METEOROLOGY CLIArATOLOGY. 101 5 



witli a rapi<l tranHjiiratidn curi'ciit can dispciisc w itli the foi'iiiatiini of inycorrhiza, 

 wliile thoHc with wt-ak tniii8i)ii'atii>n can ohlain a siiHicicnt supjily only l)y the assist- 

 ance of the symbiotic funsfus. 



Notes on the cytology of Gastromycetes, R. Maire {f'ompt. Reml. Arnd. Sci. 

 P((ris, J.)'/ (inoo), Sii. jn, p/i. 1247, 124s). — Cytoiogical notes are given ujion thestndy 

 of a nuiuhcr of species of Lycoi)er(lon, Nidularia. (ieaster, and Cyattius. 



Fung-i of Florida, H. H. Hcmk {F/arida Sta. Rpt. 1899 and 1900, j>p. SS-44, 

 jiij. I . ) — A list is given of fnngi collected by the author and others, in which the dis- 

 tiibiition of the s])ecies is indicated and several new species described. 



Cryptog-ams of Wyoming', A. Nelson ( Wi/oruing Std. Rpt. 1900, pp. :^,9). — A list 

 is yixcii with dcscriptixe notes on a number of S[)ecies of cryptogams that have been 

 coilcit.'d by tlic autlior and otiiers in the Stati' of Wyoming. This list is published 

 as siii>plcnicntal to tiic rciiort on the Hfjra of \\'yoniiiig ( Iv S. R., 8, p. 956). 



METEOROLOGY -CLIMATOLOGY. 



Monthly Weather Review ( Z'/. -S'. Dejjf. ^If/r., Wrr/t/tr/- Bureau^ 

 M<»iiJilij WntllKi' Revieti\ i^S (JOOO). ^^o.s. JO. pp. 4.25-^76, >(/.s-. 17, 

 charts 10; lUpp. ,f7'/--5^6', ^V.v. J,.AV-^-. //, rlnnls 10; 12, pp. 527-583, 

 l>l. Uf<J. U charis 10). — In addition to the usual reports on forecasts, 

 warninos, w(nitli(M- and crop conditions, meteorological ta])les and 

 charts foi- the niontiis of Octol)er. Novenil)er. and December, 1900, 

 these luinihcrs contain the following articles and notes. 



No. 10, sj)ecial contribntions on Lightning from a cloudless sky, by B. S. Pague; 

 Property loss by lightning in tiie Lnited States, 1899, by A. J. Henry; Cumulus 

 clouds at the Bayonne, N. J., fire, by J. H. Kadie; Drift ice and the theory of ocean 

 currents, l>y R. A. Daly; Ttie dynamic i)rinciple of the circulatory movements in the 

 atmosphere (illus. ), l>y V. Bjerknes; and The Porto Rican hurricane of 1899, by C. (>. 

 Paullin; and notes l\v the editor on the Weather Bureau at the Paris P^xposition, the 

 proceedings of the Pennanent International Meteorological Committee, oscillations 

 of lake level, correction. Weather Bureau men as instructors in meteorology, train- 

 ing needed to ])ecome investigators, climate and liora, heaviest rainfall at I^a Crosse, 

 Wis., meteorological cablegrams, jjsychrometric tables, observations during the solar 

 eclipse, pogonij), and the long record of Mr. S. P. Davidson. 



No. 11, special contributions on Rainfall from convectional currents (illus.), by 

 H. PL Kimball; Rainfall on the Island of St. Kitts, W. I. (illus.), by W. H. Alex- 

 ander; Notes on local whiil winds in New Brunswick, by S. W. Kain; Lightning 

 from a clou<lless sky, by C. \\. AshiTaft, jr.; Climate of Spokane, Wash., by C. Stew- 

 art; Fog studies on Mount Tamalpais, by A. G. McAdie; The water supply for the 

 season of 1900 as dejiending on snowfall: and Tornadoes in Tennessee, Mississippi, 

 and Arkansas (ilhis. ), by S. C. p]mery. 



No. IL', special contri))utions on The circulatory movements in the atmosphere, l)y 

 \'. Ljerknes; Line integrals in the atmosphere (illus.), by F. H. Bigelow; The peo- 

 ple of Mars, by C. I". Talinan; Prof. N. H. Yerby, by F. P. Chaffee; and Records by 

 the kite corps at Bayonne, N. J., by W. H. Mitchell; and notes by the editor on 

 weather forecasts in Mexico, meteorology in Costa Rica, micro-photographs of snow 

 crystals, bcjmbarding hail clouds, meteorologj' as a college course, mars and the earth, 

 oscillati(.)ns of the lakes and the climate in arid regions, erosion due to heavy rains 

 and steep grades, mirage over I^ake Michigan, meteorology at the Paris Congress of 

 1900, nieteon)logy and geodesy, i)eriodicity in meteorology, mathematics in meteor- 

 ology, a memorable storm of sleet ami snow, hurricanes at Charleston, S. C, high 



