BIBLIOGRAPHY. 



215 



LAMBE, Lawrence M. — Continued. 



This paper gives the results of a study of 

 the sponges collected by Dr. William H. Dall 

 and others in the North Pacific Ocean, Bering 

 Sea, and the Arctic Ocean. With the excep- 

 tion of a few specimens, all are the property 

 of the V. S. Xational Museum. 



LINELL, Martix L. Description of a 

 new species of Golden Beetle from 

 Costa Rica. 



Proc. V. S. Nat. Mus., xvm, No. 1040, ad- 

 vance sheet Jan. 12, 1895, pp. 77-78. 

 Plusiotis Keithi is described and the habits 

 and rarity of the golden and silvery colored 

 species of the genus are referred to. 



LCENNBERG, Einar. Notes on the rep- 

 tiles and batracliians collected in Flor- 

 ida in 1892 and 1893. 



Proc. U. S. Xat. Mug., xvil, No. 1003, Nov. 

 15, 1894, pp. 317-339, figs. 1-3. 



LUCAS, FiJEDERic Augustus. The bird's 

 foot. 



Nat. Sci., V, Sept., 1894, pp. 208-209. 

 This paper supports the proposition that the 

 syupelmous condition of the deep plantar ten- 

 dons in birds is the original one. 



Notes on the anatomy and affinities 



of tlie C(Brehidie and other American 

 birds. 



Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., xvil, No. 1001, Nov. 

 15, 1894, pp. 299-312, figs. 1-12. 

 Concludes that Ccerebidaj is not a homoge- 

 neous group, but contains three distinct types; 

 that among these, Olossoptila is the most pecu- 

 liar; a\aotha.tPhainopepla is clearly and nearly 

 related to Ampclig. 



Additional characters of the Macro- 



pterygidtc. 



Auk, XII, No. 2, Apr., 1895, pp. 155-157, with 

 figures. 



Additional characters are given for this new 

 family of swifts. 



A new family of birds. 



Auk, XII, No. 2, Apr., 1895, p. 186. 

 Notes that the anatomical characters of the 

 genus Procnias entitle it to family rank. 



The deep plautars in the Trochilid*. 



This (Series 7), i. No. 2, Apr., 1895, pp. 298- 



299, with figures. 



Notes that all previous descriptions and fig. 



ures of deep plantar tendons in the Trochilida; 



are wrong, and gives correct description and 



figure. 



Report on the Department of Com- 

 parative Anatomy in the U. S. National 

 Museum, 1892. 



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

 1892 (1893), pp. 181-183. 



LUDWIG, HruER T. Reports on explora- 

 tions off the west coasts of Mexico, 



LUDWIG, Hubert— Coutinued. 

 Central and South America, and off 

 the Gahipagos Islands, in charge of 

 Alexander Agassiz, by the U. S. Fish 

 Commission steamer J /fta^ross, during 

 1891, Lieut. Commander Z. 1^. Tanner, 

 U. S. N., commanding, xii. — The 

 Holothurioidea. 



Mem. Mus. Camp. Zool., xvii. No. 3, Oct., 



1894, pp. 1-183, pis. l-xix. 



Full descriptions are given of the species 

 which were noticed in a j)reliminary report 

 published in the Bulletin of the Museum of 

 Comparative Zoology, xxvi, No. 4, June, 1893, 

 pp. 105-114. The species are finely illustrated, 

 many of them by colored figures. 



MARLATT,CharlesL. The Buffalo Tree- 

 hopper (Ceresa bubalus, Fab.). 



Insect Life, vii, No. 1 , Sept., 1894, pp. 8-14, 

 figs. 4-7. 

 An account of the life history of this insect, 

 with a description of its method of work and 

 01 its earlier stages, and an enumeration of 

 its food plants and the remedies to be used 

 against it. 



The American species of Scolioneura, 



Kuw. 



Proc. Ent. Soc. Wash., iii. No. 4, June 22, 



1895, pp. 234-236. 



Describes iS. eapitalis, Norton, S. canaden- 

 sis, new species, and ,S'. populi, new species. 



MARSH, Othniel Charles. Report on 

 the Department of Vertebrate Fossils 

 in the U. S. National Museum, 1892. 



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

 1892 (1893), pp. 169-170. 

 MASON, Otis Tuftox. Migration and the 

 food quest; a study in the peopling of 

 America. 



Am. Anthropolo(jist, vil, No. 3, July, 1894, 

 pp. 275-292. 

 This paper calls attention to a great circle of 

 the earth passing from the straits of Malacca 

 to the Rio de la Plata mouth through a series 

 of land-locked seas and culture areas of great 

 value, especially in the line of food production 

 and variety of employment. It calls attention 

 to this great circle as an unbroken line of migra- 

 tion and of constant development of cultui'e 

 about the Pacific Ocean. 

 Summary of progress in anthropol- 

 ogy. 



Rep. Smithsonian Inst., 1893 (1894), pp. 



601-629. 



The object of this paper is to present in a 



few pages the progress nuulo in the various 



branches of anthropology during the year 1893. 



North American bows, arrows, and 



quivers. 



Rep. Smitlisonian Inst., 1893 (1894). pp. 

 631-680, pis. 37-94. 



