APPENDIX. 237 



laboratory, and every new comer learns the value of scientific 

 fellowship. 



Had the Marine Biological Laboratory done nothing beyond the 

 creation of a sound cooperative organization, it would at least have 

 fulfilled one all-essential part of its mission. That it has done, and 

 so effectively that it is not likely to be undone. 



The record of the laboratory as a scientific station is shown in the 

 following list of works : 



PAPERS PUBLISHED. 



H. Avers. 



A Contribution to the Morphology of the \'ertebrate Head. Zool. 



A?tz., 1890. 

 On the Origin of the Internal Ear and the Functions of the Semi^ 



circular Canals and Cochlea. Milwaukee, 1890. 

 Concerning Vertebrate Cephalogenesis. Journ.of Morph., IV, 1890. 

 The Ear of Man ; its Past, its Present, and its Future. Biol. 



Lectures, I, Boston, 1890. 

 Die Membrana tectoria, was sie ist, und die Membrana basilaris, was 



sie verrichtet. Anat. Anz., VI, 1891. 

 A Contribution to the Morphology of the Vertebrate Ear, with a 



Reconsideration of its Functions. Journ. of Morph., VI, Nos. 



I and 2, 1892. 

 The Macula Neglecta again. Anat. Ans., VIII, 1893. 

 ijeber das peripherische Verhalten der Gehornerven und den 



Werth der Haarzellen des Gehororgans. Anat. Ans., VIII, 



1893. 

 The Auditory or Hair-cells of the Ear and their Relations to the 



Auditory Nerve. Journ. of Morph., VIII, 1893. 

 Bdellostoma dombey. Biol. Lectures, II, 1893. 



H. C. BuMPUS. 



The Embryology of the American Lobster. Journ. of Morph., 



V, 1891. 

 A New Method in the Use of Celloidin. A/ner. Nat., 1892. 

 A Laboratory Course in Invertebrate Zoology. Providence, 1892. 



Cornelia M. Clapp. 



Some Points in the Development of the Toad-fish (Batrachus Tau). 

 Journ. of Morph., V, 1891. 



E. G. CONKUN. 



The Cleavage of the Ovum in Crepidula fornicata. Zool. Anz., 



No. 391. 

 The Fertilization of the Ovum. Biol. Lectures, II, 1893. 



