l(li; PROCEEDINGS OF OTTAWA MEETING. 



The Ancestors of the Tulip Tree : Bull. Torrey Bot. Club, vol. xiv, January, L887. 



Fossil Fishes and Fossil Plants of the Triassic Rocks of New Jersey and the Con- 

 necticut Valley: Monograph xiv, U. S. Geol. Sin-., L888. See also under Paleo 

 zoology, Animal, Trans. X. V. Acad.. Sci., vol. vi, L887, p. 124. 



Triassic Plants from Honduras: Trim*. X. )'. Acad. ScL, vol. vii, 1888, p. 113. 



Rhtetic Plants from Honduras: Am. ./our. Sci., vol. xxxvi, 1888, p. 342. 



Devonian Plants from Ohio: Jour. Cincinnati Soc. .Vo/. Hist., xii, pp. 4s-.")4. 



Remarks on Fossil Plants from the Puget Sound Region, in C. A. White'.- " On 

 Invertebrate Fossils from the Pacific Coast " : Bull. U. S. G. S., no. 51, p. 51. 



The Flora of the Great Falls Coal Field, Montana,: Am. Jour. Sci., iii, xli, 189J 

 pp. 191-201, pi. 14. 



The Genus Sphenophyllum : Jour. Cincinnati Soc. Nat. ///*/., -xiii, pp. 212-217. 



PHYSIOGKAPHY. 



On the Currents of the Gulf Stream and of the Pacific oil' Central America : Family 



Visitor, 1851. 

 Deep Sea Dredging* : Proc. N. Y. Lye, Nat. Hist., vol. i, 1870, p. PHI. 

 On the Results of the Removal of Forests: 1'euc. X. )'. Lye. Nat. Hid., second 



series, is?.",, p. 31. 

 Winds and Ocearj Currents : Science, January, 1886. 

 ( >n Sea-level and Ocean Currents: Science, July, 1886. 

 >ea-level and Ocean Currents : Science, October, 1886. 



Dr Newberry was also one of the editors of Johnson's Encyclopaedia, having 

 charge of geology and paleontology. He wrote many articles on these subjects 

 for its pages in LS7o and the years immediately following. 



Biographic sketches of Dr Newberry have been published in all the current 

 biographic dictionaries and cyclopedias. Portraits of him appear accompanying 

 such sketches in Men of Progress, 1870-71, page .'!17, and Contemporary Biography 

 of New York, volume v, 1887, page 255. The Popular Science Monthly, volume 

 ix, page491, 1876, contains a sketch, with portrait, and in Fairchild's History of 

 the New York Academy of Sciences there is an excellent artotype.* 



A memorial of .1. H. Chapin, in the absence of the author, was read 

 by C. II. Hitchcock. 



MEMORIAL OF JAMES HENRY CHAPIN 



BY w. M. DAVIS 



James Henry Chapin, an original member of our Society, was born in 

 Leavenworth, Indiana, on December 31, 1832. He died in South Nor- 

 walk, Connecticut, on March 14, 1892, in his sixtieth year. He was a 



*Sinee his death memorials have appeared, with portraits, in the Engineering and Mining 

 Journal, December 17. 1892, page 581; tin- Scientific Vmerican, December 31, 1892, page 123; the 



Si li""l of Mini s Quarterly, Ji I \ . 1893, page '>".. u ith two steel portraits, "in- taken in 1865 tun I 



I 887 : Oil- Bulletin "I the Torrey Botanical Club, March, L893, w it li an artotype; and in the 

 Transact - of the New JTorls Academj of Sciences, volume xii, March, 1893, a memoir, by Pro- 

 fessor ll. L. Fairchild, republished by the Scientific Alliance of New York, March, 1893. \ 

 memorial, bj Professor J. J. Stevenson, appears in the American Geologist for July, 1893, with a 

 revised chronologic bibliography, by J, !•'. Kemp. 



