109 



Time, a monthly publication devoted to the preservation of documents 

 and other authentic information in relation to the early explorations 

 and the settlement and improvement of the country around the head of 

 the Ohio. Edited by Neville S. Craig, Esq. Two vols., small 4to. Pitts- 

 burg, 184(5-48. 

 1856. Haymond, Rufus, M. D. Birds of South-eastern Indiana. Proc. 

 Academy of Natural Science, Philadelphia, vol. VIII, 1856, pp. 286-298. 

 A list of birds observed in the Whitewaier valley. 



1868. Allen, J. A. Notes on birds observed in AVestern Iowa, in the 

 months of July, August and September; also on birds observed in 

 Northern Illinois in May and June, and at Richmond, Wayne county, 

 Indiana, between June 3d and 10th. Memoirs Boi-ton Soc. Natural 

 History, vol. I, pt. IV, Art. XII, December 1868, pp. 488-526. 



Also issued separately. Mentions 72 Indiana species. 



1869. Haymond, Rufus. Birds of Franklin county, Indiana. First 



Annual Report of the Geological Survey of Indiana, made during the 



year 1869, byE. T. Cox, State Geologist, 1869, pp. 209-335. 



Also issued bound with Agricultural Report of the skme year, entitled Indiana Agri- 

 cultural an<l Geological Report 186y, etc. 



1874. Kirtland, J. P. Letter from, dated 1857, mentioning various 

 Indiana birds. Pr )c. Cleveland Acad. Nat. Science, 1874, pp. 131-132. 



1874. "Jlidgway, R. The Wabash valley and its avian fduna. Proc. 

 Boston Soc. Nat. Hist., vol. XVI, pp. 303-332. 



The lower Wabash valley considered in its relation to the 



faunal districts of the Eastern regions of North America, with a 

 synopsis of its avian fauna, by Robert Ridgway. Boston, 1874, pp. 31. 

 Repaged edition of the above. 



1874. Coues, Elliott. Birds of the Northwest, a handb )ok of the Orni- 

 thology of the region drained by the Missouri river and its tributaries. 

 Dept. of the Interior, IT. S. Geol. Survey of the territories, Miscellan- 

 eous Publications, No. 3, 1874. 



1876. Jordan, David Starr. Manual of the vertebrates of the North- 

 ern United States, including the district east of the Mississippi river 

 and north of North Carolina and Tennessee, exclusive of marine species, 

 by David Starr Jordan, Ph. D., M. D., Professor of Natural History iu 

 N. W. C. Univereity, and in Indiana State Medical College. Chicago, 

 Jansen, McClurg & Co., 1876. 



Refers to a number of Indiana birds. A second edition, dated 1878; a third, 1880; a 

 fourth in 1888. 



