TOD] 



614 



[TOD 



Todaro, Francesco. 6. Sopra gli organ! del 

 gusto della testuggine greca. Roma, R. Accad. 

 Lincei Atti, 3, 1876 (Pt. I), pp. 122-123. 



7. Sulla struttura muscolare del ventricoli 

 del cuore umano. [1876.] Roma, R. Accad. 

 Lincei Trans., 1, 1877, pp. 30-31. 



8. Sulla struttura iutima della pelle de' 



rettili. [1877-78.] Roma, R. Accad. Lincei 

 Mem., 2, 1878, pp. 1073-1128. 



9. Sui primi fenomeni dello sviluppo delle 



salpe. [2Ve comunicrizioni preliminari.} Roma, 

 R. Accad. Lincei Trans., 4, 1880, pp. 86-89 ; 

 6, 1882, pp. 309-315 ; 7, 1883, pp. 29-1-297. 



Todd, (Sir) Charles. 3. Observations of the phe- 

 nomena of Jupiter's satellites at the observatory, 

 Adelaide, and notes on the physical appearance 

 of the Planet. Astron. Soc. Month. Not., 37, 

 1877, pp. 284-300. 



4. Observations at the Adelaide Observatory. 

 [1878.] Astrou. Soc. Month. Not., 39, 1879, pp. 

 1-22 



5. Observations of eclipses, occultations, 



and phenomena of Jupiter's satellites, made with 

 the 8-inch equatoreal (Cooke) at the Adelaide 

 Observatory, South Australia. Astron. Soc. 

 Month. Not., 40, 1880, pp. 170-176, 286-287. 



6. Observations of the great southern Comet 

 1880, I. made at the Adelaide Observatory, New 

 South Wales. Astron. Soc. Month. Not, 40, 1880, 

 pp. 298-299. 



7. Approximate positions of Comet b, 



1881, deduced from observations made at the 

 Adelaide Observatory. [1881.] Astron. Soc. 

 Month. Not., 42, 1882, p. 46. 



8. Observations of the Transit of Venus, 



1874, December 8-9, at Adelaide, South Aus- 

 tralia. Astron. Soc. Mem., 47, 1883, pp. 93- 

 96. 



Todd, Charles Alonzo. "Reversion of type" in 

 the digastric muscle of the human being. [1881.] 

 St. Louis, Acad. Trans., 4 (1886), pp. 351-352. 



Todd, David Peck. Observations of the phe- 

 nomena of Jupiter's satellites. Astr. Nachr., 85, 



1875, col. 155-158. 



2. [Observations of eclipses of Jupiter's 

 satellites, made at Amherst and Washington, 

 during the oppositions of 1874-75,1875-76 and 

 1878.] Astr. Nachr., 89, 1877, col. 295-302 ; 

 92, 1878, col. 43-48 ; 95, 1879, col. 201-204. 



3. Occultations of planets [Saturn and 



Uranus] observed at Washington in 1876 and 



1877. Astr. Nachr., 90, 1877, col. 159-160. 

 4. Observations of the Transit of Mercury, 



1878, May 6, including a systematic search for 

 a satellite, and measures of the diameter of 

 the planet. Amer. Assoc. Proc., 1879, pp. 74- 

 77. 



5. Solar parallax from the velocity of light. 



Todd, David Peck. 6. On a mechanical at- 

 tachment for equatorial mountings, to facilitate 

 sweeping in right ascension. Amer. Acad. Proc., 

 15, 1880, pp. 270-272. 



7. Preliminary account of a speculative 



and practical search for a trans-neptunian planet. 

 Amer. Journ. Sci., 20, 1880, pp. 225-234. 



8. On the use of the electric telegraph 

 during total solar eclipses. Amer. Acad. Proc., 

 16, 1881, pp. 359-363 ; Spettrosc. Ital. Mem., 10, 

 1881, pp. 76-79. 



9. Observations of the red spot on Jupiter. 

 Astr. Nachr., 99, 1881, col. 305-366. 



10. The solar parallax as derived from the 

 American photographs of the Transit of Venus, 

 1874, December 8-9. (Washington, Phil. Soc. 

 Bull., 4, 1881, pp. 168-169.) Smithsonian 

 Miscell. Coll., 25, 1883, Art. 1 ; Paris, Acad. 

 Sci. Compt. Rend., 92, 1881, pp. 1328-1330; 

 Amer. Journ. Sci., 21, 1881, pp. 491-493; 

 Copernicus, 1, 1881, pp. 167-175. 



11. An account of observations of the 



Transit of Venus, 1882, made at the Lick Ob- 

 servatory, Mount Hamilton, California. Amer. 

 Journ. Sci., 25, 1883, pp. 131-136; Astron. Soc. 

 Month. Not., 43, 1883, pp. 273-276. 



12. A comparison of LEVERRIER'S tables 



of Uranus and Neptune with those by NEW- 

 COMB of the same planets. Copernicus, 3, 1884, 

 pp. 233-238. 



Todd, James E. On the annual deposit of the 

 Missouri River, during the post-pliocene. [Ab- 

 stract.] Amer. Assoc. Proc., 1877, pp. 287- 

 291. 



2. Notes on the distribution of timber in 



south-western Iowa, with inferences concerning 

 the origin of prairies. [1877.] American Na- 

 turalist, 12, 1878, pp. 91-96. 



3. RICHTHOFEN'S theory of the loess, in the 

 light of the deposits of the Missouri. Amer. 

 Assoc. Proc., 1878, pp. 231-239. 



4. On certain contrivances for cross-ferti- 

 lization in flowers. American Naturalist, 13, 

 1879, pp. 1-6. 



5. Has Lake Winnipeg discharged through 

 the Minnesota within the last two hundred 

 years? Amer. Jour. Sci., 17, 1879, p. 120. 



6. Notes on the flowering of Saxifraga 



sarmentosa. American Naturalist, 14, 1880, pp. 

 569-575. 



7. On the flowers of Solanum rostratum 



Amer. Journ. Sci., 19, 1880, pp. 59-64. 



and Cassia chanisecrista. [1881.] American 

 Naturalist, 16, 1882, pp. 281-287. 



8. A description of some fossil tracks from 

 the Potsdam sandstone. Wisconsin Acad. Trans., 

 5, 1882, pp. 276-281. 



9. On the geological effects of a varying 



rotation of the Earth. American Naturalist, 17, 

 1883, pp. 15-26. 



