....................................................... 66

Chemical composition and variation in the Lakeview Mountain Tonalite, Southern California batholith: Preliminary study 219

Chemical criteria for recognition o f glacialmarine sediments.......................................... 6

Chemical diagenesis o f some modern carbon­ate sediments in Bermuda and southernF lo r id a ........................................................... 1 1

Chemical equilibrium between the water and minerals of a carbonate aquifer, Florida . 307

Chert aggregate reactivity study based on observations of chert morphologies usingelectron optical tech n iq u es..................... 89

Chlorite determination in clays o f soils andmineral dep osits........................................... 2

Cincinnatian Series (Upper Ordovician) o fsoutheastern In d ia n a .................................. 19

Cirque orientation in east-central Alaska. . 130 Clarendonian faunal succession, Ricardo

Formation, Kern County, California . . 174 Classification o f presumed lunar rock types

on the basis o f their mass spectra . . . . 45Clastic dikes in the western Coastal Plain of

South Carolina...........................................248Clay mineral suite variability in a complex

estuary, Chesapeake B a y ...................... 118Clay mineralogy o f four cores o f Recent sedi­

ments off Freeport, T exas ...................... 147Clay minerals in Illinois c o a l s ...................64Clearwater Lake volcanic complex, Quebec,

Canada......................................................... 14Coal lithotypes: Their relationships to the

environments o f coal forming swamps. . 1 7 7Coastal sediment circulatory system. . . . 178Comenditic volcanic rocks in the Western

United S ta te s ............................................1 17Comparison of fossil silicoflagellates; Cali­

fornia and D e n m a rk ...............................214Composition o f the earth’s c o r e .............. 173

Compositional change in plagioclase induced by hydrothermal leaching at high tem­peratures and p re ssu re .............................. 1

Concrete pore-pressure.................................. 253Congruent Laramide magmatism and cop­

per mineralization in the southwest Basinand Range P ro v in c e .................................. 103

Consequences of some thermodynamic con­siderations on earthquake mechanism . . 236

Consistency o f the character o f body-wave phases from large underground explosions 338

Contact metamorphism of the Carmel For­mation, Iron Springs mining district, Utah 54

Coprecipitation o f Sr+2 with aragonite fromsea water at 15-95° C ..................................88

Cordilleran and Cascadan orogenies in west­ern North America.......................................47

Correlation o f the Mesozoic formations of southern Peru and northern Chile . . . 173

Correlation problems of Davis No. 6 and DeKoven No. 7 coals in western Ken­tucky................................................................... 263

Council on education in the geological sci­ences—A progress r e p o r t ............................... 75

Course of the 25-30-foot shore line in the vicinity o f Cape Kennedy, Florida . . . 2 4 1

Cretaceous paleobotany in arctic Alaska:Progress r e p o r t ..............................................229

Cross-bedding in the Eocene Torrey Sand­stone, western San Diego County, Cali­fornia................................................................... 221

Crustal structure of Hawaii from seismic-refraction measurements.................................335

Crystal structure and polymorphism o f cor-dierite . ....................................................... 107

Crystal structure of heulandite......................... 109Crystallization history o f the Little Chief

granite porphyry, California, based on electron microprobe analyses o f the feld­spars ................................................................ 106

Curvature map of the gravity field in theCentral Basin, T enn essee ......................... 251

Cut slope design based on stability charac­teristics ............................................................ 23

Cyclic and reciprocal sedimentation in Vir- gilian strata o f southern New Mexico . . 187

Cyclic sedimentation in the Upper Devonian o f the northern Appalachian Plateau . . 188

Decaturville sulfide breccia of south-centralMissouri—a fossil mud volcano................. 4

Deformation lamellae from the Lac CoutureCrater, Q u e b e c ...........................................138

Deformation of Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii, related to the eruption of March 1965 . 43

Deformation of Pleistocene Lake Cahuilla shore line, Salton Sea Basin, California . 165

Dehydration o f gypsum to hemihydrate and anhydrite at Clayton Playa, Nevada . I l l

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TITLE INDEX 355Delay-time techniques applied to epicentral

location p ro b le m s...................................... 343Dentine tubules in the South American

family Leontiniidae......................................199Depositional mechanics and mineral varia­

tions of an ignimbrite layer, eastern Ore­gon ................................................................204

Detailed study o f the November, 1964, earthquake sequence near Corralitos, Cali­fornia............................................................... 332

Determinants of pediment evolution in the central Mojave Desert, California . . . 182

Development of drainage patterns on tidalmarshes........................................................... 222

Development of earth science in the second­ary schools of New York State from 1900-1963 ................................................................ 91

Development of Schleractinian-like mor­phology in Devonian rugose corals . . . 161

Devonian spore succession in EasternGaspe, Quebec, Canada.............................. 106

Diagenetic mottling in dolomitic limestones, dolostones and cherts, northwest Scotland 17 1

Diagnostic textural parameters of beach andriver s a n d s ................................................... 60

Differentiation of beach and dune sands . . 72Dimorphism and pattern of growth in

Striatopora jlexuosa H ail..............................120Discontinuity of turbidite beds, Gaspe

Peninsula, C a n a d a ...................................... 52Dislocations in the deformation of olivine . 240 Dispersal patterns in the Fountain Forma­

tion of Colorado.......................................... 288Dispersive characteristics of first three Ray­

leigh modes for a single-layer model. . . 340 Distribution o f lead between biotite and co­

existing potassium feldspar from Basin and Range quartz monzonites, Utah and Neva­da ....................................................................123

Distribution of manganese in the Mesabi and Cuyuna iron ranges, Minnesota . . . . 95

Distribution of minor metals in the Rocky Hill stock, Tulare County, California . . 224

Distribution of potassium and rubidium in some metamorphic rocks of the northwestAdirondacks, New Y o rk ............................. 185

Distribution o f selenium in the Niobrara Formation o f the Black Hills region, SouthD akota............................................................300

Distribution of specific gravity in the San Bernardino Mountains, California . . . 193

Diversion of ground water by buried stream channels in central Adams County, Colo­rado ................................................................301

Diversity gradients in pole location—TheRecent m o d el...............................................166

Dolomite soft sediment from pluvial Lake Mound, Lynn and Terry counties, Texas 123

Dolomitization, silification, and calcitization patterns in Cambrian-Ordovician oolitic carbonates from northwest Scotland . . 172

Doming in Mason County, West Virginia . 242 D TA analysis o f 'y-radiation damage to cal-

cite dispersed in a metabentonite. . . . 155 Early Allegheny paralic rocks o f eastern

O h io ................................................................267Early Devonian brachiopod zoogeography . 15Earth’s crust in Oklahoma............................. 335Educating the geologist for the nuclear age 73 Education o f geologists for geological sur­

veys ................................................................70Effect of environmentally induced growth

rate changes in M ytilus edulis shell . . . 42Effect of Laramide deformation on Precam-

brian structural pattern, Medicine BowMountains, Wyoming..................................287

Electron microprobe analysis o f some natur­ally zoned garnets from British Columbia and their interpretation based on theRayleigh fractionation m o d e l .................79

