74 MOUNTAIN OBSERVATORIES IN AMERICA AND EUROPE. 



ultra-violette du spectre solaire a 

 diverses altitudes. Comptes Rendus, 

 vol. 89, p. 808. [It has not been prac- 

 ticable for me to see this paper.] 



Cornu (A.) : Sur la limite ultra-violette 

 du specti'e solaire . . . au som- 

 met du pic de Teneriffe. Comptea 

 Rendus, vol. 3, p. 941. 



Cutts (R. D.) : Report of . . . ob- 

 servations at Sherman [in 1872]. Re- 

 port U. S. Coast Survey, 1872, p. 75. 



Cutts (R. D.) : Observations at Sher- 

 man, Wyoming [altitude 8335 feet]. 

 Bull. Phil. Soc, Washington, vol. 1, 

 (1873), p. 70. 



Daubree (A.) ; L'observatoire meteoro- 

 logique etabli par M. V allot pres du 

 sommet du Mont-Blanc. VAstro- 

 nomie, 1894, p. 186. 



Davidson (G.) : Astronomical observa- 

 tions in the Sieri-a Nevada [at Sum- 

 mit, 7200 feet altitude]. Report U. 

 S. Coast Survey, 1872, pp. 173-176. 



Davidson (G.) : [Comparison of observa- 

 tions at Nagasaki and at high levels in 

 the Sierra Nevada of California.] Re- 

 port U. S. Coast Survey, 1875, pp. 

 228, 230. 



Davidson (G.) : [Seeing in the Sierra 

 Nevada, etc.] (in the Report to the 

 Lick Trustees of Professor Bui-nham, 

 p. 17). 



Davidson (G.): [Observation of the 

 Solar Eclipse of January 11, 1880, 

 from an elevation of 5700 feet — in 

 California.] Report U. S. Coast Sur- 

 vey, 1882, pp. 463, 468. 



Davidson (G.) : [Atmospheric phe- 

 nomena.] Mo7i. Not. R. A. S., vol. 

 50, pp. 385, 388. 



Davis, (Wm. M.) : Elementary Meteor- 

 ology. Boston, 1894, 8vo. 



Douglas (A. E.) : The study of atmos- 

 pheric currents by the aid of large 

 telescopes, and the effect of such cur- 

 rents on the quality of the seeing. 

 [Arequipa and Flagstaff observa- 

 tories.] Amer. Meteor. Jour., vol. 

 11, p. 395. 



Draper (H.) : Astronomical observa- 

 tions on the atmosphere of the Rocky 

 Mountains, made at elevations of 

 from 4500 to 11.000 feet in Utah. 



Wyoming, and Colorado. Amer. Jour. 

 Set., 3d series, vol. 13 (1877), p. 89. 



Eastman, J. R. : A telescope on the 

 western plains. U. S. Senate, 45th 

 Congress, 2d Session, 1878, Misc. Doc. 

 No. 25. 



Eaton (B. S.) : The Mount Wilson Rail- 

 road (illustrated) [describes the sites 

 of the Harvard College Station and of 

 the Lowe observatory.] Tlie Cali- 

 fornia Magazine, October, 1891, p. 

 33. 



Espin (T. E.) Observations for atmos- 

 pherical absorption at low altitudes 

 (on the Rigi) (altitude 5600 f t. ). Jour- 

 nal Liverpool Astron. Socy., vol. 3, 

 part 3, p. 42 (1884). 



Fergusson (S. P.) : The Meteorograph 

 for tlie Harvard Observatory on El 

 Misti, Peru [with a plate], (to be in- 

 stalled in place during the summer of 

 1895). Amer. Meteor. Journal, vol. 

 12, p. 116. 



Hale (G. E.) : On some attempts to 

 photograph the solar corona without 

 an eclipse [on mountains, etc.] [Pike's 

 Peak, Mt. Etna]. Astronomy and 

 Astrophysics, 1894, p. 662. 



Hall (A.) : A telescope on the western 

 plains. U. S. Senate, 45th Congi-ess, 

 2d Session, 1878, Misc. Doc. No. 25. 



Hann (J. ) : [Professor Hann's masterly 

 discussions of the meteorological data 

 derived from mountain-stations are 

 to be found in the publications of the 

 Imperial Academy of Sciences of 

 Vienna ; in the Meteorologisclie Zeit- 

 schrift, etc., q. v.] 



Harkness ( W. ) : Relating to the erection 

 of an observatory in the centre of 

 the continent. U. S. Senate. 45th 

 Congress, 2d Session, 1878, Misc. 

 Doc. No. 25. 



Hastings (F. R.) : The Manitou and 

 Pike's Peak railway. [Illustrated.] 

 Scientific American, 1891, Jan. 24, 

 p. 47. 



Haynie (H.) : [Description, etc., of the 

 great dome at Nice.] American 

 Architect, vol. 17, p. 285. 



Hazen (H. A.) : See Cambridge. 



Hermite (G.) : A sieze-mille metres de 

 liauteiir. V Astronomic, 1893, p. 317. 



