INDEX. 



ouniv, i. 127. 



Charpentier, Jean de, i. 13, 127, 128, 

 161, 207, 251 ; paper on the glacial 

 theory, i. 73-77. 



Charlesworth, Edward, i. 139. 



Charleston, S. C., Lowell lectures de- 

 livered at, i. 292; Agassiz professor 

 at Medical College, ii. 42 ; Agassiz's 

 sickness, ii. 57. 



Chavannes, Professor D. A., i. 13. 



Christian Examiner, articles by Ag- 

 assiz, ii. 44. 



Cliristinat, M., i. 34; joins Agassiz in 

 America, i. 298 ; represents Agassiz's 

 mother, ii. 10; his method of buying 

 provisions, ii. 21 ; leaves Agassiz, ii. 



34- 



Civil war, ii. 136. 

 Clark, H. James, ii. 52, 88; his claim 



as joint author with Agassiz, ii. 54. 

 College of Physicians and Surgeons, 



New York, ii. 2. 

 Comparative Physiology, ii. 31. 

 Concise, i. 32. 



Conrad, Timothy A., i. 285, ii. 29. 

 Contributions to the Natural History of 



the United States, ii. 63. 

 Coiiversacoes Scientificas sobre o Ama- 



zonas, ii. 125. 

 Cooper Institute, lectures on Brazil by 



Agassiz, ii. 153. 

 Cope, Mr., ii. 165. 

 Cornell University, ii. 168. 

 Cotta, M., i. 24, 28 ; abandons the pub- 

 lication of" Poissons fossiles," i. 64. 

 Coulon, Louis de, i. 51, 52. 

 Coulon, Henri, i. 164. 

 Coutinho, Major J. M., ii. 147. 

 Covan, Mrs., i. 190. 

 Crinoids, Lyman, the authority on, ii. 



56; fossil, at Burlington, Iowa, ii. 



139. 



Cudrefin, home of Agassiz's grand- 

 father, Dr. Mayor, i. ii. 



Curtis, Thomas Ii., ii. n. 



Cuvier, George, i. 28, 29, 37-39, 46, 116, 

 ii. 107,228; his death, i. 42; sketch of 

 his life, i. 43. 



Dnll, \V. II., ii. 138. 

 Dana, J. D., ii. 39. 



Darwin, "Origin of Species," i. 45, ii. 

 66, 103, 106, 113, 116; Professor 

 Sedgwick's letter on, ii. ic>: I 

 letter to, ii. 118; letter of Asa < 

 ii. 119; quotations from his letters, 

 ii. 120; principles of uniformitarian- 

 ism, ii. 123; compliment from, ii. 

 169. 



Darwinian theory, ii. 124, 125. 



Daudet, Alphonse, author of " Tar- 

 tarin of Tarascon," i. 4. 



Davis, Lieutenant, i. 297. 



Deep-sea dredgings, ii. 175. 



Deep-sea Dredging Expedition in the 

 Hassler, ii. 184. 



Deerfield, ii. 178. 



De Koninck, Professor T. G. ii. 81; 

 letter to M. Marcou, ii. 93; collec- 

 tion, ii. 93 ; settlement for his collec- 

 tion, ii. 94. 



Descriptions des Echinodermes fossiles 

 de la Sitisse, i. 152. 



Deshayes, Paul, i. 242, 265 ; letter from 

 Agassiz, i. 180. 



Des Moulins, Charles, Etudes sur Us 

 Echinides, i. 61, 62. 



Desor, Edward, i. 118, 137, 164, 189, 

 195, 198, 200, 222, 264, ii. 7, :' 

 view of his early life, i. 119; at wmk 

 on Sowerby's Conchology, i. 121; 

 slight knowledge of natural history, 

 i. 121 ; Excursions et Sejours Jans 

 les Glaciers et hautes Regions (/<> 

 Alpes, de M. Agazziz et de ses Com- 

 pagnons de Voyage," {.234; ai 

 in Boston, i. 294; sues Lieutrn.mt 

 Charles H. Davis, ii. 13; his return 

 to Europe, ii. 14. 



Dieppe, i. 42. 



Dinkel, Joseph, makes drawings for 

 Agassiz, i. 24, 30, 33, 34, 42, 124. 

 goes to England, i. 59; purch;i 

 drawings by the British Museum, i. 

 60; his friendship for At;. ISM/, i. 

 238. 



Discours d'ouverturc, i. 89. 



Dollfus-Ausset, Daniel, i. 209. 



Dollinger, i. 20, 22, 24, 25. 



Domeykn, Don Igr.ario, ii. 188. 



D'Orbigny, Alcicle, i. 48. 



Drayton, drawings by, i. 286. 