Electron microprobe studies o f some minor minerals in the Conway granite . . . . 61

Electron microscopy o f Precambrian micro­fossils............................................................... 150

Electron-excited luminescence in carbonaterocks and m inerals.................................. 158

Electron-microscope studies of the internal structure o f some argillaceous sedimentaryrock samples................................................... 252

Electron-probe investigation of trace ele­ments in manganese nodules..................... 197

Ellsworth Mountains fold belt—A link be­tween East and West Antarctica . . . . 37

E ly Springs Dolomite in the southern GreatBasin................................................................ 223

Emplacement of massive cupreous pyriteorebody, Skouriotissa, C y p ru s ................. 25

Emplacement of the Little Chief granite porphyry stock, central Panamint Range west of Death Valley, California . . . . 215

Emplacement o f the northwest SacramentoValley sandstone d i k e s ..............................222

Energy partition of surface waves . . . . 340Energy relationships in the earth................. 156Engineering characteristics o f saprolite in

the Fall Zone between Baltimore andAberdeen, M ary la n d ..................................34

Engineering geology—Allegheny Dam, War­ren, Pennsylvania ....................................56

Engineering geology o f Stockton Dam and Kaysinger Bluff Dam, Osage River basin,M isso u r i.......................................................98

Engineering geology—Specialty or profes­sion? ............................................................... 180

Environment of the Imperial Trough, Cali­

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356 ABSTRACTSfornia, during the Quaternary: A paleo-geographic problem............................. .... .

Environmental conditions during deposition o f part of the upper Tuscaloosa Forma­tion, M ississip pi..........................................

Equations for the prediction o f distribution coefficients for the sorption o f cesium and strontium on soil and clinoptilolite . . .

Erosion processes along revetted banks ofthe lower Mississippi R i v e r .....................

Erosional equilibrium in the Piedmont pla­teau ................................................................

Error analysis o f digital equalizing filters . E .S .C .P .—A Change or an Improvement . Estimate of the detection capabilities of the

VELA-U N IFO RM seismological obser­vatories...........................................................

Estimating the spatial dependence of the transfer function of a continuum . . . .

Estimation of mean Si-O bond lengths insilicates by X-ray emission.........................

Evaluation of Colorado Clays for sealingp u rp o ses.......................................................

Evaluation of the probability of earth-cometcollisions.......................................................

Evaluation of voluntary field trips for intro­ductory physical geology course . . . .

Evidence for Pleistocene “ jokulhlaups” along the Truckee River, California-Nevada...........................................................

Evidence from Western Ontario of the iso- topic composition of strontium in Archeans e a s ...............................................................

Evidence o f Plio-Pleistocene faulting at McGee Mountain, Mono County, Cali­fornia; Critical s tu d y ..................................

Evidence o f Precambrian deformation and intrusion preserved within the Idahobatholith.........................................................

Evolution and regional endemism o f the tal-pid Scapanus (sensu lato) ..........................

Evolution of Lower and Middle Ordoviciansponge reefs in western Utah.....................

Evolution of the Crawfordsville, Indianafossil community..........................................

Evolutionary changes in the cranial myology of the mid-Tertiary Tayassuidae . . . .

Experimental scale-model studies on flowagedifferentiation in s ills ..................... ....

Experimental studies o f igneous rock series: A zoned pluton in the Wallowa batholith,Oregon . .......................................................

Experimental study bearing on the absence of leucite in plutonic rocks . . . . . .

Exploration of gullied submarine slopes off California by diving saucer . . . . . .

Extraction of biological entities from coal .

Facies in Lower Ordovician carbonates inCentral Appalachians..................................246

Facies relationships in a transgressive phase during the development of the CatskillComplex, New Y o r k .................................. 105

Factors influencing metamorphic recrystal­lization: A quantitative evaluation . . . 135

F actors of probable significance in the genesis of copper deposits in the Kennecott dis­trict, Alaska. ................. .... 100

Fall velocity o f irregularly shaped particles 269 Fauna of the Stringocephalus biostrome,

Piute Formation, Arrow Canyon Range,Clark County, N e v a d a ..............................60

Feasibility o f subsurface correlation at the national reactor testing station, Idaho. . 298

Feldspar textures as indicators of magmatic origin and a new origin of inclusions inigneous r o c k s ...............................................208

Fire as a geomorphic agent in the San Ga­briel Mountains in Southern California . 46

Floor o f the Bellingshausen S e a .................76Fluor-chlor-oxy-apatite from crystal lode

pegmatite, Eagle, C o lo rad o ..................... 189Forceful emplacement o f the Birch Creek

pluton, White Mountains, California . . 220 Forecasting ground-water levels by electric

analog computer at Minot, North Dakota 129 Formation and crystallization of ignimbritic

magmas under high water pressure . . . 150 Formation o f aluminum hydroxide in soils. 83Formulation and use o f fluorescent tracer

coatings in sediment-transport studies. . 2 6 7 Framboids: Macrocrystals o f colloidal pyrite 85Franciscan metaconglomerates..................... 62Franciscan Rocks o f the Santa Lucia Range, California, and the Argitte Scagliose of the

Apennines, Italy: A comparison in styleof deformation. . .............................. .... . 210

Free oscillation energies.................................. 337Frequency o f extrusion o f some lavas on

Steens Mountain, Oregon, during a tran­sition o f the Miocene geomagnetic field:Speculations................................................... 237

From hacienda to ejido: Pablillo, NuevoLeon, re stu d ie d ...........................................309

Fumaroles o f Santiaquito, Guatemala . . . 168 Fundamentals of terrestrial sedimentology . 3 1 1 General lack of blue quartz in sedimentary

rocks of the “ Folded Appalachians” ofsouthwestern Virginia.................................. 246

General theory of diagenesis......................... 155Generation o f spherical elastic waves from a

moving b o u n d a ry .......................... 329Genesis o f Franciscan metamorphic types in

California....................................................... 53Genetic relationship between some aplites

and pegmatites.............................................. 226

227

265

74

92

11634222

327

344

185

282

115

125

195

84

214

293

312

137

93

239

11

130

147

2290

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T ITLE IN DEX 357

Geochemical correlation of carbonates bypaleosalinity................................................ 235

Geochemical Investigation of the Jardine- Crevasse Mountain Mining District, ParkCounty, M ontana.................................... 20

Geochemistry of recent iron deposits in theRed S e a .....................................................101

Geochemistry of Slave Point Formation,Western Canada........................................ 26

Geochronologic investigations in the crystal­line rocks of the Grand Canyon, Arizona 124

Geochronologic studies in the Bancroft- Madoc area of the Grenville Province,Ontario, Canada........................................ 156

Geochronology of New Zealand plu tonic andmetamorphic rocks.................................... 7

Geographic integration of imagery patterns 313 Geologic and geomorphic implications of the

Mariner IV photos of M a rs.................... 152Geologic and paleomagnetic observations of

the Steens Basalt, Lake County, Oregon 292 Geologic significance of isomorphism in

planktonic foraminifera............................ 9Geologic structure of the Dinkey Creek

roof pendant in the central Sierra Nevada,California.................................................... 212

