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SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM
A LIST AND INDEX OF THE PUBLICATIONS OF THE UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM (1875-1946)
Compiled in the Editorial Division Smithsonian Institution
[published as a part of the official observance of the one-hundredth
ANNIVERSARY OF THE FOUNDING OF THE SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION]
UNITED STATES
GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE WASHINGTON : 1947
For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U. S. Government Printing Office Washington 25, D. C. Price $1.00
IT is chiefly by the publications of the Institution that its fame is to be spread through the world, and the monument most befitting the name of Smithson erected to his memory.
Joseph Henry
CONTENTS
Page
Preface . 1
Annual reports . 3
Bulletins . 12
Contributions from the U. S. National Herbarium . 28
Special bulletins . 38
Proceedings . 39
Circulars . 177
Classified index . 179
A LIST AND INDEX OF THE PUBLICATIONS OF THE UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM (1875-1946)
Compiled in the Editorial Division, Smithsonian Institution
PREFACE
ONLY once before has there been issued a complete list, with index, of the publications of the National Museum. This was entitled “A List of the Publications of the United States National Museum (1875-1900)” and was published in 1902 as U. S. National Museum Bulletin No. 51. It was com¬ piled by Randolph I. Geare, chief of the Division of Correspondence and Documents, and aggregated 168 printed pages. A supplement was issued four years later, bringing the list through the year 1906.
Forty years have thus elapsed, and it is therefore felt that the present work is long overdue. Inasmuch as publication (i.e., the “diffusion of knowl¬ edge”) is one of the two prime functions of the Smithsonian Institution, another complete list is especially appropriate this year (1946) when the one-hundredth anniversary of the Institution’s founding is being observed. Since Bulletin 51 has long been out of print, the present list has been made all-inclusive, covering the entire 71 -year span of Museum publication.
The publications of the National Museum have appeared in five series as follows: the Annual Reports, the Bulletins, the Proceedings, the Special Bulletins, and the Circulars. The Reports previous to 1905 were large volumes containing, in addition to the administrative reports, papers based upon the Museum collections and upon its explorations and researches. Examples of these are such monumental contributions as Donaldson’s mono¬ graph on the George Catlin Indian Gallery, Hornaday’s “Extinction of the American Bison,” Goode’s “The Museums of the Future,” and Ridgway’s “The Humming Birds.” Since 1905 the Reports have been without the sup¬ plemental papers but have continued the lists of all the accessions received each year by the Museum.
The first of the Bulletins was issued in 1875. This series contains separate publications of monographic proportions — systematic treatises, faunal works, reports of expeditions, catalogs of type specimens and special collections — and in all fields of the Museum’s scientific work. To date, 193 Bulletins have been issued, some of them in several volumes (as Nos. 47, 50, 71, 82, 100, 104). In this series also are included the Contributions from the United States National Herbarium, now in their thirtieth volume, containing papers relating to the botanical collections of the Museum. In all, therefore, the Bulletin series aggregates nearly 300 separate volumes.
Of the Proceedings, begun in 1878, 96 volumes have been published, comprising a total of 3,204 separate papers. This series, for the most part,
1
9
BULLETIN 193, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM
contains technical papers in biology, geology, and anthropology, based on the Museum’s collections in these fields. Most of them are taxonomic in char¬ acter, since one of the principal tasks of Museum curators is to name and arrange in systematic order the specimens and objects under their care. Copies of each paper, in pamphlet form, are distributed as published to libraries and scientific organizations and to specialists and others interested in the different subjects. The dates at which these separate papers are published are recorded in the table of contents of each of the completed volumes.
No Circular has been issued since 1929, and the quarto series of Special Bulletins stopped with the final part of No. 4 in 1915.
There have been three editors of the National Museum publications: A. Howard Clark, who served from 1879 to 1896; Marcus Benjamin, from 1896 to 1931 ; and Paul H. Oehser, the present editor, who succeeded Dr. Benjamin in 1931.
The original distribution of all Museum publications is designed to make them as widely available as possible, in view of the relatively small editions printed. They are sent free to libraries and scientific establishments throughout the world, to specialists in the particular fields of science involved, and to others interested who may request copies. Small editions of the Bul¬ letins and Reports are printed for sale by the Superintendent of Documents, United States Government Printing Office. Only the most recent publica¬ tions are now available, the earlier numbers (except in rare instances) being long out of print. Information as to the availability of any particular number may be obtained by addressing the Division of Publications, Smithsonian Institution, Washington 25, D. C.
The present list and index have been compiled in the Editorial Division of the Smithsonian Institution, under the direction of Webster P. True, chief, and Paul H. Oehser, assistant chief. The classified index of titles is the work of Miss Gladys O. Visel, editorial clerk; while Mrs. Phyllis W. Prescott and Miss Ruth B. MacManus have aided in assembling the list. Lester E. Commerford, chief of the Division of Publications, has been most helpful in supplying dates and other information.
Scientific bibliographies and indexes rarely need apology, since they are the acknowledged indispensable tools of scientists, teachers, students, libra¬ rians, and editors. The present list is no exception, the only regret being that it was not found practicable at this time to list under one cover all the publica¬ tions of the Smithsonian Institution. Such a comprehensive list would include the publications of the Smithsonian proper, the Bureau of American Ethnol- ogy, the Astrophysical Observatory, the Freer Gallery of Art, and the National Collection of Fine Arts, as well as those of the National Museum. In lieu of that, the present work is offered, and those who are familiar with matters of scientific literature will know that it represents a notable achieve¬ ment in the “diffusion of knowledge among men” and one of which James Smithson, founder of the Smithsonian Institution, would have been truly proud.
ANNUAL REPORTS
Report of the Assistant Director of the United States National Museum, G. Brown
Goode, for the year 1 8 8 1 ,x From the Smithsonian Report for 1881. Pp. 1-79.
Report of the Assistant Director of the United States National Museum, G. Brown
Goode, for the year 1882. From the Smithsonian Report for 1882. Pp. 1-145.
Report of the Assistant Director and of the curators of the United States National Museum for the year 1883. From the Smithsonian Report for 1883. Pp. 1-200. Report of the United States National Museum for the year 1884. (Pt. 2 of the Annual Report of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution for the year 1884.)
Pt. 1. Report upon condition and progress of the Museum. By G. Brown Goode. Fp. 1-72.
Pt. 2. Reports of the curators. Pp. 73-276.
Pt. 3. Scientific papers:
No. 1. Throwing-sticks in the National Museum. By Otis T. Mason. Pp. 279-291, 17 pis.
No. 2. Basket-work of the North American aborigines. By Otis T. Mason. Pp. 291-306, 64 pis.
No. 3. A study of the Eskimo bows in the U. S. National Museum. By John Murdoch. Pp. 307-316, 12 pis.
No. 4. On a spotted dolphin apparently identical with the Prodelphinus doris of Gray. By Frederick W. True. Pp. 317-324, 6 pis.
No. 5. The Florida muskrat ( Neofiber alleni True). By Frederick W. True. Pp. 325-330, 3 pis.
No. 6. On the West Indian seal ( Monachus tropicalis Gray). By Frederick W. True and F. A. Lucas. Pp. 331-335, 3 pis.
Pt. 4. Bibliography of the U. S. National Museum for the year 1884. Pp. 337-381. Pt. 5. List of accessions to the U. S. National Museum during 1884. Pp. 383-428. Report of the United States National Museum for the half year ending June 30, 1885.* * (Pt. 2 of the Annual Report of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Insti¬ tution to July 1885.)
Pt. 1. Report upon condition and progress of the Museum. By G. Brown Goode. Pp. 1-54.
Pt. 2. Reports of the curators. Pp. 55-147.
Pt. 3. Bibliography of the Museum. Pp. 149-174.
Pt. 4. List of accessions with descriptive notes and indices. Pp. 175-243.
Pt. 5. The George Catlin Indian Gallery. By Thomas Donaldson. Pp. i-vii, 1-939, 142 pis.
Report of the United States National Museum for the year ending June 30, 1886. (Pt. 2 of the Annual Report of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution for the year ending June 30, 1886.)
Pt. 1. Report upon condition and progress of the Museum. By G. Brown Goode. Pp. 1-83.
Pt. 2. Reports of the curators. Pp. 87-252.
Pt. 3. Papers describing and illustrating the collections in the U. S. National Museum.
No. 1. The meteorite collection in the U. S. National Museum; a catalogue of meteorites represented November 1, 1886. By F. W. Clarke. Pp. 255-265, 1 pi.
’ This was the first report on the operations of the National Museum printed under a separate cover. The reports of the Museum for 1881, 1882, and 1883 were first printed in the reports of the Institution for those years and were afterward issued in pamphlet form. The Museum Report for 1884 was the first one to occupy a separate volume of the Smithsonian Report and to be accompanied by papers based upon the collections.
* This volume covers only the first six months of the year 1885, since it was decided to issue future reports by fiscal year instead of by calendar year.
s
4
BULLETIN 193, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM
No. 2. Gem collection of the U. S. National Mu»eum. By George F. Kunz. Pp. 267-275.
No. 3. The collection of building and ornamental stones in the U. S. National Museum: A hand-book and catalogue. By George P. Merrill. Pp. 277-64S, 9 pis.
No. 4. List of specimens of textile fibers and fabrics in the reference series of the Section of Textile Industries of the U. S. National National Museum, June 30, 1886. By Romyn Hitchcock. Pp. 649-655.
No. 5. Preparation of microscopical mounts of vegetable textile fibers. By Romyn Hitchcock. Pp. 657-658.
No. 6. How to collect mammal skins for purposes of study and for mount¬ ing. By William T. Hornaday. Pp. 659-670, 9 figs.
Pt. 4. Bibliography of the Museum. Pp. 671-699.
Pt. 5. List of accessions with descriptive notes and indices. Pp. 701-811.
Report of the United States National Museum for the year ending June 30, 1887. (Pt. 2 of the Annual Report of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution for the year ending June 30, 1887.)
Pt 1. Report upon condition and progress of the Museum. By G. Brown Goode. Pp. 1-62.
Pt. 2. Reports of the curators. Pp. 65-158, 2 figs., 1 pi.
Pt. 3. Papers illustrative of the collections in the U. S. National Museum.
No. 1. Cradles of the American aborigines. By Otis T. Mason. Pp. 161- 212, 45 figs.
No. 2. Notes on the artificial deformation of children among savage and civilized peoples. [With bibliography.] By J. H. Porter. Pp. 213- 235.
No. 3. The human beast of burden. By Otis T. Mason. Pp. 237-295, 54 figs.
No. 4. Ethno-conchology: A study of primitive money. By Robert E. C. Stearns. Pp. 297-334, 22 figs., 9 pis.
No. 5. A preliminary catalogue of the Eskimo collection in the U. S.
National Museum, arranged geographically and by uses. By T. Dix Bolles. Pp. 335-365.
No. 6. The extermination of the American bison, with a sketch of its dis¬ covery and life history. By William T. Hornaday. Pp. 367-548, 21 pis., 1 map.
No. 7. The preservation of museum specimens from insects and the effects of dampness. By Walter Hough. Pp. 549-558, 4 figs.
Pt. 4. Bibliography of the Museum. Pp. 561-594.
Pt. 5. List of accessions, with descriptive notes. Pp. 597-725.
Report of the United States National Museum for the year ending June 30, 1888. (Pt. 2 of the Annual Report of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution for the year ending June 30, 1888.)
Pt. 1. Report upon condition and progress of the Museum. By G. Brown Goode. Pp. 1-84.
Pt. 2. Reports of the curators. Pp. 85-222.
Pt. 3. Papers describing and illustrating the collections in the U. S. National Museum.
No. 1. The Coast Indians of southern Alaska and northern British Columbia.
By Albert P. Niblack. Pp. 225-386, 360 figs, (most of them appear¬ ing on 70 pis., a few in the text), 2 charts.
No. 2. A catalogue of the Hippisley collection of Chinese porcelains: With a sketch of the history of ceramic art in China. By Alfred E. Hippisley. Pp. 387-491.
No. 3. The expedition to Funk Island, with observations upon the history and anatomy of the great auk. By Frederic A. Lucas. Pp. 493-529, 3 pis.
ANNUAL REPORTS
5
No. 4. Fire-making apparatus in the U. S. National Museum. By Walter Hough. Pp. 531-587, 60 figs, (some of them appearing on 8 pis.).
No. 5 The collection of Korean mortuary pottery in the U. S. National Museum. By Pierre Louis Jouy. Pp. 589-596, 5 pis., 1 map.
No. 6. A study of prehistoric anthropology. By Thomas Wilson. Pp. 597- 671, 43 figs., 20 pis.
No. 7. Ancient Indian matting — from Petit An*e Island, Louisiana. By Thomas Wilson. Pp. 673-675, 1 pi.
No. 8. Results of an inquiry as to the existence of man in North America during the Paleolithic period of the Stone Age. By Thomas Wil¬ son. Pp. 677-702, 14 figs.
Pt. 4. Bibliography of the Museum. Pp. 705-734.
Pt. 5. List of accessions. Pp. 737-819.
Report of the United States National Museum for the year ending June 30, 1889.
Pt. 1. Report upon condition and progress of the Museum. By G. Brown Goode. Pp. 1-277.
Pt. 2. Reports of the curators. Pp. 281-423, 11 pis.
Pt. 3. Papers describing and illustrating the collections in the U. S. National Museum.
No. 1. The museums of the future. By G. Brown Goode. Pp. 427-445.
No. 2. Te Pito Te Henua, or Easter Island. By William J. Thomson. Pp. 447-552, 20 figs., 49 pis.
No. 3. Aboriginal skin-dressing; a study based on material in the U. S. National Museum. By Otis T. Mason. Pp. 553-589, 33 pis.
No. 4. The puma, or American lion ( Fells concolor of Linnaeus). By Frederick W. True. Pp. 591-608, 1 pi.
No. 5. Animals recently extinct or threatened with extermination, as repre¬ sented in the collections of the U. S. National Museum. By Fred¬ eric A. Lucas. Pp. 609-649, 2 figs., 7 maps, 10 pis.
No. 6. The development of the American rail and track, as illustrated by the collection in the U. S. National Museum. By J. Elfreth Wat¬ kins. Pp. 651-708, 115 figs.
No. 7. Explorations in Newfoundland and Labrador in 1887, made in con¬ nection with the cruise of the U. S. Fish Commission schooner Grampus. By Frederic A. Lucas. Pp. 709-728, 1 pi.
No. 8. On a bronze Buddha in the U. S. National Museum. By Charles De Kay. Pp. 729-735, 1 pi.
Pt. 4. Bibliography of the Museum. Pp. 739-776.
Pt. 5. List of accessions. Pp. 779-843.
Appendix E, Preliminary handbook of the Department of Geology in the U. S. National Museum. Pp. 1-50.
Report of the United States National Museum for the year ending June 30, 1890.
Pt. 1. Report upon condition and progress of the Museum. By G. Brown Goode. Pp. 1-116.
Pt. 2. Reports of the curators. Pp. 119-249.
Ft. 3. Papers describing and illustrating the collections in the U. S. National Museum.
No. 1. The humming birds. By Robert Ridgway. Pp. 253-383, 47 figs., 46 pis.
No. 2. White-line engraving for relief-printing in the 15th and 16th cen¬ turies. By S. R. Koehler. Pp. 385-394, 3 figs., 4 pis.
No. 3. The methods of fire-making. By Walter Hough. Pp. 395-409, 13 figs., 1 pi.
No. 4. The ulu, or woman’s knife, of the Eskimo. By Otis T. Mason. Pp. 411-416, 21 pis.
No. 5. The ancient pit-dwellers of Yezo. By Romyn Hitchcock. Pp. 417-427, 4 figs., 8 pis.
The Ainos of Yezo, Japan. By Romyn Hitchcock. Pp. 429-502, 21 figs., 37 pis.
No. 6.
6
BULLETIN 193, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM
No. 7. Handbook for the Department of Geology in the U. S. National Museum. Part 1. Geognosy: The materials of the earth’* emit. By George P. Merrill. Pp. 503-591, 10 figs., 12 pis.
No. 8. The Catlin Collection of Indian paintings. By Washington Mat¬ thews. Pp. 593-610, 21 pis.
No. 9. The log of the Savannah. By J. Elfreth Watkins. Pp. 611-639, 6 pis. No. 10. Anthropology at the Paris Exposition in 1889. By Thomas Wilson. Pp. 641-680, 7 pis.
Pt. 4. Bibliography of the Museum. Pp. 683-716.
Pt. 5. List of accessions. Pp. 719-788.
Report of the United States National Museum for the year ending June 30, 1891.
Pt. 1. Report upon condition and progress of the Museum. By G. Brown Goode. Pp. 1-131.
Pt. 2. Reports of the curators. Pp. 135-270, 1 pi.
Pt. 3. Papers describing and illustrating the collections in the U. S. National Museum.
No. 1. The genesis of the National Museum. By G. Brown Goode. Pp. 273-380.
No. 2. Ethnological collections in the U. S. National Museum from Kilima- Njaro, East Africa. By W. L. Abbott. Pp. 381-428, 24 figs.
No. 3. The Bernadou, Allen, and Jouy Korean Collections, in the U. S.
National Museum. By Walter Hough. Pp. 429-488, 31 pis.
No. 4. Shinto, or the mythology of the Japanese. By Romyn Hitchcock. Pp. 489-509.
No. 5. The ancient burial mounds of Japan. By Romyn Hitchcock. Pp. 511-523, 31 pis.
No. 6. Some ancient relics in Japan. By Romyn Hitchcock. Fp. 525-526, 4 pis.
No. 7. Prehistoric naval architecture of the North of Europe. By George II. Boehmer. Pp. 527-647, 127 figs., 17 pis.
No. 8. First draft of a system of classification for the World’s Columbian Exposition. By G. Brown Goode. Pp. 649-735.
Pt. 4. Bibliography of the Museum. Pp. 739-764.
Pt. 5. List of accessions. Pp. 767-837.
Report of the United States National Museum for the year ending June 30, 1892.
Pt. 1. Report upon condition and progress of the Museum. By G. Brown Goode. Pp. 1-97.
Pt. 2. Report* of the curators. Fp. 101-217, 3 pis.
Pt. 3. Papers describing and illustrating the collections in the U. S. National Museum.
No. 1. Japanese wood-cutting and wood-cut printing. Communicated by T.
Tokuno, and edited by S. R. Koehler. Pp. 221-244, 5 figs., 10 pis. No. 2. The relation of biology to geological investigation. By Charles A. White. Pp. 245-368, 1 pi.
No. 3. Scientific taxidermy for museums. Based on a study of the United States Government Collections. By R. W. Shufeldt. Pp. 369-436, 83 pis.
No. 4. The shofar — its use and origin. Pp. 437-450, 4 pis.
No. 5. The Crump burial cave. (Blount County, Alabama.) By Frank Burns. Pp. 451-454, 1 pi.
No. 6. Minute stone implements from India. By Thomas Wilson. Pp. 455- 460, 2 pis.
No. 7. Comparative oology of North American birds. By R. W. Shufeldt. Pp. 461-493.
Pt. 4. Bibliography of the Museum. Pp. 497-526.
Pt. 5. List of accessions. Pp. 529-601.
Report of the United States National Museum for the year ending June 30, 1893.
Pt. 1. Report upon condition and progress of the Museum. By G. Brown Goode. Pp. 1-334, 59 pis.
ANNUAL REPORTS
7
Pt. 2. Papers describing and illustrating the collections in the U. S. National Museum.
No. 1. The poisonous snakes of North America. By Leonhard Stejneger. Pp. 339-487, 70 figs., 19 pis.
No. 2. Chinese games with dice and dominoes. By Stewart Culin. Pp. 491-537, 33 figs., 12 pis.
No. 3. The onyx marbles: Their origin, composition, and uses, both ancient and modern. By George P. Merrill. Pp. 541-585, 18 pis.
No. 4. The cowbirds. By Charles Bendire. Pp. 589-624, 3 pis.
No. 5. Primitive American armor. By Walter Hough. Pp. 627-651, 5 figs., 22 pis.
No. 6. The weapons and wings of birds. By Frederic A. Lucas. Pp. 655- 663, 8 figs., 1 pi.
No. 7. Notes on the ethnology of Tibet. [Based on collections in the U. S.
National Museum.] By William Woodville Rockhill. Pp. 669- 747, 52 pis.
No. 8. Two Persepolitan casts in the U. S. National Museum. By Cyrus Adler. Pp. 751-753, 2 pis.
No. 9. Museum collections to illustrate religious history and ceremonials. By Cyrus Adler. Pp. 757-768.
No. 10. If public libraries, why not public museums? By Edward S. Morse. Pp. 771-780.
Report of the United States National Museum for the year ending June 30, 1894.
Pt. 1. Report on condition and progress of the Museum. By G. Brown Goode. Pp. 1-233.
Pt. 2. Papers describing and illustrating the collections in the U. S. National Museum.
No. 1. Primitive travel and transportation. By Otis Tufton Mason. Pp. 237-593, 260 figs., 25 pis.
No. 2. Mancala: The national game of Africa. By Stewart Culin. Pp. 595- 607, 15 figs., 5 pis.
No. 3. The golden patera of Rennes. By Thomas Wilson. Pp. 609-617,
1 fig., 1 pi.
No. 4. The wooden statue of Baron Ii Kamon-no-Kami Naosuke, pioneer diplomat of Japan. Translated from the Japanese, by H. Satoh. Pp. 621-622, 1 pi.
No. 5. A study of the primitive methods of drilling. By J. D. McGuire. Pp. 623-756, 201 figs.
No. 6. The swastika. By Thomas Wilson. Pp. 757-1011, 374 figs., 25 pis. Report of the United States National Museum for the year ending June 30, 1895.
Pt. 1. Report on condition and progress of the Museum. By G. Brown Goode. Pp. 1-308.
Pt. 2. Papers describing and illustrating collections in the U. S. National Museum.
No. 1. The social organization and the secret societies of the Kwakiutl Indians. By Franz Boas. Pp. 309-738, 215 figs., 51 pis.
No. 2. The graphic art of the Eskimos. By Walter James Hoffman. Pp. 739-968, 154 figs., 82 pis.
No. 3. Notes on the geology and natural history of the Peninsula of Lower California. By George P. Merrill. Pp. 969-994, 10 pis.
No. 4. The mineralogical collections in the U. S. National Museum. By Wirt Tassin. Pp. 995-1000, 1 pi.
No. 5. The tongues of birds. By Frederic A. Lucas. Pp. 1001-1020, 13 figs.,
2 pis.
No. 6. The Ontonagon copper bowlder in the U. S. National Museum. By Charles Moore. Pp. 1021-1030, 2 pis.
No. 7. Taxidermical methods in the Leyden Museum, Holland. By R. W. Shufeldt. Pp. 1031-1037, 6 pis.
8
BULLETIN 193, UNTED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM
No. 8. The antiquity of the Red Race in America. By Thomas Wilson. Pp. 1039-1045.
Report of the United States National Museum for the year ending June 30, 1896.
Pt. 1. Report on condition and progress of the Museum. By G. Brown Goode. Pp. 1-284, 4 pis.
Pt. 2. Papers describing and illustrating collections in the U. S. National Museum.
No. 1. An account of the United States National Museum. By Frederick W, True. Pp. 287-324.
No. 2. Prehistoric art; or, the origin of art as manifested in the works of prehistoric man. By Thomas Wilson. Pp. 325-664, 325 figs., 74 pis., frontispiece.
No. 3. Chess and playing-cards. Catalogue of games and implements for divination exhibited by the United States National Museum in connection with the Department of Archaeology and Paleontology of the University of Pennsylvania at the Cotton States and Inter¬ national Exposition, Atlanta, Georgia, 1895. By Stewart Culin. Pp. 665-942, 226 figs., 50 pis.
No. 4. Biblical antiquities. A description of the exhibit at the Cotton States International Exposition, Atlanta, 1895. By Cyrus Adler and I. M. Casanowicz. Pp. 943-1023, 46 pis.
No. 5. The lamp of the Eskimo. By Walter Hough. Pp. 1025-1057, 4 figs., 24 pis.
Report of the United States National Museum for the )rear ending June 30, 1897. Vol. 1.
Pt. 1. Report on condition and progress of the Museum. By Charles D. Walcott. Pp. 1-245.
Pt. 2. Papers describing and illustrating collections in the U. S. National Museum.
No. 1. Recent Foraminifera. A descriptive catalogue of specimens dredged by the U. S. Fish Commission steamer Albatross. By James M. Flint. Pp. 249-349, 80 pis.
No. 2. Pipes and smoking customs of the American aborigines, based on material in the U. S. National Museum. By Joseph D. McGuire. Pp. 351-645, 239 figs., 4 pis.
No. 3. Catalogue of the series illustrating the properties of minerals. By Wirt Tassin. Pp. 647-688.
No. 4. Te Pito Te Henua, known as Rapa Nui; commonly called Easter Island, South Pacific Ocean. Latitude 27° 10' S., Longitude 109° 26' W. By George H. Cooke. Pp. 689-723.
No. 5. The man’s knife among the North American Indians. By Otis Tufton Mason. Pp. 725-745, 17 figs.
No. 6. Classification of the mineral collections in the U. S. National Museum. By Wirt Tassin. Pp. 747-810.
No. 7. Arrowpoints, spearheads, and knives of prehistoric times. By Thomas Wilson. Pp. 811-988, 201 figs., 65 pis.
Report of the United States National Museum for the year ending June 30, 1897. Vol. 2. A memorial of George Brown Goode, together with a selection of his papers on museums and on the history of science in America.
Memorial Meeting.
Invitation. P. 3.
Programme. P. 4.
Introductory remarks. By Gardiner Greene Hubbard. Pp. 5-6.
Opening address. By Samuel Pierpont Langley. Pp. 7-11.
Goode as a historian and citizen. By William Lyne Wilson. Pp. 13-16.
Goode as a naturalist. By Henry Fairfield Osborn. Pp. 17-24.
Goode’s activities in relation to American science. By William Healey Dali.
Pp. 24-31.
Resolutions and messages of sympathy. Pp. 33-38.
ANNUAL REPORTS
9
Memoir of George Brown Goode. By Samuel Pierpont Langley. Pp. 39-61.
Papers by George Brown Goode. Pp. 63-477, 103 pis.
Museum-history and museums of history. Pp. 63-81.
The genesis of the United States National Museum. Pp. 83-191.
The principles of museum administration. Pp. 193-240.
The museums of the future. Pp. 241-262.
The origin of the national scientific and educational institutions of the United States. Pp. 263-354.
The beginnings of natural history in America. Pp. 355-406.
The beginnings of American science: The third century. Pp. 407-466.
The first national scientific congress (Washington, April, 1844), and its connection with the organization of the American Association. Pp. 467-477.
The published writings of George Brown Goode. By Randolph Iltyd Gearc.
Pp. 481-500, 6 pis.
Report of the United States National Museum for the year ending June 30, 1898.
Pt. 1. Report on condition and progress of the Museum. By Charles D. Walcott. Pp. 1-149.
Pt. 2. The crocodilians, lizards, and snakes of North America. By Edward Drinker Cope. Pp. 153-1270, 347 figs., 36 pis.
Report of the United States National Museum for the year ending June 30, 1899.
Pt. 1. Report on condition and progress of the Museum. By Richard Rathbun. Pp. 1-152.
Pt. 2. Papers describing and illustrating collections in the U. S. National Museum.
