126 KANSAS Academy of science. 



Birds of Kansas, N. S. Goss, 1883 [5] ; 1886 [10]. 

 The Age of Kansas, B. B. Smyth [2]. 

 Trenton, N. 3.— Trenton Natural History Society: Journal, Vol. I, No. 2 [-1] ; No. .3, Jan. 1888 [20]; No. 



4 [3]; Vol. ir, 1889, No. 1 [4]. 

 University, Ala. — Alabama Geological Survey: Annual Reports, by Eugene A. Smith, State Geol- 

 ogist—for 1875 [7]; 1876 [5]. 

 The Warrior Coal Field, by Henry McCalley [12]. 



Preliminary Report on the Tertiary Fossils of Alabama and Mississippi, by Truman H. Aldrich, 

 with numerous plates [8]. 



Contributions to the Eocene Paleontology of Alabama and Mississippi, by Otto Meyer, with 

 many plates [8]. 

 Washington. — American Microscopical Journal— Chas. W. Smiley. Monthly [2 each]. 

 U.S. Department of Agriculture: Annual Report, 1885 [28]; 1886 [25]. 



Division of Botany — Bulletin No. 5, Mildew and Black-rot of the Grapevine [5]. 

 Annual Report of the Mycologist, F. L. Scribner, for the year 1886 [5]. 



Division of Entomology — Bulletin No. 12, Entomological Notes, by C. V. Riley [4] ; No. 19, Pub- 

 lished Synopses, Catalogues, and Lists of North American Insects [5]; No. 20, The Root-knot 

 Disease on Peach, Orange, and Other Trees in Florida, due to the work of Anguillula, with col- 

 ored plates [6]. Insect Life, Vol. I [25] ; Vol. II, Nos. 1-5 [2 each]. 

 U.S. Commission of Fish and Fijs/ieries : Bulletin 6, 1886 [24]; Report for 1885 [43]. 

 The Fishery Industries of the United Stales. G. Brown Goode, and associates: 

 Sec. I. Natural History of Aquatic Animals. Text [70]. Atlas of 277 plates [60]. 

 Sec. II. Geographical Review |5o]. 



Sec. III. Fishing Grounds. Sec. IV. Fishermen of the United States. The two sections 

 bound together [55]. 



Sec. V. History and Methods. Text. Vol. I [60] ; Vol. II [65] ; book of 255 plates [55]. 

 Interior Department: U. S. Geological Survey. J. W. Powell, Director. Annual Report, Vol. VI, 

 65 plates and maps [60]. 

 Bulletins — No. 34. Laramie Molluscan Fauna, by Chas. A. White, o plates [4]. 

 No. 35. Physical Properties of the Iron-Carburets, by Carl Barus and Vincent Strouhal [4], 

 No. 36. Subsidence of Solid Particles in Liquids, by Carl Barus [4]. 

 No. 37. Types ot the Laramie Flora, by Lester F. Ward, 57 pi. [18]. 

 No. 38: Peridolite of Elliott county, Ky., by J. S. Diller, 1 pi. [2]. 

 No. 39. Beaches and Deltas of the Glacial Lake Agassiz, by Warren Upham, 1 pi. [5]. 

 No. 40. Changes in River Courses in Washington (State) due to Glaciation, by Bailey Willis, 

 4 pi. [2]. 

 No. 41. Fossil Faunas of the Upper Devonian, Genesee, N. Y., by Henry S. Williams, 4 pi. [6]. 

 No. 42. Work done in Division of Chemistry and Physics in 1885-6, by F. W. Clarke, 1 pi. [8], 

 No. 43. Tertiary and Cretaceous Strata of Rivers of Alabama, by Eugene A. Smith, 21 pi. [lOj. 

 No. 44. Bibliography of N. A. Geology for 1886, by Nelson H. Darton [2]. 

 No. 45. On the Geology of Texas, by Robt. T. Hill [5]. 

 No. 46. Deposits of Phosphate of Lime, by R. A. F. Penrose [7]. 



No. 47. Analyses of Waters of the Yellowstone National Park, by F. A. Ciooch and J. E. Whit- 

 field [3]. 

 No. 48. Form and Position of the Sea Level, by R. S. Woodward [5]. 



No. 49. Latitudes and Longitudes of Points in Missouri, Kansas, and New Mexico, by R- 

 S. Woodward [7]. 

 No. 50. Formulas and Tables for Map Construction, by R. S. Woodward [6]. 

 No. 51. On Invertebrate Fossils from the Pacific Coast, by C. A. White, 14 plates [6]. 

 No. 52. Subaerial Decay of Rocks, and Origin of the Red Color of Certain Formations, by 

 Israel C. Russell, 5 plates [4]. 

 No. 53. Geology of Nantucket Island, by N. S. Shaler [4]. 



Monographs. Vol. XII. Geology and Mining Industry of Leadville, Colo., by Samuel F. Em- 

 mons, 1886, 45 plates, and an atlas of 35 sheets folio [80], 



Vol. XIII. Geology of the Quicksilver Deposits of the Pacific Slope, by Geo. F. Becker, 1888, 

 7 plates, and atlas of 14 sheets folio [40]. 



Vol. XIV. Fossil Fishes and Fossil Plants of the Triassic Rocks of New Jersey and the Con- 

 necticut Valley, by John S. Newberry, 1888, 26 plates [30]. 

 Mineral Resources of the United States. 1882 [25] ; 1883-4 [32]; 1885 [20] ; 1887 [26]. 

 Navy Department : V. S. Naval Observatory. Reports on the Total Solar Eclipse of July 29, 1878 [48]. 

 Astronomical and Meteorological Observations, 1881 [45]; 1882 [50]. 

 American Ephemeris and Nautical Almanac, 1888 [30]; 1889 [35]. 



Yarnell's Catalogue of Stars observed at the United States Naval Observatory from 1845 to 1877, 

 reduced to the Epoch 1860.0. Third Revised Edition, 1884, by Prof. Edgar Frisby, U.S. N. [30]. 