Geological and geochemical studies of the Roskruge volcanic field, Pima County,Arizona.........................................................12

Geological applications of exo-electron emis­sion phenomena........................................ 96

Geological factors in the Baldwin HillsReservoir failure, Los Angeles, California 198

Geological use of water analysis in the Four Corners region (Colorado, New Mexico,Utah, and Arizona).................................... 294

Geology and its relationship to the ground­water reservoir of Finney County, Kansas 69

Geology and petrology of the McCloud Limestone in the South Gray Rocks area,Shasta County, California........................202

Geology in planning small watersheds. . . 249 Geology of Goshute Mountains and Toana

Range, Elko County, N evada......................12Geology of Lubrecht experimental forest,

Missoula County, M ontana....................... 277Geology of projected tunnel through Big

Walker Mountain, Interstate Route 77,Virginia............................................................244

Geology of the Alum Creek area, San JuanMountains, Colorado....................................278

Geology of the crystalline rocks in the Sal­mon Creek region, east-central part of the Okanogan Range, Washington . . . 216

Geology of the Dolly Varden Mountains,Elko County, N e v a d a ................................230

Geology of the Emigrant Peak intrusive complex, Park County, Montana. . . . 273

Geology of the Esterbrook area, Converseand Albany counties, Wyoming........... 284

Geology of the Graniteville Granite, Mis­souri ........................................................72

Geology of the Grants Ridge uranium area,New M exico......................................... 266

Geology of the Hopewell area, Rio ArribaCounty, New Mexico............................. 288

Geology of the Leucite Hills, Wyoming . . 289 Geometry of folds portrayed by contoured

maps: A new method for representing the geographical variability of folds . . . . 186

Geomorphic evolution and engineering im­plications of the Sulphur Creek derange­ment, Laguna Niguel, Orange County,California................................................ 232

Geomorphology of a high-tide tropical delta —the Burdekin River, Queensland, Aus­tralia ........................................................35

Geomorphology of the central coast of Vene­zuela ........................................................101

Geophysical investigation of a basin-fillaquifer in southeastern Arizona.............. 49

Geophysical logging as applied to ground­water studies in crystalline rocks . . . . 122

Geophysical-geological study of a granitic pluton . . . . . . . . .. . .. . . . . . 272

Giant desiccation strip es..........................116Goat Mountain cauldron—A volcanic-tec­

tonic subsidence structure of early Ter­tiary age, east-central Cascade Range, Washington: Preliminary study . . . . 207

Grande Ronde dike swarm and its relation­ship to the Columbia River basalts . . . 205

Graphical method for the construction of rays and travel times in spherically lay­ered isotropic m edia..............................341

Gravity investigations in northern Baja California, Mexico: Preliminary results . 229

Gravity investigations of subsurface shape and mass distributions of granite batho-lith s ........................................................ 14

Gravity settling of zircon in the Tunk LakeGranite, southeastern Maine...................85

Gravity studies in the Oslo igneous province,Norway.................................................... 160

Gravity studies of the Laramie Range: Anorthosite areas and adjacent basins . . 79

Ground-water flow systems in the carbonaterocks of Nevada......................................314

Growth of dolomite crystals...................... 129Growth stages in Merycodus Furcatus and

their bearing on the taxonomy of Mio-cene-Pliocene merycodonts...................304

Growth stages of the Devonian rugose coral Hexagonaria anna (Whitfield) from the Bell Shale and the Ferron Point Forma­tions (Traverse Group) of Michigan . . 169

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358 ABSTRACTS

Hematite-siderite spherules, a clue to de- positional environment, Tuscaloosa For­mation, east-central Mississippi...............

Heterocorals in the Carboniferous of NorthA m erica................................................

High-temperature metamorphic rocks as­sociated with an ultramafic complex,Siskiyou County, California...................

High-temperature Tertiary manganese nodules, Olympic Peninsula, Washington

Hydrodynamics of the Mississippian BlastoidG lo b o b la stu s ...............................................

Hydrogeology of part of upper Boxelder Valley, Larimer County, Colorado . . .

Hydrology of ground-water reservoir of Finney County, Kansas, where dischargeis greater than recharge ......................

Hydrothermal experiments on the thermal stability of amino substances in sediments

Hypothesis for oil accumulation...............Ice-rafted detritus in deep-sea sediments. . Ice-wedge pseudomorphs in the Laramie

basin, Wyoming.....................................Identification of hydrocarbons by thin-layer

chromatography.....................................Illinoisan age drift in southeastern South

Dakota .......................... ......................Implications of the discovery of much

thicker drift in southern New York . . Importance of biogenic versus physical

energy in lagoon sedimentation . . . . Inertial effects in well-aquifer systems: An

analog s t u d y .........................................Influence of bedrock highs on glaciation in

east-central North Dakota......................Influence of engineering geology on design

and construction of the Delta Pumping Plant site, California State Water Project

Influence of island migration on BarrierIsland sedimentation..............................

Influence of structural deformation on the mineral paragenesis of the Moppin Schist, Rio Arriba County, New Mexico. . . .

Influence of the Gulf Stream on the mor­phology of the Blake P lateau...............

Initiation of ground-water flow in jointedlimestone................................................

Infrared and X-ray analysis of zeolites frombedded deposits.....................................

Inselbergs of southwestern Arizona . . . . Instrument for geobarometry of fluid in­

inclusions ................................................Internal structures in the sandstone dikes of

northwestern Sacramento Valley, Cali­fornia ............................................ ... .

Interpretation of Halysitid morphology . . Interpreting the hydraulic environment of

fluvial deposits.........................................

Intertidal deposits in the geologic record . 84Investigation of the ground-water resources

in northern Saudi A rabia...................... 57Investigations in part of the Wisconsin

batholith, northeastern Wisconsin . . . 24Iowan drift problem, northeastern Iowa . . 144Iron-titanium oxide deposits in Quebec

anorthosites................................................. 4Isotopic age of fresh and altered igneous

rocks associated with copper deposits,southeastern Arizona...............................39

Isotopic age of Salmon and Abrams Schists, Klamath Mountains, California . . . . 21 3

Isotopic ages from northern Sonora, Mexico 97Isotopic evidence of Precambrian episodes of

mineralization in C olorado................. 270Isotopic nature of ore-leads in the Colorado

mineral belt ..........................................299Jadeite- lawsonite-bearing metagraywackes

of the Franciscan near Mount Hamilton,California ..............................................200

K-Ar and Rb-Sr ages of some alkalic in­trusive rocks from central and easternUnited S ta te s ......................................... 190

Karst features in northern Larimer County,Colorado................................................. 285

Knoxville-Franciscan contact near Paskenta, western Sacramento Valley, California . 215

Laboratory studies in introductory geology 33Landslide studies in planning, design, and

construction of hydraulic structures inCalifornia ......................................... 136

Large-scale recumbent folding in the metamorphic rocks of the northern RubyMountains, N e v a d a ............................. 210

Late Cenozoic basalts of the western GrandCanyon region, A r iz o n a ...................... 71

Late Cenozoic deformation in southwesternN e v a d a ................................................. 227

