BIBLIOGRAPHY. 



135 



DALL, William Healey — Continued. 



member of the original expedition for scien- 

 tific reacarcli iu Alaska, sent out under Rob- 

 ert Kennicott by the Smithsonian Institution 

 in 1865, with the cooperation of the Western 

 Union Telegraph expedition. 



A new subgenus of Coralliophaga. 



NautiluSy XI, No. 12, Apr., 1898, p. 135. 

 Oryctomya, n. subg., with the type O. clai- 

 bornensis, n. sp., from the Eocene sands of 

 Claiborne, Ahi. The types are in the National 

 Museum. 



Contribution to the Tertiary fauna 



of Florida, with special reference to 

 the silex beda of Tampa and the Plio- 

 cene beds of the Caloosahatchie River; 

 including in many cases a complete 

 revision of the generic groups treated 

 of and their American Tertiary species. 

 Part IV: (i) Prionodesinacea, Nuciila 

 to Julia ; (ii) Teleodesniacea, Teredo io 

 Ervilia. 



Trans. Wagner Free Inst. Sci., in, pt. iv, 



April^une, 1898, pp. l-vni, 571-969, 



with 13 pis. 



This memoir form.s part IV of the discussion 



of the Tertiary mollusk- fauna of the Gulf 



States and adjacent region. Nearly all the 



types of new species are in the National 



Museum. The sum of all the new names 



amounts to 3 genera, 1 subgenus, 8 sections, 



about 22 new names for species bearing names 



whicn are no longer tenable, 162 new species, 



and 27 varieties. These names are given in 



the index to the work. 



On the genus Salia of Risso. 



Prve. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., May 4, 1898, 

 pp. 190-192. 

 This paper discusses the systematic posi- 

 tion of Halia and concludes that it is a degen- 

 erate type allied to Aurinia and belonging in 

 the family Scaphellidro of the Volutacea. 



» On a new. species of Fimus from Cali- 

 fornia. 



Nautilus, XII, No. 1, May, 1898, pp. 4, 5. 

 Fusus roperi from San Pedro, Cal., is de- 

 scribed as new and taken as the typo of a new 

 section, Roperia. 



DIMMOCK, George, and ASHMEAD, 

 William H. Notes on parasitic Hymen- 

 optera, with descriptions of some new 

 species. 



Proc. Ent. fioc. Wash., iv, No. 2, Feb., 

 1898, pp. 148-171. 

 This paper is divided into two parts, the 

 tirst being by Dr. Dimmock, who records the 

 hosts of 70 distinct parasites bred by him, 25 

 of which proved to be new. These are de- 

 scribed by Mr. Ashmead in part 2. Mr. 



DIMMOCK, George, and ASHMEAD, 

 William H. — Continued. 



Ashmead also gives a table of the genera of 

 the Microgasterince, in which he characterizes 

 6 new genera. 



EASTMAN, C. R. Tamiohatis vetnslus; a 

 new form of fossil Skate. 



Am. Journ. Sci., iv. No. 20, Aug., 1897, pp. 

 85-90, pi. and fig. 



ELLIOT, Daniel G. A list of a collec- 

 tion of shells from the Gulf of Aden. 



Pub. Field Columbian Museum, No. 26, 



Zool. series 1, No. 9, Chicago, Mar., 1898, 



pp. 187-189. 



The specimens enumerated in this list were 



labeled in the Division of Mollusks. A series 



was donated to the National Museum. 



E VERM ANN, Barton Warrk.x, and 

 KENDALL, William C. Descriptions 

 of new or little-known genera and spe- 

 cies of fishes from the United States. 



Bull. V. S. Fish Com., 1897 (Feb. 9, 1898), 

 pp. 125-133. 

 In this paper are described 3 new genera and 

 8 new species of fishes collected in Florida, 

 Louisiana, iind Mississippi. 



EVERMANN, Barton Warren, and 

 MEEK, Seth Eugene. A report upon 

 salmon investigations in the Columbia 

 River Basin, and elsewhere on the Pa- 

 cific coast, in 1896. 



Bull. TT. S. Fish Com., 1897 (Jan. 6, 1898), 

 pp. 15-84. 

 This paper lists 40 species, 5 of which are 

 described as new. 



FAXON, Walter. Observations on the 

 AstacidjB iu the U. S. National Museum 

 and in the Museum of Comparative 

 Zoology, with descriptions of new spe- 

 cies. 



Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., xx. No. 1136, Feb. 17, 

 1898, pp. 643-694, pis. lxii-lxx. 

 The first part of the paper embodies the 

 results of an examination of the material 

 which has accnmulaled iu the U. S. National' 

 Museum and the Museum of Comparative 

 Zoology since the publication of the author's 

 "Notes on North American Crayfishes" in 

 1890. The second part relates to the cray- 

 fishes of the Southern Hemisphere — the Par- 

 astacina;. 



FEWKES, J. Walter. Tusayan katci- 

 nas. 



loth Aiui. Rep. Bur. Am. EthnoL, 1897, pp. 

 245-313, i>ls. Civ-cxi, figs. 39-48. 

 An account of the masked dances at Wolpi, 

 a Tusayan pueblo, and an attempt to explain 

 them. 



