42 REPOET OF COMMISSIONER OF FISH AND FISHERIES. 



Reprinted (from same types) with rest of natural history in the following work : 

 Naturhistoriske Bidrag til en Beskrivelse af Gronland, af J. Reinhardt, J. C. 

 Scbiodte, O. A. L. Morch, C. F. Liitken, J. Lange, II. Kink . . . Kjbbenhavu. 

 Louis Kleins Bogtrykkeri. 1857, (pp. 2U-27.) 

 A nominal list of 69 species, with references to original descriptions, or to the Fauna 

 Groenlandica of Fabricius, and with the names current among the Esquimaux. Only 

 four of the species (SaliuonkLe) are fresh-water. 



The same list (but without the references to authorities) was translated and pub- 

 lished in Etzel's (Anton von) Gronland geographisch und statistisch beschrieben. Aus 

 diinischen Quelleuschiifteu. Stuttgart, J. G. Cotta'scher Verlag. 1860. (pp. 582-584.) 



RICHARDSON (John). Fauna Boreali- Americana ; or, the Zoology of the North- 

 ern Parts of British America : containing Descriptions of the Objects of Natural 



History Collected on the late Northern Land Expeditions under the command of 

 Captain Sir John Franklin, R. N. Part third. The Fish. By John Richardson, 

 M. D., F. R. S., F. L. S., . . . , Surgeon and Naturalist to the Expeditions. Illus- 

 t rated by numerous plates. Published under the authority of the Eight Honourable 

 the Secretary of State for Colonial Affairs. — London : Richard Bentley, New Bur- 

 lington street. MDCCCXXXVI. [4to, xv, 327 (-f-l)pp., 24 pi. (numbered 74-97).] 



SCHGBPFF (Johann David). Beschreibung einiger nord-amerikanischer Fische, 

 vorziiglich aus den Neu-Yorkischen Gewassern, . . . <^Sk;hrilten der Gesellschaft 

 naturforschender Freuude zu Berlin, viii, 138-194, 17 v ~. 



SMITH (Jerome Van Crowninshield). Natural History of the Fishes of Massa- 

 chusetts, embracing a practical essay on angling. By Jerome V. C. Smith, M. Dj 



[Cut.] Boston : Allen and Ticknor. 1833. [12mo, vii, 399 (-f 1) pp.] 



An exceptionally and even ludicrously erroneous and worthless compilation. Its 

 character was exposed in " Remarks 'on the ' Natural History of the Fishes of Massa- 

 chusetts, . . .' Read before the Boston Society of Natural History, March 20,1839. 

 By D. Humphreys Storer, M. D. <[ American Journal of Science and Arts (Silliman's), 

 vol. XXXVI, July, 1839, pp. 337-349." According to Dr. Storer (p. 348), the work of his 

 compatriot contains "notices of 105 species, of which 80 are foreigners, and but 25 are 

 found in tin- waters of our State. Of these 105 species, 36 are illustrated by figures; 

 of these 36 illustrations, but 9 accompany species which are found on our coast; of 

 these 9 figures, 6 are copied from ' Strack'a Plates,' and 3 from Mitchill's ' Fisltes <;/' New 

 York;' of the 36 illustrations [small wood-cut figures] contained in this ' History,' not 

 one is drawn from nature." 



A Catalogue of the Marine Fishes taken on the Atlantic Coasl of Massachu- 



setts. . . . [Also, "Fishes found in the Rivers, Mountain-Streams and Ponds of 

 Massachusetts."] <[Report on the Geology, Mineralogy, Botany, and Zoology of 

 Massachusetts, . . . By Edward Hitchcock, . . . Boston, 1833, pp. 553-154. 

 A list of 52 nominal species of marine and 17 of fresh-water fishes. 



[Revised Catalogue of the Fishes of Massachusetts.] <[Op. cit., 1833, pp. f.97- 



598. 

 A list of 102 nominal species, B3 of which (including theBodiani=Moronc) are salt- or 



brackish-water, and 19 fresh-water. 



A Catalogue of the Marine and Fresh -Water Fishes of Massachusetts, . . . 



<^Op. cit., second edition. Boston, . . . , 1835, pp. 534-538. 



A list of the same character as the pivc eding, enumerating 106 nominal species (and 

 2 varieties), of which 89 are salt- or brackish-water, and 17 fresh-water. Re) roduccd 

 (pp. L5-18) in the "Catalogues of the Animals and Plants of Massachusetts." (E ited 

 by Edward Hitchcock), Amherst, 1835, reprinted (same type) from the second edi.iou 

 of the above-cited work. 