Late Cenozoic vertebrates of the Anza- Borrego Desert area, Southern California 310

Late Cretaceous stratigraphy and paleontol­ogy, El Rosario, northwest Baja Cali­fornia, M e x ic o .................... ................ 211

Late omphacite in metamorphic rocks of the Franciscan Formation of California . . 202

Late Paleozoic Lafonian Tillite of the Falk­land Islands..............................................40

Late pleistocene marine tills in the Lauren-tian Channel, C a n a d a ..........................37

Late Tertiary lake deposits and a mammalfauna from New G u in e a ..................... 223

Late Tertiary mammal succession, Mojave Desert region, Southern California . . . 3 1 8

Late Tertiary volcanic center near MountRainier, Washington.............................209

Late Wisconsin alpine glaciation of east- central Cascade Range, Washington . . 131

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TITLE IN D EX 359

Layered pegmatites, southern Wind River Mountains, Fremont County, Wyoming 132

Leaf jams as a minor geomorphic agent in East Creek, Washington D.C.—Maryland 62

Least-squares analysis o f fabric data: I—Theoretical con sid eration s..................... 290

Least-squares analysis o f fabric data: I I—Geological e xa m p le s ..................................298

Lenoir Limestone in central east Tennessee 257 Liesegang rings as structural analogs of

orbicular rocks...............................................96Life habits of the “ Living Fossil” bivalve

N eotrigonia ................................................... 104Limitations on strike-slip displacement along

the Death Valley and Furnace CreekFault Zones, California..............................188

Lipid analyses in sedim ents..........................110Load measurements in the phase I, Carley

V . Porter tunnel, Lebec, California . . 6Long-period S wave for distances between

2000 and 5000 k m ...................................... 325Long-period strain and pendulum system . 327 Lower Cambrian paleocurrents and environ­

ments in western Virginia and north­eastern Tennessee ...................................... 21

Lower Paleozoic rocks in diatremes in southern Wyoming and northern Colorado 280

Lower thermalstability of FeTi205-Fe2Ti05 (pseudobrookite) solid-solution series . . 97

Lunar and planetary petrographic micro­scope ............................................................99

Lunar environment: A geologic interpreta­tion of the surface of the moon . . . . 262

Lunar impact, volcanism, and tectonism:Rationale and resu lts..................................102

Magnetic anomalies associated with oceanicr id g e s ............................................................179

Magoffin beds of morse in three eastern Ken­tucky quadrangles...................................... 259

Major structural discontinuities across southeastern New England: New evidence 197

Manihiki P la t e a u ...........................................77Mantle Rayleigh wave radiation pattern

and the source mechanism of the Hindu Kush earthquake of July 6, 1962 . . . . 341

Marine geophysical studies nearshore—New­port, O re g o n ............................................... 238

Marine middle Jurassic, eastern Big Horn Mountains, Wyoming and Montana . . 296

Marine-terrace tectonism ..............................221Measurement of movement of water through

unsaturated dune sand by a neutron meter 132 Melting and phase relationships of an

anhydrous natural basalt to 40 kilobars . 35 Mercury in sphalerite from central Ken­

tucky and central Tennessee ................. 251Mesozoic regionaL metamorphism of the

Shuswap Complex, British Columbia . . 289

Metabentonite or weathered shale of the Decorah Formation in Missouri? . . . . 3

Metallogeny and geochronology, CanadianA p palach ians...............................................104

Metamorphic petrology of the Schwartz- walder Mine area, Jefferson County,Colorado .................................. 274

Metamorphosed igneous intrusions of the southwestern Medicine Bow Mountains,Wyoming ................................................... 291

Meteorite impact metamorphism and cosmicpetrology....................................................... 30

Method for determining the density ofmicro-sized spherical p artic les ................. 13

Method for structural studies o f coal andkerogen........................................................... 13

Method of determination of relative surfaceenergies for crystal g r o w t h ..................... 149

Methodology of textural analysis ofsubaqueous se d im e n ts ..............................299

Microearthquakes and current tectonica c t i v i t y ....................................................... 119

Microprobe analysis of interlayered mus­covite and paragonite, Lincoln Mountainquadrangle, Vermont .............................. 2

Microprobe cathodoluminescence and X- ray emission studies of cassiterite . . . 135

Microprobe study of zoning in eclogitegarnets.........................................................54

Microstructure of the shell and discorbaceansystematics (Fo ram in iferid a)............. 233

Middle and Upper Triassic spiriferinid brachiopods from the Canadian Arctic . 98

Middle Cretaceous to Oligocene source areas and paleocurrents in the northern Apen­nines, Italy ................................................15 1

Middle Oligocene fluorite-barite mineraliza­tion in New Mexico ................................91

Mid-North America ridge structure . . . 1 8 6Mid-Tertiary K-Ar dates from late Mesozoic

metamorphosed rocks, Wood Hills and Ruby-East Humboldt Range, Elko Coun­ty, N e v a d a ................................................234

Mineral and chemical composition of lower Columbia River reservoir sediments . . 185

Mineral correlations o f some Eocene sand­stones of central California ..................... 219

Mineralized ground-water resources o f theconterminous United S ta te s ..................... 203

Mineralogical changes between uranium- bearing and barren arkosic sandstones in the Powder River basin, Wyoming . . . 295

Mineralogy and petrography o f Lower Cabaniss underclays in western Missouri 174

Mineralogy of a Piemontite gneiss near Ban­ning Pass, C a lifo rn ia ..................................159

Minor element content o f apatite from ig­neous and metamorphic environments . . 282

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360 ABSTRACTS

Miocene-Pliocene sediments, gravity slides, and range tectonics near Currant, easternNevada . ................................................... 1 13

Mississippian Chainman Formation o f west­ern Utah and eastern Nevada: A clastic wedge deposit o f the Cordilleran géosyn­clinal complex . . . . . ■. •.....................145

Mobile seismograph a rra y ..............................326Model seismicity ...................................... .... 330Model studies on magnification o f earth­

quake motion in soil-filled basins . . . . 205 Modern inorganic chert from a carbonate

precipitating lo c a lity .................................. 128Morphology and behavior of talus at high

a ltitu d e s ....................................................... 1 13Morphology of a Miocene sea lion . . . . 2 1 8 Mountain sheep: A link with the Pleistocene 302 Multi-element Ordovician conodont species 183 Multiple early pleistocene glacial stades,

northeastern K a n s a s .................................. 47Natural parameters of igneous rocks expres­

sed by proportions of quarfeloids . . . 139 Nature, direction, and amount of displace­

ment of the Nebo thrust, southernWasatch Mountains, U t a h ..................... 274

Nature o f batholiths...................................... 207Nature o f chlorite in some low-grade meta-

volcanic rocks in South Island, NewZ e a la n d ....................................................... 28

Nature o f low-temperature apatite and the effect of/>C0 2 on the formation of apatite and octa-calcium phosphate . . . . . . 157

New class of transform f a u l t s ..................... 187New collection of seventy-five ivory coast

tektites ........................................................146New cystoid from the Osgood Formation