No. 1. Guide to the study of the collections in the section of applied geology:
The nonmetallic minerals. By George P. Merrill. Pp. 155-483, 12 figs., 30 pis.
No. 2. A primitive frame for weaving narrow fabrics. By Otis Tufton Mason. Pp. 485-510, 19 figs., 9 pis.
No. 3. An early West Virginia pottery. By Walter Hough. Pp. 51T521, 18 pis.
No. 4. Pointed bark canoes of the Kutenai and Amur. By Otis T. Mason. Pp. 523-537, 6 figs., 5 pis.
No. 5. Descriptive catalogue of a collection of objects of Jewish ceremonial deposited in the U. S. National Museum by Hadji Ephraim Ben- guiat. By Cyrus Adler and I. M. Casanowicz. Pp. 539-561, 36 pis.
Report of the United States National Museum for the year ending June 30, 1900.
Pt. 1. Report on condition and progress of the Museum. By Richard Rathbun. Pp. 1-152, 9 pis.
Pt. 2. Papers describing and illustrating collections in the U. S. National Museum.
No. 1. Anthropological studies in California. By William Henry Holmes. Pp. 1-187, 50 pis.
No. 2. Aboriginal American harpoons: A study in ethnic distribution and invention. By Otis Tufton Mason. Pp. 189-304, 92 figs., 19 pis.
No. 3. A sketch of the history of ceramic art in China, with a catalogue of the Hippisley Collection of Chinese porcelains. By Alfred E. Hip- pisley. Pp. 305-416, 21 pis.
No. 4. Contributions to the history of musical scales. By Charles Kasson Wead. Pp. 417-462, 8 figs., 10 pis.
No. 5. A collection of Hopi ceremonial pigments. By Walter Hough. Pp. 465-471.
No. 6. Descriptive catalogue of the collections of gems in the United States National Museum. By Wirt Tassin. Pp. 473-670, 26 figs., 9 pis.
No. 7. Descriptive catalogue of the meteorite collection in the United States National Museum, to January 1, 1902. By Wirt Tassin. Pp. 671- 698, 4 pis.
10
BULLETIN 193, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM
Report of the United States National Museum for the year ending June 30, 1901.
Pt. 1. Report on condition and progress of Museum. By Richard Rathbun. Pp. .
i -174.
Pt. 2. Papers describing and illustrating collections in the U. S. National Museum.
No. 1. Report on the exhibit of the United States National Museum at the Pan-American Exposition, Buffalo, New York, 1901. By Frederick W. True, William H. Holmes, and George P. Merrill. Pp. 177- 231, 72 pis.
No. 2. Flint implements and fossil remains from a sulphur spring at Afton, Indian Territory. By William Henry Holmes. Pp. 233-252, 26 pis.
No. 3. Classification and arrangement of the exhibits of an anthropological museum. By William Henry Holmes. Pp. 253-278, 7 figs.
No. 4. Archeological field work in northeastern Arizona. The Museum- Gates Expedition of 1901. By Walter Hough. Pp. 279-358, 101 pis.
No. 5. Narrative of a visit to Indian tribes of the Purus River, Brazil. By Joseph Beal Steere. Pp. 359-393. 15 figs., 9 pis.
Report of the United States National Museum for the year ending June 30, 1902.
Pt. 1. Report on condition and progress of Museum. By Richard Rathbun. Pp. 1-168.
Pt. 2. Papers describing and illustrating collections in the U. S. National Museum.
No. 1. Aboriginal American basketry: Studis3 in a textile art without machinery. By Otis Tufton Mason. Pp. 171-548, 212 figs., 248 pis.
No. 2. The herpetology of Porto Rico. By Leonhard Stejneger. Pp. 549- 724, 197 figs’ 1 pi.
No. 3. Wokas, a primitive food of the Klamath Indians. By Frederick Ver¬ non Coville. Pp. 725-739, 13 pis.
Report of the United States National Museum for the year ending June 30, 1903.
Pt. 1. Report on condition and progress of Museum. By Richard Rathbun. Pp. 1-174.
Pt. 2. Papers descriptive of Museum Buildings.
No. 1. The United States National Museum: An account of the buildings occupied by the national collections. By Richard Rathbun. Pp. 177-308, 29 pis.
No. 2. Studies of the museums and kindred institutions of New York City, Albany, Buffalo, and Chicago, with notes on some European institutions. By A. B. Meyer. Pp. 311-608, 120 figs., 40 pis.
Report of the United States National Museum for the year ending June 30, 1904.
Pt. 1. Report on condition and progress of Museum. By Richard Rathbun. Pp. 1-186.
Pt. 2. Papers describing and illustrating collections in the U. S. National Museum.
No. 1. Contributions to the history of American geology. By George P. Merrill. Pp. 187-733, 141 figs., 37 pis.
No. 2. The S. S. Howland collection of Buddhist religious art in the National Museum. By Immanuel M. Casanowicz. Pp. 735-744, 17 pis.
No. 3. Flint implements of the Fayum, Egypt. By Heywood Walter Seton- Karr. Pp. 745-751, 12 pis.
Report of the United States National Museum for 1905 (forming part of the Annual Report of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution). By Richard Rath¬ bun. Pp. 1-132.
Report of the United States National Museum for 1906 (forming part of the Annual Report of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution). By Richard Rath¬ bun. Pp. 1-120.
Report on the progress and condition of the United States National Museum for the year ending June 30, 1907. By Richard Rathbun. Pp. 1-118.
Report on the progress and condition of the United States National Museum for the year ending June 30, 1908. By Richard Rathbun. Pp. 1-138.
ANNUAL REPORTS
11
Report on the progress and condition of the United States National Museum for the year ending June 30, 1909. By Richard Rathbun. Pp. 1-141.
Report on the progress and condition of the United States National Museum for the year ending June 30, 1910. By Richard Rathbun. Pp. 1-146.
Report on the progress and condition of the United States National Museum for the year ending June 30, 1911. By Richard Rathbun. Pp. 1-147.
Report on the progress and condition of the United States National Museum for the year ending June 30, 1912. By Richard Rathbun. Pp. 1-165.
Report on the progress and condition of the United States National Museum for the year ending June 30, 1913. By Richard Rathbun. Pp. 1-201.
Report on the progress and condition of the United States National Museum for the year ending June 30, 1914. By Richard Rathbun. Pp. 1-252.
Report on the progress and condition of the United States National Museum for the year ending June 30, 1915. By Richard Rathbun. Pp. 1-215.
Report on the progress and condition of the United States National Museum for the year ending June 30, 1916. By Richard Rathbun. Pp. 1-219.
Report on the progress and condition of the United States National Museum for the year ending June 30, 1917. By Richard Rathbun. Pp. 1-184.
Report on the progress and condition of the United States National Museum for the year ending June 30, 1918. By William DeC. Ravenel. Pp. 1-175.
Report on the progress and condition of the United States National Museum for the year ending June 30, 1919. By William deC. Ravenel. Pp. 1-211
Report on the progress and condition of the United States National Museum for the year ending June 30, 1920. By William deC. Ravenel. Pp. 1-210.
Report on the progress and condition of the United States National Museum for the year ending June 30, 1921. Bv William deC. Ravenel. Pp. 1-219.
Report on the progress and condition of the United States National Museum for the year ending June 30, 1922. By William deC. Ravenel. Pp. 1-210.
Report on the progress and condition of the United States National Museum for the year ending June 30, 1923. By William deC. Ravenel. Pp. 1-205.
Report on the progress and condition of the United States National Museum for the year ended June 30, 1924. By William deC. Ravenel. Pp. 1-205.
Report on the progress and condition of the United States National Museum for the year ended June 30, 1925. By Alexander Wetmore. Pp. 1-206.
Report on the progress and condition of the United States National Museum for the year ended June 30, 1926. By Alexander Wetmore. Pp. 1-205.
Report on the progress and condition of the United States National Museum for the year ended June 30, 1927. By Alexander Wetmore. Pp. 1-221.
Report on the progress and condition of the United States National Museum for the year ended June 30, 1928. By Alexander Wetmore. Pp. 1-216.
Report on the progress and condition of the United States National Museum for the year ended June 30, 1929. By Alexander Wetmore. Pp. 1-207.
Report on the progress and condition of the United States National Museum for the year ended June 30, 1930. By Alexander Wetmore. Pp. 1-219.
Report on the progress and condition of the United States National Museum for the year ended June 30, 1931. By Alexander Wetmore. Pp. 1-223.
Report on the progress and condition of the United States National Museum for the year ended June 30, 1932. By Alexander Wetmore. Pp. 1-181.
Report of the United States National Museum for 1933. (Part 2 of the Report of the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution for the year ended June 30, 1933). By Alexander Wetmore. Pp. 1-194.
Report on the progress and condition of the United States National Museum for the year ended June 30, 1934. By Alexander Wetmore. Pp. 1-109.
Report on the progress and condition of the United States National Museum for the year ended June 30, 1935. By Alexander Wetmore. Pn. 1-121.
Report on the progress and condition of the United States National Museum for the year ended June 30, 1936. By Alexander Wetmore. Pp. 1-115.
Report on the progress and condition of the United States National Museum for the year ended June 30, 1937. By Alexander Wetmore. Pp. 1-120.
12
BULLETINS
Report on the progress and condition of the United States National Museum for the year ended June 30, 1938. By Alexander Wetmore. Pp. 1-121.
Report on the progress and condition of the United States National Museum for the year ended June 30, 1939. By Alexander Wetmore. Pp. 1-128.
Report on the progress and condition of the United States National Museum for the year ending June 30, 1940. By Alexander Wetmore. Pp. 1-118.
Report on the progress and condition of the United States National Museum for the year ended June 30, 1941. By Alexander Wetmore. Pp. 1-118.
Report on the progress and condition of the United States National Museum for the year ended June 30, 1942. By Alexander Wetmore. Pp. 1-118.
Report on the progress and condition of the United States National Museum for the year ended June 30, 1943. By Alexander Wetmore. Pp. 1-108.
Report on the progress and condition of the United States National Museum for the year ended June 30, 1944. By Alexander Wetmore. Pp. 1-100.
Report on the progress and condition of the United States National Museum for the year ended June 30, 1945. By Alexander Wetmore. Pp. 1-112.
Report on the progress and condition of the United States National Museum for the year ended June 30, 1946. By Alexander Wetmore. Pp. 1-113.
Bull BULLETINS-
No.
1. Check-list of North American Batrachia and Reptilia; with a systematic list of
the higher groups, and an essay on geographical distribution. Based on the specimens contained in the U. S. National Museum. By Edward D. Cope. Pp. 1-104. 1875.
2. Contributions to the natural history of Kerguelen Island, made in connection
with the American [United States] Transit-of-Venus Expedition, 1874-75. By J. H. Kidder. I. Ornithology: Edited by Elliott Coues. Pp. i-ix and 1-51. 1875.
3. Contributions to the natural history of Kerguelen Island, made in connection
with the United States Transit-of-Venus Expedition, 1874-75. By J. H. Kid¬ der. II. Pp. 1-122. 1876.
Oology, etc. By J. H. Kidder and Elliott Coues, pp. 7-20.
Botany. A. Phaenogamia, Filices, et Lycopodiacea. Revised by A. Gray, pp. 21-25. B. Musci. Determined by Thomas P. James, pp. 25-27. C. Lichenes. Determined by Edw. Tuckerman, pp. 27-30. Algae. De¬ termined by W. G. Farlow, pp. 30-31.
Geology. Determined by F. M. Endlich, pp. 33-38.
Fish. Identified by Tlieo. Gill, pp. 41-42.
Mollusks. By W. H. Dali, pp. 42-48.
Diptera. Identified by C. R. Osten Sacken, pp. 51-52.
Pseudo-neuroptera. By H. A. Hagen, pp. 52-57.
Crustaceans. Described by S. I. Smith, pp. 57-64.
Annelids and Echinoderms. By A. E. Verrill, pp. 64-77.
Appendix. Surgeon E. Kershner’s collection, pp. 79-83.
A study of Chionis minor with reference to its structure and systematic position. By J. H. Kidder and Elliott Coues, pp. 85-116.
4. Birds of southwestern Mexico. Collected by Francis E. Sumichrast for the
United States National Museum. By George N. Lawrence. Pp. 1-56. 1875.
5. Catalogue of the fishes of the Bermudas. Based chiefly upon the collections
of the United States National Museum. By G. Brown Goode. Pp. 1-82. 1876.
6. Classification of the collection to illustrate the animal resources of the United
States. A list of substances derived from the animal kingdom, with synopsis of the useful and injurious animals and a classification of the methods of capture and utilization. [International Exhibition, 1876.] By G. Brown Goode. Pp. i-xiii and 1-126. 1876.
7. Contributions to the natural history of the Hawaiian and Fanning Islands and
Lower California, made in connection with the United States North Pacific Surveying Expedition. 1873-75. By Thomas H. Streets. Pp. 1-172. 1877.
BULLETINS
J3
I. Index to the names which have been applied to the subdivisions of the class
Brachiopoda excluding the rudistes previous to the year 1877. By W. H. Dali, Pp. 1-88. 1877.
9. Contributions to North American ichthyology. Based primarily on the collec¬
tions of the United States National Museum. I. Review of Rafinesque’s Memoirs on North American Fishes. By David S. Jordan. Pp. 1-53. 1877.
10. Contributions to North American ichthyology. Based primarily on the collec¬
tions of the United States National Museum. II. A. — Notes on Cottidae, Etheostomatidae, Percidae, Centrarchidae, Aphododeridae, Dorysomatidae, and Cyprinidae, with revisions of the genera and descriptions of new or little known species. B. — Synopsis of the Siluridae of the fresh waters of North America. By David S. Jordan. Pp. 1-120, 45 pis. 1877.
II. Bibliography of the fishes of the Pacific coast of the United States to the end
of 1879. By Theodore Gill. Pp. 1-73. 1882.
12. Contributions to North American ichthyology. Based primarily on the collec¬
tions of the United States National Museum. III. A. — On the distribution of the fishes of the Alleghany region of South Carolina, Georgia, and Tennessee, with descriptions of new or little known species. By David S. Jordan and Alembert W. Braytcn. B. — A synopsis of the family Catostomidae. By David S. Jordan. Pp. 1-237. 1878.
13. The flora of St. Croix and the Virgin Islands. By H. F. A. Eggers. Pp. 1-133,
1879.
14. Catalogue of the collection to illustrate the animal resources and the fisheries of
the United States, exhibited at Philadelphia in 1876 by the Smithsonian Insti¬ tution and the United States Fish Commission, and forming a part of the United States National Museum. [International Exhibition, 1876.] Prepared under the direction of G. Brown Goode. Pp. i-xvi and 1-351. 1879.
Pt. [1]. Section A. List of animals of North America beneficial or injurious to man. Pp. 1-70.
Section B. Means of pursuit and capture. Pp. 71-167.
Section C. Methods of preparation. Pp. 168-178.
Section D. Animal products and their applications. Pp. 179-232. Section E. Protection and culture of useful animals. Pp. 233- 248.
Pt. [2]. Catalogue of illustrations of the economical invertebrates of the American coasts. By W. H. Dali. Pp. 249-271.
Pt. [3]. Commercial statistics of animal products in the United States:
A review of a portion of the report of the Chief of the Bureau of Statistics for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1877. By G. Brown Goode. Pp. 272-300.
15. Contributions to the natural history of Arctic America, made in connection with
the Howgate Polar Expedition, 1877-78. By Ludwig Kumlien. Pp. 1-179. 1879.
Introduction. By Ludwig Kumlien. Pp. 5-9.
Ethnology. Fragmentary notes on the Eskimo of Cumberland Sound. By Ludwig Kumlien. Pp. 11-46.
Mammals. Fragmentary notes on the Mammalia of Cumberland Sound.
By Ludwig Kumlien. Pp. 47-67.
Birds. By Ludwig Kumlien. Pp. 69-105.
Fishes collected in Cumberland Gulf and Disko Bay. By Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 107-138.
Crustacea. By S. I. Smith. Pp. 139-140.
Annelides. By A. E. Verrill. Fp. 141-143.
— Mollusks. List of shells obtained by Mr. Ludwig Kumlien, naturalist to the Howgate Expedition, 1877-78, at points in Cumberland Sound, Arctic region, west from Baffin’s Bay. By W. H. Dali. Pp. 145-146. Molluscoids. By A. E. Verrill. Pp. 147-150.
Radiates. By A. E. Verrill. Pp. 151-153.
Insects: Diurnal Lepidoptera. By W. H. Edwards. Pp. 155-157.
711175—47—2
14
BULLETIN 193, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM
Insects: Hymenoptera, Nocturnal Lepidoptera, Diptera, Coleoptera, Neu- roptera, and Arachnida. By S. H. Scudder and others. Pp. 159-161. (Hymenoptera, E. T. Cresson; Lepidoptera, A. R. Grote; Diptera, E. Burgess; Coleoptera, J. L. LeConte; Neuroptera, H. Hagen; Arachnida, J. H. Emerton.)
Plants. List of the plants collected at points in Cumberland Sound between the Sixty-sixth and Sixty-seventh Parallels of North Latitude and on the south shores of Disko Island, Greenland. By Asa Gray. Pp. 163-166.
Lichens. List of lichens collected in the vicinity of Annanactook Harbor, Cumberland Sound, at about lat. 67° N., long. 68° 49' W. By Edward Tuckerman. Pp. 167-168.
Algae. By W. G. Farlow. Pp. 169.
Minerals. By F. M. Endlich. P. 171.
16. Synopsis of the fishes of North America. By David S. Jordan and Charles H.
Gilbert. Pp. i-lvi, 1-1018. 1882.
17. On the zoological position of Texas. By Edward D. Cope. Pp. 1-51. 1880.
18. Exhibit of the fisheries and fish culture of the United States of America, at the
Internationale Fischerei-Ausstellung, held at Berlin, April 20, 1880, and form¬ ing a part of the collections of the National Museum, made by the United States Fish Commission. Prepared under the direction of G. Brown Goode. Pp. i-xv, 1-263. 1880.
19. Nomenclator Zoologicus. An alphabetical list of all generic names that have
been employed by naturalists for recent and fossil animals from the earliest times to the close of the year 1879. In 2 parts: I. Supplemental list. II. Universal index. By Samuel LI. Scudder. Pp. i-xxi, 1-376, 1-340. 1882.
20. Bibliographies of American naturalists. I. The published writing of Spencer
Fullerton Baird, 1843-1882. By George Brown Goode. Pp. 1-xvi, 1-377. 1883.
21. Nomenclature of North American birds chiefly contained in the United States
National Museum. By Robert Ridgway. Pp. 1-94. 1881.
22. Guide to the flora of Washington and vicinity. By Lester F. Ward. Pp. 1-264,
1 map. 1881.
23. Bibliographies of American naturalists. II. The published wrtings of Isaac
Lea, LL.D. By Newton Pratt Scudder. Pp. i-lix, 1-278, 1 pi. 1885.
24. Check list of North American Reptilia and Batrachia, with catalogue of speci¬
mens in U. S. National Museum. By LI. C. Yarrow. Pp. i-v, 1-249. 1882.
25. Contributions to the natural history of the Bermudas. Edited by J. Matthew
Jones and George Brown Goode. Pp. i-xxiii, 1-353, 12 pis. 1884.
Ft. 1. Geology. By William North Rice. Pp. 1-32, 5 pis.
Pt. 2. Botany. By John Henry Lefroy. Pp. 33-141.
Pt. 3. Mammals. By J. Matthew Jones. Pp. 143-161.
Pt. 4. Birds. By Savile G. Reid. Pp. 163-279.
Pt. 5. Notes on birds. By C. Hart Merrirnan. Pp. 281-284.
Pt. 6. Reptiles. By Samuel Garman. Pp. 285-303.
Pt. 7. Annelids. By H. E. Webster. Pp. 305-327, 6 pis.
26. Avifauna Columbiana: being a list of birds ascertained to inhabit the
District of Columbia, with the times of arrival and departure of such as non-residents, and brief notices of habits, etc. The second edition, revised to date, and entirely rewritten. By Elliott Coues and D. Webster Prentiss. Pp. 1-133, 100 figs., 2 pis. 1883.
27. Descriptive catalogues of the collections sent from the LTnited States to the
International Fisheries Exhibition, London, 1883, constituting a report upon the American section. Prepared under the direction of G. Brown Goode. Pp. i-liv, 1-1279. 1884.
Pt. A. Preliminary catalogue, and synopsis of the collections ex¬ hibited by the United States Fish Commission, and by special exhibitors. Pp. 1-85.
Pt. AA. Concordance to the official classification for the use of the juries. Pp. 87-105.
BULLETINS
15
Pt. B. Collection of economic crustaceans, worms, echincderins, and sponges. By Richard Rathbun. Pp. 107-137.
Pt. C. Catalogue of the aquatic and fish-eating birds exhibited by
the United States National Museum. By Robert Ridgway. Pp.
139-184.
Pt. D. Catalogue of the economic Mollusca and the apparatus and
appliances used in their capture and preparation for market. By Francis Winslow. Pp. 185-270.
Pt. E. The whale fishery and its appliances. By James Temple
Brown. Pp. 271-386.
Pt. F. Catalogue of the collection of fishes exhibited by the United States National Museum. By Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 387-510.
Ft. G. Descriptive catalogue of the collection illustrating the scientific investigation of the sea and fresh waters. Pp. 511-622.
Pt. H. Catalogue of the aquatic mammals exhibited by the United
States National Museum. By Frederick W. True. Pp. 623-644.
Pt. I. Catalogue of the collection illustrating the fishing vessels and boats and their equipment; the economic condition of fisher¬ men; anglers’ outfits, etc. By Joseph \v. Collins. Pp. 645-823.
Pt. J. Catalogue of the apparatus for the capture of fish. By R.
Edward Earll. Pp. 825-1030.
Pt. K. Catalogue of fishery products and of the apparatus used in
their preparation. By A. Howard Clark. Pp. 1031-1154.
Pt. L. Catalogue of the fish-cultural exhibit of the United States
Fish Commission. Pp. 1155-1249.
28. A manual of American land shells. By W. G. Binney. Pp. 1-528, 516 figs.
1885.
29. Results of ornithological explorations in the Commander Islands and in
Kamtschatka. By Leonhard Stejneger. Pp. 1-382, 8 figs., 8 pis. 1885.
^ 30. Bibliographies of American naturalists. III. Bibliography of publications
relating to the collection of fossil invertebrates in the United States National Museum, including complete lists of the writings of Fielding B. Meek, Charles A. White, and Charles D. Walcott. By John Belknap Marcou. Pp. 1-333. 1885.
31. Synopsis of the North American Syrphidae. By Samuel W. W illiamson. Pp.
i-xxx, 1-335, 12 pis. 1886.
32. Catalogue of batrachians and reptiles of Central America and Mexico. By
E. D. Cope. Pp. 1-98. 1887.
33. Catalogue of minerals and synonyms. By T. Egleston. Pp. 1-198. 1887.
34. The Batrachia of North America. By E. D. Cope. Pp. 1-525, 119 figs., 86
pis. 1889.
35. Bibliographical catalogue of the described transformations of North American
Lepidoptera. By Henry Edwards. Pp. 1-147. 1889.
36. Contributions to the natural history cf the cetaceans. A review of the family
Delphinidae. By Frederick W. True. Pp. 1-181, 47 pis. 1889.
- 37. A preliminary catalogue of the shell-bearing marine mollusks and brachiopods of the southeastern coast of the United States, with illustrations of many of the species. By William Healey Dali. Pp. 1-221, 74 pis. 1889. (New ed.( 1903, included 21 additional pis.)
38. Contribution toward a monograph of the insects of the lepidopterous family
Noctuidae of temperate North America. Revision of the species of the genus Agrotis. By John B. Smith. Pp. i-iv, 1-237, 5 pis. 1890.
39. Directions for collecting and preserving specimens.
Pt. A. Directions for collecting birds. By Robert Ridgway. Pp. 1-27, 9 figs. 1891.
Pt. B. Directions for collecting Recent and fossil plants. By F. H. Knowl- ton (with notes on collecting and preserving fresh-water algae, by Frank S. Collins). Pp. 1-46, 10 figs. 1891.
16
BULLETIN 193, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM
Pt. C. Notes on the preparation of rough skeletons. By Frederic A. Lucas. Pp. 1-11, 12 figs. 1891.
Pt. D. Directions for collecting, preparing, and preserving birds’ eggs and nests. By Charles Bendire. Pp. 1-10, 7 figs. 1891.
Pt. E. Directions for collecting reptiles and batrachians. [With supple¬ mentary note giving directions for preserving small herpetological specimens in formalin.] By Leonhard Stejneger. Pp. 1-13, 5 figs. 1891.
Pt. F. Directions for collecting and preserving insects. By C. V. Riley. Pp. 1-147, 139 figs., 1 pi. 1892.
Pt. G. Instructions for collecting mollusks, and other useful hints for the conchologist. By William FI. Dali. Pp. 1-56, 8 figs. 1892.
Pt. H. Directions for collecting minerals. By Wirt Tassin. Pp. 1-6, 8 figs. 1895.
Pt. I. Directions for collecting rocks and for the preparation of thin sec¬ tions. By George P. Merrill. Pp. 1-15, 17 figs. 1895.
Pt. J. Directions for collecting specimens and information illustrating the aboriginal uses of plants. . By Frederick V. Coville. Pp. 1-8. 1895.
Pt. K. Directions for collecting and preparing fossils. By Charles Schu- chert. Pp. 1-31, 13 figs. 1895.
Pt. L. Directions for collecting and preserving scale insects (Coccidae). By T. D. A. Cockerell. Pp. 1-9. 1897.
Pt. M. The methods employed at the Naples Zoological Station for the preservation of marine animals. By Salvatore Lo Bianco. Trans¬ lated from the original Italian by Edmund Otis Flovey. Pp. 1-42, 1 pi. 1899.
Pt. N. Directions for preparing study specimens of small mammals. By Gerrit S. Miller, Jr. Pp. 1-10, 1 fig. 1899. (2d ed., rev., with
abstracts in German, F'rench, and Spanish, issued in 1901; 3d ed., under new title, “Directions for Preparing Specimens of Mammals,” and with additional figures, 1912; 4th ed., 1914; 5th ed., 1925; 6th ed., 1932.)
Pt. O. Directions for collecting and rearing dragon flies, stone flies, and may flies. By James G. Needham. Pp. 1-9, 4 figs. 1899.
Pt. P. Directions for collectors of American basketry. By Otis T. Mason. Pp. 1-31, 44 figs. 1902.
Pt. Q. Instructions to collectors of historical and anthropological speci¬ mens. By William Henry Holmes and Otis Tufton Mason. Pp. 1-16. 1902.
Pt. R. Directions for collecting information and specimens for physical anthropology. By Ales Hrdlicka. Pp. 1-25, 8 pis. 1904.
Pt. S. Directions for collecting information and objects illustrating the history of medicine. By James M. Flint. Pp. 1-5. 1905.
40. Bibliographies of American naturalists. IV. The published writings of George
Newbold Lawrence, 1844-1891. By L. S. Foster. Pp. i-xi, 1-124, 1 pi. 1892.
41. Bibliographies of American naturalists. V. The published writings of Dr.
Charles Girard. By George Brown Goode. Pp. i-vi, 1-141, 1 pi. 1891.
