LIST OF PUBLICATIONS. 



201 



Walcott, Charles D. The Monarch of 

 the Canadian Rockies. The Robson 

 Peak District of British Columbia and 

 Alberta. 



Nat. Geog. Mag., 24, No. 5, 

 May, 1913, pp. 62&-639, 

 11 text illustrations and a 

 large panoramic frontis- 

 piece. 

 Describes and illustrates the Rob- 

 son Peak District of British Columbia 

 and Alberta, with a review of pre 

 vious explorations, and an account 

 and illustration of explorations and 

 discoveries by the expedition of 1912, 

 led by the author. 



WiCKHAM, H. F. Fossil Coleoptera from 

 Florissant in the United States Na- 

 tional Museum. 



WiCKHAM, H. F. — Continued, 



Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., 45, 

 No. 1982, June 13, 1913, 

 pp. 283-303, pis. 22-26. 

 Describes and figures the more im- 

 portant of the fossil Coleoptera from 

 Florissant in the collection of the U. 

 S. National Museum. Twenty new 

 species are described, and the follow- 

 ing new genera founded: Aleocharop- 

 sis, Miolithocharis, and Miostenosis. 



Williams, Henry Shaler. Some new 

 MoUusca from the Silurian formations 

 of Washington County, Maine. 



Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., 42, 

 No. 1908, July 3, 1912, pp. 

 381-398, pis. 49, 50. 

 Describes and figures 17 new spe- 

 cies and varieties and founds the 2 

 [pew genera, Eurymyeila and Cliop- 

 heria. 



MISCELLANEOUS. 



Clark, Austin Hobart. A study of the 

 salinity of the surface water in the 

 North Pacific Ocean and in the adja- 

 cent enclosed seas. 



Smithsonian Misc. Colls., 

 60, No. 13, Dec. 4, 1912, 

 pp. 1-33. 



Sumner, Francis B., Raymond C. Os- 

 BURN, and Leon J. Cole. A bio- 

 logical survey of the waters of Woods 

 Hole and vicinity. Part I. Section I. 

 Physical and Zoological. Part II. Sec- 

 tion III. A Catalogue of the Marine 

 Fauna. 



Bull. Bur. Fisheries, 31, 

 1911 (June 3, 1913), pt. 1, 

 pp. 3-442, charts 1-227; 

 pt. 2, pp. 545-794. 

 Section I describes the results ob- 

 tained by a systematic biological sur- 

 vey, from 1903 to 1909, of the waters 

 of the region about Woods Hole, that 

 is, from Newport eastward to Chat- 



SuMNER,^ Francis B., Raymond C. Os- 

 BURN, and Leon J. Cole — Continued, 

 ham and Sankaty Head, and includ- 

 ing Buzzards Bay, Vineyard Sound, 

 and Nantucket Sound, the ocean 

 shores of Marthas Vineyard and Nan- 

 tucket, and southward to the 20- 

 fathom line. The results are in- 

 cluded under geographical and 

 physical conditions, synopsis of 

 zoological data, the fauna considered 

 by systematic groups, and theo- 

 retical considerations; followed by a 

 bibliography, a list of dredging sta- 

 tions, and 227 charts showing distri- 

 bution of species separately, range of 

 temperatures, densities, and geo- 

 graphic and hydrographic features. 

 Section III is a census of the animals 

 (invertebrate and vertebrate) found 

 in the vicinity of Woods Hole, and 

 based on the collecting done by the 

 United States Fish Commission (now 

 the Bureau of Fisheries) and on all 

 published records known to the 

 authors. 



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