(Silurian) o f In d ia n a .............................. . 265New data on periclase from Crestmore,

California ...................................... .... 29New evidence for a late Jurassic age for the

Santiago Peak Volcanics in San DiegoCounty, California .................................. .... 203

New genus o f protoceratid artiodactyl and Relationships of the Protoceratidae . . . 2 3 1

New Mississippian demosponge from Arkan­sas .................................................................... 1 17

New occurrence o f the Scythian (Triassic) ammonite Anasibirites from Nevada. . . 271

New Pleistocene shore lines in Hawaii. . . 201 New technique in subsurface mapping of

glacial drift in southern I o w a ................. 26New techniques for array data processing . 344 New World origins of Old World camels . 320 Non-Brownian bubble movement in fluid

inclusions—a thermal gradient detector of extreme sensitivity and rapid response . . 140

North American distribution o f the Turonian (Late Cretaceous) ammonite Mammttes Nodosoides (Schlotheim) . . 293

Northwest Alabama clay dep osit................. 252Note on reflected refractions..........................337Note on reversing the Gnome profile in the

northeastern United S t a t e s ..................... 324Notes on the stratigraphy o f Pulaski County,

Georgia............................................................265Novato Conglomerate, Marin County, Cali­

fornia: New evidence for its Cretaceous age and Sierra Nevadan provenance . . 195

0 18/ 0 16 ratios o f coexisting minerals in glaucophane-bearing metamorphic rocks 173

Observation of higher mode free oscillations in the period range of 100-200 seconds . . 338

Observation o f modern flute mark formationin a quarry d e l t a ...................................... 89

Observations on the Teton Glacier, Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming . . . . 300

Occurrence and stability of carbonate minerals in Carlsbad Caverns, NewMexico ....................................................... 176

Occurrence o f water with high hardness and high chloride content in the alluvial de­posits o f Franklin Parish, Louisiana . . 255

Old landslides near Vicksburg, Mississippi . 255 Oligocene or younger thrust faulting in the

Ruby Mountains, northeastern Nevada . 239 Olympic-Wallowa lineament: A major deep-

seated tectonic feature o f the PacificN o rth w e st ...............................................158

On the appropriate denominator for F-tests in two-factor analysis o f variance . . . 25

On the formation o f dissepiments inanthozoan corals...................................... 184

On the klippe origin of the Franciscan rocks of the Santa Lucia Range, California—Aworking hypothesis . ................82

Ontogeny o f Bathyuriscus fim briatus and its bearing on affinities o f corynexochidtrilobites, western Utah ........................... 140

Orbicular rocks from Davie County, NorthC a r o lin a ....................................................242

Ordovician and Silurian stratigraphy of the southern Rocky Mountains of Canada . . 1 18

Ore genesis in the North Pennine orefield, in the light of fluid inclusion studies . . 146

Organic constituents o f p e a t .................. 124Organic dolomite from Point Fermin,

California ................................................163Origin o f deep-water sands off La Jolla,

California ................................................180Origin o f foliation in glacial ice by shear,

eastern Alaska Range .......................... 132Origin of igneous central complexes and for­

mation o f rin g-d ik es................................3 1Origin o f Laguna de Guatavita, Colombia 10

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TITLE IND EX 361

Origin o f mound topography, WesternUnited States: New t h e o r y ..................... 169

Origin o f m yrm ekite................. .....................198Origin of S2Schistosity by tectonic compac­

tion, Rangeley-Phillips area, Maine . . I l l Origin of stibnite associated with borax at

Kramer, California ..................................45Origin of the Cabellos and Arkansas

novaculite formations, Texas, Oklahoma,and A rk an sas...............................................122

Originals and suture of Parahoplites Melchio-ris A n th u la ...................................................232

Ostracode faunules from Vicksburg sedi­ments in Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama,and F lo r id a ...................................................257

Paleocene through Pliocene sequence in the Ixtapa-Soyalo Region, Chiapas, Mexico 93

Paleoecological and rock-stratigraphic proof for the existence of the Talbot Formationin South C a ro lin a ...................................... 243

Paleoenvironmental interpretation of the Rondout Formation of eastern New York 68

Paleoenvironments of the Coeymans Forma­tion (Lower Devonian) of New York . . 5

Paleomagnetic confirmation of obscure fault­ing in a section of lavas in Lake County,Oregon ....................................................... 238

Paleotectonic sequence indicated by a new mid-Mesozoic formation, northwesternN e v a d a ....................................................... 231

Palynology of Vermejo Formation coals, upper Cretaceous central Colorado . . 2 8 1

Parallel evolution o f some Upper Paleozoic Nuculanidae in Czechoslovakia and theUnited S ta te s ...............................................48

Particle orientation in turbidites: Theoryand experiment ........................................144

Particle-size distribution of lower ColumbiaRiver reservoir sediments . ................... 72

Particle-size reduction along streams . . . 300Partition o f seismic e n e r g y ...................... 339PcP from the nuclear explosion Bilby—

September 13 , 1963 .................................. 326Pedologic aspects o f remote sensing . . . 3 1 9Peedee-Black Creek boundary, Carolina

Coastal Plain: A transgressive contact . 264Pegmatites in A lab am a...............................263Pennsylvanian environmental studies in the

Illinois basin and northern mid-continent 181 Pennsylvanian environments o f the lower

Allegheny series in the Appalachian coalbasin ............................................................ 9

Pennsylvanian sediments o f the Michigancoal basin ................................................ 153

Pennsylvanian strophomenida from Ohio . 78Permian fusulinids o f the type Earp Forma­

tion, Tombstone, Arizona.......................200Petrogenetic relationships between anortho-

site and metanorite (gabbroic anorthosite)in the Adirondack H ighlands............. 141

Petrography of an Upper Silurian (Cayugan) dolomitized algal stromatolite mound andassociated facies, O h io ......................... 175

Petrography of lenses of Tower Sandstone (Eocene) at Green River, Wyoming . . 282

Petrology of a metamorphic iron formation in southwestern Labrador, Canada . . . 88

Petrology of Precambrian iron-formation and associated rocks, Palmer area,Marquette District, Michigan.............. 43

Petrology of rocks from a 3.05-km-deep Precambrian borehole, Wind RiverMountains, W y o m in g .......................... 50

Petrology of the Birch Creek pluton, WhiteMountains, C alifornia ......................... 233

Petrology of the St. Francois Mountainsbatholith, Missouri................................. 138

Petrology of two zoned scapolite skarns . . 152Petrology of Upper Cenozoic basalts of the

western Snake River Plain, Idaho . . . 168 Phase equilibria in the Ag-As-S system . . 140 Phase equilibrium studies bearing on the

limestone assimilation hypothesis . . . 182 Phase relations and mineral assemblages in

the Ag-Bi-Pb-S system ..........................38Phosphorite in Georgia continental shelf

sediments ............................................. 129Photogeologic interpretation of structure ia

the Amazon b a s in .................................210Phylomorphogenic trends in muscle-scar

development in three subfamilies ofO stracoda................ .... 75

Physical and chemical changes during zeolitization of vitric tuffs and lava flows,Nevada Test S i t e .................................286