42. A preliminary descriptive catalogue of the systematic collections in economic
geology and metallurgy in the United States National Museum. By Frederic
P. Dewey. Pp. i-xviii, 1-256, 10 figs., 34 pis. 1891.
43. A monograph of the bats of North America. By Harrison Allen. Pp. i-ix, 1-198,
1 fig., 38 pis. 1893.
44. A catalogue, bibliographical and synonymical, of the species of moths of the
lepidopterous superfamily Noctuidae, found in boreal America, with critical
notes. By John B. Smith. Pp. 1-424. 1893.
45. A monograph of the North American Proctotrypidae. By William H. Ashmead.
Pp. 1-472, 2 figs., 18 pis. 1893.
BULLETINS
17
The Myriapoda of North America. By Charles Harvey Bollman. Edited by L. M. Underwood. Pp. 1-210. 1893.
The fishes of North and Middle America: A descriptive catalogue of the species of fish-like vertebrates found in the waters of North America, north of the Isthmus of Panama. By David Starr Jordan and Barton Warren Evermann. Pp. 1-3313, 392 pis.
Pt. 1. Pp. i-lx, 1-1240. 1896.
Pt. 2. Pp. i-xxx, 1241-2183. 1898.
Pt. 3. Pp. i-xxiv, 2183a-3136. 1898.
Pt. 4. Pp. i-ci, 3137-3313, 392 pis. 1900.
Contributions toward a monograph of the insects of the lepidopterous family Noctuidae of boreal North America. A revision of the deltoid moths. By John B. Smith. Pp. i-vi, 1-129, 14 pis. 1895.
The published writings of Philip Lutley Sclater, 1844-1896. Prepared under the direction of G. Brown Goode. Pp. i-xix, 1-135, 1 pi. 1896.
The birds of North and Middle America: A descriptive catalogue of the higher groups, genera, species, and subspecies of birds known to occur in North America, from the Arctic lands to the Isthmus of Panama, the West Indies and other islands of the Caribbean Sea, and the Galapagos Archipelago.
Pt. 1. Family Fringillidae— The Finches. By Robert Ridgway. Pp. i-xxx, 1-715, 20 pis. 1901.
Pt. 2. Families Tanagridae, Icteridae, Coerebidae, Mniotiltidae. By Rob¬ ert Ridgway. Pp. i-xx, 1-834, 22 pis. 1902.
Pt. 3. Families Motacillidae, Hirundinidae, Ampelidae, Ftilogonatidae, Dulidae, Vireonidae, Lamidae, Corvidae, Paridae, Sittidae, Certhiidae, Troglodytidae, Cinclidae, Chamaeidae, Sylviidae. By Robert Ridgway. Pp. i-xx, 1-801, 19 pis. 1904.
Pt. 4. Families Turdidae, Zeledoniidae, Mimidae, Sturnidae, Ploceidae, Alaudidae, Oxyruncidae, Tyrannidae, Pipridae, Cotingidae. By Robert Ridgway. Pp. i-xxii, 1-973, 34 pis. 1907.
Pt. 5. Families Pteroptochidae, Formicariidae, Furnariidae, Dendrocolapti- dae, Trochilidae, Micropodidae, Trogonidae. By Robert Ridg¬ way. Pp. i-xxiii, 1-859, 33 pis. 1911.
Pt. 6. Families Picidae, Capitonidae, Ramphastidae, Bucconidae, Gal- bulidae, Alcedinidae, Todidae, Momotidae, Caprimulgidae, Nyc- tibiidae, Tytonidae, Bubonidae. By Robert Ridgway. Pp. i-xx, 1-882, 36 pis. 1914.
Pt. 7. Families Cuculidae, Psittacidae, Columbidae. By Robert Ridgway. Pp. i-xiii, 1-543, 24 pis. 1916.
Pt. 8. Families Jacanidae, Oedicnemidae, Haematopodidae, Arenariidae, Aphrizidae, Charadriidae, Scolopacidae, Phalaropodidae, Recur- virostridae, Rynchopidae, Sternidae, Laridae, Stercorariidae, Alcidae. By Robert Ridgway. Pp. i-xvi, 1-852, 34 pis. 1919.
Pt. 9. Families Gruidae, Rallidae, Heliomithidae, Eurypygidae. By Rob¬ ert Ridgway and Herbert Friedmann. Pp. i-ix, 1-254, 16 figs. Oct. 2, 1941.
Pt. 10. Families Cracidae, Tetraonidae, Phasianidae, Numididae, Melea- grididae. By Robert Ridgway and Herbert Friedmann. Pp. i-xii, 1-484, 28 figs. Dec. 18, 1946.
A list of the publications of the United States National Museum (1875-1900). By Randolph I. Geare. Pp. i-vi, 1-168. 1902. (Suppl. 1, pp. 1-40, covering period 1901-1906, issued in 1906.)
A list of North American Lepidoptera and key to the literature of this order of insects. By Harrison G. Dyar, assisted by C. H. Fernald, George D. Hulst, and August Busck. Pp. i-xix, 1-723. 1902.
Catalogue of the type and figured specimens of fossils, minerals, rocks and ores in the Department of Geology, United States National Museum. Prepared under the direction of George P. Merrill.
18
BULLETIN 193, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM
Pt. 1. Fossil invertebrates. Section 1. Catalogue of the type specimens of fossil invertebrates in the Department of Geology, United States National Museum. By Charles Schuchert, assisted by W. H. Dali, T. W. Stanton, and R. S. Bassler. Pp. i-v, 1-704. 1905.
Pt. 2. Fossil vertebrates; fossil plants; minerals, rocks, and ores. Section 2. Catalogue of the types, cotypes, and figured specimens of fossil vertebrates in the Department of Geology, United States National Museum. Begun by F. A. Lucas, completed by J. W. Gidley and C. W. Gilmore, assisted by Mrs. M. S. F. Jouy and Miss M. W. Moodey. Pp. 1-82. 1907. Section 3. Catalogue of the types and illustrated specimens of fossil plants in the Depart¬ ment of Geolog3r, United States National Museum. By A. C. Peale, with cooperation of David White and F. H. Knowlton, assisted by Mrs. M. S. F. Jouy, Miss L. M. Graves, and Miss M. W. Moodey. Pp. 85-350. 1907. Section 4. List of minerals, meteorites, rocks, and ores that have been the subject of special investigation and publication, and are now in the Department of Geology, U. S. National Museum. By George P. Merrill and Wirt Tassin. Pp. 351-370. 1907.
54. A monograph on the isopods of North America. By Harriet Richardson. Pp.
i-liii, 1-727, 740 figs. 1905.
55. A contribution to the oceanography of the Pacific. Compiled from data collected
by the United States steamer Nero while engaged in the survey of a route for a trans-Pacific cable. By James M. Flint. Pp. i-v, 1-62, 14 pis. 1905.
56. Mammals of the Mexican Boundary of the United States. A descriptive catalogue
of the species of mammals occurring in that region; with a general summary of the natural history, and a list of trees. By Edgar Alexander Mearns. Part 1. Families Didelphiidae to Muridae. Pp. i-xv, 1-530, 126 figs., 13 pis. Apr. 13, 1907.
57. The families and genera of bats. By Gerrit S. Miller, Jr. Pp. i-xvii, 1-282,
49 figs., 14 pis. 1907.
58. Herpetology of Japan and adjacent territory. By Leonhard Stejneger. Pp. i-xx,
1-577, 409 figs., 35 pis. July 22, 1907.
59. Recent Madreporaria of the Hawaiian Islands and Laysan. By T. Wayland
Vaughan. Pp. i-ix, 1-427, 96 pis. July 12, 1907.
60. The barnacles (Cirripedia) contained in the collection of the U. S. National
Museum. By Henry A. Pilsbry. Pp. i-x, 1-122, 36 figs., 11 pis. Nov. 8, 1907.
61. Variations and genetic relationships of the garter-snakes. By Alexander G. Ruth-
ven. Pp. i-xii, 1-201, 82 figs., 1 pi. June 24, 1908.
62. Catalogue of the type-specimens of mammals in the United States National
Museum, including the Biological Survey collection. By Marcus Ward Lyon, Jr., and Wilfred Hudson Osgood. Pp. i-x, 1-325. 1909.
63. A monographic revision of the Coleoptera belonging to the tenebrionide tribe
Eleodiini inhabiting the United States, Lower California, and adjacent islands. By Frank E. Blaisdell, Sr. Pp. i-xi, 1-524, 8 figs., 13 pis. June 24, 1909.
64. A critical summary of Trcost’s unpublished manuscript on the crinoids of Ten¬
nessee. By Elvira Wood. Pp. i-xi, 1-150, 16 pis. May 8, 1909.
65. Dendroid graptolite9 of the Niagaran dolomites at Hamilton, Ontario. Compiled
by Ray S. Bassler. Pp. i-ix, 1-76, 91 figs., 5 pis. July 10, 1909.
66. A monographic revision of the twisted winged insects comprising the order
Strepsiptera Kirby. By W. Dwight Pierce. Pp. i-xii, 1-232, 3 figs., 15 pis., 1 map. Dec. 6, 1909.
67. Directions for collecting and preserving insects. By Nathan Banks. Pp. i-xiii,
1-135, 188 figs., 1 pi. Oct. 7, 1909.
68. A monograph of West American pyramidellid mollusks. By William Healey
Dali and Paul Bartsch. Pp. i-xi, 1-258, 30 pis. Dec. 13, 1909.
69. The taenioid cestodes of North American birds. By Brayton Howard Ransom.
Pp. 1-141, 43 figs. Dec. 31, 1909.
BULLETINS
19
70. The National Gallery of Art. Department of Fine Arts «f the National Museum.
By Richard Rathbun. Pp. 1-140, 26 pis. July 1, 1909. (Reprinted, with addi¬ tions, January 1916.)
71. A monograph of the Forminifera of the North Pacific Ocean. By Joseph Augui-
tine Cushman.
Pt. 1. Astrorhizidae and Lituolidae. Pp. i-xiv, 1-134, 203 figs. June 30, 1910.
Pt. 2. Textulariidae. Pp. i-xiii, 1-108, 156 figs. June 30, 1911.
Pt. 3. Lagenidae. Pp. i-ix, 1-125, 47 pis. Dec. 12, 1913.
Pt. 4. Chilostomellidae, Glcbigerinidae, Nummufitidae. Pp. i-vi, 1-46, 19 pis. Feb. 28, 1914.
Pt. 5. Rotaliidae. Pp. i-vii, 1-87, 63 figs., 31 pis. Apr. 24, 1915.
Pt. 6. Miliolidae. Pp. i-vii, 52 figs., 39 pis. June 15, 1917.
72. Catalogue of Nearctic spiders. By Nathan Banks. Pp. i-iii, 1-80. Apr. 30, 1910.
73. An account of the beaked whales of the family Ziphiidae in the collection of the
United States National Museum, with remarks on some specimens in other American museums. By Frederick W. True. Pp. i-v, 1-89, 42 pis. Sept. 28, 1910.
74. On some West Indian echinoias. By Theodor Mortensen. Oct. 3, 1910. Pp. i-v,
1-31, 17 pis.
75. North Pacific ophiurans in the collection of the United States National Museum.
By Hubert Lyman Clark. Pp. i-xvi, 1-302, 144 figs. Feb. 23, 1911.
76. Asteroidea of the North Pacific and adjacent waters. By Walter Kenrick Fisher.
Pt. 1. Phanerozonia and Spinulosa. Pp. i-vi, 1-419, 122 pis. June 30, 1911. Pt. 2. Forcipulata (part). Pp. i-iii, 1-245, 81 pis. June 23, 1928.
Pt. 3. Forcipulata (concluded). Pp. i-iii, 1-356, 93 pis. 1930.
77. The early Paleozoic Bryozoa of the Baltic Provinces. By Ray S. Bassler. Pp.
i-xxi, 1-382, 226 figs., 13 pis. Dec. 23, 1911.
78. Catalogue of a selection of art objects from the Freer Collection exhibited
in the new building of the National Museum, April 15 to June 15, 1912. Pp. 1-39. 1912.
79. List of North American land mammals in the United States National Museum,
1911. By Gerrit S. Miller, Jr. Pp. i-xiv, 1-455. Dec. 31, 1912.
80. A descriptive account of the building recently erected for the departments of
natural history of the United States National Museum. By Richard Rathbun. Pp. 1-131, 34 pis. 1913.
81. Synopsis of the Rotatoria. By Harry K. Harring. Pp. 1-226. June 28, 1913.
82. A monograph of the existing crinoids. By Austin Hobart Clark. Vol. 1, The
comatulids :
Pt. 1. [General.] Pp. i-vi, 1-406, 513 figs., 17 pis. June 10, 1915.
Pt. 2. [General.] Pp. i-xxv, 1-795, 949 figs., 57 pis. 1921.
Pt. 3. Superfamily Comasterida. Pp. i-vii, 1-816, 82 pis. 1931.
Pt. 4a. Superfamily Mariametrida (except the family Colobometridae) . Pp. i-vii, 1-603, 61 pis. Aug. 5, 1941.
83. Type species of the genera of ichneumon flies. By Henry L. Viereck. Pp. i-v,
1-186. Jan. 31, 1914.
84. A contribution to the study of ophiurans of the United States National Museum.
By Rene Koehler. Pp. i-vii, 1-173, 18 pis. Apr. 9, 1914.
85. A monograph of the jumping plant-lice or Psyllidae of the New World. By David
L. Crawford. Pp. i-ix, 1-186, 30 pis. June 3, 1914.
86. A monograph of the genus Chordeiles Swainson, type of a new family of goat¬
suckers. By Harry C. Oberholser. Pp. i-vii, 1-123, 6 pis. Apr. 6, 1914.
87. Culture of the ancient Pueblos of the Upper Gila River region, New Mexico and
Arizona. Second Museum-Gates Expedition. By Walter Hough. Pp. i-xiv, 1-139, 348 figs., 29 pis. Mar. 21, 1914.
88. Revision of Paleozoic Stelleroidea with special reference to North American
Asteroidea. By Charles Schuchert. Pp. 1-311, 41 figs., 38 pis. Mar. 20, 1915.
89. Osteology of the armored Dinosauria in the United States National Museum,
with special reference to the genus Stegosaurus. By Charles Whitney Gilmore. Pp. i-xi, 1-143, 73 figs., 37 pis. Dec. 31, 1914.
20 BULLETIN 193, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM
90. A monograph of the molluscan fauna of the Orthaulax pugnax zone of the
Oligocene of Tampa, Florida. By William Healey Dali. Pp. i-xv, 1-173, 26 pis. Jan. 21, 1915.
91. Report on the Turton collection of South African marine mollusks, with addi¬
tional notes on other South African shells contained in the United States National Museum. By Paul Bartsch. Pp. i-xii, 1-305, 54 pis. July 28, 1915.
92. Bibliographic index of American Ordovician and Silurian fossils. By Ray S.
Bassler. Vol. 1, pp. i-viii, 1-718, Nov. 1, 1915. Vol. 2, pp. i-iv, 719-1521, 4 pis., Nov. 1, 1915.
93. The sessile barnacles (Cirripedia) contained in the collections of the U. S.
National Museum; including a monograph of the American species. By Henry A. Pilsbry. Pp. i-xi, 1-366, 99 figs., 76 pis. July 31, 1916.
94. Handbook and descriptive catalogue of the meteorite collections in the United
States National Museum. By George P. Merrill. Pp. i-x, 1-207, 41 pis. May 25, 1916.
95. The fishes of the west coast of Peru and the Titicaca Basin. By Barton Warren
Evermann and Lewis Radcliffe. Pp. i-xi, 1-166, 14 pis. Aug. 1, 1917. _
96. A synopsis of American Early Tertiary cheilostome Bryozoa. By Ferdinand
Canu and Ray S. Bassler. Pp. T87, 6 pis. Feb. 27, 1917.
97. The grapsoid crabs of America. By Mary J. Rathbun. Pp. i-xxii, 1-461, 172
figs., 161 pis. Jan. 25, 1918.
98. The birds of the Anamba Islands. By Harry C. Oberholser. Pp. i-v, 1-75, 2 pis.
June 30, 1917.
99. East African mammals in the United States National Museum. By N. Hollister.
Pt. 1. Insectivora, Chiroptera, and Carnivora. Pp. 1-194, 3 figs., 55 pis. Aug. 16, 1918.
Pt. 2. Rodentia, Lagomorpha, and Tubulidentata. Pp. i-x, 1-184, 1 fig., 44 pis. May 16, 1919.
Pt. 3. Primates, Artiodactyla, Perissodactyla, Proboscidea, and Hyracoi- dea. Pp. i-viii, 1-164, 1 fig., 57 pis. June 20, 1924.
100. Contributions to the biology of the Philippine Archipelago and adjacent regions.
Vol. 1. Papers on collections gathered by the Albatross Philippine Expedition,
1907-1910. Pp. i-xv, 1-649, 193 figs., 54 pis. Dec. 20, 1928.
Pt. 1. The Philippine land shells of the genus Amphidromus. By Paul Bartsch. Pp. 1-47, 22 pis. Sept. 22, 1917.
Pt. 2. Ascidians from the Philippines and adjacent waters. By Willard G. Van Name. Pp. 49-174, 115 figs., 11 pis. May 4, 1918.
Pt. 3. Report upon the Scyphomedusae collected by the United States Bureau of Fisheries steamer Albatross in the Philippine Islands and Malay Archipelago. By Alfred Goldsborough Mayer. Pp. 175-233, 24 figs. Dec. 22, 1917.
Pt. 4. Report on the Chaetognatha collected by the United States Bureau of Fisheries steamer Albatross during the Philippine Expedition, 1907-1910. By Ellis L. Michael. Pp. 235-277, 5 pis. May 19, 1919.
Pt. 5. Hydromedusae, siphonophores, and ctenophores of the Albatross Philippine Expedition. By Henry B. Bigelow. Pp. 279-362, 5 pis. May 22, 1919.
Pt. 6. The relationships of the genera Calcarina, Tinoporus, and Baculo- gyps'ma as indicated by recent Philippine material. By Joseph A. Cushman. Pp. 363-368, 2 pis. Oct. 7, 1919.
Pt. 7. The macrouroid fishes of the Philippine Islands and the East Indies.
By Charles Henry Gilbert and Carl L. Hubbs. Pp. 369-588, 40 figs. Oct. 5, 1920.
Pt. 8. Polychaetous annelids collected by the United States Fisheries steamer Albatross in the waters adjacent to the Philippine Islands in 1907-1910. By A. L. Treadwell. Pp. 589-602, 8 figs. Jan. 26, 1921.
BULLETINS
21
Pt. 9. Polychaetous annelids collected by the United States Fisheries steamer Albatross during the Philippine Expedition of 1907-1910. By Ruth A. Hoagland. Pp. 603-634, 7 pis. Mar. 24, 1921.
Pt. 10. The polyclad turbellarians from the Philippine Islands. By Tokio Kaburaki. Pp. 635-649, 6 figs., 2 pis. Jan. 14, 1924.
Vol. 2. Papers on collections gathered by the Albatross Philippine Expedition, 1907-1910. Pp. i-vii, 1-562, 159 figs., 60 pis. Apr. 21, 1932.
Pt. 1. The Salpidae collected by the United States Fisheries steamer Alba¬ tross in Philippine waters during the years 1908 and 1909. By Maynard M. Metcalf. Pp. 1-4. May 7, 1919.
Pt 2 The Salpidae: A taxonomic study. By Maynard M. Metcalf, with the assistance of Mary M. Bell. Pp. 5-193, 150 figs., 14 pis. Apr. 29, 1919.
Pt. 3. Pyrosoma: A taxonomic study based upon the collections of the United States Bureau of Fisheries and the United States National Museum. By Maynard M. Metcalf and Hoyt S. Hopkins. Pp. 195-272, 9 figs., 22 pis. July 19, 1919.
Pt. 4. Silicious and horny sponges collected by the U. S. Fisheries steamer Albatross during the Philippine Expedition, 1907-1910. By H. V. Wilson. Pp. 273-532, 16 pis. Oct. 19, 1925.
Pt. 5. The shipworms of the Philippine Islands. By Paul Bartsch. Pp. 533-562, 1 fig., 8 pis. Apr. 28, 1927.
Vol. 3. Starfishes of the Philippine seas and adjacent waters. By Walter K.
Fisher. Pp. i-xi, 1-712, 156 pis. June 27, 1919.
Vol. 4. Foraminifera of the Philippine and adjacent seas. By Joseph A. Cush¬ man. Pp. 1-608, 52 figs., 100 pis. Aug. 18, 1921.
Vol. 5. Ophiurans of the Philippine seas and adjacent waters. By Rene Koehler. Pp. i-x, 1-4S6, 103 pis. Apr. 6, 1923.
Vol. 6. Papers on Philippine diatoms, annelids, hydroids, echinoids, and mol- lusks. Pp. i-viii, 1-567, 47 figs., 120 pis. Jan. 19, 1940.
Pt. 1. Marine diatoms of the Philippine Islands. By Albert Mann. Pp. 1-182, 39 pis. June 27, 1925.
Pt. 2. Additions to the polychaetous annelids collected by the United States Fisheries steamer Albatross, 1907-1910, including one new genus and three new species. By Aaron L. Treadwell. Pp. 183-193, 20 figs. Nov. 20, 1926.
Pt. 3. Report on the Hydroida collected by the United States Fisheries steamer Albatross in the Philippine region, 1907-1010. By Charles C. Nutting. Pp. 195-242, 8 pis. Apr. 27, 1927.
Pt. 4. Report on the Echinoidea collected by the United States Fisheries steamer Albatross during the Philippine Expedition, 1907-1910. Part 1. The Cidaridae. By Theodor Mortensen. Pp. 243-312, 22 figs., 33 pis. Sept. 10, 1927.
Pt. 5. Four new species of polychaetous annelids collected by the United States Fisheries steamer Albatross during the Philippine Expedi¬ tion of 1907-1910. By Aaron L. Treadwell. Pp. 313-321, 4 figs. Oct. 31, 1931.
Pt. 6. The Philippine land mollusks of the genus Opisthoporus. By Paul Bartsch. Pp. 323-327, 1 fig., 2 pis. June 18, 1932.
Pt. 7. The Philippine land mollusks Cochlostyla rufogaster and Obba mar- morata and their races. By Paul Bartsch. Pp. 329-342, 4 pis. Aug. 20, 1932.
Pt. 8. The land shells of the genus Obba from Mindoro Province, Philip¬ pine Islands. By Paul Bartsch. Pp. 343-371, 7 pis. Apr. 1, 1933. Pt. 9. The tree snails of the genus Cochlostyla of Mindoro Province, Philippine Islands. By Paul Bartsch. Pp. 373-533, 27 pis. Feb. 26, 1938.
22
BULLETIN 193, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM
Vol. 7. The fishes of the families Pomacentridae, Labridae, and Callyodontidae, collected by the United States Bureau of Fisheries steamer Albatross, chiefly in Philippine seas and adjacent waters. By Henry W. Fowler and Barton A. Bean. Pp. i-viii, 1-525, 49 pis. Apr. 17, 1928.
Vol. 8. The fishes of the series Capriformes, Ephippiformes, and Squamipennes, collected by the United States Bureau of Fisheries steamer Albatross, chiefly in Philippine seas and adjacent waters. By Henry W. Fowler and Barton A. Bean. Pp. i-xi, 1-352, 25 figs. Mar. 11, 1929.
Vol. 9. Bryozoa of the Philippine region. By Ferdinand Canu and Ray S. Bassler. Pp. i-xi, 1-685, 224 figs., 94 pis. Oct. 28, 1929.
Vol. 10. The fishes of the families Amiidae, Chandidae, Duleidae, and Serranidae, obtained by the United States Bureau of Fisheries steamer Albatross in 1907 to 1910, chiefly in the Philippine Islands and adjacent seas. By Henry W. Fowler and Barton A. Bean. Pp. i-xi, 1-334, 27 figs. Mar. 21, 1930.
Vol. 11. The fishes of the families Pseudochromidae, Lobotidae, Pempheridae, Priacanthidae, Lutjanidae, Pomadasyidae, and Teraponidae, collected by the United States Bureau of Fisheries steamer Albatross, chiefly in Philippine seas and adjacent waters. By Henry W. Fowler. Pp. i-xi, 1-388, 29 figs. May 8, 1931.
Vol. 12. The fishes of the families Banjosidae, Lethrinidae, Sparidae, Girellidae, Kyphosidae, Oplegnathidae, Gerridae, Mullidae, Emmelichthyidae, Sciaenidae, Sillaginidae, Arripidae, and Enoplosidae, collected by the United States Buieau of Fisheries steamer Albatross, chiefly in Philip¬ pine seas and adjacent waters. By Henry W. Fowler. Pp. i-vi, 1-465, 32 figs. May 19, 1933.
Vol. 13. The fishes of the groups Elasmobranchii, Holocephali, Isospondyli, and Ostarophysi obtained by the United States Bureau of Fisheries steamer Albatross in 1907 to 1910, chiefly in the Philippine Islands and adjacent seas. Bv Henry W. Fowler. Pp. i-x, 1-879, 30 figs. Mar. 10, 1941.
Vol. 14. Part 1. Report on the Echinoidea collected by the United States Fisheries steamer Albatross during the Philippine Expedition, 1907-1910. Part 2. The Echinothuridae, Saleniidae, Arbaciidae, Aspidodiadematidae, Micropygidae, Diadematidae, Pedinidae, Temnopleuridae, Toxopneu- stidae, and Echinometridae. By Theodor Mortensen. Pp. i-vi, 1-52, 3 figs., 1 pi. July 25, 1940.
Part 2. Descriptions and figures of new fishes obtained in Philippine seas and adjacent waters by the United States Bureau of Fisheries steamer Albatross. By Henry W. Fowler. Pp. i-iii, 53-91, 22 figs. July 19, 1943.
101. The Columbian Institute for the promotion of arts and sciences. By Richard
Rathbun. Pp. i-iii, 1-85. Oct. 18, 1917.
102. The mineral industries of the United States. Vol. 1. The energy resources of
the United States: A field for reconstruction. By Chester G. Gilbert and
Joseph E. Pogue. Pp. i-x, 1-165, 15 figs., 8 pis. May 15, 1919.
Pt. 1. Coal products: An object lesson in resource administration. By Chester G. Gilbert. Pp. 1-16, 11 pis. Nov. 17, 1917.
Pt. 2. Fertilizers: An interpretation of the situation in the United States. By Joseph E. Pogue. Pp. 1-22, 1 chart. Oct. 10, 1917.
Pt. 3. Sulphur: An example of industrial independence. By Joseph E. Pogue. Pp. 1-10, 1 chart, 3 pis. Nov. 7, 1917.
Pt. 4. Coal: The resource and its full utilization. By Chester G. Gilbert and Joseph E. Pogue. Pp. 1-27. Feb. 21, 1918.
Pt. 5. Power: Its significance and needs. By Chester G. Gilbert and Joseph E. Pogue. Pp. 1-53, 2 figs. Sept. 21, 1918.
Pt. 6. Petroleum: A resource interpretation. By Chester G. Gilbert and Joseph E. Pogue. Pp. i-v, 1-76, 12 figs., 3 pis. Aug. 7, 1918.
BULLETINS
23
Pt. 7. Natural gas: Its production, service, and conservation. By Samuel S. Wyer. Pp. 1-67, 20 figs., 8 pis. Dec. 28, 1918.
