144 



REPOKT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1902. 



COQUILLETT, Daniel W. [Original 

 ■ descriptions of new Diptera. ] 



BnlL N. Y. State Museum, No. 47, Sept., 

 1901, pp. 585-.586. 

 Included in Aquatic insects in tlie Adi- 

 rondacks, by James G. Needham and Corne- 

 lius Betten. Describes 2 new genera and 2 

 new species. 



Papers from the Hopkins-Stanford 



; Galapagos Expedition, 1898-99. ii. 

 I Entomological Re.sults (2): Diptera. 



Proc. Wash. Acad. Scl.. iii, Nov. 7, 1901. 

 pp. 371-379. 

 Gives a resume of publislied notices of Dip- 

 tera collected on the Galapagos Lslands, and 

 lists 35 species, distributed in 26 genera, col- 

 lected on these islands by the Hopkins-Stan- 

 ford Expedition; gives the known distribu- 

 tion of each species, and describes 1 genus 

 and 9 species as new. 



Three new species of neniatocer- 



'. OU3 Diptera. 



Ent. New.'<. xiii. No. :i. Mar., 1902, i)p 

 84-85. 

 Describes 3 new species of long-horned Dip- 

 tera. 



- [Diptera.] 



Proc. Ent. Sor. 

 1902, p. 70. 



Ua.<li. 



No. ], .\pr. 2,s, 



Included in Some insects from the sum- 

 mit of Pikes Peak, found on snow, by A. N. 

 Caudell. Reports on 10 species, giving the 

 known distribution of each. 



[Diptera.] 



Psyche, ix, No. 313, May, 1902, pp. 346-347. 

 Included in Some insects of the Hudson- 

 ian Zone in New Mexico, viii, by T. D. A. 

 Cockerell. Lists 31 species. 



COOK, Orator F. Revolutionary infer- 

 ences from the Diplopoda. 



Proc. Ent. ,Soc. Wash., v, No. 1 (author's 

 extras published Mar. 28, 1902 ), pp. 14-20. 

 The Diplopoda are discussed as an example 

 of kinetic evolution, a progressive modifica- 

 tion without natural selection and without 

 diversification of habits. 



The earwig'.s forceps and thephy- 



logeny of insects. 



Proc. Ent. Soc. Wash., v, No. 1 (author's 

 extr s publi-shed Apr. 28, 1902), pp. 84-92. 

 The use of tho earwig's forceps is found to 

 be the unfolding of the wings of the in.sect 

 before flight, not the closing of them on 

 alighting, as in the Staphylinid beetles. 

 Winged insects with complete metamorpho.sis 

 are held to be more primitive, and the anal- 

 ogy of Dyscriiina as a larval earwig with Pro- 

 Jaj)y.r as the larva of Japyx is pointed out. 

 The cockroaches are less primitive than the 

 May flies, Odonata, and other insects with 

 acpiatic larva', and the derivation of the 

 wings of insects from larval gills seems prob- 



COOK, Orator F. — Continued. 



able. The homology of the stylets of Proja- 

 pyx with those of ScalopcndreUa, as suggested 

 by Silvestri, indicates that the Diplopoda 

 may prove to be a larviform offshoot from the 

 insect phylum instead of an ancestral type, 

 as commonly supposed. 



COYILLE, Frederick V. Papers from 

 the Harriman Alaska expedition, xxiv. 

 The willows of Alaska. 



Proc. Wash. Acad. Sci.. in, Aug. 23, 1901, 

 pp. 297-362, pis. xxxiii-xi.ii. 



Papers from the Harriman Alaska 



expedition, xxvi. IlarrimaneJla . a. new 

 genus of heathers. 



Proc. Wash. Acad. ScL, in, Dec. 6, 1901, 

 pp. 569-576, figs. 62-66. 



Ribes aureum and Ribes lentiun. 



Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash., xv. Mar. 5. 1902, 

 pp. 23-29. 



CURRIE, RoLLA Patteson. Papers from 

 the Harriman Alaska expedition, 

 xxii, Entomological Results (14): The 

 Odonata. 



Proc. H a.s7i. Acad. ScL, ill, July 13, 1901 

 pp. 217-223. 

 Eight species of dragonflies, collected by 

 Prof. Trevor Kincaid on the Harriman expe- 

 dition, are here listed with critical notes. 

 Four additional species, not collected on this 

 expedition, but previously recorded from 

 Alaska, are appended. 



Papers from the Hopkins-Stanford 



Galapagos expedition, 1898-99. iii, 

 Entomological Results (3): Odonata. 

 Proc. Wash. Acad. ScL, in, Nov. 7, 1901, 

 pp. 381-389, text figs. 29-34. 

 Gives a list of the published references to 

 Galapagos dragonflies and records 7 species 

 collected by Mr. R. E. Snodgrass. The male 

 of Tramca dancini Kirby is here described 

 for the first time, as well as two new species, 

 jEschna (/alapagoensis and Cannacria ftimi- 

 2}enn /.s. 



DALL, William Healey. Synopsis of 

 the Lucinacea and of the American 

 sj^ecies. 



Proc. V. S. yat. Mus., xxnx, No. 1237, Aug. 

 22, 1901, pp. 779-883, pis. XXXIX-XLII. 

 This work contains a synopsis with charac- 

 ters of the families Thyasiridee, Diplodonti- 

 die, Lucinida', Corbida\ and CyrenellidBe, 

 which make up the Lucinacea, their genera, 

 subgenera, and sections; a thorough revision 

 of the nomenclature of the groups and of the 

 %, American species. The following groups are 

 described as new; 



Eulopia Dall, section of Myrt:va Turton, with 

 Lucina sagrhiata Dall as type. The genus 

 Phacoidcs Blainville is reinstated; with sec- 

 tion Pleiirolucina Dall, type Lucina leucocyma 