Physical and topographic factors as relatedto short-period wind n o i s e .................333

Physiography and glacial geology of Burleigh County, south-central North Dakota . . 291

Physiography of Marie Byrd Land, Ant­arctica ...................................................... 10

Plane flow of viscous matrix with an interned layer compressed between long rectangu­lar parallel rigid plates: A geologic applica­tion and a potential viscosimeter indistorted r o c k s ......................................179

Plant transfer and ensuing change inregional agricultural econom y.............317

Plate growth in platycrinid crinoids . . . 109Pleistocene lakes in the Great Basin . . . 230Pleistocene mammals and stratigraphy of

Big Bone Lick State Park, Kentucky . 262 Pleistocene mollusks from Santa Barbara

Island and their biostratigraphic implica­tions ......................................................... 235

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362 ABSTRACTS

Pleistocene pluvial lakes o f E l Paso, Texas,a r e a ............................................................... 134

Polymetamorphism of Precambrian rocks in the southwestern Wind River Mountains,Wyoming ...................................................286

Portable strain meter with continuous ihter-ferometric c a lib ra t io n ..............................328

Possible geologic significance of recently discovered threshold gradient require­ment for water flow in clay systems. . . 15 1

Possible late Tertiary glaciation, JonesMountains, A n tarctica ..............................144

Possible petrogenic significance and mag­netic properties of oxidized zones in anIcelandic olivine b a sa lt ..............................237

Possible relationship between color loss in hyacinth zircons and meteoritic impact . 193

Possible tectonic origin for “ Cryptoexplo­sion” structures: Wells Creek structure,T e n n e s se e ...................................................253

Possible window in Elk Range thrust sheetnear Aspen, C o lo r a d o ..............................277

Post-lithiiication dolomite in the Joachim and Plattin formations (Ordovician),northern Arkansas...................................... 59

Potassium-argon ages of magnetite-bearing ultramafic complexes in southeasternA la s k a ........................................................... 94

Potential industrial clays in southeasternA la b a m a ....................................................... 243

Precambrian fossils and their distribution . 8Precambrian gabbroic dikes and sills in the

southern Wind River Mountains, Wyo­ming ...................................... .....................297

Precambrian geochronology o f the north­eastern Front Range, Colorado.................127

Precambrian geology on the east flank of the Front Range near Fort Collins, Colorado 277

Precambrian glacial environment of the Gowganda Formation at Lake Timagami,Ontario, C a n a d a ....................................148

Precambrian metamorphic and plutonic rocks in the Sierra Madre, CarbonCounty, W yom ing.................................292

Precambrian Metazoan fossils from theShaler group, Victoria Island, CanadianArchipelago..............................................107

Precambrian Sherman Granite ring-dike complex near Virginia Dale, Colorado . 283

Precambrian syenites of northern LosAngeles County, C a lifo rn ia ................ 228

Precambrian taconite iron formation: Aspecial type of san d sto n e.....................108

Predictions and findings, Straight Creektunnel pilot bore, C o lo rad o ................ 139

Prehistoric springs and geochronology o f Blackwater No. 1 locality, New Mexico 285

Preliminary investigation o f earth tremors generated by Old Faithful geyser . . . 333

Pre-Pennsylvanian stratigraphy o f the south­ern San Juan Mountain a r e a ..............305

Pre-Pennsylvanian tectonic elements in the San Juan Mountains, southwestern Colo­rado .............................................................271

Pre-Tertiary stratigraphy and structure of the Silver Peak region, southwesternN e v a d a .................................................... 296

Prevalence of basically straight longitudinalprofiles in graded stream s........................27

Pre-Vashon Pleistocene sequence in the cen­tral Puget Lowland, Washington . . . 201

Pre-Wisconsin glaciations in Kentucky . . 2 6 1 Principal-components analysis and its appli­

cation in large-scale correlation studies . 104Principles o f piston coring fine-grained sedi­

ments with minimum deformation . . . 136 Problematical organism from the Lower

Ordovician (El Paso Group) o f WestT e x a s ........................................................... 177

Prograde formation of muscovite pseu- domorphs after staurolite and the forma­tion of large megacrysts of muscovite . . 206

Program for routine location of T-phasesources in the P acific .................................. 343

Propagation of short-period S waves to tele-seismic distances.......................................... 325

Proposed source area for some Keweenawanrocks, northeastern M innesota.................58

PS converted waves from earthquakes and large underground explosions at epicentraldistances o f 2000-10,000 k m .................339

Quantitative study o f the oxidation o f coal from Christian County, Illinois . . . . 17

Quasi steady-state o f alluvial fans . . . . 209 Quaternary geology and geomorphic history

of the southeastern portion o f the CanonCity Embayment, Colorado..................... 85

Quick clay movements, Anchorage, Alaska . 87Radiation damage in zircon and apatite

measured by electron spin resonance, a po­tential geologic dating method . . . . 1 9 1

Radiation o f body waves from a near-surfaces o u r c e ...................................... .....................328

Radioactive age dates o f porphyry copper deposits in western United States. . . . 1 4 1

Radiocarbon dating o f Recent sediments o fSan Francisco Bay C alifo rn ia .................303

Rare concretion from the Eagle Ford Shaleof Dallas, T e x a s ...................................... .... 256

Ratio o f total CO2 to calcium in Tertiary andQuaternary oceans.............................. 18

Rays, wave fronts, and travel times o f elastic waves in tangentially isotropic homo­geneous spherical shells ................. .... 341

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TITLE IN D EX 363

Rb-Sr dating o f metasedimentary rocks ofthe Animikie Group of Minnesota . . . 126

Rb-Sr study 01 the Ammonoosuc Volcanics- Monson Gneiss problem, New England . 19

Rb-Sr whole-rock age of the Traveler and Kineo Rhyolites, Maine, and its bearing on the duration of the Early Devonian . 15

Reactions o f alkalic zeolites at low tempera­tures in sedimentary deposits .................74

Realms of deposition in an Oregon estuary . 212 Recent developments in the geomagnetic

polarity............................................................41Recent faulting in south Florida . . . . . 264 Recent geological and geophysical studies of

the Flynn Creek structure, Tennessee . 261 Recent ostracode biofacies o f the G u lf of

California and western Central America 17 1 Recent versus relict sediment transport pro­

cesses on the Scotian Shelf, Canada . . . 164 Reconnaissance o f potential bedrock aquifers

in western Kane County, Utah . . . . 284 Reconnaissance physical dating of plutons in

Elko County, Nevada, and vicinity. . . 199 Reconnaissance study of some western

Canadian lead-zinc d ep o sits..................... 54Rectilinear motion detection (REM O D E) 342 Regional aspects o f structure and age o f rocks

o f the Medicine Bow Mountains, Wyom­ing ................................................................ 287

Regional chemical variations in the Southern California batholith across the San Andreas and San Jacinto faults: Prelimi­nary estim ate ...............................................194

Regional features o f Precambrian rocks innorth-central C o lo rad o ..............................304

Regional lithostratigraphic analysis of Paleocene and Eocene rocks o f Florida 31