Pt. 8. Manufactured gas in the home. By Samuel S. Wyer. Pp. i-vi, 1-24, 11 figs. June 9, 1923.
103. Contributions to the geology and paleontology of the Canal Zone, Panama, and geologically related areas in Central America and the West Indies. Prepared under the direction of Thomas Wayland Vaughan. Pp. i-xviii, 1-612, 27 figs., 154 pis. Feb. 21, 1920.
Pt. 1. On some fossil and recent Lithothamnieae of the Panama Canal Zone. By Marshall A. Howe. Pp. 1-13, i, 11 pis. Feb. 9, 1919.
Pt. 2. The fossil higher plants from the Canal Zone. By Edward W. Berry. Pp. 15-44, i, 7 pis. Jan. 11, 1919.
Pt. 3. The smaller fossil Foraminifera of the Panama Canal Zone. By Joseph Augustine Cushman. Pp. 45-87, i-ii, 15 pis. Feb. 18, 1919.
Pt. 4. The larger fossil Foraminifera of the Panama Canal Zone. By Joseph Augustine Cushman. Pp. 89-102, i, 12 pis. Jan. 7, 1919.
Pt. 5. Fossil Echini of the Panama Canal Zone and Costa Rica. By Rob¬ ert Tracy Jackson. Pp. 103-116, i, 3 figs., 7 pis. Feb. 9, 1919.
Pt. 6. Bryozoa of the Canal Zone and related areas. By Ferdinand Canu
and Ray S. Bassler. Pp. 117-122, i, 1 pi. Jan. 28, 1919.
Pt. 7. Decapod crustaceans from the Panama region. By Mary J. Rath- bun. Pp. 123-184, i-iii, 13 pis. Jan. 8, 1919.
Pt. 8. Cirripedia from the Panama Canal Zone. By Henry A. Pilsbry. Pp. 185-188, 1 pi. Jan. 28, 1919.
Pt. 9. Fossil corals from Central America, Cuba, and Porto Rico, with an account of the American Tertiary, Pleistocene, and Recent coral reefs. By Thomas Wayland Vaughan. Pp. 189-524, i-xiv, 22 figs., 85 pis. July 11, 1919.
Pt. 10. The sedimentary formations of the Panama Canal Zone, with special reference to the stratigraphic relations of the fossiliferous beds. By Donald Francis MacDonald. Pp. 525-545, 2 figs., 2 pis. May 16, 1919.
Pt. 11. The biologic character and geologic correlation of the sedimentary formations of Panama in their relation to the geologic history of Central America and the West Indies. By Thomas Wayland Vaughan. Pp. 547-612. May 19, 1919.
104. The Foraminifera of the Atlantic Ocean. By Joseph Augustine Cushman.
Pt. 1. Astrorhizidae. Pp. i-vii, 1-111, 39 pis. July 1, 1918.
Pt. 2. Lituolidae. Pp. i-vii, 1-111, 18 pis. Oct. 6, 1920.
Pt. 3. Textulariidae. Pp. i-viii, 1-149, 26 pis. June 28, 1922.
Pt. 4. Lagenidae. Pp. i-x, 1-228, 42 pis. Sept. 27, 1923.
Pt. 5. Chilostomellidae and Globigerinidae. Pp. i-v, 1-55, 8 pis. May 20, 1924.
Pt. 6. Miliolidae, Ophthalmidiidae, and Fischerinidae. Pp. i-viii, 1-129, 22 pis. June 29, 1929.
Pt. 7. Nonionidae, Camerinidae, Peneroplidae, and Alveolinellidae. Pp. i-vi, 1-79, 18 pis. Feb. 25, 1930.
Pt. 8. Rotaliidae, Amphisteginidae, Calcarinidae, Cymbaloporettidae, Glo- borotaliidae, Anomalinidae, Planorbulinidae, Rupertiidae, and Homotremidae. Pp. i-ix, 1-179, 26 pis. July 25, 1931.
105. Catalogue of the postage stamps and stamped envelopes of the United States
and possessions, issued prior to January 1, 1919. Compiled by Joseph B.
Leavy. Pp. i-lx, 1-204, 3 pis. May 7, 1919.
106. North American Early Tertiary Bryozoa. By Ferdinand Canu and Ray S. Bass¬
ler. Pp. i-xx, 1-879, 279 figs., 162 pis. (Text and plates in separate vols.)
June 30, 1920.
107. Life histories of North American diving birds: Order Pygopodes. By Arthur
Cleveland Bent. Pp. i-xiii, 1-245, 55 pis. Aug. 1, 1919.
24
BULLETIN 193, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM
108. A revision of the Nearctic termites. By Nathan Banks. With notes on biology
and geographic distribution by Thomas E. Snyder. Pp. i-viii, 1-228, 70 figs., 35 pis. Apr. 13, 1920.
109. Contributions to a history of American State geological and natural history
surveys. Edited and compiled by George P. Merrill. Pp. i-xviii, 1-549, 37 pis. Aug. 2, 1920.
110. Osteology of the carnivorous Dinosauria in the United States National Museum,
with special reference to the genera Antrodemus ( Allosaurus ) and Cera- tosaurus. By Charles Whitney Gilmore. Pp. i-xi, 1-159, 79 figs., 36 pis. Sept. 9, 1920.
111. A monograph of the East American scaphopod mollusks. By John B. Hender¬
son. Pp. i-vi, 1-177, 20 pis. Oct. 6, 1920.
112. Summary of the marine shellbearing mollusks of the northwest coast of America,
from San Diego, California, to the Polar Sea, mostly contained in the collec¬ tion of the United States National Museum, with illustrations of hitherto unfigured species. By William Healey Dali. Pp. i-iii, 1-217, 22 pis. Feb. 24, 1921.
113. Life histories of North American gulls and terns: Order Longipennes. By
Arthur Cleveland Bent. Pp. i-x, 1-345, 93 pis. Aug. 27, 1921.
114. A revision of the king snakes: Genus Lampropeltis. By Frank N. Blanchard.
Pp. i-vi, 1-260, 78 figs. Sept. 15, 1921.
115. The fossil crinoid genus Dolatocrlnus and its allies. By Frank Springer. Pp.
i-v, 1-78, 6 figs., 16 pis. Apr. 6, 1921.
116. The dipterous genus Dolichopus Latreille in North America. By M. C. Van
Duzee, F. R. Cole, and J. M. Aldrich. Pp. i-vi, 1-304, 16 pis. Mar. 21, 1921.
117. The distribution of bird life in the Urubamba Valley of Peru. A report on the
birds collected by the Yale University-National Geographic Society’s Expedi¬ tions. By Frank M. Chapman. Pp. 1-138, 3 figs., 9 pis. June 29, 1921.
118. Handbook and descriptive catalogue of the collections of gems and precious
stones in the United States National Museum. By George P. Merrill, assisted by Margaret W. Moodey and Edgar T. Wherry. Pp. i-viii, 1-225, 26 figs., 14 pis. Apr. 26, 1922.
119. Catalogue of the mechanical engineering collection in the United States National
Museum. Motors, locomotives, and self-propelled vehicles. Edited and com¬ piled by Carl W. Mitman. Pp. 1-118, 59 figs., 2 pis. Feb. 3, 1922.
120. The opalinid ciliate infusorians. By Maynard M. Metcalf. Pp. i-vii, 1-484,
258 figs. June 9, 1923.
121. Life histories of North American petrels and pelicans and their allies: Order
Tubinares and order Steganopodes. By Arthur Cleveland Bent. Pp. i-xii, 1-343, 69 pis. Oct. 19, 1922.
122. A monograph of the American shipworms. By Paul Bartsch. Pp. i-iii, 1-51,
1 fig., 37 pis. Aug. 4, 1922.
123. Revision of the North American moths of the subfamily Eucosminae of the
family Olethreutidae. By Carl Heinrich. Pp. i-iv, 1-298, 1 fig, 59 pis. Apr. 12, 1923.
124. The type species of the genera of Chalcidoidea or chalcid-flies. By A. B.
Gahan and Margaret M. Fagan. Pp. i-iii, 1-173. Apr. 6, 1923.
125. North American Later Tertiary and Quaternary Bryozoa. By Ferdinand Canu
and Ray S. Bassler. Pp. i-vii, 1-302, 38 figs., 47 pis. July 16, 1923.
126. Life histories of North American wild fowl: Order Anseres (Part). By Arthur
Cleveland Bent. Pp. i-ix, 1-250, 46 pis. May 25, 1923.
127. Catalogue of the watercraft collection in the United States National Museum.
Compiled and edited by Carl W. Mitman. Pp. i-v, 1-298, 96 figs., 1 pi. July 17, 1923.
128. List of North American Recent mammals, 1923. By Gerrit S. Miller, Jr. Pp.
i-xvi, 1-673. Apr. 29, 1924.
129. The spider crabs of America. By Mary J. Rathbun. Pp. i-xx, 1-613, 153 figs.,
283 pis. June 19, 1925.
BULLETINS 25
130. Life histories of North American wild fowl: Order Anseres (Part). By Arthur
Cleveland Bent. Pp. i-x, 1-376, 60 pis. June 27, 1925.
131. The minerals of Idaho. By Earl V. Shannon. Pp. i-vii, 1-483, 170 figs., 19 pis.
Apr. 9, 1926.
132. Revision of the North American moths of the subfamilies Laspeyresiinae and
Olethreutinae. By Carl Heinrich. Pp. i-v, 1-216, 2 figs., 76 pis. Feb. 2, 1926.
133. Observations on the birds of Argentina, Paraguay, Uruguay, and Chile. By
Alexander Wetmore. Pp. i-iv, 1-448, 20 pis. Feb. 1, 1926.
134. Material culture of the people of southeastern Panama, based on specimens in
the United States National Museum. By Herbert W. Krieger. Pp. i-v, 1-141, 1 fig., 37 pis. Nov. 4, 1926.
135. Life histories of North American marsh birds. Orders Odontoglossae, Hero-
diones, and Paludicolae. By Arthur Cleveland Bent. Pp. i-xii, 1-490, 98 pis. Mar. 11, 1927.
136. Handbook of the collection of musical instruments in the United States National
Museum. By Frances Densmore. Pp. i-iii, 1-164, 48 pis. May 26, 1927.
137. The collection of primitive weapons and armor of the Philippine Islands in the
United States National Museum. By Herbert W. Krieger. Pp. i-iii, 1-128, map, 21 pis. Dec. 1, 1926.
138. The fossil stalk-eyed Crustacea of the Pacific slope of North America. By Mary
J. Rathbun. Pp. i-vii, 1-155, 6 figs., 39 pis. Dec. 30, 1926.
139. Fire as an agent in human culture. By Walter Hough. Pp. i-xiv, 1-270, 4 figs.,
41 pis. Dec. 30, 1926.
140. Bird parasites of the nematode suborders Strongylata, Ascaridata, and Spiru-
rata. By Eloise B. Cram. Pp. i-xvii, 1-465, 444 figs. June 30, 1927.
141. Collection of heating and lighting utensils in the United States National Museum.
By Walter Hough. Pp. i-viii, 1-113, 99 pis. Feb. 17, 1928.
142. Life histories of North American shore birds. Order Limicolae (Part 1). By
Arthur Cleveland Bent. Pp. i-ix, 1-420, 55 pis. Dec. 31, 1927.
143. Biological and taxonomic investigations on the mutillid wasps. By Clarence E.
Mickel. Pp. i-ix, 1-351, 28 figs., 5 pis. Apr. 23, 1928.
144. The American bats of the genera Myotis and Pizonyx. By Gerrit S. Miller, Jr.,
and Glover M. Allen. Pp. i-viii, 1-218, 13 maps. May 25, 1928.
145. A revision of the North American species of buprestid beetles belonging to the
genus Agrilus. By W. S. Fisher. Pp. i-v, 1-347, 11 pis. Dec. 21, 1928.
146. Life histories of North American shore birds. Order Limicolae (Part 2). By
Arthur Cleveland Bent. Pp. i-ix, 1-412, 66 pis. Mar. 27, 1929.
147. Archeological and historical investigations in Samana, Dominican Republic. By
Herbert W. Krieger. Pp. i-iv, 1-91, 1 map, 27 pis. Sept. 9, 1929.
148. Collections of objects of religious ceremonial in the United States National
Museum. By Immanuel Moses Casanowicz. Pp. i-viii, 1-207, 75 pis. Dec. 31, 1929.
149. Composition and structure of meteorites. By George P. Merrill. Pp. i-vi, 1-62,
32 pis. Feb. 26, 1930.
150. Revision of the fishes of the family Liparidae. By Victor Burke. Pp. i-xii, 1-204,
110 figs. May 27, 1930.
151. East African reptiles and amphibians in the United States National Museum.
By Arthur Loveridge. Pp. i-v, 1-135, 1 pi. Dec. 31, 1929.
152. The cancroid crabs of America of the families Euryalidae, Portunidae, Atele-
cyclidae, Cancridae, and Xanthidae. By Mary J. Rathbun. Pp. i-xvi, 1-609, 85 figs., 230 pis. May 29, 1930.
153. Birds collected by the Childs Frick Expedition to Ethiopia and Kenya Colony.
By Herbert Friedmann.
Pt. 1. Non-Passeres. Pp. i-xiii, 1-516, 22 figs., 12 pis. June 10, 1930.
Pt. 2. Passeres. Pp. i-xii, 1-506, 30 figs., 14 pis. June 23, 1937.
154. A study of the teiid lizards of the genus Crtemidop horns, with special reference
to their phylogenetic relationships. By Charles E. Burt. Pp. i-viii, 1-286, 38 figs. Apr. 24, 1931.
26
BULLETIN 193, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM
155. The birds of Haiti and the Dominican Republic. By Alexander Wetmore and
Bradshaw H. Swales. Pp. i-iv, 1-483, 26 pis. Mar. 7, 1931.
156. Aboriginal Indian pottery of the Dominican Republic. By Herbert W. Krieger.
Pp. i-iii, 1-165, 56 pis. Dec. 31, 1931.
157. The butterflies of the District of Columbia and vicinity. By Austin H. Clark.
Pp. i-ix, 1-337, 64 pis. Feb. 13, 1932.
158. The copepods of the Woods Hole region, Massachusetts. By Charles Branch
Wilson. Pp. i-xix, 1-635, 316 figs., 41 pis. Oct. 26, 1932.
159. The birds of the Natuna Islands. By Harry C. Oberholser. Pp. i-vi, 1-137, 1
fig. Feb. 12, 1932.
160. Mexican tailless amphibians in the United States National Museum. By Rem¬
ington Kellogg. Pp. i-iv, 1-224, 24 figs., 1 pi. May 19, 1932.
161. The Foraminifera of the tropical Pacific collections of the Albatross, 1899-1900.
By Joseph Augustine Cushman.
Pt. 1. Astrorhizidae to Trochamminidae. Pp. i-iv, 1-88, 1 fig., 17 pis. June 18, 1932.
Pt. 2. Lagenidae to Alveolinellidae. Pp. i-vi, 1-79, 19 pis. Aug. 23, 1933. Pt. 3. Heterohelicidae and Buliminidac. Pp. i-v, 1-67, 15 pis. Feb. 10, 1942.
162. Life histories of North American gallinaceous birds (orders Galliformes and
Columbiformes). By Arthur Cleveland Bent. Pp. i-xi, 1-490, 93 pis. May 25, 1932.
163. American and European swords in the historical collections of the United States
National Museum. By Theodore T. Belote. Pp. i-vii, 1-163, 46 pis. July 1, 1932.
164. The Canadian and Ordovician formations and fossils of South Manchuria. By
Riuji Endo. Pp. i-iii, 1-152, 40 pis. Aug. 3, 1932.
165. The bryozoan fauna of the Vincentown limesand. By Ferdinand Canu and Ray
S. Bassler. Pp. i-v, 1-108, 21 pis. Dec. 4, 1933.
166. The oxystomatous and allied crabs of America. By Mary J. Rathbun. Pp. i-vi,
1-278, 47 figs., 86 pis. Oct. 14, 1937.
167. Life histories of North American birds of prey. Part 1. Order Falconiformes.
By Arthur Cleveland Bent. Pp. i-viii, 1-409, 102 pis. May 3, 1937.
168. Nearctic Collembola, or springtails, of the family Isotomidae. By J. W. Folsom.
Pp. i-iii, 1-144, 39 pis. July 1, 1937.
169. The Fort Union of the Crazy Mountain Field, Montana, and its mammalian
faunas. By George Gaylord Simpson. Pp. i-x, 1-287, 80 figs., 10 pis. Aug. 21, 1937.
170. Life histories of North American birds of prey. Part 2. Orders Falconiformes
and Strigiformes. By Arthur Cleveland Bent. Pp. i-viii, 1-482, 92 pis. Aug. 8, 1938.
171. The Pleistocene vertebrate fauna from Cumberland Cave, Maryland. By James
W. Gidley and C. Lewis Gazin. Pp. i-vi, 1-99, 50 figs., 10 pis. May 5, 1938.
172. Birds from Siam and the Malay Peninsula in the United States National Museum
collected by Drs. Hugh M. Smith and William L. Abbott. By J. H. Riley. Pp. i-iv. 1-581. Dec. 3. 1938.
173. Catalog of the mechanical collections of the Division of Engineering, United
States National Museum. By Frank A. Taylor. Pp. i-viii, 1-203, 37 pis. Mar. 2, 1939.
174. Life histories of North American wookpeckers. Order Piciformes. By Arthur
Cleveland Bent. Pp. i-viii, 1-334, 39 pis. May 23, 1939.
175. Variations and relationships in the snakes of the genus Pituophis. By Olive
Griffith Stull. Pp. i-vi, 1-225, 84 figs. June 26, 1940.
176. Life histories of North American cuckoos, goatsuckers, hummingbirds, and their allies. Orders Psittaciformes, Cuculiformes, Trogoniformes, Coraciiformes, Caprimulgiformes, and Micropodiiformes. By Arthur Cleveland Bent. Pp. i-viii, 1-506, 73 pis. July 20, 1940.
The herpetology of Hispaniola. By Doris M. Cochran. Pp. i-vii, 1-398, 120 figs., 12 pis. July 8. 1941.
177.
BULLETINS
27
178. Catalog of the type specimens of mammals in the United States National
Museum, including the Biological Surveys collection. By Arthur J. Poole and Viola S. Schantz. Pp. i-xiii, 1-705. Apr. 8, 1942.
179. Life histories of North American flycatchers, larks, swallows, and their allies.
Order Passeriformes (Families Cotingidae, Tyrannidae, Alaudidae, and Hirundinidae). By Arthur Cleveland Bent. Pp. i-xi, 1-555, 70 pis. May I, 1942.
180. Fishes of the Phoenix and Samoan Islands collected in 1939 during the expedi¬
tion of the U.S.S. Bushnell. By Leonard P. Schultz. Pp. i-x, 1-316, 27 figs., 9 pis. Jan. 20, 1943.
181. The cyclophorid operculate land mollusks of America. By Carlos de la Torre,
Paul Bartsch, and Joseph P. E. Morrison. Pp. i-iv, 1-306, 42 pis. Aug. 21, 1942.
182. Monograph of the West Indian beetles of the family Staphylinidae. By Richard
E. Blackwelder. Pp. i-viii, 1-658, 3 figs., 19 maps. Jan. 27, 1943.
183. Archeological investigations in Platte and Clay Counties, Missouri. By Waldo
R. Wedel. With Appendix, “Skeletal Remains from Platte and Clay Counties, Missouri,” by T. Dale Stewart. Pp. i-viii, 1-284, 22 figs., 50 pis. Oct. 1, 1943.
184. The metallography of meteoric iron. By Stuart H. Perry. Pp. i-vii, 1-206, 9
figs., 78 pis. Feb. 15, 1944.
185. Checklist of the coleopterous insects of Mexico, Central America, the West
Indies, and South America. Compiled by Richard E. Blackwelder.
Pt. 1. Pp. i-xii, 1-188. Mar. 7, 1944.
Pt. 2. Pp. i-iii, 189-341. June 30, 1944.
Pt. 3. Pp. i-iv, 343-550. May 21, 1945.
Pt. 4. Pp. i-iii, 551-763. May 13, 1946.
[To be completed.]
186. The birds of northern Thailand. [An account of the birds of Chiang Rae Prov¬
ince and those parts of the provinces of the Mae Hong Son, Chiang Mai, Lam- phun, Lampang, Phrae, and Nan lying north of latitude 17°47' N.] By H. G. Deignan. Pp. i-v, 1-616, 4 maps, 9 pis. Sept. 17, 1945.
187. An annotated checklist and key to the snakes of Mexico. By Hobart M. Smith
and Edward H. Taylor. Pp. i-iv, 1-239. Oct. 5, 1945.
188. The fresh-water fishes of Siam, or Thailand. By Hugh M. Smith. Pp. i-xi,
1-622, 107 figs., 9 pis. Nov. 13, 1945.
189. A descriptive catalog of the shore fishes of Peru. By Samuel F. Hildebrand. Pp.
i-xi, 1-530, 95 figs. Feb. 26, 1946.
190. The North American clear-wing moths of the family Aegeriidae. By George
P. Engelhardt. Pp. i-vi, 1-222, 32 pis. June 28, 1946.
191. Life histories of North American jays, crows, and titmice. Families Corvidae
and Paridae. By Arthur Cleveland Bent. Pp. i-xi, 1-495, 68 pis.
192. The operculate land mollusks of the family Annulariidae of the island of His¬
paniola and the Bahama Archipelago. By Paul Bartsch. Pp. i-iv, 1-264, 38 pis. Oct. 3, 1946.
193. A list of the publications of the United States National Museum (1875-1946).
Compiled in the Editorial Division, Smithsonian Institution. Pp. 1-305.
CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE U. S. NATIONAL HERBARIUM*
Volume 1
Reports on collections, and miscellaneous papers. Pp. i-viii (title page, note, prefatory note, contents, and list of illustrations) ; pp. 1-368 (papers 1-9) ; pp. 393-434 (index) ; 10 figs., 35 pis. 1890-1895.
No.
1. Plants from southern California. By George Vasey and J. N. Rose. Pp. 1-8. June
16, 1890.
List of plants collected by Dr. Edward Palmer in Lower California in 1889. By George Vasey and J. N. Rose. Pp. 9-28. June 16, 1890.
2. Upon a collection of plants made by Mr. G. C. Nealley, in the region of the
Rio Grande, in Texas, from Brazos Santiago to El Paso County. By John
Coulter. Pp. 29-61. July 18, 1890.
3. List of plants collected by Dr. Edward Palmer in Lower California and western
Mexico in 1890. By George Vasey and J. N. Rose. Pp. 63-90, 1 pi. Nov. 8, 1890.
4. List of plants collected by Dr. Edward Palmer in western Mexico and Arizona
in 1890. By J. N. Rose. Pp. 91-116, 10 pis. June 30, 1891.
List of plants collected by Dr. E. Palmer in Arizona in 1890. By J. N. Rose. Pp. 117-127. June 30, 1891.
5. List of plants collected by Dr. Edward Palmer in 1890 on Carmen Island. By
J. N. Rose. Pp. 129-134, 3 pis. Sept. 20, 1892.
List of plants collected by the U.S.S. Albatross in 1887-’91 along the western coast of America. 1. List of plants from Cocos Island. By J. N. Rose. P. 135. 2. List of plants from Galapagos Islands. By J. N. Rose. Pp. 136-138. 3. List of ferns from southern Patagonia. By Daniel C. Eaton. P. 138. 4. List of mosses from Fuegia and Patagonia. By Daniel C. Eaton. Pp. 138-139. 5. List of
liverworts from southern Patagonia. By A. W. Evans. Pp. 140-142. 6. List of lichens from southern Patagonia. By J. W. Eckfeldt. P. 142. 2 pis. Sept. 20, 1892.
Revision of the North American species of Hojfmanseggia. By E. M. Fisher. Pp. 143-150. Sept. 20, 1892.
Systematic and alphabetic index of new species of North American phanerogams and pteridophytes, published in 1891. Compiled by Josephine A. Clark. Pp. 151-188. Sept. 20, 1892.
6. List of plants collected by C. S. Sheldon and M. A. Carleton in Indian Territory
in 1891. By J. M. Holzinger. Pp. 189-219, 2 pis. Dec. 6, 1892.
Observations on the native plants of Oklahoma Territory and adjacent districts. By M. A. Carleton. Pp. 220-232. Dec. 6, 1892.
7. Systematic and alphabetic index to new species of North American phanerogams
and pteridophytes published in 1892. By Josephine A. Clark. Pp. 233-264. July 15, 1892.
8. Notes on some Pacific coast grasses. By George Vasey. Pp. 265-266. Oct. 31, 1893. Descriptions of new or noteworthy grasses from the United States. By George
Vasey. Pp. 267-280. Oct. 31, 1893.
Descriptions of new grasses from Mexico. By George Vasey. Pp. 281-285, 1 pi. Oct. 31, 1893.
Descriptions of four new plants from Texas and Colorado. By J. M. Holzinger. Pp. 286-287, 2 pis. Oct. 31, 1893.
List of plants new to Florida. By J. M. Holzinger. P. 288. Oct. 31, 1893. Descriptions of three new plants. By J. N. Rose. Pp. 289-290, 2 pis. Oct. 31, 1893. List of lichens from California and Mexico, collected by Dr. Edward Palmer from 1888 to 1892. By J. W. Eckfeldt. Pp. 291-292. Oct. 31, 1893.
9. Report on a collection of plants made in the states of Sonora and Colima, Mexico,
by Dr. Edward Palmer, in the years 1890 and 1891. By J. N. Rose. Pp. 293- 366, 10 figs., 13 pis. Jan. 31, 1895.
Three new species of Sapindaceae from western Mexico and Lower California. By L. Radlkofer. Pp. 367-368. Jan. 31, 1895.
• Volumes 1-8 of the Contributions were published by the U. S. Department of Agriculture.
28
CONTRIBUTIONS, NATIONAL HERBARIUM
29
Volume 2
Botany of western Texas. Pp. i-v (title page, note, prefatory note, table of contents,
and list of plates) ; pp. 1-568 (papers 1-3) ; pp. 569-588 (index) ; 3 pis. 1891-189L
No.
1* Manual of the phanerogams and pteridophytes of western Texas: Polypetalae. By John M. Coulter. Pp. 1-152, 1 pi. June 27, 1891.
2. Manual of the phanerogams and pteridophytes of western Texas: Gamopetalae.
By John M. Coulter. Pp. 153-345, 2 pis. July 1, 1892.
3. Manual of the phanerogams and pteridophytes of western Texas: Apetalae,
Monocotyledonae, Pteridophyta. By John M. Coulter. Pp. 347-568 Mav lo’
1004 J '
Volume 3
Reports on collections, revisions of groups, and miscellaneous papers. Pp. i-vii (title page, note, errata and addenda, prefatory note, contents, and list of illustrations) ; pp. 1-578 (papers 1-9) ; 579-612 (index) ; 28 pis. 1892-1896.
No.
1. Monograph of the grasses of the United States and British America. By George
Vasey. Pp. 1-89. Feb. 25, 1892.
2. Preliminary revision of the North American species of Cactus, Anhalonium, and
Lophophora. By John M. Coulter. Pp. 91-132. June 10, 1894.
3. Flora of the sand hills of Nebraska. By P. A. Rydberg. Pp. 133-203 1 fig 2 dIs
Sept. 14, 1895.
