BIBLIOGRAPHY. 



139 



HOWE, Reginald Hebeu, Jr. Ranges of 



Hyloclchla fuscescem, and Hylocichla 



fuscescens .mlicicold in North America. 



Auk, XVII, No. 1, Jan., 1900, pp. 18-25. 



A revision of the geographi'i'al distribution 



of these forms in North America. 



North American Wood Frogs. 



Proc. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist., xxvill. No. 

 14, pp. 369-374. 

 A critical review of the group, based in part 

 upon material belonging to the National 

 Museum. 



KELLOGG, Vernon L. A list of the Bit- 

 ing Lice (Mallophaga) taken from birds 

 and mammals of North America. 



Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., xxii, No. 1183, Oct. 

 9, 1899, pp. 39-100. 



KISHINOUYE, K. Contributions to the 



natural history of the Commander 



Islands. No. xiii. — A new species of 



Stalked Medusse, Hnliclystus stejnegeri. 



Proc. U. S. Nat. .¥((.s., xxii, No. 1188, Dec. 



23, 1899, pp. 125-129, 3 text figs. 



Based on specimens collected at Nikolski. 



Bering Island, by Dr. Leonliard Stejnegcr 



in 1897. 



KNOWLTON, Frank Hall. Report on 

 some fossil wood from the Richmond 

 ])asin, Virginia. 



Wth Ann. Rep. U. S. Qeol. Surv., 1899, Part 

 II, pp. 516-519, pi. Lll. 

 The specimens examined comprised three 

 forms from the Triassic; one was too much 

 changed for identification; one was identified 

 as Araucarioxylon (?) virginicum; and the 

 third was a new species, viz, Araucarioxylon 

 woodworthi, named for the collector of the 

 specimens. 



Fossil plants associated with the 



lavas of the Cascade Range. 



20th Ann. Rep. U. S. Geol. Surv., Part in, 

 1900, pp. 37-64, pis. i-iii. 

 The specimens described in this paper are 

 in the Museum collection. They were col- 

 lected by Mr. J. S. Diller and Mr. Elmer I. 

 Applegate from .six different localities in 

 Oregon, and include 28 forms, 10 of which are 

 regarded as new to science. The characters 

 "f the plants indicate the Miocene age of the 

 beds from which they were obtained. 



Fossil flora of the Yellowstone 



National Park. 



Monogr. U.S. Geol. Surv., xxxii, 1899, Chap, 

 xiv, pp. 651-882, pis. Lxxvii-cxxi. 

 The specimens upon which this paper is 

 based are in the Museum collection. The 

 paper describes 160 species, 76 of which are 

 new. They are distributed among 33 families, 

 of which 19 are not represented in the present 

 flora of the park. A comparison of the Ter- 

 tiary and living flora renders apparent the 

 great climatic changes that have taken place 

 since the close of the Miocene period. 



L() BIANCO, Salvatore. The methods 

 employed at the Naples Zoological Sta- 

 tion for the preservation of marine 

 animals. 



- Bull. U. S. Nat. Mus., No. 39, Part M, Oct. 

 2, 1899, pp. [1]-[42J, 1 plate. 

 Translated from the original Italian by 

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LUTKEN, C. F., and MORTENSEN, Th. 



Reports on an exploration off the west 

 coasts of Mexico, Central and South 

 America, and off the Galapagos Islands, 

 in charge of Alexander Agassiz, by the 

 U. S. Fish Commission steamer Alba- 

 tross, during 1891; Lieut. Commander 

 Z. L. Tanner, U. S. N., commanding, 

 xxv. — The Ophiuridaj. 



Mem. Mus. Comp. Zool. (Harvard College), 

 XXIll, No. 2, Nov., 1899, pp. 97-208, 22 

 plates and a chart. 

 Sixty-six species were collected by the 

 Albatross; 1 genus and 53 species are new. 

 These are fully described and figured. A list 

 of papers on Ophiurids, published subse- 

 quently to Lyman's Monograph, is given, and 

 also a list of the new genera and species con- 

 tained therein. 



McGUIRE, Joseph D. Pipes and smok- 

 ing customs of the American aborig- 

 ines, based on material in the V. S. 

 National Museum. 



Rep. Smithsonian Inst. (U. S. Nat. Mus.), 

 1897 (1899), pp. 351-645, pis. 1-4, fig.s. 

 1-239. 



MARLATT, C. L. 



(See under L. O. Howard.) 



MARSH, Millard Caleb. (See under 

 B. W. Evermann. ) 



MASON, Otis Tufton. The man's knife 

 among the North American Indians. 

 A study in the collections of the U. S. 

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Rrp. Smithsonian Inst. (U. S. Nat. Mus.), 

 1897 (1899), pp. 72.5-745, figs. 1-17. 



Ethnology and archaeology of 



Mexico. 



Handbook of Mexico (Bureau of American 

 Republics), Washington, 1900, Chap, in, 

 pp. 21-43. 

 A bibliography from 1876 to date is in- 

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MAXON, William R. A new Asplenium, 

 hitherto referred to A. trichomanes var. 

 incisum Moore. 



Bull. Torrcy Botan. Club, xxvii, Apr., 

 1900, pp. 197-199. 