Regional mapping in northern Baja Cali­fornia ...............................................................204

Regional patterns o f cross-laminae and convolutions in a single bed, west-centralNew Y o r k ................................................... 170

Relationship between nickel mineralization and overlying soil composition in the Cuyamaca Gabbro, San Diego County,C a l i f o r n ia ................................................... 199

Relationship between the Whiteface and Marcy anorthosite facies in the vicinity of Whiteface Mountain, northeasternAdirondacks, New Y o r k ..........................39

Relationship o f Carolina Bays to regionalgeom orphology...........................................175

Relationship o f coke microstructure to coalr a n k ................................................................44

Relationship o f Front Range to Denverbasin, C o lo ra d o ...........................................305

Relationship o f sulphide deposits to age- group boundaries in the Canadian Shield 45

Relationship of thrust faults to plunging anticlines in south-central Pennsylvania 81

Relationships between plutons and lampro- phyric dikes in the foothills of the centralSierra Nevada, California...............201

Relationships of erosional surfaces to glacial deposits along the southwest flank of theCrazy Mountains, M ontana...........276

Reliability of visual estimates of grainabundance....................................... 245

Residual soils—some engineering character­istics ....................................................137

Review of spectral an a ly sis ...............343Revision of some Niagaran correlations in

the standard Silurian section of NewYork S t a te ........................................191

Reworked fossils in the Cretaceous succes­sion of Sacramento Valley, California . . 127

Rhode Island formation as rock excavation,Massachusetts.................................... 55

Rhomboporoid Bryozoa from the type Keyser Limestone, at Keyser, WestV irg in ia ............................................248

Ring dike fault complex with a vertically displaced 3000-foot central core just northof Yellowstone National P a r k .......143

Rock mechanics for Dworshak Dam,northern I d a h o ................................112

Rock-fragment flows at Mount Rainier,Washington........................................281

Rock-mechanics instrumentation and geology, Straight Creek Tunnel pilotbore 68

Rocks of the Basement complex at Tonsina on the north margin of the ChugachRange, Alaska................................... 225

Role of geology in space research . . . . 46Role of mixing of grain-size modes in dis­

tinguishing between sedimentary envir­onments, south Texas coast ............ 74

Role of the photogeologist in materials in­ventories in Kansas ................................ 164

Sa phase from the Hindu Kush earthquakeof July 6, 1962............................................. 324

Salt Lake Group in the Southern Portneuf and Northern Malad Ranges, Idaho . . 87

Saturated fatty acids and normal paraffin hydrocarbons in Lower Cretaceous sedi­ments .........................................................92

Scheme to calculate earthquake energy on alayered E arth .............................................340

Scolithus—A profuse Cambrian fossil . . . 254 Screening mineralogical chemical data by

factor analysis.............................................183Seafaring in the Indian tradition................ 317Secondary flowage features in welded

pyroclastic flows, Grand Canary, CanaryIslands.........................................................149

Sedimentary history of Upper Ordovician

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364 ABSTRACTS

geosynclinal rocks and the genetic signi­ficance of graded bedding, Girvan, Scot­land .............................................................83

Sedimentary structures in the late Cretace­ous Rosario Formation, San DiegoCounty, California................................ .... 202

Sediments of the northern part of the Mid­dle America Trench oif western Mexico . 142

Seismic and gravity study in Grand TetonNational Park and v ic in ity .................... 273

Seismic studies of the earth’s crust . . . . 335 Seismic surveying with firecrackers . . . . 245 Seismicity and deep structure of the Tonga-

Fiji r e g io n ................................................ 172Seismicity of island arcs . ..........................332Seismicity of Nevada ................................ 331Seismicity of O k la h o m a............................ 331Seismicity of Tennessee ............................257Seismicity of the island of Hawaii . . . . 331Semi-notes—A student a i d ........................ 119Shear folding in Northwestern Ontario,

Canada .....................................................18Shock damage of minerals in shattercones . 156Shock sedimentology.................................... 315Significance of shell protein variation to en­

vironment and molluscan phylogeny . . 44Significance of third-order and peripherally

split septa in Ditoecholasma, a Silurianrugose coral................................................ 170

Silicate-molybdenite paragenesis in graniticrocks ........................................................ 125

Silicified Ordovician brachiopods fromK en tu c k y ................................................ 258

Simple digitizer for seismograms................328Snow avalanches in Gallatin County, Mon­

tana, during May 1964 ............................ 306Soda pyroxenes in the glaucophane schist

facies, California........................................ 53Solid solutions of scheelite with other

R11W04 type tungstates........................ 30Solution brecciation process........................165Some aspects of the crystallization and dif­

ferentiation of the Michikamau an- orthositic intrusion, Labrador, Canada . 51

Some geological implications of equilibrium between graphite and a C-H-O fluid phase at high temperatures and pressures . . . 59

Some neglected but significant aspects oflead isotope r a tio s .................................... 20

Some relationships of Precambrian and Laramide structure, Laramie basin,Wyoming ................................................ 275

Some stratigraphic relationships within the New York City group in WestchesterCounty, New Y o r k ................................ 70

Source materials and environmental condi­tions in certain Florida swamps.............. 162

Spectral density levels of short-period

seismic noise in continental physiographicenvironm ents...............................................334

Spectrum o f P waves radiating from pointsources in a layered m e d iu m .................. 328

Speculations on endemism in terrestrial westcoast Paleogene mammals . ..................... 314

Spheroidal and torsional oscillations re­corded on the strain seismometers atBergen Park, C olorado..............................337

Spicule structure of Dystactospongia madi- sonensis Foerste from the Ohio Ordovician 261

Spring Creek and its delta, Shasta County,California ...................................................224

St. Peter Sandstone in eastern-centralK e n t u c k y ...................................................250

Stability limit o f analcite-quartz at 1000bars total pressure......................................78

Statistical theory of Horton’s law of streamn u m b e rs....................................................... 154

Strain energy, strain release, and vertical extent o f faulting for the Alaskan earth­quake of March 28, 1964 .......................... 325

Stratigraphic and structural relationships in the Mare Humorum-Mare Nubium regionof the M o o n ...............................................303

Stratigraphy and correlation o f the Pre­cambrian Belt Supergroup o f the southern Lewis and Clark Range, Montana . . . 16 1

Stratigraphy and structure of the Wades- boro Triassic Basin of North Carolina . 133

Stratigraphy o f the Cambrian and Ordovi­cian rocks of the southern MosquitoRange, Colorado .....................................270

Stratigraphy o f the continental margin offeastern F l o r i d a ......................................... 148

Stratigraphy of the Devonian system of the White River Plateau, Colorado . . . . 2 7 8

Structural engineering aspects of the March28, 1964, Alaskan earth q u ake............... 334

Structural framework o f north part of Barker Quadrangle, Little Belt Moun­tains, Montana ......................................... 306

Structural geology of the Blount Springs inlier, Blount County, Alabama . . . . 259

Structural studies on the New Quebec and Lac Couture craters, New Quebec,Canada ....................................................... 64

Structure and evolution o f Ordoviciancolonial co ra ls .............................................. 56