4. Report on a collection of plants made by J. H. Sandberg and assistants in north¬
ern Idaho in the year 1892. By John M. Holzinger. Pp. 205-287, 2 pis Nov 23, 1895.
5. Report on Mexican Umbelliferae, mostly from the state of Oaxaca, recently col¬
lected by C. G. Pringle and E. W. Nelson. By John M. Coulter and J. N. Rose Pp. 289-309, 6 pis. Dec. 14, 1895.
Descriptions of plants, mostly new, from Mexico and the United States. By J. N. Rose. Pp. 311-323, 6 pis. Dec. 14, 1895.
6. Botany of Yakutat Bay, Alaska. I.— Field report. By Frederick Funston. II.—
Botanical report. By Frederick Vernon Coville. Pp. 325-353. Jan. 15, 1896.
7. Preliminary revision of the North American species of Echinocactus, Cereus, and
Opuntia. By John M. Coulter. Pp. 355-462. Apr. 1, 1896.
8. Flora of the Back Hills of South Dakota. By P. A. Rydberg. Pp. 463-536 4 pis
June 13, 1896. ’
9. Report on a collection of plants made by C. H. Thompson in southwestern Kan¬
sas in 1893. By A. S. Hitchcock. Pp. 537-557. Aug. 5, 1896.
Crepis occidentalis and its allies. By Frederick V. Coville. Pp. 559-565 6 pis Aug. 6, 1896. '
Plants from the Big Horn Mountains of Wyoming. By J. N. Rose. Pp 567-574 Aug. 5, 1896.
Leibergia, a new genus of Umbelliferae from the Columbia River region. By John M. Coulter and J. N. Rose. Pp. 575-576, 1 pi. Aug. 5, 1896.
Roseanthus, a new genus of Cucurbitaceae from Acapulco, Mexico. By Alfred Cogniaux. Pp. 577-578, 1 pi. Aug. 5, 1896.
Volume 4
Botany of the Death Valley Expedition. By Frederick Vernon Coville. Pp. i-viii (title page, note, letter of transmittal, letter of submittal, contents, and list of illus¬ trations) ; 363 pp., 22 pis., 1 map. Nov. 29, 1893.
Volume 5
Systematic, economic, and ecological investigations. Pp. i-x (title page, note, prefa¬ tory note, contents, and illustrations); pp. 1-550 (papers 1-6); pp. 551-585
(index) ; 77 pis., 90 figs., 2 maps. 1897-1901.
No.
1. General report on a botanical survey of the Coeur d’Alene Mountains in Idaho during the summer of 1895. By John B. Leiberg. Pp. 1-86, 1 pi. Jan. 25 1897 711175 — 47 — 3
30
BULLETIN 195, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM
2. Notes -on the plants used by the Klamath Indians of Oregon. By Frederick V.
Coville. Pp. 87-108. June 9, 1897.
3. Studies of Mexican and Central American plants. By J. N. Rose. Pp. 109-144,
6 figs., 16 pis. Aug. 27, 1897.
4. Studies of Mexican and Central American Plants — No. 2. By J. N. Rose. (With
a section on “Ferns Collected in Mexico Dy J. N. Rose during the Months of August and September, 1897,” pp. 146-151, by George E. Davenport.) Pp. 145-200, 24 figs., 8 pis. Oct. 31, 1899.
Two new species of plants from the northwestern United States. By L. F. Hen¬ derson. Pp. 201-202, 1 pi. Oct. 31, 1899.
Ilesperogenia, a new genus of Umbelliferae from Mount Rainier. By John M.
Coulter and J. N. Rose. P. 203, 1 pi. Oct. 31, 1899.
Three new species of Tradescantia from the United States. By J. N. Rose. Pp. 204-206. Oct. 31, 1899.
Treleasea, a new genus of Commelinaceae. By J. N. Rose. Pp. 207-208. Oct. 31, 1899.
Notes on useful plants of Mexico. By J. N. Rose. Pp. 209-259, 2 figs., 37 pis. Oct. 31, 1899.
5. The plant covering of Ocracoke Island; a study in the ecology of the North
Carolina strand vegetation. By Thomas H. Kearney, Jr. Pp. 261-319, 18 figs. Aug. 1, 1900.
6. Report on a botanical survey of the Dismal Swamp region. By Thomas H.
Kearney. Pp. 321-550, 40 figs., 13 pis., 2 maps. Sept. 6, 1901.
Volume 6
Plant life of Alabama. By Charles Mohr. Pp. 1-921, 13 pis. July 31, 1901.
Volume 7
Systematic and geographic botany and aboriginal uses of plants. Pp. 1-8 (title page, contents, and note); pp. 9-408 (papers 1-3); 21 pis., 78 figs. 1900-1902.
No.
1. Monograph of the North American Umbelliferae. By John M. Coulter and J. N.
Rose. Pp. 9-256, 65 figs., 9 pis. Dec. 31, 1900.
2. The origin and distribution of the cocoa palm. By O. F. Cook. Pp. 257-293.
Sept. 24, 1901.
3. Plants used by the Indians of Mendocino County, California. By V. K. Chesnut.
Pp. 295-408, 13 figs., 12 pis. Jan. 24, 1902.
Volume 8
Mexican, Central American, and Porto Rican plants. Pp. i-xiii (title, advertisement, title page, note, preface, contents, and illustrations) ; pp. 1-339 (parts 1-4) ; pp. 341-373 (index) ; 19 figs., 73 pis. 1903-1905.
Part
1. Studies of Mexican and Central American plants — No. 3. By J. N. Rose.
Pp. 1-55, 11 figs., 12 pis June 16, 1903.
2. Economic plants of Porto Rico. By O. F. Cook and G. N. Collins. Pp. 57-270,
2 figs., 47 pis. June 27, 1903.
3. A study of certain Mexican and Guatemalan species of Polypodium. By William
R. Maxon. Pp. 271-280, 2 pis. June 27, 1903.
4. Studies of Mexican and Central American plants — No. 4. By J. N. Rose.
Pp. 281-339, 6 figs., 10 pis. Apr. 20, 1905.
Volume 9
The useful plants of the Island of Guam. By William Edwin Safford. Pp. 1-416, 70 pis. Apr. 8, 1905.
CONTRIBUTIONS, NATIONAL HERBARIUM
31
Volume 10
Systematic investigations in phanerogams, ferns, and diatoms. Pp. i-xii (title, advertisement, title page, note, preface, contents, and illustrations) ; pp. 1-508 (parts 1-7) ; pp. 509-535 (index) ; 6 figs., 56 pis. 1906-1908.
Part
1. North American species of Festuca. By Charles V. Piper. Pp. 1-48, 15 pis.
Mar. 30, 1906.
2. The genus Ptelea in the western and southwestern United States and Mexico.
By Edward L. Greene. Pp. 49-78. July 16, 1906.
3. Studies of Mexican and Central American plants — No. 5. By J. N. Rose. Pp.
79-132, 6 figs., 28 pis. Dec. 5, 1906.
4. The Leguminosae of Porto Rico. By J. Perkins. Pp. 133-220. June 10, 1907.
5. Report on the diatoms of the Albatross voyages in the Pacific Ocean, 1888-1904.
By Albert Mann. (Assisted in the bibliography and citations by P. L. Ricker.) Pp. 221-442, 11 pis. July 11, 1907.
6. The Cyperaceae of Costa Rica. By C. B. Clarke. Pp. 443-472. Jan. 21, 1908.
7. Studies of tropical American ferns — No. 1. By William R. Maxon. Pp. 473-508,
2 pis. Mar. 30, 1908.
Volume 11
Flora of the State of Washington. By Charles V. Piper. Pp. 1-637, 22 pis., 1 map. Oct. 8, 1906.
Volume 12
Systematic investigations and bibliography. Pp. i-xvi (title, advertisement, title page, note, preface, contents, and illustrations; pp. 1-455 (parts 1-10); pp. 457- 474 (index) ; 67 figs., 85 pis. 1908-1909.
Part
1. Catalogue of the botanical library of John Donnell Smith, presented in 1905
to the Smithsonian Institution. Compiled by Alice Cary Atwood. Pp. 1-94. Apr. 23, 1908.
2. The Lecythidaceae of Costa Rica. By H. Pittier de Fabrega. Pp. 95-101, 4
figs., 8 pis. May 20, 1908.
Tonduzia, a new genus of Apocynaceae from Central America. By H. Pittier de Fabrega. Pp. 103-104, 2 figs., 1 pi. May 20, 1908.
A collection of plants from the vicinity of La Guaira, Venezuela. By J. R. Johnston. Pp. 105-111. May 20, 1908/
3. Types of American grasses: A study of the American species of grasses de¬
scribed by Linnaeus, Gronovius, Sloane, Swartz, and Michaux. By A. S. Hitchcock. Pp. 113-158. June 18, 1908.
4. The Mexican and Central American species of Sapium. By Henry Pittier. Pp.
159-169, 4 figs., 8 pis. Oct. 6, 1908.
5. New or noteworthy plants from Colombia and Central America. By Henry
Pittier. Pp. 171-181, 9 figs., 2 pis. Jan. 27, 1909.
6. Catalogue of the grasses of Cuba. By A. S. Hitchcock. Pp. 183-258. Mar.
23, 1909.
7. Studies of Mexican and Central American plants — No. 6. By J. N. Rose.
Pp. 259-302, 29 figs., 7 pis. Apr. 12, 1909.
8. The Allioniaceae of the United States, with notes on Mexican species. By
Paul C. Standley. Pp. 303-389, 19 figs., 16 pis. Apr. 23, 1909.
9. Thompsonella, a new genus of Crassulaceae from Mexico. By N. L. Britton
and J. N. Rose. Pp. 391-392, 2 pis. May 10, 1909.
Rediscovery of Echeveria carnicolor. By J. N. Rose. P. 393, 1 pi. May 10, 1909. Three new species of Crassulaceae from Guatemala. By J. N. Rose. Pp. 395-396, 2 pis. May 10, 1909.
Rediscovery of Cereus nudiflorus. By J. N. Rose. Pp. 397-398, 3 pis. May 10, 1909.
A species of Pereskia from Guatemala. By J. N. Rose. P. 399, 3 pis. May 10, 1909.
32
BULLETIN 193, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM
New species of Opuntia from Arizona. By J. N. Rose. Pp. 401-402, 1 pi. May 10, 1909.
Echinocereus baileyi, a new cactus from Oklahoma. By J. N. Rose. P. 403, 2 pis. May 10, 1909.
Nopalea lutea, a new cactus from Guatemala. By J. N. Rose. P. 405, 1 pi. May 10, 1909.
Conzattia a new genus of Caesalpiniaceae. By J. N. Rose. Pp. 407-408, 1 pi. May 10, 1909.
Two new species of Acacia of the series Filicinae. By J. N. Rose. P. 409. May 10, 1909.
A new spleenwort from China. By William R. Maxon. P. 411, 1 pi. May 10, 1909.
10. The genus Cereus and its allies in North America. By N. L. Britton and J. N. Rose. Pp. 413-437, 16 pis. July 21, 1909.
Five new species of Crassulaceae from Mexico. By J. N. Rose. Pp. 439-440, 5 pis. July 21, 1909.
Supplement to the monograph of the North American Umbelliferae. By John M. Coulter and J. N. Rose. Pp. 441-451, 2 pis. July 21, 1909.
Apogamy in the maize plant. By G. N. Collins. Pp. 453-455, 2 pis. July 21, 1909.
Volume 13
Systematic and ecological investigations and bibliography. Pp. i-xvi (title, advertise¬ ment, title page, note, preface, contents, and illustrations) ; pp. 1-466 (parts 1-12) ; pp. 467-489 (index) ; 91 fig9., 96 pis., 1 map. 1909-1912.
Part
1. Studies of tropical American ferns — No. 2. By William R. Maxon. Pp. 1-43,
1 fig., 9 pis. June 30, 1909.
2. Three new species of Echeveria from southern Mexico. By J. N. Rose and
J. A. Purpus. Pp. 45-46, 5 pis. Feb. 21, 1910.
3. The grasses of Alaska. By F. Lamson-Scribner and Elmer D. Merrill. Pp.
47-92, 2 pis. June 8, 1910.
4. New or noteworthy plants from Colombia and Central America — 2. By Henry
Pittier. Pp. 93-132, 40 figs., 4 pis. June 11, 1910.
5. Relationships of the ivory palms. By O. F. Cook. Pp. 133-141, 3 figs. June
22, 1910.
6. 1. The type localities of plants first described from New Mexico. By Paul
C. Standley. Pp. 143-227. 2. A bibliography of New Mexican botany. Bv
Paul C. Standley. Pp. 229-246. 1 pi., 1 map. Oct. 31, 1910.
7. A preliminary treatment of the genus Castilla. By Henry Pittier. Pp. 247-279, 10
figs., 22 pis. Dec. 31, 1910.
8. The genus Talinum in Mexico. By J. N. Rose and Paul C. Standley. Pp. 281-288,
2 pis. Feb. 24, 1911.
Two new species of Harper ella. By J. N. Rose. Pp. 289-290. Feb. 24, 1911.
9. Studies of Mexican and Central American plants — No. 7. By J. N. Rose.
Pp. 291-312, 1 fig., 22 pis. Apr. 11, 1911.
10. The Gyrophoraceae of California. By Albert W. C. T. Herre. Pp. 313-321,
6 pis. June 8, 1911.
The plant life of Ellis, Great, Little, and Long Lakes in North Carolina.
By William H. Brown. Pp. 323-341, 1 fig. June 8, 1911.
A revision of the subgenus Cyclobothra of the genus Calochortus. By Joseph H. Painter. Pp. 343-350. June 8, 1911.
A revision of the cichoriaceous genera Krigia, Cynthia, and Cymbia. By Paul C. Standley. Pp. 351-357. June 8, 1911.
New or noteworthy plants from the eastern United States. By Edward S. Steele. Pp. 359-374. June 8, 1911.
Two new shrubs from Lower California. By Paul C. Standley and E. A. Goldman. P. 375. June 8, 1911.
11. The Allioniaceae of Mexico and Central America. By Paul C. Standley.
Pp. 377-430, 4 pis. July 12, 1911.
12. New or noteworthy plants from Colombia and Central America. By Henry
Pittier. Pp. 431-466, 35 figs., 19 pis. Jan. 5, 1912.
CONTRIBUTIONS, NATIONAL HERBARIUM 33
Volume 14
Lichens of Minnesota; history of coconut palm; grama grasses. Pp. i-xiv (title, advertisement, title page, note, preface, contents, and illustrations) ; pp. 1-428 (parts 1-3) ; pp. 429-444 (index) ; 63 figs., 84 pis. 1910-1912.
Part
1. The lichens of Minnesota. By Biuce Fink. Pp. 1-269, 18 figs., 52 pis. June 1, 1910.
2. History of the coconut palm in America. By O. F. Cook. Pp. 271-342, 15 pis.
Dec. 31, 1910.
3. The grama grasses: Bouteloua and related genera. By David Griffiths. Pp.
343-428, 45 figs., 17 pis. Feb. 24, 1912.
Volume 15
The North American species of Panicutn. By A. S. Hitchcock and Agnes Chase. Pp. 1-396, 370 figs. Oct. 22, 1910.
Volume 18
Systematic investigations in phanerogams, ferns, and mosses. Pp. i-xv (title, advertisement, title page, note, preface, contents, and illustrations) ; pp. 1-371 (parts 1-14) ; pp. 373-389 (index) ; 54 figs., 133 pis., 1 map. 1912-1916.
Part
1. The relationship of Asplenium andrewsu. By William R. Maxon. Pp. 1-3, 2 pis.
Feb. 13, 1912.
Report on a collection of plants from the Pinacate region of Sonora. By J. N.
Rose and Paul C. Standley. Pp. 5-20, 1 fig., 14 pfi. Feb. 13, 1912. Tumamoca, a new genus of Cucurbitaceae. By J. N. Rose. P. 21, 1 pi. Feb. 13, 1912.
New or interesting mosses from Panama. By R. S. Williams. Pp. 23-24. Feb. 13, 1912.
2. Studies of tropical American ferns — No. 3. By William R. Maxon. Pp. 25-62,
17 pis. June 19, 1912.
3. The North American species of Nymphaea. By Gerrit S. Miller, Jr., and Paul
C. Standley. Pp. 63-108, 39 figs., 13 pis. July 6, 1912.
4. Descriptions of new plants preliminary to a report upon the flora of New
Mexico. By E. O. Wocton and Paul C. Standley. Pp. 109-196, 3 pis. Feb. 12, 1913.
5. Supplementary notes on American species of Festuca. By Charles V. Piper.
Pp. 197-199. Feb. 11, 1913.
Delphinium simplex and its immediate allies. By Charles V. Piper. Pp. 201-203.
Feb. 11, 1913.
The identity of Heuchera cylindrica. By Charles V. Piper. Pp. 205-206. Feb. 11, 1913.
New or noteworthy species of Pacific coast plants. By Charles V. Piper. Pp. 207-210. Feb. 11, 1913.
The American species of Meibomia of the section Nephromeria. By J. N. Rose and Paul C. Standley. Pp. 211-216, 1 pi. Feb. 11, 1913.
Raimondia, a new genus of Annonaceae from Colombia. By W. E. Safford. Pp. 217-219, 2 pis. Feb. 11, 1913.
Four new species of goldenrod from the eastern United States. By E. S. Steele.
Pp. 221-224. Feb. 11, 1913.
6. Three new genera of stilt palms (Iriarteaceae) from Colombia, with a synopti¬
cal review of the family. By O. F. Cook and C. B. Doyle. Pp. 225-238, 1 fig., 12 pis. Feb. 21, 1913.
7. Studies in Cactaceae — 1. By N. L. Britton and J. N. Rose. Fp. 239-242, 8 pis.
Apr. 10, 1913.
8. Relationships of the false date palm of the Florida Keys, with a synoptical key
to the families of American palms. By O. F. Cook. Pp. 243-254, 4 pis. May 14, 1913.
34
BULLETIN 193, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM
9. The genus Epiphyllum and its allies. By N. L. Britton and J. N. Rose. Pp.
255-262, 7 pis. June 6, 1913.
10. Annona sericea and its allies. By William E. Safford. Pp. 263-275, 3 figs., 15
pis. Dec. 13, 1913.
11. Nomenclature of the sapote and the sapodilla. By O. F. Cook. Pp. 277-285, 2 pis.
Dec. 13, 1913.
12. A monograph of the Hauyeae and Gongylocarpeae, tribes of the Onagraceae.
By John Donnell Smith and J. N. Rose. Pp. 287-298, 10 figs. Aug. 23, 1913.
13. Botrychium virginianum and its forms. By Ivar Tidestrom. Pp. 299-303, 1 pi.
Dec. 29, 1913.
Sphenoclea zeylanica and Caperonia palustris in the southern United States. By Ivar Tidestrom. Pp. 305-307, 1 pi. Dec. 29, 1913.
14. Plant records of an expedition to Lower California. By Edward A. Goldman.
Pp. 309-371, 30 pis. Feb. 10, 1916.
Volume 17
Systematic investigations in lichens and ferns, grasses and other phanerogams. Pp.i -xiv (title, advertisement, title page, note, preface, contents, and illustrations) ; pp. 1-625 (parts 1-8) ; pp. 627-647 (index) ; 149 figs., 54 pis. 1913-1916.
Part
1. The lichen flora of southern California. By Hermann Edward Hasse. Pp.
1-132. June 19, 1913.
2. Studies of tropical American ferns — No. 4. By William R. Maxon. Pp. 133-179,
7 figs., 10 pis. June 20, 1913.
3. Mexican grasses in the United States National Herbarium. By A. S. Hitchcock.
Pp. 181-389. July 15, 1913.
4. Studies of tropical American ferns — No. 5. By William R. Maxon. Pp. 391-425,
3 figs., 13 pis. Jan. 21, 1914.
5. Studies of tropical American phanerogams — No. 1. By Paul C. Standley. Pp.
427-458, 8 pis. Jan. 30, 1914.
6. Tropical North American species of Panicum . By A. S. Hitchcock and Agnes
Chase. Pp. 459-539, 139 figs. July 24, 1915.
7. Studies of tropical American ferns — No. 6. By William R. Maxon. Pp. 541-608,
12 pis. May 23, 1916.
8. Branching and flowering habits of cacao and patashte. By O. F. Cook. Pp.
609-625, 11 pis. June 28, 1916.
Volume 18
Systematic investigations of tropical American plants. Pp. i-xvii (title, advertise¬ ment, title page, note, preface, contents, and illustrations) ; pp. 1-471 (parts 1-7) ; pp. 473-494 (index) ; 104 figs., 106 pis. 1914-1917.
Part
1. Classification of the genus Annona, with descriptions of new and imperfectly
known species. By W. E. Safford. Pp. 1-68, 75 figs., 41 pis. June 17, 1914.
2. New or noteworthy plants from Colombia and Central America — 4. By Henry
Pittier. Pp. 69-86, 12 figs., 15 pis. Apr. 16, 1914.
3. Studies of tropical American phanerogams — No. 2. By Paul C. Standley.
Pp. 87-142. Feb. 11, 1916.
4. New or noteworthy plants from Colombia and Central America — 5. By Henry
Pittier. Pp. 143-171, 10 figs., 24 pis. Mar. 3, 1916.
5. Preliminary revision of the genus Inga. By Henry Pittier. Pp. 173-223, 25 pi*.
Oct. 30, 1916.
6. New or noteworthy plants from Colombia and Central America — 6. By Henry
Pittier. Pp. 225-259, 7 figs., 1 pi. Sept. 22, 1917.
7. Grasses of the West Indies. By A. S. Hitchcock and Agnes Chase. Pp. 261-471.
Sept. 1, 1917.
Volume 19
Flora of New Mexico. By E. O. Wooton and Paul C. Standley. Pp. 1-794. June 24, 1915.
CONTRIBUTIONS, NATIONAL HERBARIUM 35
Volume 20
Systematic studies of American plants. Pp. i-xv (title, advertisement, title page, note, preface, contents, and illustrations) ; pp. 1-588 (parts 1-14) ; pp. 589-605 (index) ; 70 figs., 51 pis. 1917-1925.
Part
1. The Mexican and Central American Bpecies of Ficus. By Paul C. Standley.
Pp. 1-35. May 31, 1917.
2. The Middle American species of Lonchocarpus. By Henry Pittier. Pp. 37-93,
43 figs., 6 pis. Aug. 3, 1917.
3. New or noteworthy plants from Colombia and Central America — 7. By Henry
Pittier. Pp. 95-132, 19 figs., 1 pi. June 18, 1917.
4. The North American species of Aquilegia. By Edwin Blake Payson. Pp. 133-157,
7 pis. Oct. 14, 1918.
5. The allies of Selaginella rupestris in the southeastern United States. By G. P.
Van Eseltine. Pp. 159-172, 8 figs., 8 pis. Oct. 1, 1918.
6. Studies of tropical American phanerogams. By Paul C. Standley. Pp. 173-220.
Aug. 29, 1919.
7. The genus Homalium in America. By S. F. Blake. Pp. 221-235. Sept. 9, 1919. New South American spermatophytes collected by H. M. Curran. By S. F.
Blake. Pp. 237-245. Sept. 9, 1919.
8. The North American species of Asterella. By Alexander W. Evans. Pp. 247-312.
Apr. 29, 1920.
9. Scrophulariaceae of the central Rocky Mountain States. By Francis W. Pen¬
nell. Pp. 313-381. Apr. 29, 1920.
10. Revision of the genus Acanthospcrmum. By S. F. Blake. Pp. 383-392, 1 pi.
June 20, 1921.
Revision of the genus Flourensia. By S. F. Blake. Pp. 393-409. June 20, 1921. Revision of the genus Oyedaea. By S. F. Blake. Pp. 411-422. June 20, 1921. Revision of the genus Tithonia. By S. F. Blake. Pp. 423-436. June 20, 1921.
11. The identification of Berbens aqutfolium and Berberis repens. By Charles V.
Piper. Pp. 437-451, 3 pis. Jan. 26, 1922.
12. New or noteworthy plants from Colombia and Central America — 8. By Henry
Pittier. Pp. 453-490, 4 pis. Jan. 9, 1922.
13 Revision of the American species of Rinorea. By S. F. Blake. Pp. 491-518, 7 pis. July 19, 1924.
New plants from Venezuela. By S. F. Blake. Pp. 519-541, 10 pis. July 19, 1924. Hemibaccharis, a new genus of Baccharidinae. By S. F. Blake. Pp. 543-554, 4 pis. July 19, 1924.
14. The American species of Canavalia and IVenderothia. By C. V. Piper. Pp. 555-588. Apr. 27, 1925.
Volume 21
Flora of the District of Columbia and vicinity. By A. S. Hitchcock and Paul C. Standley. Pp. 1-329, 1 fig., 42 pis. 1919.
Volume 22
Systematic plant studies, chiefly tropical American. Pp. i-xiv (title, advertisement, title page, note, preface, contents, and illustrations) ; pp. 1-748 (parts 1-10) ; pp. 749-777 (index) ; 87 figs., 64 pis. 1920-1927.
Part
1. Revisions of North American grasses: The North American species of
Ichnanthus. By A. S. Hitchcock. Pp. 1-12, 9 pis.; The North American
species of Lasiacis. By A. S. Hitchcock. Pp. 13-31, 15 pis.; The North American species of Brachiaria. By Agnes Chase. Pp. 33-43, 6 figs.; The North American species of Cenchrus. By Agnes Chase. Pp. 45-77, 14 figs. Mar. 29, 1920.
2. A study of Allocarya. By Charles V. Piper. Pp. 79-113. Mar. 13, 1920.
3. Revisions of North American grasses: The North American species of lsachne.
By A. S. Hitchcock. Pp. 115-121, 8 pis.; The North American species of
36
BULLETIN 193, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM
Oplismenus. By A. S. Hitchcock. Pp. 123-132, 4 figs.; The North American species of Echinochloa. By A. S. Hitchcock. Pp. 133-153, 11 figs.; The North American species of Chaetochloa. By A. S. Hitchcock. Pp. 155-208, 27 figs. Nov. 1, 1920.
4. The North American species of Pennisetum. By Agnes Chase. Pp. 209-234, 14
figs. Feb. 2, 1921.
5. Flora of Glacier National Park, Montana. By Paul C. Standley. Pp. 235-438,
20 pis. Mar. 16, 1921.
6. Grasses of British Guiana. By A. S. Hitchcock. Pp. 439-515, 10 figs., 1 pi.
May 24, 1922.
7. The North American species of Aristida. By A. S. Hitchcock. Pp. 517-586.
May 21, 1924.
8. New American Asteraceae. By S. F. Blake. Pp. 587-661, 1 fig., 10 pis. May
22, 1924.
9. Studies in American Phaseolineae. By C. V. Piper. Pp. 663-701, 1 pi. June
12, 1926.
10. The North American species of Scutellaria. By Emery C. Leonard. Pp. 703-748.
Feb. 9, 1927.
Volume 23
Trees and shrubs of Mexico. By Paul C. Standley. Pp. i-vii (title, advertisement, note, preface, contents) ; pp. 1-1681 (parts 1-5) ; pp. 1683-1721 (index). 1920-1926.
