1892.] J-**^ [Ruschenbcrger. 



Verbil, Pec. 22, on a curious animalcule founrl on stones and deal plants in the Schuyl- 

 kill and Delaware rivers. Vol. 9, p. 201. 



Verbal, Dec. 22, observations on the introduction of camjl int.) North America. Vol. 9, 

 p. 210. 



1858. 



Verbal, Jan. 1?, that the stomachs of Urnatella gracilis contained voluntary moving 

 bodies, which might prove to be generative bodies. Vol. 10, p. 1. 



Verbal, Jan. 19, that the extinct camel seemed to be about two-thirds the size of the 

 recent species. Vol. 10, p. 2. 



Verbal, Feb. 2, that the fossil remains from the Niobrara river belong to some twenty or 

 more species which are distinct from those found in the Miocene of the Mauvaises 

 Terres, as well as from those of a sub-equent age. Vol. 10, p. 7. 



Verbal, March 2, that with the collection of fossils received from the vicinity of Kansas 

 river, were several masses of a yellowish magnesian limestone containing numerous 

 casts of a very peculiar group of fossils ; that among the specimens found in the val- 

 ley of the Niobrara river, Nebraska, is the lower jaw of a new species of Mastodon. 

 Vol. 10, p. 10. 



Verbal, March 9, that after inspecting numerous equine remains from Niobrara, he in- 

 clines to believe that the remains of the horse found in the Postpliocene deposits of 

 the United States indicate two species. Vol. 10, p. II. 



Notices of remains of Extinct Vertebrata from the valley of the Niobrara River, col- 

 lected during the Exploring Expedition of 1857, in Nebraska, under the command 

 of Lieut. C. K. Warren, U. S. Top. Eng., by Dr. F. V. Hayden, Geologist to the Expe- 

 dition. Vol. 10, pp. 20-9. 



Verbal, April 6, that in the collection from Niobrara two additional species of the ancient 

 camel are indicated : Procamelus robustus and P. gracilis. He mentioned that frac- 

 tured fossils are best mended by saturating them with melted beeswax. Vol. 10, p. 89. 



Verbal, April 13, that he had named a fresh-water worm which lives in tubes of mud 

 Manayunkla speciosa. Vol. 10, p. 90. 



Contributions to Helminthology. Vol. 10. pp. 110-2. 



Verbal, June 29, that one-half of the chrysalides of the canker-worm were infected by 

 two species of Ichneumon. Vol. 10, p. 137. 



Verbal, Nov. 2, that he and Dr. Bridges, in Lily pond, near Newport, R. I., had f jund a 

 species of Cristatella. Vol. 10, pp. 188-90. 



Verbal, Dec. 14, that the fossil bones obtained from Haddonfleld, N. J., and given to him 

 by Mr. Foulke for description, belonged to a huge extinct herbivorous Saurian, which 

 he named Hadrosaurus Foulkii. Vol. 10, pp. 215-8. 



1859. 



Verbal, Jan. 11, that he had found the Manayunkia speciosa (a curious fresh-water 

 worm, a drawing of which he exhibited) in great abundance at the foot of the cliffs 

 washed by the ocean near Newport, R. I. Vol. 11, p. 2. 



Verbal, Jan. 18, that from fossil remains of cartilaginous fishes, found in the carbonifer- 

 ous formations of Kansas, he had made three species. Vol. 11, p. 3. 



Verbal, March 22, remarks on a Mastodon tooth from Tambla, Honduras ; and teeth and 

 fragments of teeth of Mososaurus from the green sand of New Jersey. Vol. 11, p. 91. 



Verbal, April 12, in reference to ferruginous rock containing remains of fishes. Vol. 11, 

 p. 110. 



Verbal, April 19, in reference to fossil bones contained in so-called guano from Sombrero, 

 W. I., which were exhibited. Vol. 11, p. 111. 



Verbal, May 17, on specimens of Patceobrochus from subsilurian strata which he con- 

 sidered fossil, though its organic nature had been denied. Vol. 11, p. 150. 



Verbal, Aug. 23, remarks on an antler of a reindeer, and on an animalcule, a drawing of 

 Avhich was submitted, found at Newport, R. I., named Freyia Americana. Vol. 11, p. 

 191. 



PROC. AMER. PHILOS. SOC. XXX. 138. W. PRINTED MAY 6, 1893. 



