ILLUSTRATIONS

Plates.
Map [1.]Pleistocene cetaceans in eastern North America.
[2.]Pleistocene Pinnipedia in eastern North America.
[3.]Pleistocene Xenarthra in eastern North America.
[4.]Pleistocene Xenarthra in Florida.
[5.]Pleistocene mastodons in eastern North America.
[6.]Eastern New York, western Massachusetts, and Connecticut, showing relation of mastodon localities to areas of sea-level in Late Wisconsin.
[6A.]Pleistocene mastodons in New Jersey.
[7.]Pleistocene mastodons in Ohio.
[8.]Pleistocene mastodons in Michigan.
[9.]Pleistocene mastodons in Indiana.
[10.]Pleistocene mastodons in Florida.
[11.]Elephas primigenius in eastern North America.
[12.]Elephas columbi in eastern North America.
[13.]Elephas columbi in Florida.
[14.]Elephas imperator in southeastern United States.
[15.]Elephas imperator in Florida.
[16.]Elephas sp. indet. in eastern North America.
[17.]Pleistocene horses in eastern North America.
[18.]Pleistocene horses in Florida.
[19.]Pleistocene tapirs in eastern North America.
[20.]Pleistocene peccaries in eastern North America.
[21.]Pleistocene camels in eastern North America.
[22.]Pleistocene species of Odocoileus in eastern North America.
[23.]Cervus canadensis in Pleistocene of eastern North America.
[24.]Rangifer in Pleistocene of eastern North America.
[25.]Pleistocene musk-oxen in eastern North America.
[26.]Extinct bisons in Pleistocene of eastern North America.
[27.]Bison bison in Pleistocene of eastern North America.
[28.]Castoroides in eastern North America.
[29.]Castoroides in Ohio.
[30.]Castoroides in Indiana.
[31.]Areas in New York, Connecticut, Massachusetts, and Vermont occupied by water at sea-level in Late Wisconsin stage.
[32.]Isobases of Late Glacial uplift.
[33.]J. W. Spencer’s view of preglacial drainage of the region of the Great Lakes.
[34.]Wisconsin glacier in New York, lakes Newberry and Maumee, and localities of mastodons.
[35.]Glacial map of Ohio.
[36.]Distribution of Pleistocene mammals in Ohio.
[37.]Glacial map of Indiana.
[38.]Glacial map of Illinois. Shows also localities of Pleistocene vertebrates.
[39.]Coastal plain of North Carolina, with localities of Pleistocene animals and plants.
[40.]Sketch map of Skidaway Island, near Savannah, Georgia.
[41.]Bigbone Lick and vicinity.
Text-figures.
Fig. 1.Geological section of Twin Creek, near Beecher, Will Co., Illinois[108]
2.Section across gully at Whitehall, Wisconsin[242]
3.Region about Toronto, Ontario[282]
4.Eastern Ontario, showing limit of marine and fresh-water beaches[286]
5.South shore-line of the Champlain sea[287]
6.Preglacial drainage of the Upper Ohio[293]
7.Geologic section of Fish House beds at Camden, New Jersey[302]
8.Vicinity of Trenton, New Jersey, showing distribution of the Trenton gravels[305]
9.Geologic sections at Trenton, New Jersey[305]
10.Northern Pennsylvania, showing glaciated areas[309]
11.Section of Port Kennedy bone cave at time of first exploration, 1871[318]
12.Section of Port Kennedy bone cave at time of last exploration, 1896[318]
13.Metatarsal of Ovis sp. indet., from Kendall Co., Illinois[338]
14.Relation of the driftless area to the surrounding glaciated areas[342]
15.Diagram showing the supposed terraces of the Maryland coastal plain[345]
16.Section across Potomac River near Big Pool, Maryland, showing gravel-covered terraces[347]
17.Generalized section across Allegheny Valley at Parkers Landing, W. Va.[349]
18.Tooth of Hydrochoerus pinckneyi[365]
19.Jaw and tooth of a wolf from Charleston, South Carolina[366]
20.Coastal plain of Georgia[369]
21.Geologic section from north to south through the phosphate deposits of Florida[377]
22.Geological map of Mississippi embayment[388]
23.County map of Tennessee, to show where Pleistocene fossils have been found[395]
24.Vertical section of Bigbone Cave, Elroy, Van Buren Co., Tennessee[398]
25.Section on bank of Tennessee River at Nashville[400]