BIBLIOGRAPHY 349 



The Fisheries and Fishery Industries of the United States. 

 Prepared through the co-operation of the Commissioner 

 of Fisheries and the Superintendent of the Tenth Census, 

 by George Brown Goode, assistant director of the U. S. 

 National Museum, and a Staff of Associates. Washing- 

 ton, Gov't Printing Office, 1884-1887. 7 vols. in 5 sec- 

 tions. 



Section I. Vol. I. Natural History of Useful Aquatic 

 Animals, 895 pp. Vol. II. An Atlas of 277 plates, 

 to accompany Vol. I. 



Section II. A Geographical Review of the Fisheries 

 Industries and Fishing Communities for the Year 

 1880. 787 pp. 



(Sections I-V, pp. 1-340, give a review of the New 

 England States. Also the appendix, pp. 675- 

 737, contains "Historical References to the 

 Fisheries of New England," by A. Howard 

 Clark. This part of the work is the most com- 

 plete and the most valuable list of references 

 now in print relating to the New England fish- 

 eries; it also has many pages of quotations 

 from original sources. Especial emphasis has 

 been laid upon Massachusetts towns.) 

 Section III. The Fishing Grounds of North America, 

 with forty-nine charts. Edited by Richard Rath- 

 bun. 238 pp. 



(This section gives all that may be desired in regard 

 to the position of the fishing grounds, their 

 shape and depth, the nature of the bottom, the 

 kind of fish to be found at the different places, 

 and the fishing that is carried on, with some 

 historical material showing how long the 

 grounds have been fished upon, and with what 

 success.) 



Section IV. The Fishermen of the United States. By 

 G. Brown Goode and Joseph W. Collins. 178 pp. 

 Sections III and IV in one vol. 

 (This section is arranged under the subjects, Na- 