Part
1. Gleicheniaceae-Belulaceae. Pp. 1-169. Oct. 11, 1920.
2. Fagaceae-Fabaceae. Pp. 171-515. July 14, 1922.
3. Oxalidaceae-Turneraceae. Pp. 517-848. July 18, 1923.
4. Passifloraceae-Scrophulariaceae. Pp. 849-1312. Dec. 31, 1924.
5. Bignoniaceae-Asteraceae. Pp. 1313-1681. Nov. 15, 1926.
Volume 24
Plant studies, chiefly tropica! American. Pp. i-xii (title, advertisement, title page, note, preface, contents, and illustrations) ; pp. 1-762 (parts 1-9) ; pp. 763-802 (index) ; 4 figs., 52 pis. 1922-1930.
Part
1. New plants from Guatemala and Honduras. By S. F. Blake. Pp. 1-32, 4 figs.,
10 pis. Jan. 11, 1922.
2. Studies of tropical American ferns — No. 7. By William R. Maxon. Pp. 33-63,
10 pis. Aug. 15, 1922.
3. Key to genus Diplostephium, with descriptions of new species. By S. F. Blake.
Pp. 65-86, 8 pis. Aug. 11, 1946.
4. Native names and uses of some plants of eastern Guatemala and Honduras.
By S. F. Blake. Pp. 87-100, 5 pis. Aug. 18, 1922.
5. Economic fruit-bearing plants of Ecuador. By Wilson Popenoe. Pp. 101-134,
16 pis. May 28, 1924.
6. A bibliographic study of Beauvois’ Agrostographic. By Cornelia D. Niles. With
introduction and botanical notes, by Agnes Chase. Pp. 135-214. Aug. 20, 1925.
7. The North American species of Stipa. By A. S. Hitchcock. Pp. 215-262, 3 pis.
Nov. 20, 1925.
Synopsis of the South American species of Stipa. By A. S. Hitchcock. Pp. 263-289. Nov. 20, 1925.
8. The grasses of Ecuador, Peru, and Bolivia. By A. S. Hitchcock. Pp. 291-556.
May 4, 1927.
9. The grasses of Central America. By A. S. Hitchcock. Pp. 557-762. Feb. 12, 1930.
Volume 25
Flora of Utah and Nevada. By Ivar Tidestrom. Pp. 1-655, 2 figs., 15 pis., 1 map. Oct. 31, 1925.
CONTRIBUTIONS, NATIONAL HERBARIUM
37
Volume 26
Systematic plant studies: mainly tropical America. Pp. i-xii (title, advertisement, title page, dates of publication, errata, preface, contents, and illustrations) ; pp. 1-5 30 (parts 1-10) ; pp. 531-554 (index) ; 39 figs., 40 pis. 1927-1939.
Part
1. The Lecythidaceae of Central America. By H. Pittier. Pp. 1-14, 12 pis.
May 2, 1927.
2. The Piperaceae of Panama. By William Trelease. Pp. 15-50. May 21, 1927.
3. Costa Rican mosses collected by Paul C. Standley in 1924-1926. By Edwin B.
Bartram. Pp. 51-114, 39 figs. Oct. 31, 1928.
4. The Piperaceae of Costa Rica. By William Trelease. Pp. 115-226. Dec. 31, 1929.
5. Notes on certain type specimens of American Asteraceae in European herbaria.
By S. F. Blake. Pp. 227-263. Mar. 10, 1930.
6. Asiatic Pteridophyta collected by Joseph F. Rock, 1920-1924. By Carl Christen¬
sen. Pp. 265-337, 17 pis. Apr. 2, 1931.
7. The Mexican and Central American species of Viburnum. By C. V. Morton.
Pp. 339-366. Nov. 16, 1933.
8. New species of Pilea from the Andes. By Ellsworth P. Killip. Pp. 367-394.
Jan. 30, 1936.
9. A revision of Besleria. By C. V. Morton. Fp. 395-474. May 9, 1939.
10. The Andean species of Pilea. By Ellsworth P. Killip. Pp. 475-530, 11 pis.
June 14, 1939.
Volume 27
Flora of the Panama Canal Zone. By Paul C. Standley. Pp. i-x, 1-416, 7 figs., 67 pis. Jan. 31, 1928.
Volume 28
Systematic plant studies. Pp. i-xii (title, advertisement, title page, dates of publica¬ tion, errata, preface, contents, and illustrations) ; pp. 1-675 (parts 1-4) ; pp. 677-694 (index) ; 144 figs., $27 pis. 1929-1941.
Part
1. The North American species of Paspalutn. By Agnes Chase. Pp. 1-310, 142 figs.
June 28, 1929.
2. The American species of Thibaudieae. By Albert C. Smith. Pp. 311-547, 1 fig.,
19 pis. June 27, 1932.
3. Marine algae of the Smithsonian-Hartford Expedition to the West Indies, 1937.
By William Randolph Taylor. Pp. 549-561, 1 pi. June 12, 1940.
4. Plants collected by R. C. Ching in southern Mongolia and Kansu Province,
China. By Egbert H. Walker. Pp. 563-675, 1 fig., 7 pis. July 22, 1941.
Volume 29
[Volume in progress.]
Part
1. Taxonomic studies of tropical American plants. By C. V. Morton. Pp. 1-86.
Mar. 23, 1944.
2. Mexican phanerogams described by M. E. Jones. By C. V. Morton. Pp. 87-116.
May 21, 1945.
Asteraceae described from Mexico and the southwestern United States by M. E. Jones, 1908-1935. By S. F. Blake. Pp. 117-137. May 21, 1945.
3. The American species of Ilymenophyllum, section Sphaerocionium. By C. V.
Morton. (In press.)
Volume 30
[Volume in progress.]
Part
1. A botanical bibliography of the islands of the Pacific. By Elmer D. Merrill. (In press.)
A subject index to Elmer D. Merrill’s “A Botanical Bibliography of the Islands of the Pacific.” By Egbert H. Walker. (In press.)
SPECIAL BULLETINS
No.
1. Life histories of North American birds with special reference to their breeding
habits and eggs. By Charles Bendire. Pp. viii, 1-446, 12 pis. (col.). 1892.
2. Oceanic ichthyology, a treatise on the deep-sea and pelagic fishes of the world,
based chiefly upon the collections made by the steamers Blake, Albatross, and Fish Hawk in the Northwestern Atlantic. By George Brown Goode and Tarleton H. Bean. Vol. 1, pp. xxxv, 1-S53, 24 figs., 1 diagram; Vol. 2, pp. xxiii, 1-26, 123 pis. 1895.
3. Life histories of North American birds, from the parrots to the grackles, with
special reference to the breeding habits and eggs. By Charles Bendire. Pp. ix, 1-518, 7 pis. (col.). 1895.
4. American hydroids. By Charles Cleveland Nutting. Pt. 1, The Plumularidae,
pp. ii, 1-285, 124 figs., 34 pis., 1900. Pt. 2, The Sertularidae, pp. ii, 1-325; 139 figs., 41 pis., 1904. Pt. 3, The Campanularidae and the Bonneviellidae, pp. iii, 1-126, 68 figs., 27 pis., 1915.
38
PROCEEDINGS Volume 1
Proceedings of the United States National Museum, vol. 1. Pp. i-iv (title page and table of contents) ; pp. 1-488 (Proceedings papers 1-61) ; pp. 489-520 (index) ; 7 figs., 8 pis. 1879.
Proc.
No.
1. Descriptions of new forms of mollusks from Alaska contained in the collec¬
tions of the National Museum. By W. H. Dali. Pp. 1-3. Mar. 27, 1878.*
2. Postpliocene fossils in the coast range of California. By W. H. Dali. P. 3.
Mar. 27, 1878.
3. Notes on the American species of the genus Cybium. By Felipe Poey. Pp.
3-5. Mar. 27, 1878.
4. The Clupea tyrannus of Latrobe. By G. Brown Goode. Pp. 5-6. Mar. 27,
1878.
5. The occurrence of Belone latimanus in Buzzard’s Bay, Massachusetts. By
G. Brown Goode. Pp. 6-7. Mar. 27, 1878.
6. The voices of crustaceans. By G. Brown Goode. Pp. 7-8. Mar. 27, 1878.
7. On a new humming bird ( Atthis ellioti) from Guatemala. By Robert Ridg-
way. Pp. 8-10, 2 figs. Mar. 27, 1878.
8. Fossil mollusks from later Tertiaries of California. By W. H. Dali. Pp.
10-16. Mar. 27, 1878.
9. The manufacture of porpoise-oil. By Caleb Cook. P. 16, Mar. 27, 1878 ;
pp. 17-18. Sept. 12, 1878.
10. The Craig flounder of Europe, Glyptocephalus cynoglossus, on the coast of
North America. By G. Brown Goode and Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 19-23. Sept. 12, 1878.
11. Note on shells from Costa Rica kitchenmidden, collected by Drs. Flint and
Bransford. By W. H. Dali. Pp. 23-24. Sept. 12, 1878.
12. Arsenic acid for protecting anatomical preparations from insects. By J. B. S.
Jackson. P. 24. Sept. 12, 1878.
13. The oceanic bonito on the coast of the United States. By G. Brown Goode
and Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 24-26. Sept. 12, 1878.
14. Distribution of Californian Tertiary fossils. By \V. H. Dali. Pp. 26-30.
Sept. 12, 1878.
15. A revision of the American species of the genus Brevoortia, with a description
of a new species from the Gulf of Mexico. By G. Brown Goode. Pp. 30-42. Sept. 12, 1878.
16. Description of Caulolatilus microps, a new species of fish from the Gulf
coast of Florida. By G. Brown Goode and Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 42-45. Sept. 12, 1878.
17. The occurrence of Hippocampus antiquorum, or an allied form, on Saint
George’s Banks. By G. Brown Goode. Pp. 45-46. Sept. 12, 1878.
18. Descriptions of new species of shells from California in the collections of the
National Museum. By W. H. Dali. Pp. 46-47. Sept. 12, 1878.
19. Catalogue of the birds of Dominica from collections made for the Smith¬
sonian Institution by Frederick A. Ober, together with his notes and observations. By George N. Lawrence. Pp. 48-69. Sept. 12, 1878.
20. Notes on a collection of fishes from Clackamas River, Oregon. By David S.
Jordan. Pp. 69-85. Sept. 12, 1878.
21. A review of the American species of the genus Scops, Savigny. By Robert
Ridgway. Pp. 85-112, Sept. 12, 1878; pp. 113-117. Oct. 9, 1878.
22. Notes on the ornithology of southern Texas, being a list of birds observed
in the vicinity of Fort Brown, Texas, from February, 1876, to June, 1878. By James C. Merrill. Pp. 118-160, Oct. 9, 1878; pp. 161-173, 3 pis., _ Oct^24, 1878.
1 Proceedings papers Nos. 1-760 were issued by signatures, and when the published date for a signature differs from the date it was received from the printer at the National Museum, the latter date has been used here as the actual date of publication. After No. 760 each article has its actual date of publication recorded in the completed volume of Proceedings.
39
40
BULLETIN 193, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM
Proc.
No.
23. On a new serranoid fish, Epinephelus drummond-hayi, from the Bermudas
and Florida. By G. Brown Goode and Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 173-175. Oct. 24, 1878.
24. Descriptions of two new species of fishes, Lutjanus blackfordii and Lutjanus
stearnsii, from the coast of Florida. By G. Brown Goode and Tarleton H. Bean. P. 176, Oct. 24, 1878; pp. 177-181, Oct. 28, 1878.
25. A note on the Gulf menhaden, Brevoortia patronus, Goode. By Silas Stearns.
Pp. 181-182. Oct. 28, 1878.
26. A note upon the black grouper ( Epinephelus nigritus ) (Holbrook, Gill) of
the southern coast. By G. Brown Goode and Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 182- 184. Oct. 28, 1878.
27. Catalogue of the birds of St. Vincent, from collections made by Mr. Fred A.
Ober, under the directions of the Smithsonian Institution, with his notes thereon. By George N. Lawrence. Pp. 185-198. Oct. 28, 1878.
28. Description of a new' sparoid fish, Sargus holbrookii, from Savannah Bank.
By Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 198-200. Oct. 28, 1878.
29. Catalogue of casts taken by Clark Mills, Esq., of the heads of sixty-four
Indian prisoners of various western tribes, and held at Fort Marion, Saint Augustine, Fla., in charge of Capt. R. H. Pratt, U. S. A. [By R. H. Pratt.] Pp. 201-208, Oct. 28, 1878; pp. 209-214, Dec. 18, 1878.
30. Synopsis of the pediculate fishes of the eastern coast of extratropical North
America. By Theodore Gill. Pp. 215-221. Dec. 18, 1878.
31. Note on the Antennariidae. By Theodore Gill. Pp. 221-222. Dec. 18, 1878.
32. On the proper specific name of the common antennariid Pterophryne. By
Theodore Gill. Pp. 223-224, Dec. 18, 1878; pp. 225-226, Dec. 23, 1878.
33. Note on the Ceratiidae. By Theodore Gill. Pp. 227-231. Dec. 23, 1878.
34. Note on the Maltheidae. By Theodore Gill. Pp. 231-232. Dec. 23, 1878.
35. Catalogue of the birds of Antigua and Barbuda, from collections made for
the Smithsonian Institution, by Mr. Fred A. Ober, with his observations. By George N. Lawrence. Pp. 232-240, Dec. 23, 1878 ; pp. 241-242, 1878? (exact date of publication unknown).
36. Note on Perea flavescens. By Franz Steindachner. P. 243. 1878? (exact date
of publication unknown).
37. On the destruction of fish in the vicinity of the Tortugas during the months
of September and October, 1878. By J. P. Jefferson, Joseph Y. Porter, and Thomas Moore. Pp. 244-246. 1878? (exact date of publication unknown).
38. Descriptions of several new species and geographical races of birds con¬
tained in the collection of the United States National Museum. By Robert Ridgway. Pp. 247-252. 1878? (exact date of publication unknown).
39. Description of two new species of birds from Costa Rica, and notes on other
rare species from that country. By Robert Ridgway. Pp. 252-255. 1878? (exact date of publication unknown).
40. Description of two gadoid fishes, Phycis chesteri and Haloporphyrus viola,
from the deep-sea fauna of the northwestern Atlantic. By G. Brown Goode and Tarleton H. Bean. P. 256, 1878? (exact date of publication unknown) ; pp. 257-260, Feb. 5, 1879.
41. Description of Argentina syrtensium, a new deep-sea fish from Sable Island
Bank. By G. Brown Goode and Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 261-263. Feb. 5, 1879.
42. On the occurrence of the oceanic bonito, Orcynus pelamys, (Linne) Poey,
in Vineyard Sound, Massachusetts. By Vinal N. Edwards. P. 263. Feb. 5, 1879.
43. Notes on the western gizzard shad, Dorosoma cepedianum heterurum, (Raf.)
Jordan. By Samuel Wilmot. Pp. 263-264. Feb. 5, 1879.
44. The occurrence of the Canada porcupine in West Virginia. By G. Brown
Goode. Pp. 264-265. Feb. 5, 1879.
PROCEEDINGS
41
Proc.
No.
45. Catalogue of the birds of Grenada, from a collection made by Mr. Fred. A. Cber
for the Smithsonian Institution, including others seen by him, but not obtained. By George N. Lawrence. Pp. 265-272, Feb. 5, 1879; pp. 273-278, Feb. 15, 1879.
46. On the breeding habits of the sea-catfish ( Ariopsis milberti?) . By N. T.
Lupton. Pp. 278-279. Feb. 15, 1879.
47. On the occurrence of Stichaeus punctatus, (Fabr.) Kroyer, at St. Michael’s,
Alaska. By Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 279-281. Feb. 15, 1879.
48. Report on the limpets and chitons of the Alaskan and Arctic regions, with
descriptions of genera and species believed to be new. Bv W. H. Dali. Pp. 281-288, figs. A-C, Feb. 15, 1879; pp. 289-336, figs. D, E,' Feb. 17, 1879; pp. 337-344, 5 pis., Feb. 19, 1879.
49. On the identity of Euchalarodus putnami, Gill, with Pleuronectes glaber,
(Storer) Gill, with notes on the habits of the species. By Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 345-348. Feb. 19, 1879.
50. The identity of Rhinonemus caudacuta (Storer) Gill with Gadus cimbrius,
Linn. By G. Brown Goode and Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 348-349. Feb. 19, 1879.
51. Catalogue of the birds collected in Martinique by Mr. Fred. A. Ober for the
Smithsonian Institution. By George N. Lawrence. Pp. 349-352, Feb. 19, 1879; pp. 353-360, Mar. 17, 1879.
52. Notes on Platessa ferruginea, D. LI. Storer, and Platessa rostrata, H. R. Storer.
By G. Brown Goode and Tarleton LI. Bean. Pp. 361-362. Mar. 17, 1879.
53. On the identity of Brosmius americanus, Gill, with Bros mins brosme, (Muller)
White. By G. Brown Goode and Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 362-363. Mar. 17, 1879.
54. On the mortality of fishes in the Gulf of Mexico in 1878. By J. P. Jefferson.
Pp. 363-364. Mar. 17, 1879.
55. Notes on the fishes of Beaufort Harbor, North Carolina. By David S. Jordan
and Charles II. Gilbert. Pp. 365-384, Mar. 17, 1879; pp. 385-388, Mar. 25, 1879.
56. A partial list of the birds of central California. By L. Belding. [Edited by
R. Ridgway.] Pp. 388-432, Mar. 25, 1879; pp. 433-448, Mar. 28, 1879; p. 449, ?Apr. 30, 1879.
57. Catalogue of a collection of birds obtained in Guadeloupe for the Smith¬
sonian Institution, by Mr. Fred. A. Ober. By George N. Lawrence. Pp. 449-462. PApr. 30, 1879.
58. On two fishes from the Bermudas mistakenly described as new by Dr.
Gunther. By G. Brown Goode. Pp. 462-463. PApr. 30, 1879.
59. Description of a species of Lycodes ( L . turneri ) from Alaska, believed to
be undescribed. By Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 463-466. PApr. 30, 1879.
60. Descriptions of new species and races of American birds, including a synopsis
of the genus Tyr annus, Cuvier. By Robert Ridgway. Pp. 466-480, PApr. 30, 1879; pp. 481-486, May ? 1879.
61. A general catalogue of the birds noted from the islands of the Lesser Antilles
visited by Mr. Fred. A. Ober; with a table showing their distribution, and those found in the United States. By George N. Lawrence. Pp. 486-488. May ? 1879.
Volume 2
Proceedings of the United States National Museum, vol. 2. Pp. i-iv (title page and table of contents) ; pp. 1-482 (Proceedings papers 62-101) ; pp. 483-499 (index) ; 2 figs., 7 pis. 1880.
62. Notes on the nests and eggs of the eight North American species of
Empidonaces. By T. M. Brewer. Pp. 1-10. May 2?, 1879.
63. A list of European fishes in the collection of the United States National
Museum. By Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 10-16, May 2?, 1879; pp. 17-32, May 6, 1879; pp. 33-44, July 7, 1879.
42
BULLETIN 193, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM
Proc.
No.
64. Description of a species of Ly codes {L. paxillus) obtained by the United
States Fish Commission. By G. Brown Goode and Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 44-46. July 7, 1879.
65. Description of a new species of Liparis ( L . ranula) obtained by the United
States Fish Commission off Halifax, Nova Scotia. By G. Brown Goode and Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 46-48. July 7, 1879.
66. Description of a new species of amber fish ( Seriola stearnsii) obtained near
Pensacola, Florida, by Mr. Silas Stearns. By G. Brown Goode and Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 48-51. July 7, 1879.
67. On the birds of Heligoland. By H. Gatke. Pp. 51-55. July 7, 1879.
68. Description of Alepocephalus bairdii, a new species of fish from the deep-
sea fauna of the western Atlantic. By G. Brown Goode and Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 55-57. July 7, 1879.
69. On the species of Astroscopus of the eastern United States. By Tarleton H.
Bean. Pp. 57-63. July 7, 1879.
70. On the occurrence of Hippoglossus vulgaris, Flem., at Unalashka and St.
Michael’s, Alaska. By Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 63-66. July 7, 1879.
71. Description of an apparently new species of Gasterosteus (G. atkinsii) from
the Schoodic Lakes, Maine. By Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 67-69. July 7, 1879.
72. Review of the Pleuronectidae of San Francisco. By W. N. Lockington. Pp.
69-80, July 7, 1879; pp. 81-96, July 15, 1879; pp. 97-108, 1879 (exact date of publication unknown).
73. A preliminary catalogue of the fishes of the St. John’s River and the east coast
of Florida, with descriptions of a new genus and three new species. By G. Brown Goode. Pp. 108-121. 1879 (exact date of publication unknown).
74. Catalogue of a collection of fishes sent from Pensacola, Florida, and vicinity,
by Mr. Silas Stearns, with descriptions of six new species. By G. Brown Goode and Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 121-128, 1379 (exact date of publication unknown); pp. 129-144, Sept. 25, 1879; pp. 145-156, Nov. 14, 1879.
75. Notes on New England Isopoda. By Oscar Harger. Pp. 157-165. Nov. 14,
1879.
76. Notice of recent additions to the marine Invertebrata of the northeastern coast
of America, with descriptions of new genera and species and critical remark* on others. Part 1 — Annelida, Gephyraea, Nemertina, Nematoda, Polyzoa, Tunicata, Mollusca, Anthozoa, Echinodermata, Porifera. By A. E. Verrill. Pp. 165-192, Nov. 14, 1879; pp. 193-205. Nov. 12, 1879.
77. Description of a new genus and species of fish, Lopholatilus chamaeleonticeps,
from the south coast of New England. By G. Brown Goode and Tarleton
H. Bean. Pp. 205-208, Nov. 12, 1879; p. 209, Dec. 17, 1879.
78. On the occurrence of Lycodes vahlii, Reinhardt, on La Have and Grand Banks.
By G. Brown Goode and Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 209-210. Dec. 17, 1879.
79. List of names, age, tribe, etc., of Indian boys and girls at Hampton Normal
and Agricultural Institute, Virginia, plaster casts of whose heads were taken by Clark Mills, Esq., March, 1879. By R. H. Pratt. P. 211. Dec. 17, 1879.
80. Description of a new fish from Alaska (Anarrhichas lepturus), with notes upon
other species of the genus Anarrhichas. By Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 212-218. Dec. 17, 1879.
81. Notes on certain typical specimens of American fishes in the British Museum
and in the Museum d’Histoire Naturelle at Paris. By David S. Jordan. Pp. 218-224, Dec. 17, 1879; pp. 225-226, Feb. 3, 1880.
82. List of marine Invertebrata from the New England coast, distributed by the
U. S. Commission of Fish and Fisheries. Series I. [By Richard Rathbun.] Pp. 227-232. Feb. 3, 1880.
83. Occurrence of Chelura terebrans, a crustacean destructive to the timber of sub¬ marine structures, on the coast of the United States. By Sidney I. Smith. Pp. 232-235, 2 figs. Feb. 3, 1880.
Description of new species of North American fishes. By David S. Jordan. Pp. 235-241. Feb. 3, 1880.
84.
PROCEEDINGS
43
Proc.
No.
85. On the migrations and nesting habits of west-coast birds. By J. G. Cooper.
Pp. 241-251. Feb. 3, 1880.
86. Descriptions of new species of Carboniferous invertebrate fossils. By C. A.
White. Pp. 252-256, Feb. 3, 1880; pp. 257-260, 1 pi., Feb. 21, 1880.
87. A study of the trunk-fishes (Ostraciontidae) , with notes upon the American
species of the family. By G. Brown Goode. Pp. 261-272, Feb. 21, 1880; pp. 273-283, Mar. 30, 1880.
88. On the habits of the Rocky Mountain goat. By James C. Merrill. Pp. 283-284.
Mar. 30, 1880.
89. Notes on a collection of fishes from eastern Georgia. By Tarleton H. Bean.
Pp. 284-286. Mar. 30, 1880.
90. Description of a new species of Amiurus (A. portderosus) from the Mississippi
River. By Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 286-290. Mar. 30, 1880.
91. Note on Endothyra ornata. By C. A. White. P. 291. Mar. 30, 1880.
92. Note on Criocardium and Ethmocardium. By C. A. White. Pp. 291-292. Mar.
30, 1880.
S3. Descriptions of new Cretaceous invertebrate fossils from Kansas and Texas. By C. A. White. Pp. 292-298, 5 pis. Mar. 30, 1880.
94. Notes on a collection of fishes obtained in the streams of Guanajuato and in
Chapala Lake, Mexico, by Prof. A. Duges. By David S. Jordan. Pp. 298- 301. Mar. 30. 1880.
95. Descriptions of two species of fishes collected by Prof. A. Duges in central
Mexico. By Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 302-304, Mar. 30, 1880; p. 305, Mar. 31, 1880.
96. Report of experiments upon the animal heat of fishes, made at Provincetown,
Mass., during the summer of 1879, in connection with operations of the United States Fish Commission. By J. H. Kidder. Pp. 306-326. Mar. 31, 1880.
97. Descriptions of new genera and species of fishes from the coast of California.
By W. N. Lockington. Pp. 326-332. Mar. 31, 1880.
98. Catalogue of a collection of fishes obtained in the Gulf of Mexico, by Dr. J. W.
Velie, with descriptions of seven new species. By G. Brown Goode and Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 333-345. Mar. 31, 1880.
99. Notice of a new species of the “Willemoesia group of Crustacea” (Recent
Eryontidae). By Sidney I. Smith. Pp. 345-352, Mar. 31, 1880; p. 353, 1 pi., Apr. 8, 1880.
100. Descriptions of some genera and species of Alaskan fishes. By Tarleton H.
Bean. Pp. 353-359. Apr. 8, 1880.
101. Fourth instalment of ornithological bibliography: Being a list of faunal pub¬
lications relating to British birds. By Elliott Coues. Pp. 359-368, Apr. 8, 1880; pp. 369-384, Apr. 16, 1880; pp. 385-400, Apr. 19, 1880; 401-416, Apr. 16, 1880; pp. 417-432, Apr. 19, 1880; pp. 433-448, May 5, 1880; pp. 449-464, 1880 (exact date of publication unknown); 465-480, June 28, 1880; 481-482, July 6, 1880.
Volume 3
Proceedings of the United States National Museum, vol. 3. Pp. i-v (title page and table of contents) ; pp. 1-537 (Proceedings papers 102-184) ; pp. 539-589 (index) ; 11 figs., 2 pis. 1881.
102. Revisions of nomenclature of certain North American birds. By Robert Ridg-
way. Pp. 1-16, 1880 (exact date of publication unknown).
103. Description of a new species of bird of the family Turdidae, from the Island
of Dominica, W. I. By Geo. N. Lawrence. Pp. 16-17, 1880 (exact date of publication unknown).
104. Notes on a collection of fishes from east Florida, obtained by Dr. J. A. Hen-
sb all. By David S. Jordan. Pp. 17-21, 1880 (exact date of publication unknown).
105. Notes on a collection of fishes from Saint John’s River, Florida, obtained by
Mr. A. H. Curtiss. By David S. Jordan. P. 22, 1880 (exact date of publica¬ tion unknown).
BULLETIN 193, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM
44
Proc.
No.
106. Notes on a collection of fishes from San Diego, California. By David S. Jor¬
dan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 23-32, 1880 (exact date of publication unknown) ; pp. 33-34, May 18, 1880.
107. Description of a new flounder (Xystreurys liolepis), from Santa Catalina
Island, California. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 34-36. May 18, 1880.
108. Description of a new ray (Platyrhbia triseriata), from the coast of California.
By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 36-38. May 18, 1880.
