A List of the Chief Works Cited 1217 



1902. Edward A. Preble. A Biological Investigation of 

 the Hudson Bay Region. N. Am. Fauna, No. 22. 

 Div. Biol. Surv., U. S. Dep. Agr., 140 pp., 14 plates. 

 Washington. 



1902. Edwin Hollis. Collection Small Mammals in N. W. 



T., Canada. The Zoologist, August 15, 1902. Pp. 

 293-298. London. 



[Notes on 22 species taken near Touchwood Hills, Sask.] 



1903. Samuel N. Rhoads. The Mammals of Pennsylvania 



and New Jersey. 8vo, 266 pp., with plates and a 

 faunal map. Privately published. Philadelphia. 



1903. T. Roosevelt, T. S. Vandyke, D. G. Elliott, 



and A. J. Stone. The Deer Family. 334 pp., 7 

 maps by C. Hart Merriam, and 25 illustrations 

 chiefly by C. Rungius. New York. 



1904. Ernest T. Seton. The Master Plowman of The 



West. Century Magazine, June. A study of Tho- 

 momys. Pp. 299-307, 8 illustrations by the author. 

 New York. 



1904. J. D. Figgins. Field Notes on the Birds and Mam- 

 mals of the Cook Inlet Region of Alaska. Proc. 

 Linn. Soc. N. Y. December 19. New York. 



1904. William Temple Hornaday. The American Nat- 

 ural History. 4to, 449 pp., with many illustrations. 

 New York. 



1904. W.H.Osgood. A Biological Reconnaissance of the 

 Base of the Alaska Peninsula. N. Am. Fauna, No. 

 24, Div. Biol. Surv., U. S. Dep. Agr., 86 pp., 7 

 plates. Washington. 



1904. Woods Hutchinson. Animal Marriage. Cotem- 

 porary Revieiu, October, 1904. Pp. 485-496. 



1904-5-6. J. G. Millais. The Mammals of Great Britain 

 and Ireland. 3 vols., roy. 410, many illustrations. 

 London. 



