410 



Cyclas emarginata Prime, 156, 283. 



fabalis " 159, 273. 



fiava " 155, 284. 



furcata, 281. 



giyantta Prime, 157, 282. 



(jriuiUs " 156, 274. 



inornafa " 159, 285. 



Jayensis " 157, 279. 



ndrabiUs " 157. 



modesta " 159, 284. 



ovalis, 276. 



partumeia, 278. 



patella, 285. 



pellucida, 277. 



ponderosa Prime, 157, 282. 



rliomboidea, 272. 



rosacea Prime 155, 277. 



securis " 160, 276. 



simplex " 159, 284. 



soUdida " 158,282. 



sphoerica, 275. 



staminea, 281. 



teiiuis Prime 161, 285. 



transversa, 274. 



tenuistriata Prime, 156, 272. 



Cynthia giitta Stimpson, 231. 



partita Stimpson, 231. 



subccerulea Stimpson, 231. 



vittata " 230. 



Daguerreotype of Chetz-a-mockaha, 



242. 

 Deinotherium, 1G8. 

 Dentalium strivlatum Stimpson, 114. 

 Depth inhabited by Marine Mollusks, 



97. 

 Depth of water inhabited by Ophiuridoe 



and HolothuridiB, 54. 

 Diamond, native, 240. 

 Distomata, development of, 65. 

 Dogfish, 242. 

 Donax obesus Gould, 90. 

 Drift deposit near Portland, Me. and 



Boston, Mass., 181. 

 Drift at East Boston, peculiar feature 



of, 286. 

 Drift, glacial, near Boston, 10. 



near Lake Champlam, 34. 



of northern part of North Ame- 

 rica, 182. 



Duasmodactyla, gen. Aj'res, 244. 



jyroduita Ay res, 244. 



Dugesia Foremanii Girard,' 211. 

 Dunes on shores of upper American 

 lakes, 41. 



Earthquake at Manilla, September, 

 185.!, 299. 



Earthworms after rain, 374. 



Echmoderms, distribution of, 133. 



— regarded as deep sea ge- 

 nera, found in shallow water, 298. 



Embryology and Spermatology as an 

 element in the classification of ani- 

 mals, 87. 



Emys punctata, osseous structure of, 24. 



Emysaurus serpentina, 94. 



Eolis and Doris, number of yolks in eggs 

 of, 165. 



Epiorns, eggs of, 261. 



Esox nobilior, copulation of, 360. 



Etheostoma Linsleyi, 37. 



Eulima conoidea Stimpson and Kurtz, 

 115. 



Eulima o?eflfeff Stimpson and Kurtz, 115. 



Eupyrchroite from Kew York, 259, 264. 



Fauna and Flora of the pine barrens of 

 Upper South Carolina, relations be- 

 tween, 117. 



Fauna of Bay of Fundy, 96. 



of pine barrens' of Upper South 



Carolina, notes of, by VV. 1. Burnett, 

 115. 



Felis smylodon, 256. 



Fisheries of Massachusetts, discussion 

 on, 287. 



Fishes, contents of their stomachs, 240. 



Florida coast, change of level of, 391. 



Fossil bird from New Zealand, 236. 



echinoderms, new species of, by 



T. T. Bouve, 2. 



Fossil bird-rtracks, 378. 



elephant, 376. 



remains, in Brandon, \'^. 



34. 

 Fossil fish, dagi^erreotj'pe of, 151. 

 — -— — new species of, by C. T. 



Jackson, 138. 

 Fossil fishes from New Brunswick coal 



foiTnation, 73. 

 Fossil ^lallotus of Bytown, same as M. 



villosus, 51. 

 Fossil plants of Hillsboro' coal, 142. 



rain drops, 131. 



of Lake Superior, 131. 



discussion on, 131. 



trees from New Brunswick, 270. 



Fossils from beneath Pennsylvania coal, 



81. 



Fovia, gen. Girard, 211. 



Franklinite of New Jersey, 308. 



Fused type metal, phenomenon in cool- 

 ing, 119. 



Galena, fossils in, 389. 



Geology of North Carolina, account of, 



397. 

 Glaiidula, gen. Stimpson, 230. 



Jibrosa " 230. 



^mollis " 230. 



Globiceps, gen. Ayres, 193. 



tiarella Ayres, 193. 



Gracula religiosa, anatomy of, 85. 