109. Description of a new species of “rock cod” ( Sebastichthys serriceps), from the
coast of California. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 38-40. May 18, 1880.
110. On the occurrence of Cephaloscyll'ium laticeps (Dumeril) Gill, on the coast of
California. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 40-42. May 18, 1880.
111. On the oil-shark of southern California (Galcorhinus galeus). By David S.
Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 42-43. May 18, 1880.
112. The surf-smelt of the Northwest coast, and the method of taking them by the
Quillehute Indians, west coast of Washington Territory. By James G. Swan. Pp. 43-46. May 18, 1880.
113. Note on the occurrence of Productus giganteus in California. By C. A. White.
Pp. 46-47, 1 pi. May 18, 1880.
114. Note on Acrothele. By C. A. White. P. 47. May 18, 1880.
115. Description of a new Cretaceous Pinna from New Mexico. By C. A. White. Pp.
47-48. May 18, 1880.
116. Note on the occurrence of Stricklandinia salteri and S. davidsoni in Georgia.
Pp. 48-49. May 18, 1880.
117. Description of a new flounder ( Pleuronichthys verticalis) , from the coast of
California, with notes on other species. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 49-51. May 18, 1880.
118. Notes on sharks from the coast of California. By David S. Jordan and Chas.
H. Gilbert. Pp. 51-52. May 18, 1880.
119. On the generic relations of Platyrhina exasperata. By David S. Jordan and
Charles H. Gilbert. P. 53. May 18, 1880.
120. Remarks on the species of the genus C hints found in San Francisco market,
including one hitherto imdescribed. By W. N. I.ockington. Pp. 53-57. May 18, 1880.
121. Description of a new fish from Alaska (Uranidea microstoma). By W. N.
Lockington. Pp. 58-59. May 18, 1880.
122. Description of a new species of Agonidae (Brachyopsis verrucosus), from the
coast of California. By W. N. Lockington. Pp. 60-63. May 18, 1880.
123. Description of a new genus and some new species of California fishes (Icosteus
aenigmaticus and Osmerus attenuatus). By W. N. Lockington. Pp. 63-64, May 18, 1880; pp. 65-68, July 8, 1880.
124. Description of a new hake ( P/iycis earllii ), from south California, and a note
on the occurrence of Phycis regius in North Carolina. By Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 69-70. July 8, 1880.
125. Description of a new species of Sebastichthys (Sebastichthys miniatus), from
Monterey Bay, California. By David S. Jordan and Charles II. Gilbert. Pp. 70-73. July 8, 1880.
126. Description of a new species of “rock-fish” (Sebastichthys carnatus), from the
coast of California. Bv David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 73- 75. July 8, 1880.
127. Check-list of duplicates of North American fishes distributed by the Smith¬
sonian Institution in behalf of the United States National Museum, 1877- 1880. Prepared by Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 75-96, July 8, 1880; pp. 97-116. July 10, 1880.
128. The littoral marine fauna of Provincetown, Cape Cod, Massachusetts. By
Richard Rathbun. Pp. 116-128, July 10, 1880; pp. 129-133, 1880 (exact date of publication unknown).
Proc.
No.
129.
PROCEEDINGS
45
Description of a new species of ray (Raia stellulata) from Monterey, Cali¬ fornia. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 133-135. 1880 (exact date of publication unknown).
130. Descriptions of new species of Xiphister and A podichthys, from Monterey,
California. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 135-140. 1880 (exact date of publication unknown).
131. Description of a very large fossil gasteropod from the state of Puebla, Mexico.
By C. A. White. Pp. 140-142. 1 pi. 1880 (exact date of publication unknown).
132. Description of two new species of Sebastichthys (Sebastichthys entomelas and
Sebastichthys rhodochloris) , from Monterey Bay, California. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 142-144, 1880 (exact date of publication unknown) ; pp. 145-146, July 8, 1880.
133. On the occurrence of a species of Cremnobates at San Diego, California. By
Rosa Smith. Pp. 147-149. July 8, 1880.
134. On some new species of Eocene Mollusca from the southern United States.
By Angelo Heilprin. Pp. 149-152, 1 pi. July 8, 1880.
135. Description of a new agonoid fish (Brachyopsis xyosternus) , from Monterey
Bay, California. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 152-154. July 8, 1880.
136. Description of a new flounder (Hippoglossoides exilis), from the coast of
California. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 154-156. July 8, 1880.
137. Descriptions of new invertebrate fossils from the Mesozoic and Cenozoic rocks
of Arkansas, Wyoming, Colorado, and Utah. By C. A. White. Pp. 157-160, July 8, 1880; pp. 161-162, Aug. 27, 1880.
138. A catalogue of the birds of North America. By Robert Ridgway. Pp. 163-208,
Aug. 27, 1880; pp. 209-224, Sept. 9, 1880; pp. 225-246, Sept. 15, 1880.
139. On the identity of the genus Leurynnis, Lockington, with Lycodopsis, Collett.
By Theodore Gill. Pp. 247-248. Sept. 15, 1880.
140. Description of a new chircid fish, Myriolepis zonifer, from Monterey Bay, Cal¬
ifornia. By W. N. Lockington. Pp. 248-251. Sept. 15, 1880.
141. Description of a new species of ray, Raia rhina, from the coast of California.
By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 251-253. Sept. 15, 1880.
142. Description of a new species of parrot of the genus Chrysotis, from the Island
of Dominica. By George N. Lawrence. Pp. 254-256, Sept. 15, 1880; p. 257, Sept. 22, 1880.
143. The eulachon or candle-fish of the Northwest coast. By James G. Swan. Pp.
257-264. Sept. 22, 1880.
144. Description of two new species of fishes, Ascelic/ilhys rhodorus and Scytalina
cerdale, from Neah Bay, Washington Territory. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 264-268. Sept. 22, 1880.
145. On Camaraphysema, a new type of sponge. By John A. Ryder. Pp. 269-272,
7 figs. Sept. 22, 1880.
146. Description of twro new’ species of scopeloid fishes, Stidis ringens and Mycto-
phum crenulare, from Santa Barbara Channel, California. By David S. Jor¬ dan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 273-276. Oct. 2, 1880.
147. Description of two new species of flounders (Parophrys ischyrus and Hip¬
poglossoides elassodon), from Puget’s Sound. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 276-280. Oct. 2, 1880.
148. On the genitalia of male eels and their sexual characters. By S. Th. Cattie.
Pp. 280-284, 1 fig. Oct. 2, 1880.
149. Description of a new sparoid fish (Spams brachysomus) , from Lower Cali¬
fornia. By W. N. Lockington. Pp. 284-286. Oct. 2, 1880.
150. Description of seven new species of sebastoid fishes, from the coast of Cali¬
fornia. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 287-298. Oct. 2, 1880.
151. Description of a new embiotocoid (Abeona aurora), from Monterey, Cali¬
fornia, with notes on a related species. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 299-301. Oct. 2, 1880.
711175—47—4
46
BULLETIN 193, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM
Proc.
No.
152. Description of a new flounder (Platysomatichlhys stomias), from the coast of
California. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 301-303. Oct. 2, 1880.
153. Description of a new embiotocoid fish (Cymatogaster rosaceus), from the coast
of California. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 303-304, Oct. 2, 1880; p. 305, Oct. 18, 1880.
154. Description of a new species of deep-water fish (Icichthys lockingtoni) , from
the coast of California. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 305-308. Oct. 18, 1880.
155. Catalogue of Trochilidae in the collection of the United States National
Museum. By Robert Ridgway. Pp. 308-320. Oct. 18, 1880.
156. Description of a new embiotocoid fish (Ditrema atripes), from the coast of
California. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. P. 320, Oct. 18, 1880; pp. 321-322, Nov. 2, 1880.
157. Description of a new scorpaenoid fish (Sebastichthys maliger), from the coast
of California. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 322-324. Nov. 2, 1880.
158 Note on a new flat-fish ( Lepidopsetta isolepis) found in the markets of San Francisco. By W. N. Lockington. P. 325. Nov. 2, 1880.
159. Note on a forgotten paper of Dr. Ayres and its bearing on the nomenclature
of the cyprinoid fishes of the San Francisco markets. By David S. Jordan. Pp. 325-327. Nov. 2, 1880.
160. Note on "Sema” and “Dacentrus.” By David S. Jordan. P. 327. Nov. 2, 1880.
161. Description of a new scorpaenoid fish (Sebastichthys proriger), from Monterey
Bay, California. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 327-329. Nov. 2, 1880.
162. Description of a new agonoid (Agonus <vulsus), from the coast of California.
By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 330-332. Nov. 2, 1880.
163. List of species and varieties of minerals in the National Museum of the
United States in 1879. By Fred. M. Endlich. Pp. 333-335. Nov. 2, 1880.
164. Description of a new species of Hemirhamphus (Hernirhamphus rosae), from
the coast of California. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp.
335-336. Nov. 2, 1880.
165. Descriptions of seven new species of fishes from deep soundings on the south¬
ern New England coast, with diagnoses of two undescribed genera of
flounders and a genus related to Merlucius . By G. Brown Goode. Pp. 337- 350. Dec. 30, 1880.
166. Description of a new species of Icterus from the West Indies. By George N.
Lawrence. P. 351. Dec. 30, 1880.
167. Description of a new species of notidanoid shark (Hexanchus corinus), from
the Pacific coast of the United States. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 352-355. Dec. 30, 1880.
168. Notice of recent additions to the marine Invertebrata, of the northeastern coast
of America, with descriptions of new genera and species and critical remarks on others. Part II. — Mollusca, with notes on Annelida, Echino- dermata, etc., collected by the United States Fish Commission. By A. E. Verrill. Pp. 356-384, Dec. 30, 1880; pp. 385-400, Jan. 10, 1881; pp. 401-405, Jan. 14, 1881.
169. [Notice of recent additions to the marine Invertebrata, of the northeastern coast
of America, with descriptions of new genera and species and critical remarks on others. 1 Part III. — Catalogue of Mollusca recently added to the fauna of southern New England. By A. E. Verrill. Pp. 405-409. Jan. 14, 1881.
170. Description of a new species of Nemichthys (N emichthys avocetta), from Puget
Sound. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 409-410. Jan. 14, 1881.
171. Description of a new species of Paralepis (Paralepis coruscans) , from the
Straits of Juan de Fuca. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 411-413. Jan. 14. 1881.
PROCEEDINGS
47
Proc.
No.
172. Preliminary notice of the Crustacea dredged, in 64 to 325 fathoms, off the south
coast of New England, by the United States Fish Commission in 1880. By S. I. Smith. Pp. 413-416, Jan. 14, 1881; pp. 417-432, Jan. 15, 1881; pp. 433- 448, Jan. 17, 1881; pp. 449-452, Feb. 4, 1881.
173. List of fishes of the Pacific coast of the United States, with a table showing
the distribution of the species. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. P. 452-458. Feb. 4, 1881.
174. On the generic relations of Belone exilis Girard. By David S. Jordan and
Charles H. Gilbert. P. 459. Feb. 4, 1881.
175. Notes on a collection of fishes from Utah Lake. By David S. Jordan and
Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 459-464, Feb. 4, 1881; p. 465, Feb. 25, 1881.
176. Description of a new species of “rock-fish” (Sebasiichthys chrysomelas) , from
the coast of California. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 465-466. Feb. 25, 1881.
177. Fishes from the deep water on the south coast of New England and obtained by
the United States Fish Commission in the summer of 1880. By G. Brown Goode. Pp. 467-480, Feb. 25, 1881; pp. 481-486, Feb. 23, 1881.
178. Description of a new species of Caranx (Caranx beani), from Beaufort, North
Carolina. By David S. Jordan. Pp. 486-488. Feb. 23, 1881.
179. On a collection of fishes from eastern Mississippi. By O. P. Hay. Pp. 488-515.
Feb. 23, 1881.
180. Synopsis and descriptions of the American Rhincbatidae. By Samuel Garman.
Pp. 516-523. Feb. 23, 1881.
181. List of the North American species of myriapods belonging to the family of
the Lysiopetalidae, with a description of a blind form from Luray Cave, Virginia. By John A. Ryder. Pp. 524-528, 3 figs., Feb. 23, 1881; p. 529, Apr. 28, 1881.
182. Description of a new species of Prionotus ( Prionotus stephanophrys) , from the
coast of California. By W. N. Lockington. Pp. 529-532. Apr. 28, 1881.
183. The frigate mackerel, Auxis rochei, on the New England coast. By G. Brown
Goode. Pp. 532-535. Apr. 28, 1881.
184. Notacanthus phasganorus, a new species of Notacanthidae from the Grand
Banks of Newfoundland. By G. Brown Goode. Pp. 535-537. Apr. 28, 1881.
Volume 4
Proceedings of the United States National Museum, vol. 4. Pp. i-v (title page and table of contents) ; pp. 1-475 (Proceedings papers 185-256) ; pp. 477-534 (index) ; 13 figs., 1 pi. (With Appendix, 146 pp., circulars 1-18, individually paged.) 1882.
185. Check-list of duplicates of fishes from the Pacific coast of North America, dis¬
tributed by the Smithsonian Institution in behalf of the United States National Museum, 1881. Prepared by David S. Jordan and Pierre L. Jouy. Pp. 1-18. Apr. 22, 1881.
186. Description of a new species of Squalius ( Squalius aliciae), from Utah Lake. By
Pierre Louis Jouy. P. 19. Apr. 22, 1881.
187. Description of a new gobicid fish ( Athonops eos ), from San Diego, California.
By Rosa Smith. Pp. 19-21. Apr. 22, 1881.
188. On a duck new to the North American fauna. By Robert Ridgway. Pp. 22-24.
Apr. 22, 1881.
189. On Amazilia yucatanesis (Cabot) and A. cerviniventris, Gould. By Robert
Ridgway. Pp. 25-26. Apr. 22, 1881.
190. Descriptions of new species of fishes ( Uranidea marginata, Potamocottus ben- direi) and of Myctophum crenulare J. and G. By Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 26-29. Apr. 22, 1881.
Notes on the fishes of the Pacific coast of the United States. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 29-48, Apr. 22, 1881 ; pp. 49-64, May 9, 1881; pp. 65-70, May 10, 1881.
191.
BULLETIN 193, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM
48
Proc.
No.
192. Description of Sebastichthys mystinus. By David S. Jordan and Charles H.
Gilbert. Pp. 70-72. May 10, 1831.
193. Description of a new species of Ptychochilus (Ptychochilus harfordi), from
Sacramento River. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 72-73. May 10, 1881.
194. Notes on Raid inornata. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 73-
74. May 10, 1881.
195. On the fish-mortality in the Gulf of Mexico. By Ernest Ingersoll. Pp. 74-80.
May 10, 1881.
196. Notes on Salmonidae of the upper Columbia. By Charles Bendire.
Pp. 81-87, 1 fig. July 18, 1881.
197. A review of the genera and species of the family Centrarchidae, with a
description of one new species. By Charles L. McKay. Pp. 87-93. July 18, 1881.
198. A review of the genus Centurus, Swainson. By Robert Ridgway. Pp. 93-119.
July 18, 1881.
199. Observations on Sircdon lichenoides. By Wm. E. Carlin. Pp. 120-121. July
18, 1881.
200. On the destruction of fish by poisonous water in the Gulf of Mexico. By '
Joseph Y. Porter. Pp. 121-123. July 18, 1881.
201. An analysis of water destructive to fish in the Gulf of Mexico. By F. M.
Endlich. P. 124. July 18, 1881.
202. Fish mortality in the Gulf of Mexico. By M. A. Moore. Pp. 125-126. July 18,
1881.
203. On the destruction of fish by polluted waters in the Gulf of Mexico. By W. C.
W. Glazier. Fp. 126-127. July 18, 1881.
204. Notes on some fishes from Hudson’s Bay. By Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 127-129.
July 18, 1881.
205. On the mineralogical composition of the normal Mesozoic diabase upon the
Atlantic border. By George W. Hawes. Pp. 129-134. July 18, 1881.
206. On the determination of feldspar in thin sections of rocks. By George W.
Hawes. Pp. 134-136. July 18, 1881.
207. On certain Cretaceous fossils from Arkansas and Colorado. By C. A. White.
Pp. 136-139, 1 pi. July 18, 1881.
208. Description of a new species of Gobicsox (Gobiesox rhessodon) from San
Diego, California. By Rosa Smith. Fp. 140-141. July 18, 1881.
209. Description of a new genus and species of Cittidae. By W. N. Lockington.
Pp. 141-144. July 18, 1881.
210. Descriptions of new fishes from Alaska and Siberia. By Tarleton H. Bean.
Pp. 144-159. July 18, 1881.
211. Description of a new species of fish, Apogon pandionis, from the deep water
off the mouth of Chesapeake Bay. By G. Brown Goode and Tarleton H. Bean. P. 160, July 18, 1881; p. 161, Aug. 20, 1881.
21 2. Metallic castings of delicate natural objects. [Translated.] P. 161. Aug. 20,
1881.
213. The occurrence of the Canada porcupine in Maryland. By Otto Lugger. Pp.
161-162. Aug. 20, 1881.
214. Note on the latiloid genera. By Theodore Gill. Pp. 162-164. Aug. 20, 1881.
215. List of species of Middle and South American birds not contained in the
United States National Museum. By Robert Ridgway. Pp. 165-192, Aug. 20, 1881; pp. 193-203, Nov. 25, 1S8L
216. Description of a new sub-species of Loxigilla from the Island of St. Chris¬
topher, West Indies. By George N. Lawrence. Pp. 204-205. Nov. 25, 1881.
217. Notes on the mortality among fishes of the Gulf of Mexico. By S. H. Johnson.
P. 205. Nov. 25, 1881.
218. The comparative action of dry heat and sulphurous acid upon putrefactive bacteria. [Based on experiments by Dr. Wermch.] P. 206. Nov. 25, 1881.
List of special desiderata among North American birds. By Robert Ridgway. Pp. 207-208, Nov. 25, 1881; pp. 209-223, Dec. 8, 1881.
219.
Proc.
No.
220.
PROCEEDINGS
49
On Semper’s method of making dry preparations. [Abstract, with remarks by J. A. Ryder.] P. 224, Dec. 8, 1881; p. 225, Jan. 4, 1882.
221. Notes on a collection of fishes, made by Lieut. Henry E. Nichols, U.S.N., on
the west coast of Mexico, with descriptions of new species. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 225-233. Jan. 4, 1882.
222. Report on the contents of two bottles of water from the Gulf of Mexico, for¬
warded by the Smithsonian Institution. By W. G. Farlow. P. 234. Jan.
4, 1882.
223. Remains of the walrus (?) in Maine. By C. H. Boyd. Pp. 234-235. Jan. 4, 1882.
224. Directions for collecting and preserving fish. By Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 235-
238. Jan. 4, 1882.
225. A preliminary catalogue of the fishes of Alaskan and adjacent waters. By
Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 239-240, Jan. 4, 1882; pp. 241-256, Jan. 9, 1882; pp. 257-272, Jan. 4, 1882.
226. Methods of making and preserving plaster casts. By Anthony Pirz. P. 272,
Jan. 4, 1882; p. 273, Feb. 1, 1882.
227. List of fishes collected by Lieut. Henry E. Nichols, U.S.N., in the Gulf of
California and on the west coast of Lower California, with descriptions of four new species. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 273-279. Feb. 1, 1882.
228. On the genera of chitons. By W. H. Dali. Pp. 279-288, Feb. 1, 1882; pp. 289-
291, Mar. 13, 1882.
229. Notes on certain aboriginal shell mounds on the coast of New Brunswick and
of New England. By S. F. Baird. Pp. 292-297. Mar. 13, 1882.
230. List of marine invertebrates, mainly from the New England coast, distributed
by the United States National Museum. Series II. Prepared by Richard Rathbun. Pp. 298-303. Mar. 13, 1882.
231. List of marine invertebrates from the New England coast, distributed by the
United States National Museum. Series III. — Educational Series. Prepared by Richard Rathbun. P. 304, Mar. 13, 1882; pp. 305-307, Mar. 15, 1882.
232. Catalogue of a collection of Japanese woods presented to the United States
National Museum by the University of Tokio, Japan. [Prepared by Lester F. Ward.] Pp. 308-311. Mar. 15, 1882.
233. A partial bibliography of the fishes of the Pacific coast of the United States
and of Alaska, for the year 1880. By Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 312-317. Mar. 15, 1882.
234. Catalogue of Old World birds in the United States National Museum. By
Robert Ridgway. Pp. 317-320, Mar. 15, 1882; pp. 321-333, Mar. 16, 1882.
235. Notes on some Costa Rican birds. By Robert Ridgway. Pp. 333-336, Mar. 16,
1882; p. 337, Apr. 6, 1882.
236. Description of a new fly-catcher and a supposed new petrel from the Sand¬
wich Islands. By Robert Ridgway. Pp. 337-338. Apr. 6, 1882.
237. Descriptions of thirty-three new species of fishes from Mazatlan, Mexico. By
David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 338-365. Apr. 6, 1882.
238. Description of a new owl from Porto Rico. By Robert Ridgway. Pp. 366-368,
Apr. 6, 1882; pp. 369-371, Apr. 13, 1882.
239. Description of two new races of Myadestes obscurus Lafr. By Leonhard Stejne-
ger. Pp. 371-374. Apr. 13, 1882.
240. Descriptions of two new thrushes from the United States. By Robert Ridgway.
Pp. 374-379. Apr. 13, 1882.
241. Benthodesmus, a new genus of deep-sea fishes, allied to Lepidopus. By G.
Brown Goode and Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 379-383. Apr. 13, 1882.
242. Description of a new species of Pornadasys from Mazatlan, with a key to the species known to inhabit the Pacific coasts of tropical America. By David
5. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 383-384, Apr. 13, 1882; pp. 385-388,
Apr. 25, 1882.
The rapid preparation of large myological specimens. By Felix Plateau. Pp. 388-391. Apr. 25, 1882.
243.
BULLETIN 193, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM
50
Proc.
N°.
244. On the Chinnook names of the salmon in the Columbia River. By Silas B.
Smith. Pp. 391-392. Apr. 25, 1882.
245. Remarks upon the osteology of Opheosaurus ventralis. By R. W. Shufeldt. Pp.
392-400, 9 figs. Apr. 25, 1882.
246. On certain limpets and chitons from the deep waters off the eastern coast of
the United States. By W. H. Dali. P. 400, Apr. 25, 1882; pp. 401-414, May 5, 1882.
247. On two recent additions to the North American bird fauna, by L. Belding.
By Robert Ridgway. Pp. 414-415. May 5, 1882.
248. The taxonomic relations and geographical distribution of the members of the
sword-fish family, Xiphiidae. By G. Brown Goode. Pp. 315-416, May 5, 1882; pp. 417-432, May 10, 1882; p. 433, May 18, 1882.
249. On the North American land tortoises of the genus Xerobates. By Frederick
W. True. Pp. 434-448, May 18, 1882; p. 449, 3 figs., 1882 (exact date of publication unknown).
250. Catalogue of a collection of Japanese cotton fiber presented to the United
States National Museum by the Government of Japan, together with the amount of the annual crop of Japan and the price of cotton. [Prepared by the Japanese Legation.] Pp. 449-452. 1882 (exact date of publication
unknown).
251. Brief account of cotton husbandry. [Prepared by the Japanese Legation.]
Pp. 452-453. 1882 (exact date of publication unknown).
252. Description of a new species of Xenichthys (Xenichthys xenurus) from the
west coast of Central America. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. P. 454. 1882 (exact date of publication unknown).
253. List of anthropological publications of Charles Rau. 1859-1882. Pp. 455-458.
1882 (exact date of publication unknown).
254. Description of five new species of fishes from Mazatlan, Mexico. By David S.
Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 458-463. 1882 (exact date of publica¬ tion unknown).
255. Notes on a collection of fishes made by Captain Henry E. Nichols, U.S.N., in
British Columbia and southern Alaska, with descriptions of new species and a new genus (Delolepis) . By Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 463-464, 1882 (exact date of publication unknown) ; pp. 465-474, Aug. 16, 1882.
256. On the rare rodent, Cricetodipus parvus (Baird) Coues. By Frederick W.
True. Pp. 474-475. Aug. 16, 1882.
Volume 5
Proceedings of the United States National Museum, vol. 5. Pp. i-xi (title page, advertisement, table of contents, list of illustrations, and list of corrections) ; pp. 1-663 (Proceedings papers 257-342) ; pp. 665-703 (index) ; 52 figs., 12 pis. 1883.
257. Information concerning some fossil trees in the United States National Museum.
P. T. Swaine and J. T. C. Hegewald. Pp. 1-3. June 14, 1882.
258. A study of the Phronimidae of the North Pacific Surveying Expedition. By
Thos. H. Streets. Pp. 3-9, 1 pi. June 14, 1882.
259. Description of several new races of American birds. By Robert Ridgway. Pp.
9-15. June 14, 1882.
260. Synopsis of the West Indian Myadestes. By Leonhard Stejneger. Pp. 15-16,
June 14, 1882; pp. 17-27, 1 pi., June 12, 1882.
261. On some generic and specific appellations of North American and European
birds. By Leonhard Stejneger. Pp. 28-32, June 12, 1882; pp. 33-43, June 13, 1882.
262. On the genera Harporhytichus, Cabanis, and Methriopterus, Reichenbach, with a description of a new genus of Miminae. Pp. 43-46. June 13, 1882.
On a phosphatic sandstone from Hawthorne, in Florida. By George W. Hawes. Pp. 46-48. June 13, 1882.
263.
PROCEEDINGS
51
Proc.
No.
264. Notes on the native trees of the lower Wabash and White River Valleys, in
Illinois and Indiana. By Robert Ridgway. Pp. 49-88. June 24, 1882.
265. Notes on fishes collected by Capt. Chas. Bendire, U. S. A., in Washington Terri¬
tory and Oregon, May to October, 1881. By Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 89-93. June 24, 1882.
- 266. New molluscan forms from the Laramie and Green River groups, with discussion of some associated forms heretofore known. By C. A. White. Pp. 94-96, June 24, 1882; pp. 97-99, 2 pis., July 3, 1882.
267. The molluscan fauna of the Truckee group, including a new form. By
C. A. White. Pp. 99-102, 1 pi. July 3, 1882.
268. Description of four new species of sharks, from Mazatlan, Mexico. By David
S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 102-110. July 3, 1882.
269. Description of a new shark (Carc/iarias lamiella) from San Diego, California.
By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 110-111. July 3, 1882.
270. Critical remarks on the tree-creepers (Certhia) of Europe and North America.
By Robert Ridgway. pp. 111-112, July 3, 1882; pp. 113-116, July 21, 1882.
271. Note on the occurrence of a silver lamprey, Ichthyomyzon castaneus, Girard,
in Louisiana. By Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 117-119. July 21, 1882.
272. Notes on a collection of fishes from Johnston’s Island, including descriptions of
five new species. By Rosa Smith and Joseph Swain. Pp. 119-143. July 21, 1882.
273. Description of a new cyprinodont (Zygonectes inurus), from southern Illinois.
By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 143-144. July 21, 1882.
274. Notes on birds collected during the summer of 1880 in Alaska and Siberia.
By Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 144-160, July 21, 1882; pp. 161-173, Aug. 5, 1882.
275. Outlines of a monograph of the Cygninae. By Leonhard Stejneger. Pp. 174-
221. Aug. 5, 1882.
276. Note on the habits and the rearing of the axolotl, Amblystoma mexicanum
By M. Carbonnier. Pp. 221-222. Aug. 5, 1882.
