INDEX 
493 
Sceloporus undulatus, 123, 126, 127 
Schistomys, 403 
Schlosser, origin of reindeer, 4 ; on 
value of zoogeographical evidence, 
120, 223 ; geological age of Vis- 
caciidae, 354 
Schmidt, fish fauna of northern Sea 
of Japan, 94 
Schuchert, palaeogeography of Cali¬ 
fornia, 198 ; palaeogeography of 
North America, 228—231 ; on Cen¬ 
tral America, 237, 238 ; antiquity 
of Bahamas, 264, 293 
Schwarz, Coleoptera of Florida, 178 
geology of Ascension, 384 
Scincidae, 123, 124, 189, 376 
Sciuropterus, sabrinus, 63, 64 ; yukon- 
emsis, 63, 92 
Sclater, W. L., and P. L. Sclater, 
distribution of seals, 280 
Scoliopterix libatrix, 214 
Scolopendra morsitans, 382, 386 
S colop end rid ae, 382 
Scorpions in Florida, 178 ; of western 
America, 349, 350 ; of St. Helena, 
389 
Scott, on Cervalces, 32 ; Steiromys an 
ancestor of Erethizon, 71 \Necro- 
lestes, 246, 404 ; on Santa Cruz 
fauna, 398—404 ; origin of eden¬ 
tates, 401 ; Antarctic continent, 
422 
Seals, distribution of, 280 ; “ ele¬ 
phant,” 428 
Sea-urchins, fossil, of West Indian and 
Mediterranean areas, 278 
Sedgwick, distribution of Onycho- 
phora, 346 
Semotilus corporalis, 51 
Seton, mountain caribou, 5, 6 ; range 
of moose, 32 ; range of wapiti, 67 
Seward, fossil plants as tests of cli¬ 
mate, 43 
Shaler, effect of warm current on 
Polar regions, 99 ; former eleva¬ 
tion of Florida, 169 
Sharpe, birds of Bermuda, 188, 189 
Sheep, range of in America, 6 ; ex¬ 
tinct, in Alaska, 80 ; in English 
Forest Bed, 85 ; in Nicaragua, 105 
Shimek, on Helicina, 158 
Sialis bermudianus, 188 
Siberia, fauna of, in Glacial times, 82 
Siebenrock, distribution of turtles, 
132 
Siluridae, 380 
Simpson, distribution of Unionidae, 
52, 54 ; sub-divisions of Unionidae, 
254 ; geological history of Florida, 
177 ; Antillean molluscan fauna, 265 
—267 
Simpulopsis, 270 
Simroth, on Arionidae, 213 ; mode 
of dispersal of Amalia, 214 ; origin 
of Bulimulidae, 273 ; pendulation 
theory, 434 
Sinclair, discovery of Euceratherium, 
154 ; Santa Cruz fossil beds, 403, 
404 ; Miocene beds in Oregon, 408, 
409 
Siren lacertina, 173 
Sistrurus, 131 
Sitta, 56 
Skinks, 123, 189, 376 
Skunks, western, 201 
Sloth, in Brazil, 365, 366 ; ground, 
244giant ground, in North 
America, 153, 156 ; in South 
America, 400 ; gravigrade, re¬ 
mains in Oregon, 408 
Smith, Edgar A., mollusca of St. 
Helena, 389, 390 
Smith, Eugene A., elevation of 
Florida, 170 
Smith, G., Mysis relicta in Lake 
Superior, 48 
Smith, Geoffrey, faunistic affinity of 
Tasmania and South America, 424 
Smith, J. P., similarity of marine 
faunas of Japan and America, 96 ; 
geology of California, 199, 356, 357 ; 
northern marine faunas, 318 
Snakes in eastern North America, 
127 ; garter, 127, 128, 222 ; rough 
green, 130, 197 ; smooth green, 130 
197 ; rattle, 131, 253, 352 ; 
burrowing, 252, 253 ; glass, 173, 
221, 281 ; blind, 203 
Snodgrass and Heller, birds of Gala¬ 
pagos, 302 
Solenodon, paradoxus, 282 ; cubanus, 
282 
