ADVERTISEMENT. 



The scientific publications of the National Museum consist of two 

 series — the Bulletin and the Proceedings. 



The Bulletin, publication of which was begun in 1875, is a series 

 of more or less extensive works intended to illustrate the collections 

 of the United States National Museum and, with the exception noted 

 below, is issued separately. These bulletins are monographic in scope 

 and are devoted principally to the discussion of large zoological and 

 ])otanical groups, faunas and floras, bibliographies of eminent natural- 

 ists, reports of expeditions, etc. TJiey are usually of octavo size, 

 although a quarto form, known as the Special Bulletin, has been 

 adopted in a few instances in which a larger page was deemed indis- 

 pensable. 



This work forms No. 61 of the Bulletin series. 



Since 1902 the volumes of the series knowTi as "Contributions from 

 the National Herbarium," and containing papers relating to the botan- 

 ical collections of the Museum, have been pul)lislied as bulletins. 



The Proceedings, the first volume of which was issued in 1878, are 

 intended as a medium of publication of brief original papers based 

 on the collections of the National Museum, and setting forth newly 

 acquired facts in biolog}^, anthropology, and geology derived there- 

 from, or containing descriptions of new forms and revisions of limited 

 groups. A volume is issued annually, or oftener, for distribution 

 to libraries and scientific establishments, and in view of the impor- 

 tance of the more prompt dissemination of new facts a limited edition 

 of each paper is printed in pamphlet form in advance. 



RiciiAED Rathbun, 

 ■ Assistant Secretary, Smithsonian Institution, 



in charge of the United States National Museum. 



Washington. U. S. A., June 15, 1908. 