277. Description of a new species of Uranidea (Uranidea pollicaris ) from Lake
Michigan. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 222-223. Aug. 5, 1882.
278. Observations on four mules in milk. Alfred Duges. Pp. 223-225. Aug. 5, 1882.
279. On Lagopus mutus, Leach, and its allies. By Lucien M. Turner. Pp. 225-233.
Aug. 5, 1882.
280. Genera of the Scolopendrellidae. By J. A. Ryder. P. 234. Aug. 5, 1882.
281. A list of the species of fishes recorded as occurring in the Gulf of Mexico.
By G. Brown Goode and Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 234-240. Aug. 5, 1882.
282. Notes on fishes observed about Pensacola, Florida, and Galveston, Texas, with
description of new species. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 241-272, Aug. 16, 1882; pp. 273-307, Aug. 22, 1882.
283. A review of the Syngnathinae of the United States, with a description of one
new species. By Joseph Swain. Pp. 307-315. Aug. 22, 1882.
284. Notice of recent additions to the marine invertebrata of the northeastern coast
of America, with descriptions of new genera and species and critical remarks on others. Part IV. — Additions to the deep-water Mollusca, taken off Martha’s Vineyard, in 1880 and 1881. By A. E. Verrill. Pp. 315-320, Aug. 22, 1881; pp. 321-336, Sept. 16, 1882; pp. 337-343, Sept. 11, 1882.
285. Descriptions of some new North American birds. By Robert Ridgway. Pp. 343-
346. Sept. 11, 1882.
286. Description of a new species of Uranidea (Uranidea rhothea) from Spokane
River, Washington Territory. By Rosa Smith. Pp. 347-348. Sept. 11, 1882.
287. On the eastward distribution of the black-tailed deer (Cariacus columbianus) .
By Chas. Bendire. Pp. 348-349. Sept. 11, 1882.
288. Description of a new species of blenny ( Isesthes gilberti) from Santa Barbara,
California. By David S. Jordan. Pp. 349-351. Sept. 11, 1882.
289. Description of a new species of Conodon ( Conodon serrifer), from Boca Sole-
dad, Lower California. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 351- 352. Sept. 11, 1882.
BULLETIN 193, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM
52
Proc.
No.
290. Catalogue of the fishes collected by Mr. John Xantus at Cape San Lucas, which
are now in the United States National Museum, tvith descriptions of eight new species. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 353-371. Sept. 16, 1882.
291. List of fishes collected by John Xantus at Colima, Mexico. By David S. Jor¬
dan and Charles II. Gilbert. Pp. 371-372. Sept. 16, 1882.
292. List of fishes collected at Panama by Captain John M. Doav, now in the United
States National Museum. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 373-378. Sept. 16, 1882.
293. List of a collection of fishes made by Mr. L. Belding near Cape San Lucas,
Lower California. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 378-381. Sept. 16, 1882.
294. List of fishes collected at Panama, by Rev. Mr. Rowell, now preserved in the
United States National Museum. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gil¬ bert. Pp. 381-382. Sept. 16, 1882.
295. On a collection of birds from the Hacienda “La Palma,” Gulf of Nicoya,
Costa Rica. By C. C. Nutting. (With critical notes by R. Ridgway.) Pp. 382-409. Sept. 16, 1882.
296. Description of two new species of fishes (Sebastichthys umbrosus and C'lthar-
ichlhys stigmaeus) collected at Santa Barbara, California, by Andrea Larco. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 410-412. Sept. 16, 1882.
297. Descriptions of twenty-irve new species of fish from the southern United States,
and three new genera, Letharcus, Ioglossus, and Chriodorus. By G. Brown Goode and Tarleton II. Bean. Pp. 412-416, Sept. 16, 1882; pp. 417-437, Nov. 11, 1882.
298. Description of a new species of goby ( Gobiosoma ios) from Vancouver’s Island.
By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 437-438. Nov. 11, 1S82.
299. Descriptions of new species of reptiles and amphibians in the United States
National Museum. By LI. C. Yarrow. Pp. 438-443. Nov. 11, 1882.
300. Contribution to the Miocene flora of Alaska. By L. Lesquereux. Pp. 443-448,
Nov. 11, 1882; p. 449, 5 pis., Feb. 23, 1883.
301. Remarks on the systematic arrangement of the American Turdidae. By Leon¬
hard Stejneger. Pp. 449-480, Feb. 23, 1883 ; pp. 481-483, 33 figs., Mar. 5, 1883.
302. On the family Centropomidae. By Theodore Gill. Pp. 484-485, 1 pi. Mar.
5, 1883.
303. Nomenclature of the xiphiids. By Theodore Gill. Pp. 485-486. Mar. 5, 1883.
304. On the family and subfamilies of Carangidae. By Theodore Gill. Pp. 487-
493. Mar. 5, 1883.
305. Catalogue of a collection of birds made in the interior of Costa Rica by Mr.
C. C. Nutting. By Robert Ridgway. Pp. 493-502. Mar. 5, 1883.
306. Brief descriptions of fossil plants, chiefly Tertiary, from western North
America. By J. S. Newberry. Pp. 502-512, Mar. 5, 1883 ; pp. 513-514, Apr. 3, 1883.
307. Note on the leptocardians. By Theodore Gill. Pp. 515-516. Apr. 3, 1883.
308. Note on the myzonts or marsipobranchiates. By Theodore Gill. Pp. 516-517.
Apr. 3, 1883.
309. Note on the Bdellostomidae and Myxinidae. By Theodore Gill. Pp. 517-520.
Apr. 3, 1883.
310. Note on the petromyzontids. By Theodore Gill. Pp. 521-525. Apr. 3, 1883.
311. Description of a new warbler from the Island of Santa Lucia, West Indies.
By Robert Ridgway. Pp. 525-526. Apr. 3, 1883.
312. Description of a supposed new plover from Chili. By Robert Ridgway. Pp.
526-527. Apr. 3, 1883.
313. Catalogue of a collection of birds made at various points along the western
coast of Lower California, north of Cape St. Eugenio. By L. Belding. [Edited by R. Ridgway.] Pp. 527-532. Apr. 3, 1883.
Proc.
No.
314.
PROCEEDINGS
53
Catalogue of a collection of birds made near the southern extremity of the peninsula of Lower California. By L. Belding. [Edited by R. Ridgway.] Pp. 532-550. Apr. 3, 1S83.
315. On the genus Tantalus, Linn., and its allies. By Robert Ridgway. Pp. 550-
551. Apr. 3, 1883.
316. Supplementary note on the Pediculati. By Theodore Gill. Pp. 551-556. Apr.
3, 1833.
317. Note on the Pomatomidae. By Theodore Gill. P. 557. Apr. 3, 1883.
318. Note on the affinities of the ephippiids. By Theodore Gill. Pp. 557-560. Apr.
3, 1883.
319. On the relations of the family Lobotidae. By Theodore Gill. Pp. 560-561.
Apr. 3, 1883.
320. Note on the relationships of the echeneidids. By Theodore Gill. Pp. 561-566,
1 pi. Apr. 3, 1883.
321. Note on the genus Sparus. By Theodore Gill. Pp. 566-567. Apr. 3, 1883.
322. On the proper name of the blue fish. By Theodore Gill. Pp. 567-570. Apr.
3, 1883.
323. Does the panther (Felis concolor ) go into the water to kill fish? By Liv¬
ingston Stone. P. 570. Apr. 3, 1883.
324. On certain neglected generic names of La Cepede. By David S. Jordan and
Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 570-576. Apr. 3, 1883.
325. On the synonymy of the genus Bothus Rafinesque. By David S. Jordan and
Charles H. Gilbert. P. 576, Apr. 3, 1883 ; p. 577, Apr. 28, 1883.
326. Description of a new species of Artedius (Artedius fenestralis) from Puget
Sound. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 577-579. Apr. 28, 1883.
327. Description of a new species of Urolophus (Urolophus asterias), from Mazatlan
and Panama. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 579-580. Apr. 28, 1883.
328. Notes on a collection of fishes from Charleston, South Carolina, with descrip¬
tions of three new species. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 580-592, Apr. 28, 1883; pp. 593-620, May 22, 1883.
329. List of fishes now in the museum of Yale College, collected by Prof. Frank
H. Bradley, at Panama, with descriptions of three new species. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 620-624, May 22, 1883; pp. 625-632, May 29, 1883.
330. Jumping seeds and galls. By Charles V. Riley. Pp. 632-635, 1 fig. May 29, 1883.
331. Note on cluster flies. By W. H. Dali. Pp. 635-637. May 29, 1883.
332. A review of the genus Noturus, with a description of one new species. By
Joseph Swain and George B. Kalb. Pp. 638-644. May 29, 1883.
333. Catalogue of a collection of samples of raw cotton presented to the United
States National Museum by the International Cotton Exposition, Atlanta, Georgia, 1881. By S. M. Inman. Pp. 644-645. May 29, 1883.
334. Description of two new species of fishes (Myrophis wafer and Chloroscombrus
orqueta) from Panama. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 645-647. May 29, 1883.
335. Description of a new eel (Sidera castanea ) from Mazatlan, Mexico.* By David
S. Jordan and Charles II. Gilbert. Pp. 647-648. May 29, 1883.
336. On the nomenclature of the genus Ophichthys. By David S. Jordan and
Charles LI. Gilbert. Pp. 648-651. May 29, 1883.
337. On the life coloration of the young of Pomacentrus rubicundus. By Rosa
Smith. Pp. 652-653. May 29, 1883.
338. On a cinnamon bear from Pennsylvania. By Frederick W. True. Pp. 653-656.
May 29, 1383.
339. Description of a new petrel from Alaska. By Robert Ridgway. P. 656, May 29,
1883 ; pp. 657-658, June 30, 1883.
340. Description of a species of whitefish, Coregonus hoyi (Gill) Jordan, called
“smelt” in some parts of New York. By Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 658-660. June 30, 1883.
54
BULLETIN 193, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM
Proc.
No.
341. Note on a Potsdam sandstone, or conglomerate, from Berks County, Pennsyl¬
vania. By George P. Merrill. Pp. 660-661. June 30, 1883.
342. Description of a new species of Alepidosaurus ( A . aesculapius) from Alaska.
By Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 661-663. June 30, 1883.
Volume 6
Proceedings of the United States National Museum, vol. 6. Pp. 1-vii (title page, advertisement, table of contents, list of illustrations, and list of corrections) ; pp. 1-429 (Proceedings papers 343-396) ; pp. 431-497, (circulars 19-23) ; pp. 499-530 (index) ; pp. 532-558 (explanation of plates) ; 6 figs., 14 pis. 1884.
343. Preliminary report on the Brachyura and Anomura dredged in deep water off
the south coast of New England by the United States Fish Commission in
1880, 1881, and 1882. By Sidney I. Smith. Pp. 1-57, 6 pis. June 30, 1883.
344. Contributions to the history of the Commander Islands. No. 1. — Notes on the
natural history, including descriptions of new cetaceans. By Leonhard Stejneger. Pp. 58-80, June 30, 1883 ; pp. 81-89, Aug. 2, 1883.
345. Descriptions of some birds supposed to be undescribed, from the Commander
Islands and Petropaulovski, collected by Dr. Leonhard Stejneger, U. S. Signal Service. By Robert Ridgway. Pp. 90-96. Aug. 2, 1883.
346. Description of a new genus and species of alcyonoid polyp, from Japanese
waters, with remarks on the structure and habits of related forms, etc. By
Robert E. C. Stearns. Pp. 96-101, 1 pi. Aug. 2, 1883.
347. Report on a fragment of cloth taken from a mound in Ohio. By J. G. Hunt.
Pp. 101-102. Aug. 2, 1883.
348. Lucilia macellaria infesting man. By Fred. Humbert. Pp. 103-105. Aug. 2, 1883.
349. Fish mortality in the Gulf of Mexico. By S. T. Walker. Pp. 105-109. Aug.
2, 1883.
350. The generic names Amitra and Thyris replaced. By G. Brown Goode. P.
109. Aug. 2, 1883.
351. Shell beds in Westchester, N. Y. By Merritt Willis. P. 109. Aug. 2, 1883.
352. Notes on the nomenclature of certain North American fishes. By David S.
Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 110-111. Aug. 2, 1883.
353. Notes on the natural history of Labrador. By W. A. Stearns. Pp. 111-112,
Aug. 2, 1883; pp. 113-128, Aug. 8, 1883 ; pp. 129-137, Sept. 27, 1883.
354. On the black nodules or so-called inclusions in the Maine granites. By George
P. Merrill. Pp. 137-141. Sept. 27, 1883.
355. Description of two new species of fishes (A prion ariommus and Ophid'tum
leant) from Pensacola, Florida. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gil¬ bert. Pp. 142-144. Sept. 27, 1883.
356. On the probable identity of Alotacilla ocularis Swinhoe and M. amurensis
Seebohm, with remarks on an allied supposed species, M. blakistoni See-
bohm. P. 144, Sept. 27, 1883; pp. 145-147, Oct. 11, 1883.
357. The first occurrence of Pseudotriacis microdon, Capello, on the coast of the
United States. By Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 147-150. Oct. 11, 1883.
358. On a pair of abnormal antlers of the Virginia deer. By Frederick W. True.
P. 151, 1 fig. Oct. 11, 1883.
359. Description of a new species of reptiles in the United States National Museum.
By H. C. Yarrow. Pp. 152-154. Oct. 11, 1883.
360. Descriptions of some new birds from Lower California, collected by Mr. L.
Belding. By Robert Ridgway. Pp. 154-156. Oct. 11, 1883.
361. Anthus cervinus (Pallas) in Lower California. By Robert Ridgway. Pp. 156-
157. Oct. 11, 1883.
362. Note on Merula confinis (Baird) By Robert Ridgway. Pp. 158-159. Oct. 11,
1883.
363. Preliminary note on the crystalline schists of the District of Columbia. By
George P. Merrill. Pp. 159-160, Oct. 11, 1883 ; p. 161, Oct. 12, 1883.
PROCEEDINGS
55
Proc.
No.
364. Catalogue of a collection of ethnological specimens obtained from the Ugashag-
mut tribe, Ugashak River, Bristol Bay, Alaska. By William J. Fisher. Pp. 161-165. Oct. 12, 1883.
365. On the collection of Maine building stones in the United States National
Museum. By George P. Merrill. Pp. 165-176, Oct. 12, 1883; pp. 177-183, Oct. 11, 1883.
366. On the Macrocheilus of Phillips, Plectostylus of Conrad, and Soleniscus of
Meek & Worthen. By Charles A. White. Pp. 184-187, 1 pi. Oct. 11, 1883.
367. A review of the American Caranginae. By David S. Jordan and Charles H.
Gilbert. Pp. 188-192, Oct. 11, 1883 ; pp. 193-207, Oct. 12, 1883.
368. Note on the genera of Fetromyzontidae. By David S. Jordan and Charles H.
Gilbert. P. 208. Oct. 12, 1883.
369. Description of a new muraenoid eel (Sidera chlevastes) from the Galapagos
Islands. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 208-210. Oct. 12, 1883.
370. Description of a new species of Rhinobatus (Rhinobatus glaucostigma) from
Mazatlan, Mexico. By David S. Jordan and Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 210- 211. Oct. 12, 1883.
371. List of duplicate marine invertebrates distributed by the United States National
Museum. Series IV. — Educational Series No. 2. Prepared by R. S. Tarr. Pp. 212-216. Oct. 12, 1883.
372. The life colors of Cremnobates integripinnis. By Rosa Smith. Pp. 216-217.
Oct. 12, 1883.
373. Note on the occurrence of Gasterosteus nvilliamsoni Grd., in an artesian
well at San Bernardino, Cal. By Rosa Smith. P. 217. Oct. 12, 1883.
374. List of the Crustacea dredged on the coast of Labrador by the expedition
under the direction of W. A. Stearns, in 1882. By Sidney I. Smith. Pp. 218- 222. Oct. 12, 1883.
375. Review of the marine Crustacea of Labrador. By Sidney I. Smith. Pp. 223-
224, Oct. 12, 1883 ; pp. 225-232, Nov. 3, 1883.
376. Notes on the fishes of Todos Santos Bay, Lower California. By Rosa Smith.
Pp. 232-236. Nov. 3, 1883.
377. Catalogue of Mollusca and Echinodermata dredged on the coast of Labrador
by the expedition under the direction of Mr. W. A. Stearns, in 1882. By Katherine J. Bush. Pp. 236-240, Nov. 3, 1883 ; pp. 241-247, 1 pi., Dec. 5, 1883.
378. List of fishes collected in the Clear Fork of the Cumberland, Whitley County,
Kentucky, with descriptions of three new species. By David S. Jordan and Joseph Swain. Pp. 248-251. Dec. 5, 1883.
379. A description of a new species of Hadropterus (Hadropterus scierus) from
southern Indiana. By Joseph Swain. P. 252. Dec. 5, 1883.
380. Diagnosis of new genera and species of deep-sea fishlike vertebrates. By
Theodore Gill. Pp. 253-260. Dec. 5, 1883.
381. Diagnoses of new genera of nemichthyoid eels. By Theodore Gill and John
A. Ryder. Pp. 260-262. Dec. 5, 1883.
382. On the anatomy and relations of the Eurypharyngidae. By Theodore Gill
and John A. Ryder. Pp. 262-272, Dec. 5, 1883 ; p. 273, Dec. 20, 1883.
383. Ornithological notes on collections made in Japan from June to December,
1882. By Pierre Louis Jouy. Pp. 273-288, Dec. 20, 1883; pp. 289-304, Dec. 26, 1883; pp. 305-318, Jan. 4, 1884.
384. On a collection of shells sent from Florida by Mr. Henry Hemphill. By W. H.
Dali. Pp. 318-320, Jan. 4, 1884; pp. 321-342, 1 pi., Jan. 9, 1884.
385. List of birds found at Guaymas, Sonora, in December, 1882, and April, 1883.
By L. Belding. Pp. 343-344. Jan. 9, 1884.
386. Second catalogue of a collection of birds made near the southern extremity
of Lower California. By L. Belding. [Edited by R. Ridgway.] Pp. 344- 352. Jan. 9, 1884.
BULLETIN 193, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM
5G
Proc.
No.
387. Notes on a collection of fishes made in 1882 and 1883 by Capt. Henry E.
Nichols, U.S.N., in Alaska and British Columbia, with a description of a new genus and species, Prionistius macellus. By Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 353-361. Jan. 18, 1884.
388. Notes on some fishes collected by James G. Swan in Washington Territory,
including a new species of Macrurus. By Tarleton II. Bean. Pp. 362-364. Jan. 18, 1884.
389. Notes on fishes observed at the head of Chesapeake Bay in the spring of
1882; and upon other species of the same region. By Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 365-367. Jan. 18, 1884.
390. Notes on some Japanese birds related to North American species. By Robert
Ridgwav. P. 368, Jan. 18. 1884; pp. 369-371, Apr. 23, 1884.
391. On a collection of birds from Nicaragua. By Charles C. Nutting. [Edited
by R. Ridgway.] Pp. 372-384, Apr. 23, 1884; pp. 385-410, Apr. 26, 1884.
392. On some Costa Rican birds, with descriptions of several supposed new species.
By Robert Ridgway. Pp. 410-415. Apr. 26, 1884.
393. On an antique Roman mosaic from Carthage, now in the United States National
Museum. By G. H. Heap. Pp. 415-416, Apr. 26, 1884; p. 417, May 22, 1884.
394. On the skeleton of P/ioca (Ilistriophoca) jasciata, Zimmerman. By Frederick
W. True. Pp. 417-426, 1 fig., 4 pis. May 22, 1884.
395. On the source of the jadeite implements of the Alaskan Innuits. By E. W.
Nelson. Pp. 426-427. May 22, 1884.
396. On the origin of the fossil bones discovered in the vicinity of Tise’s Ford,
Florida. By S. T. Walker. Pp. 427-429. May 22, 1884.
Volume 7
Proceedings of the United States National Museum, vol. 7. Fp. i-viii (title page, advertisement, table of contents, list of illustrations, and list of corrections) ; pp. 1-553 (Proceedings papers 397-469); pp. 555-624 (Appendix, circulars 23-31); pp. 625-661 (index) ; 15 figs., 2 pis. 1885.
397. List of, and notes upon, the lichens collected by Dr. T. H. Bean in Alaska
and the adjacent region in 1880. By J. T. Rothrock. Pp. T9. July 8, 1884.
398. On the chlorophylloid granules of V orticella. By John A. Ryder. Pp. 9-12, 1
fig. July 8, 1884.
399. A new geographical race of the mountain sheep (O-vis montana dalli var.
nov.) from Alaska. By E. W. Nelson. Pp. 12-13. July 8, 1884.
400. Note on Selasphorus torridus Salvin. By Robert Ridgway. P. 14. July 8, 1884.
401. A review of the species of the genus Calamus. By David S. Jordan and
Charles H. Gilbert. Fp. 14-24. July 8, 1884.
402. Descriptions of ten new species of fishes from Key West, Florida. By David
S. Jordan and Charles PI. Gilbert. Pp. 24-32. July 8, 1834.
403. Note on Caranx ruber and Caranx bartholomaei. By David S. Jordan and
Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 32-33. July 8, 1884.
404. Notes on a collection of fishes from Pensacola, Florida, obtained by Silas
Stearns, with descriptions of two species ( Exocoetus volador and Gnathypops mystacinus). By David S. Jordan. Pp. 33-40. July 8, 1884.
405. Note on A elurichthys eydouxii and Porichthys porosissimus. By David S. Jor¬
dan. Pp. 40-41. July 8, 1884.
406. Notes on some Florida fishes. By G. Brown Goode and Tarleton H. Bean.
Pp. 42-47. July 8, 1884.
407. Description of a new species of whitefish (Coregonus nelson'll), from Alaska.
By Tarleton H. Bean. P. 48. July 8, 18S4.
403. On the literature and systematic relations of the saccopharyngoid fishes. By Theodore Gill and John A. Ryder. Pp. 48-64, July 8, 1884; p. 65, July 25, 1884.
On domesticated hybrid ducks (Anas boschas + obscura). By Elisha Slade. P. 66. July 25, 1884.
409.
Proc.
No.
410.
PROCEEDINGS
57
On prochlorite from the District of Columbia. By George P. Merrill. P. 67. July 25, 1884.
411. Melanettn fusca (Linn.) in Alaska. By Robert Ridgway. P. 68. July 25, 1884.
412. Description of a new snow bunting from Alaska. By Robert Ridgway. Pp.
68-70. July 25, 1884.
413. On the use of trinominals in American ornithology. By Leonhard Stejneger.
Pp. 70-81. July 25, 1884.
414. Descriptions of scaroid fishes from Havana and Key West, including five new
species. By David S. Jordan and Joseph Swain. Pp. 81-102. July 25, 1884.
415. Description of a new species of Sphaerium. By Temple Prime. Pp. 102-103.
July 25, 1884.
416. List of fishes collected at Key West, Florida, with notes and descriptions.
By David S. Jordan. Pp. 103-144, July 25, 1884; pp. 145-150, Sept. 1, 1884.
417. Note on Calamus proridens, a new species of Calamus. By David S. Jordan
and Charles H. Gilbert. P. 150. Sept. 1, 1884.
418. A catalogue of fishes received from the Public Museum of the Institute of
Jamaica, with descriptions of Pomadasys cpproximans and Tylosurus euryops, two new species. By Tarleton H. Bean and H. G. Dresel. Pp. 151-170. Sept. 1, 1884.
419. On a new muskrat, Neo fiber allem, from Florida. By Frederick W. True. Pp.
170-172. Sept. 1, 1884.
420. On a collection of birds made by Messrs. J. E. Benedict and W. Nye, of the
United States Fish Commission steamer Albatross. By Robert Ridgway. Pp. 172-180. Sept. 1, 1884.
421. Contributions to the history of the Commander Islands. No. 2. — Investigations
relating to the date of the extermination of Steller’s sea-cow. By Leonhard Stejneger. Pp. 181-189. Sept. 1, 1884.
422. An identification of the figures of fishes in Catesby’s Natural History of Caro¬
lina, Florida, and the Bahama Islands. By David S. Jordan. Pp. 190-199. Sept. 1, 1884.
423. A list of fishes collected in the east fork of White River, Indiana, with
descriptions of two new species. By Charles H. Gilbert. Pp. 199-205. Sept. 1, 1884.
424. Notes on the fishes of Switz City Swamp, Greene County, Indiana. By Chas.
H. Gilbert. Pp. 206-210. Sept! 1, 1884.
425. Remarks on the species of the genus Cepphus. By Leonhard Stejneger. Pp. 210-
224, Sept. 1, 1884; pp. 225-229, 6 figs., Sept. 12, 1884.
426. Notes on fishes collected by David S. Jordan at Cedar Keys, Florida. By
David S. Jordan and Joseph Swain. Pp. 230-234. Sept. 12, 1884.
427. List of fishes observed in the Saint John’s River at Jacksonville, Florida. By
David S. Jordan and Seth E. Meek. Pp. 235-237. Sept. 12, 1884.
428. Notes on the pipe-fishes of Key West, Florida, with description of Siphostoma
mckayi, a new species. By Joseph Swain and Seth E. Meek. Pp. 237-239. Sept. 12, 1884.
429. Descriptions of Physicuhis fulvus and Lotella maxillaris, new species of fishes
collected in 1881 by the United States Fish Commission. By Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 240-242. Sept. 12, 1884.
430. On the occurrence of the striped bass in the lower Mississippi Valley. By
Tarleton H. Bean. Pp. 242-244. Sept. 12, 1884.
431. Notes on some Greenland fishes. By H. G. Dresel. Pp. 244-256, Sept. 12, 1884;
pp. 257-258, Sept. 19, 1884.
432. Description of a new species of field-sparrow from New Mexico. By Robert
Ridgway. P. 259. Sept. 19, 1884.
433. Notes on fishes collected at Guaymas, Mexico, by Mr. H. F. Emeric, with a
description of Gobiosoma histrio, a new species. By David S. Jordan. Pp. 260-261. Sept. 19, 1884.
434. A review of the American species of marine Mugilidae. By David S. Jordan
and Joseph Swain. Pp. 261-275. Sept. 19, 1884.
BULLETIN 193, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM
58
Proc.
No.
435. Synopsis of the genera of the superfamily Teuthidoidea (families Teuthididae
and Siganidae). By Theodore Gill. Pp. 275-281. Sept. 19, 1884.
436. A review of the species of the genus Haemulon. By David S. Jordan and
Joseph Swain. Pp. 281-304, Sept. 19, 1884; pp. 305-317, Sept. 27, 1884.
437. List of fishes collected in the vicinity of New Orleans by Dr. R. W. Shufeldt,
U. S. A. By David S. Jordan. Pp. 318-320, Sept. 27, 1884; pp. 321-322, Sept. 29, 1884.
438. List of the fishes collected in Lake Jessup, and Indian River, Florida, by Mr.
R. E. Earll, with descriptions of two new species. By David S. Jordan. Pp. 322-324. Sept. 29, 1884.
439. Concerning some of the forms assumed by the patella in birds. By R. W.
Shufeldt. Pp. 324-331, 7 figs. Sept. 29, 1884.
440. Observations upon a collection of insects made in the vicinity of New Orleans,
Louisiana, during the years 1882 and 1883. By R. W. Shufeldt. Pp. 331- 336, Sept. 29, 1884; pp. 337-338,