BIBLIOGRAPHY. 



143 



KOSE, Joseph Nki.son. Studies of Mex- 

 ican and Central American plants. 



Contrib. V. S. yal. Herbarium, v, No. 3, 

 Aug. 27, 18J7, pj). 109-144, pis. I-IV. 

 This paper is ii technical study of some 

 Mexican and Central Americ.in plants, in- 

 cluding the revision of some difficult genera, 

 and the description of more than 50 species 

 new to science. 



Agave washingtonensia and other 



Agaves. 



Xinth Ann. Hep. Missouri Botan. Garden, 

 Apr. 20, 1898, pp. 121-126, pis. 20-31. 

 A short account of four Agaves which flow- 

 ered iu Washington during the year 1897, one 

 of which had not been previously described. 



LoeseJia cordifolia, n. sp. 



Hooker's Icon. Plant., xxvi, Pt. 3, 1898, 

 pi. 2551. 

 A new species from Mexico which Mr. Rose 

 describes in connection with Mr. "W. Botting 

 Hemsley, of Kew, England. 



yALVIN, OSBERT, and GODMAN, F. D. 

 An account of tlie owls of the Central 

 American region. 



Biologia Centrali-Americana, Aves, III, 

 Nov., 1897, pp. 1-40, pis. LXI, LXll. 

 This account embraces 34 species, of which 

 Syrnium fulvescens and Scops trichopsis are 

 figured. 



SCHUCHERT, Charles. A synopsis of 

 American fossil Brachiopoda, including 

 bibliography and synonymy. 



Bull. U. S. Geol. Surv., No. 87, 1897, pp. 

 1-464. 

 The contents of tliis volume are : Geological 

 development and geographical distribution of 

 American fossil Brachioi)oda; bracliiopod 

 terminology, applied to fossil forms ; biological 

 development of the Brachiopoda ; morphology 

 of the brachia, by Charles E. Beecher; clas- 

 sification of the Brachiopoda; index and bib- 

 liography of American fossil Brachiopoda. 



(See also under David White.) 



SCOFIELD, Norman Bishop. 

 (See under Charles Henry Gilbert.) 



SC UDDER, Samuel Hubbard. Revi- 

 sion of the Orthopteran group Melano- 

 pli (Acridiida'), with special reference 

 to North American forms. 



Froc. U. S. Xat. Mus., xx, No. 1124, Dec. 28, 

 1897, pp. 1-421, pis. i-xxvi. 



SHUFELDT, R. W. Taxidermical meth- 

 ods in the Leyden Museum. 



Rep. Smithtonia7i Inst. (U. S. Nat. Mus.). 

 1895 (1897), pp. 1031-1038, pis. 1-6. 



SMITH, Hugh M. The fishes found in 

 the vicinity of Woods Hole. 



Bull. U. .V. Fish Coin , 1897 (Jan. 6, 1898), 



pp. 85-111. 



The fishes listed in this paper represent 88 



families, 160 genera, and 209 species, and 



were collected by the U. S. Fish Commission. 



STANTON, Timothy William. A com- 

 parative study of the Lower Cretace- 

 ous formations and faunas of the United 



States. 



Journ. Oeol., v, Sept. -Oct., 1897, pp. 579- 

 624. 

 A portion of the paleontological material 

 treated of in this general discussion is in the 

 collection of the National Museum. 



Supplement to the annotated cata- 

 logue of the published writings of 

 Charles Abiathar White, 1886-1897. 



Proc. TJ. S. Xat. Mus., xx, No. 1135, Feb. 12, 

 1898, pp. 627-642. 



STEARNS, Robert E. C. Quarter-decks 

 and Jingles. 



Nautilus, XI, No. 4, Aug., 1897, pp. 38-40. 

 "Quarter-decks" and "Jingles" are the 

 names locally applied to the shells of certain 

 marine mollusks properly known as Crepidula 

 fornicata Linne, and A7tomt"« simplex Orbigny. 

 Large quantities (thousands of bushels) of 

 these shells are taken by dredging in the 

 neighborhood of Greenport, N. Y., and sold to 

 the oysterraen of that general region to be 

 used as "catchment objects" or material for 

 forming spawning beds for Ostrea virginica. 



Modiola plicatula Lamarck, au ex- 

 tinct locality. 



Xautilus, XI, No. 9, Jan., 1898, pp. 102, 103. 

 That portion of the city of Boston west of 

 the Public Garden and extending to Roxbury, 

 known as the Back-bay section, was fifty 

 years ago simply a salt marsh, with occasional 

 patches of mud flats. In the greater part of 

 this .area the well-known niu.ssel, Modiola pli- 

 cattila Lamarck, was abundant, and millions 

 must have been destroj'ed when the marshes 

 were filled up. 



STEJNEGER, Leonhard. Stjernen, 



Bergens Tidende, Jan. 21, 1898, p. 2. 

 A popular account of a Christmas custom 

 on Bering Island. 



Ross's Gull, L'hodostethia rosea, on 



Bering Island. 



Auk, XV, No. 2, Apr., 1898, p. 183. 

 This is the first record of the occurrence of 

 this bird on Bering Island, and the first au- 

 thentic record for Kamchatka. 



