The Fourteenth Annual Field Conference of the Kansas Geological Society ended Sunday night, September 1, 1940, near Centennial, Wyoming, high on the eastern slope of the Medicine Bow Mountains. Here, 10,000 feet above sea-level, the conferees spent the night as guests of the University of Wyoming’s Science Camp. On Monday morning, about 35 geologists3 took part in a meeting to discuss problems of Permian correlation between the Rocky Mountains and the Mid-Continent—more particularly, in the region of Wyoming, the Black Hills, and Nebraska, and Kansas. In the following paragraphs is a brief account of the origin of this correlation...
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