N. A. INVERTEBRATE PALAEONTOLOGY. 7,'W 



Marcou, J. B. — (Identificatiou of Fossils and Strata of tho Great Sioux 

 Eeservatiou.) The Lignites of the Great Sioux Reservation, a Report 

 on the Region between the Grand and Moreau Rivers, Dakota, by 

 Bailey Willis. Bull. U. S. Oeol. Surv., :So. 21, p. 11. 1885. Wash- 

 ington. 

 A stratigiaphic list of the fossils collected by Mr. Willis. 



Marcou, J. B. — A List of the Mesozoic and Cenozoic Types in the Col- 

 lections of the U. S. National Museum. Proc. U. 8. National Museum^ 

 vol. VIII, pp. L*90-344. 1885. Washington. 



MA'J THEW, G. F. — Recent Discoveries in the Saint John Group. Cana- 

 dian Bee. ScL, vol. i (ISSi-'So), pp. 13G-141. Montreal. 



This article also appeared in the Bull. Nat. His(. Soc. Weiv Brunswick^ 

 No, IV, pp. 97-l(»2. 1885. Saint John, New Brunswick. 



Matthew, G, F. — A New Genus of Cambrian Pteropods. Canadian 

 Bee. ScL, vol. i (1884-'85) pp. 149-152, figs. 1-3 on p. 152. Mon- 

 treal. 



Describes from the Saint John group, the new genus Camerotheca, 

 with the new species C. gracilis as tlie type. He refers to this genus 

 HyoUthes danianus {Bull. No. 10 U. S. Geol. Survey). In a note the 

 author states that, after seeing the specific description of Eichwald's 

 typical species H. acutus, he considers it necessary to place Camerotheca 

 as a subgenus of HyoUthes. 



Ma'ITHEW, G. F. — An Outline of Recent Discoveries in the Saint John 

 Group. With a Letter of Prof. Alpheus Hyatt relative to the Ptero- 

 pods. Bull. Nat. Hist. Soc. New Brtmsicicl-, No. iv, pp. 97-102. 1885. 

 Saint John, New Brunswick. 



Gives a general sketch of the Saint John group and its fauna. Con- 

 siders it to more nearly represent the Solva group than the Meuevian. 

 [See Hyatt, Alpheus.) 



Matthew, G. F. — ..n the Probable Occurrence of the Great Welsh 

 Paradoxides, P. Davidis, in America. Amer. Jour. Sci., 3d ser., vol, 

 XXX, pp. 72, 73. July, 1885. New Haven. 



The author states that he has received from ^Ir. J. P. Howley, direc- 

 tor of the GeoIogi(al Survey of Newfoundland, fragments which ap[)ear 

 to belong to the species Paradoxides Davidis. They occur in a hard 

 black «ilico-calcareous shale at Highland's Cove, Trinity Bay, New- 

 foundland, in company with species of Agnostu.^i, A.punetuosus Aug., A. 

 Iwviyatus Dalm., ^. Acadivus Hartt (var. declivis Matthew). These fos- 

 sils indicate a new horizon in the Paradoxides beds of xVmerica some- 

 what above that of Braintree, or the known horizons of Newfoundland 

 and New Brunswick. [It may also occur in the Cambrian slate of 

 Saint John, New Brunswick.] 

 H. Mis. 15 47 



