£tet of guUettna gtaauco in the Science §erie» 



Volume 1 : 



No. 1. On the Speed of Liberation of Iodine in Solutions of Hydro- 

 chloric Acid, Potassium Chlorate, and Potassium Iodide, by Herman 

 Schlundt, Assistant in Chemistry. Pp. 33, December, 1894. Price 35 

 cents. 



No. 2. On the Quartz Keratophyre and Associated Rocks of the North 

 Range of the Baraboo Bluffs, by Samuel Weidman. Pp. 21, pis. 3, 

 January, 1395. Price 25 cents. 



No. 3. Studies in Spherical and Practical Astronomy by George C. 

 Comstock, Director of the Washburn Observatory. Pp. 50, June, 1895. 

 Price 40 cents. 



No. 4. A Contribution to the Mineralogy of Wisconsin, by William 

 Herbert Hobbs, Assistant Professor of Mineralogy and Petrology. Pp. 48, 

 pis. 5, June, 1895. Price 40 cents. 



No. 5. Analytic Keyes to the Genera and Species of North American 

 Mosses, by Charles Reid Barnes, Professor of Botany, and Fred DePorest 

 Heald, Fellow in Botany. Pp. 211, January, 1897. Price S1.00. 



Volume 2 : 



No. 1. The Action of Dilute Solutions of Electrolytes upon the Sense 

 of Taste, by Louis Kahlenberg, Ph. D., Assistant Professor of Physical 

 Chemistry. Pp. 31, September, 1898. Price 35 cents. 



No. 2. Aspects of Mental Economy. An essay on some phases of the 

 dynamics of mind, with particular observations upon student life in the 

 University of Wisconsin, by M. V. O'Shea, Professor of the Science and 

 Art of Education. Pp. 165, Pis. 2, April, 1900. Price 75 cents. 



No. 3. Contributions from the Anatomical Laboratory of the Univers- 

 ity of Wisconsin, edited by W. S. Miller, M. D., Assistant Professor of 

 Vertebrate Anatomy. Pp. 46, pis. 3-15, February, 1900. Price 40 cents. 