Structure and petrography of some diabase dikes in central South Carolina . . . . 260

Structure and stratigraphy in the Esquipulas area of southeastern Guatemala . . . . 23

Structure o f Kilauea Volcano, Hawaii, from seismic-refraction measurements . . . . 336

Structure o f the crust and upper mantle in the Alps from the phase velocity of Ray­leigh w a v e s ...................................................335

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TITLE IN D EX 365

Structure o f the Precambrian crystalline complex, Storm Mountain-Big Thompson area, Larimer County, Colorado . . . . 276

Structure o f the southern Grapevine Moun­tains, Death Valley, California . . . . 226

Study ofsomesynthetic a p a tite s ................. 36Subaerial diagenesis in reef-building corals

from the Pliocene-Pleistocene o f Bar­bados, West In d ies...................................... 103

Submarine lavas from the east rift zone ofMauna Kea, Hawaii . .............................. 218

Subsolidus relationships in the systemA1F3-Al203-Si02-H20 ................. .... 142

Succession o f spore and pollen assemblages in theRedstoneseamofWestVirginia . . . 69

Sulfur and sulfur bacteria in some MississippiSound m u d s ...............................................260

Sulfurization in nature: Two examples . . 1 1 5 Surveying the training o f secondary earth

science teachersin New York State . . . 38Synthesis and stability of staurolite . . . 63Synthesis and stability relationships of fer-

rotremolite, Ca2Fe5++Sis022(0H )2. . . 52Synthetic seismograms of P waves propagat­

ing in solid wedges with free boundaries 329 System C a 0 'M g 0 -S i0 2-C 0 2'H 20 : kimber-

lites and carbonatites..................................58System diopside-akermanite-nepheline. . . 1 2 1 System of Na20-Al203-Si02-C0 2 : liquid

immiscibility caused by increasing PCO2 90 Talc-minnesotaitesystem at 1 and 2 kb. . . 57 Taxonomic, ecologic, and evolutionarysignif-

icance of interior shell morphology in the Inoceramidae (Mesozoic bivalvia) . 86

Technical aspects of ground-water adminis­tration ............................................................119

Technique for sampling in a paleoecologicalstudy................................................................256

Tectonic emplacement of a glaucophane schist block, Santa Barbara County,California ...................................................208

Tectonic emplacement of the Burro Mountain ultramafk body, southern Santa Lucia Mountains, California . . . 196

Tectonic inferences from gravity and magnetic data near New Madrid, Missouri 336

Tectonics and stratigraphy of the WestCoast of Newfoundland ..........................40

Telescopic evidence of the absence of water erosion and sedimentation on Mars andsome resulting m in e r a lo g y ..................... 319

Temperature dependence of M g arid Sr inCrassostrea ca lc ites...................................... 95

Tertiary geologic evolution o f northernMarkagunt Plateau, U ta h .......................... 5

Textural parameters of beach and dune sands 60 Textural trends of continental margin sedi­

ments off the central coast o f Oregon . 24

Th230/U 234 chronology of high sea stands inthe Mediterranean S e a ............................ 176

The American s c e n e ....................................313The Cambrian-Ordovician wedge edges of

south-central New Mexico . . . . . . 290The geologist and water s u p p ly ................ 269The Martian yellow c lo u d s ........................ 316The mithan {Bos frontalis) in culture and

history........................................................ 317The role of cultural origin in the variable

geographical impact of three centuries ofBritish settlement overseas....................308

Theoretical deposition patterns of wind-born volcanic ash .................................... 71

Theoretical seismicity....................................330Thorium isotopes in oceanic carbonates of

the Southern O ce a n ................................80Three Precambrian plutonic rock units,

central Sawatch Range, Colorado. . . . 272 Thrust contact of Colebrook schist over

Myrtle Group, southwestern Oregon . . 7Time of formation of some mountain roots 33 Titanaugites and the join CaMgSi20e-

CaTiAl20 6 ................................................ 189Topographic analysis of the Basin and

Range province........................................99Trace fossils as environment indicators in

the Upper Cretaceous of east-central Utah 81 Trace-element studies in iron meteorites. . 35Transmission of Rayleigh waves at a corner 329 Travel times, velocities, and amplitudes of

body phases ............................................323Trends in remote sensing research sponsored

by the Geography Branch of the Officeof Naval Research....................................315

Ultrahigh vacuum adhesion of rock powders 316 Ultramicrochemical method of carbohydrate

analysis for geological sam ples................122Ultrastructure of the septa of scleractinian

corals............................................................187Unusual characteristics of carbonatites in the

Arkansas River Canyon area, Colorado . 77Unusual zeolite assemblage, Bowie, Arizona 145 Upper Cambrian archaeocyathid from

A ntarctica................................................183Upper Cretaceous volcanic glass from

western M on tan a....................................301Upper Devonian foraminifera from the Lime

Creek Formation of north-central Iowa . 178 Upper Jurassic and lower Cretaceous dino-

flagellates and acritarchs from the west side of the Sacramento Valley, California 236

Upper Ordovician Bryozoa in Kentucky . 252 Upper Triassic glass from Hound Island,

Keku Strait, southeastern Alaska . . . 196 Use of analog model to predict streamflow

depletion, Blue River Basin, Nebraska . 51Use of ash skeletographs and profiles to show

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366 ABSTRACTS

vertical variation of ash in a coal seam,Pike County, Indiana.................................. 16

Use of reciprocity theorem for obtainingradiation p a tte rn s ...................................... 330

Utility of chemical and instrumental analyses 65 Validity o f comparisons between Late

Paleozoic and Quaternary glaciations . . 16Variation in gold content of minerals of the

Marysville quartz diorite stock, Montana 22 Variations in benthic communities of estu-

arine foraminifera, V irg in ia ..................... 50Velocity filtering o f seismic core phases . . 326 Vent location by investigation of lateral and

vertical characteristics o f a welded ash-flow t u f f .......................................................206

Volcanic geology o f the Quezaltenangoregion, G uatem ala......................................241

Volcanic vent complex at Point o f Rocks,Gallatin Range, M ontana......................... 280

Wall structure and the classification of Cenozoic planktonic foraminifera . . . 213

Water tower apparatus to replace bromo- form in the separation of zircons . . . . 73

Wave parameters characterizing beach en­vironments ...................................................62

Wells Creek Basin cryptoexplosive structure, Srewart and Houston counties, Tennessee :Progress r e p o r t .......................................... 266

Whole-rock Rb-Sr age o f the cupriferous parting shale member o f the NonesuchFormation, Michigan ..............................55

Whole-rock rubidium-strontium age of theSilurian-Devonian b o u n d a ry ................. 61

Wind-formed pebble ripples in Antarctica . 160 Wind-induced vibrations and building modes 334 Wollastonite in rodingites from Cape San

Martin, Monterrey County, California . 66World-wide seismicity, 1963 ......................... 330Zonation o f calcareous zooplankton in the

Scotia Sea and Drake P a ssa g e ................. 32Zoning and twinning in metamorphic

plagioclases................................................... 279Zoogeographic significance of Capybaras in

A r iz o n a ........................................................3 13

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