x TABLE OF CONTEXTS. 



(d.) ANTHROPOLOGY, (cli) 



General : Mental Ability of Different Races, 321; Boyd Dawkins's "Cave 

 Hunting," 324; the Antiquity of Human Remains, 331; Artificial Deforma- 

 tion of Teeth, 356. Man in the Old World : Cranial Amulets, 332 ; Stone 

 Arrow in a Human Tibia, 355; a Strange Race of People Discovered in 

 India, 323; Human Figure Engraved on Reindeer Horn from the Cave of 

 Laroche-Berthier, 325; the Lowest of Known Human Forms, 32G; Pre- 

 historic Remains found near Schaffhausen, 327; Efficiency of Ancient 

 Weapons, 328 ; Ancient Wells near Ashill, England, 330 ; the Semangs, a 

 Primitive Race in India, 331 ; Origin and True Character of Certain Stone 

 Weapons, 333 ; Crania-Ethnica the Cro-Magnon Race, 333 ; Representa- 

 tions of Animals on Bone and Horn by Men of the Reindeer Period, 335; 

 Kitchen-midding in the Island of St. George, near Athens, 329. Man in 

 the New World : Mr. George Latimer's Archaeological Collection from 

 Porto Rico, 325; Stone Knives with Handles, from the Pai-Utes, 326; 

 Archaeology of the Mammoth Cave, 327 ; the Sacred Fires of the Pueblo 

 Indians of Taos, 328 ; Ancient Modes of Burial among the Indians of North 

 Carolina, 329 ; Hyde Clark's Comparison of American and Accadian Lan- 

 guages, 330. 



(e.) MAMMALS. 



Evolution of the Hog, 334; Origin of the Horns of the Deer, 335; New 

 Tertiary Mammals, 336 ; Professor Marsh on a New Order of Mammals : 

 Tillodontia, 337 ; Eotherium JEgypliacum, a New Fossil Sirenian, 337 ; Sir 

 Victor Brooke on Cervus Brownii, 337; a New Kangaroo from New 

 Guinea, 338 ; Dr. Coues on the Mice of North America, 338 ; Food of the 

 Mastodon, 339 ; Domesticated Animals among the Ancients, 352. 



(f.) BIRDS. 



Barnacles on Birds, 338 ; Discovery in Newfoundland of Bones of the Great 

 Auk, 339 ; Habits of Kingfishers, 339 ; the Flight of Birds, 340 ; Professor 

 Alfred Newton on the Migration of Birds, 340 ; Introduction of the Ameri- 

 can Turkey, 354 ; Occurrence of Moa in New Zealand, 359. 



(g.) REPTILES AND AMPHIBIA. 



New Species of Serpent, 342 ; New Serpent from Florida, 342 ; Resemblance 

 of Extinct Tortoises to Living Ones, 342 ; the Hybridization of Salaman- 

 ders, 342 ; Fossil Salamander : Salamandrdla Petroli, 343 ; the Batrachia 

 and Reptilia of North America, 343. 



(ll.) FISHES. 



Grayling in the Au Sable River, Michigan, 344; Respiration of the Leach, 

 345; Monograph on the Anguilliform Fish, 345; Habits of Eels, 346 ; Soft- 

 ness of Bones in Old Congers, 347 ; Leptoccphali are Larval Forms of 

 Congers, etc., 348 ; Largest Pike ever taken in England. 346 ; Fossil Lepi- 

 dosteus, 347 ; Reproductive Season of the Cod on the Faroe Islands, 347. 



(I.) ARTICULATES. 



Scudder on the Butterflies of the Genus Pamphila, 349; Flight of Butter- 

 flies, 354 ; Dimorphism in Certain Butterflies, 357 ; Habits of Bees, Wasps, 

 and Ants, 349; Occurrence of a Cochineal Insect in Nebraska, 350; Mineral 

 Substances in the Articulata, 350; Capture of Insects by "Fly-catching" 

 Plants, 350; Gigantic Marine Worm, 352; the Palolo Worm, 359. 



