NO. 1488. BUTTERFLIES OF BRITISH AMERICA— CARY. 457 



1889. Fletcher, James. List of Diurnal Lepidoptera collected b3^Mr. W. Ogilvie on 

 Mackenzie Kiver in 1888. List of Diurnal Lepidoptera collected by Mr. 

 Fredk. Bell * * * at Fort Simpson, Mackenzie River (lat. 61° 52^, in 

 1888. List of Diurnal Lepidoptera collected in the Yukon District and adja- 

 cent northern portion of British Columbia. Ann. Eept. Can. Geol. Surv., 

 Ill (new ser.). Part I, App. IV (Zoology), pp. 229-231 B. Montreal. 

 (Reprint in Ann. Rept. Dept. Interior [Canada] for 1889, Part VIII, p. 51, 

 1890.) 



Brief notes on five species from the lower Mackenzie River, ten species 

 from Fort Simpson, and five species from the Devil's Portage, Liard River. 



1889. ScuDDEK, Samuel Hubbard. The Butterflies of the Eastern United States and 

 Canada. 3 vols., quarto, pp. 1956. I — Nymphalidte. II — Lycaenidie, 

 Papilionidse, Hesperidie. Ill — Appendix, plates. Cambridge. 



Many references to butterflies collected in the Athabaska-Mackenzie region 

 by the earlier explorers. 



1893. Butler, Arthur G. List of Insects collected in Western North America in 



the Summer of 1892. By Arthur G. Butler and W. F. Kirby. Annals Nat. 



Hist. (6), XII, 1893, pp. 11-21. London. (Lepidoptera by A. G. Butler.-) 



A list of 18 species of butterflies collected in Athabaska and Mackenzie by 



Miss Elizabeth Taylor. 



1898. WiCKHAM, H. F. Explorations in the Far North. By Frank Russell. Being 

 the report of an expedition under the auspices of the University of Iowa 

 during the years 1892, 1893, and 1894." Octavo, pp. i-vii, 1-290, one map. 

 Report on Insects by H. F. Wickham, pp. 276-280. Published by the Uni- 

 versity, Iowa City, Iowa. 

 Two species of diurnals from Fort Rae, Mackenzie, collected by Russell. 



1902. Dyar, Harrison G. List of North American Lepidoptera. Bull. No. 52, 



U. S. National Museum. Octavo, pp. i-xix,' 1-723. Washington. 



1903. Elwes, Henry John. On a Collection of Lepidoptera from Arctic America. 



Trans. Ent. Soc. London, Part III, 1903, pp. 243-245, pi. ix. 



A brief review of the butterflies collected by Mr. David Hanbury in 1902. 

 Fifteen species are mentioned, collected chiefly on the Barren Grounds 

 between Bathurst Inlet and Great Bear Lake. 



1904. Dyar, Harrison G. Two New Forms of (Eneis. Proc. Ent. Soc. Wash., VI, 



1904, p. 142. (Author's separates published June 25, 1904.) 



(Eneis caryi, new species, described from Smith Landing, Athabaska, and 

 Q^iieis nahannl, new species, from Nahanni Mountains, Mackenzie, both 

 species collected by INIerritt Cary in 1903. 

 1904. Hanbury, David T., and Elwes, H. J. Sport and Travel in the Northland 

 of Canada. By David T. Hanbury. Octavo, pp. i-xxxii, 1-319, 5 col. plates, 

 2 maps, numerous illustrations. London. Lepidoptera from Arctic America, 

 App. Ill, pp. 271-275, 1 pi. By H. J. Elwes. (Reprint from Trans. Ent. 

 Soc. London, Part III, 1903. ) 



A popular account of a journey across the Barren Grounds from Chester- 

 field Inlet to Great Bear Lake in 1902. There are several text references to 

 the butterflies oliserved along the route, by Mr. Hanbury. 



