266 ANNUAL REPORT SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION, 1964 



Volume 145 



No. 5. Tertiary echinoida from the Caloosahatchee and Tamiami formations 



of Florida, by Porter M. Kier. 64 pp. 18 pis. (Publ. 4543.) August 2, 1963. 



($2.) 

 No. 6 Additions to records of birds known from the Republic of Panama, by 



Alexander Wetmore. 11 pp. (Publ. 4523.) December 16, 1963. (50 cents.) 

 No. 7. A phytophysiognomic reconnaissance of Barro Colorado Island, Canal 



Zone, by Charles F. Bennett, Jr. 8 pp. 1 map. (Publ. 4527.) December 20, 



1963. (50 cents.) 



Volume 146 



No. 2. A contribution toward an encyclopedia of insect anatomy, by Robert E. 



Snodgrass. 48 pp. (Publ. 4,544.) July 12, 1963. ($1.) 

 No. 3. Solar variation and weather, by C. G. Abbot. 68 pp. 4 pis. (Publ. 



4545.) October 18, 1963. ($1.) 



Volume 147 



No. 1. The architecture of Pueblo Bonito, by Neil M. Judd. 349 pp. 81 pis. 

 (Publ. 4524.) June 30, 1964. ($6.) 



Smithsonian Annual Reports 

 report for 1962 

 The complete volume of the Amiiial Eeport of the Board of Kegents 

 for 1962 was received from the printer on September 26, 1963. 



Annual Report of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution showing 

 the operations, expenditures, and condition of the Institution for the year 

 ended June 30, 19G2. x +610 pp., illustr. (Publ. 4518.) 



The general appendix contained the following papers (Publ. 4546- 

 4566) : 



Aircraft propulsion: A review of the evolution of aircraft powerplants, by C. 



Fayette Taylor. 

 Rocket propulsion, by Ralph S. Cooper. 

 The early history of radar, by R. M. Page. 

 Modern glass, by S. Donald Stookey. 



The great earthquakes of May 1900 in Chile, by Pierre Saint-Armand. 

 The rim of the reef, by E. Yale Dawson. 

 What's happening to water? By Charles J. Robinove. 

 The opening of the Arctic Ocean, by James T. Strong. 

 The place of genetics in modern biology, by George W. Beadle. 

 The shark that hibernates, by L. Harrison Matthews. 

 Man in a world of insects, by Dwight M. DeLong. 

 Tropical fruit-fly menace, by L. D. Christenson. 

 The soil as a habitat for life, by Sir John Russell. 

 The evolution of the echinoderms, by E. Barraclough Fell. 

 Mangroves : Trees that make land, by William M. Stephens. 



The history and relationships of the world's cottons, by Sir Joseph Hutchinson. 

 Some mysteries of life and existence, by R. E. Snodgrass. 

 Civilization and the landscape, by Sylvia Crowe. 



How many people have ever lived on earth? By Annabelle Desmond. 

 Bows and arrows : A chapter in the evolution of archery in America, by Paul B. 



Klopsteg. 



