96 SAMUEL HUBBARD SCUDDER— MAYOR. l * c * 01 *tv"™£"ii. 



354. Archipolypoda, a aubordinal type of spined myriapod from the Carboniferous formation. Memoirs Boston Soc. 



Nat. Hist., v. 3, pp. 143-182, pi. 10-13, 8 figs, in text, 1S82. 



355. Nomenclator Zoologicus— Part I, supplemental list, Bull. U. S. National Museum, No. 19, pp. 19, 376; 1882. Also 



Part II, Universal index, Ibid., pp. 2, 340; 1884. 



356. The affinities of Paleoeampa Meek and Worthen, as evidence of the wide diversity of type in the earliest known 



myriapods. American Journal of Science, ser. 3, v. 24, pp. 161-170; 1882. Also in Annals and Magazine of 

 Nat. Hist., London, ser. 5, v. 10, pp. 286-295; 1882. 



357. A new and unusually perfect Carboniferous cockroach from Mazon Creek, Illinois. Proc. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist., 



vol. 21, pp. 391-396; 1882. 



358. Notes on some of the Tertiary Neuropteraof Florissant, Colorado, and Green River, Wyoming. Proc. Boston Soc. 



Nat. Hist., v. 21, pp. 407-409; 1882. 



359. Older fossil insects west of the Mississippi. Proc. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist., v. 22, pp. 58-60; 1882. 



360. On additional remains of articulates obtained by Dr. Dawson from stumps in the coal fields of Nova Scotia. Philo- 



sophical Transactions Royal Soc, London, pp. 649-650; 1883. 



361. On a new species of Scolopendrella. Proc. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist., v. 22, pp. 64-65, figs. 1-5; 1883. 



362. Polyxenusfascicularia. Proc. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist., vol. 22, pp. 66-67, fig. 6; 1883. 



363. A gigantic walking-stick from the coal. Science, v. 1, pp. 95-96; 1883. 



364. The pine moth of Nantucket Retinia frustrana. Publications Mass. Soc. for Promotion of Agriculture. 22 pp., 1 



pi.; 1883. 



365. The Carboniferous hexapod insects of Great Britain. Mem. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist., v. 3, pp. 213-224, pi. 17 ; 1883. 



366. The fossil white ants of Colorado. Proc. American Acad. Arts and Sciences, v. 19, pp. 135-145. 



367. Oswald Heer. Science, v. 2, pp. 583-586, portrait; 1883. 



368-369. Miscellaneous notes in Science, v. 1, pp. 22, 52, 82, 120, 245, 371, 374, 433, 438, 467, 554, 574, 612; also v. 2, pp. 

 55, 604, 748-749, 755-778; 1883. 



370. The male genital armature of Lepidoptera. Science, v. 1, p. 22-23; 1883. 



371. European Lepidoptera (Review). Science, v. 1, p. 605. 



372. Fruit-in sects [Review of Saunder's Insects injurious to fruit], Science, v. 2, p. 174. 



373. The November meeting of the National Academy of Sciences. Science, v. 2, pp. 669-670; 1883. 



374. An arachnid from the coal measures of Arkansas. Science, v. 3, pp. 207-208; 1884. 



375. Miscellaneous notes in Science, v. 3, 1884, pp. 110, 242, 337, 344, 424, 427, 555, 584, 607-608, 671, 746. 



376. Two new and diverse types of Carboniferous myriopods. Mem. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist., v. 3, pp. 283-297, pi. 26, 



27; 1884. 



377. The species of Mylacris, a Carboniferous genus of cockroaches. Mem. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist., v. 3, pp. 299-309, 



pi. 27, figs. 5-11; 1884. 



378. The April session of the National Academy of Sciences. Science, v. 3, pp. 503-505; 1884. 



379. A climb on Mt. Adams in winter. Appalachia, v. 3, pp. 314-323, pi. 6; 1884. 



380. The Government and economic entomology. Science, v. 3, pp. 646-647; 1884. 



381. A contribution to our knowledge of Paleozoic Arachnida. Proc. American Acad. Arts and Sciences, v. 20, pp. 



13-22; 1884. 



382. Miscellaneous notes in Science, v. 4, 1884, pp. 1, 2, 3, 28, 31, 49, 75, 88-92, 111, 139, 141, 142, 157, 221, 423, 539, 562. 



383. Triassic insects from the Rocky Mountains. American Journal of Science, ser. 3, v. 28, pp. 199-203; 1884. 



384. The October meeting of the National Academy of Sciences. Science, v. 4, pp. 396-397; 1884. 



385. A biographical sketch of Dr. John Lawrence Le Conte, 1825-1883. Trans. American Entomological Society, v. 



11, 28 pp. 18S4 ; Also in Biographical Memoirs of National Academy of Sciences, v. 2, pp. 261-293, portrait; 1886. 



386. The Alpine Club of Williamstown, Massachusetts. Appalachia, v. 4, pp. 45-54; 1884. 



387. Dictyoneura and the allied insects of the Carboniferous epoch. Proc. American Acad. Arts and Sciences, v. 20 



pp. 167-173; 1885. 



388. The earliest winged insects of America. A reexamination of the Devonian insects of New Brunswick, in the light 



of criticisms and of new studies of other Paleozoic types. 4°, 8 pp., plate and diagram, Cambridge, Mass. Pub- 

 lished by the author; 1885. 



389. Miscellaneous notes in Science, v. 5, 1885, pp. 20, 25, 38, 41, 119, 122, 140, 178, 187, 206, 208, 226, 262, 283, 284, 285, 



302, 414, 471, 472, 492, 512, 531, 532. 



390. The decadence of science about Boston. Science, v. 5, pp. 86-87; 1885. 



391. The discovery of Silurian insects. Science, v. 5, p. 97, 1885. 



392. A new plan for the scientific associations of Boston. Science, v. 5, pp. 125-127 ; 1885. 



393. A pedipalp in American Carboniferous rocks, and a fossil scorpion from the Silurian. Psyche, v. 4, p. 226; 1885. 



394. New genera and species of fossil cockroaches from the older American rocks. Proc. Acad. Nat. Sciences, Phila- 



delphia, pp. 34-39; 1885. 



395. Palaeodictyoptera or the affinities and classification of Paleozoic Hexapoda. Mem. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist., v. 3, 



pp. 319-351, pis. 29-32; 1885. 



396. Winged insects from a paleontological point of view, or the geological history of insects. Mem. Boston Soc. Nat. 



Hist., v. 3, pp. 353-358, pi. 29; 1885. 



397. Notes on Mesozoic cockroaches. Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci., Philadelphia, pp. 105-115; 1SS5. 



