WHITINGS OF C A WHITE 1^5 



37. 



White, C. A. Woodpeckers Tapping Sugar Trees <American Naturalist, vol. vii, 

 p. 496. Salem, 1873. 



■Woodpeckers were observed to peck liolea in the bark of young and sound sugar maples, 

 evidently to get the sap. 



38. 



White, C. A. Kjoekkenmoeddings do I'Am^rique dn uord. <C()ngre8 Inleruational 

 d'Anthropologie et d'Arch^ologie. Pr6historiques ; Compte rendu de la cinqui- 

 hme session k Bologne, 1871. pp. 379-389. Bologna (Italy), 1873. 

 Same. Bologna (Italy), 1873. 8vo, pp. l.^".. Thirty separates jirinted with title-page 

 and repaging. 



This paper embraces a general review of the subject of shell heaps in Koith America as 

 known up to that date. 



39. 



White, C. A. On Spontaneous fission? in Zaphrentis. <Amer. Jour. Sc, 3d ser., 

 vol. v., p. 72. New Haven, 1873. 



A specimen of Zaphrentis spimdifera, Hall is described, T^hich seemed to be a case of sponta- 

 neous fission. The author now thinks it probable that it was the result of a twLu polyp, or 

 that the fission took place at a very early stage in the formation of the corallite 



40. 



White, C. A. On the Eastern Limit of Cretaceous Deposits in Iowa. <Proc. Amer. 

 Ass. Adv. Sci. ? 2l8t meeting (Ditbnqne), 1872, vol. xxi, pp. 187-192. Cambridge, 

 1873. 



Same. Cambridge, 1873. 8vo. pp. 187-192. Fifty separates printed without title- 

 page, covers, or repaging. 



The discovery is announced of Cretaceous fossils in the drift or glaciirr-disturbed Cretaceous 

 deposits in Howard, Black Hawk, and Johnson Counties, Iowa; showing that the Cretaceous 

 deposits once extended as far eastward as Eastern Iowa and Southeastern Minnesota. 



41. 



White, C. A. The proposed genus Anomalodouta of Miller identical with the earlier 

 Megaptera of Meek. <Anier. Jour. Sci., 3d ser., vol. viii, pp. 218-219. New 

 Haven, 1874. 



Meek's claim to priority is defended against that of Miller. The note bears only the initials 

 of the author, " C. A. W." 



42. 



White, C. A. Artificial Shell-heaps of Fresh-water Mollusks. <^Proc. Amer. Ass. 



Adv. Sci., 22d meeting, Portland, 1873, pp. 133-137. Salem, 1874. 

 Same. Salem, 1874. 8vo. pp. 133-137. Fifty .separates printed without title-page, 



covers, or repaging. 



It is herein shown that the fresh-water mollusks were extensively used as food by the ah 

 original inhabitants. 



43. 



White, C. A. Preliminary Rejiort upon Invertebrate Fossils collected by the Expe- 

 ditions of 1871, 1872, and 1873, with Descriptions of New Species. <^Engineer 

 Department, U. S. Army. Geographical and Geological Explorations and Suryevs 

 west of the 100th meridian. Fii'st Lieut. George M. Wheeler, Corps of Engineers, 

 in charge, pp. 1-27. Washington, 1874. 



Thirty-nine species are described as new, and five others are noticed. They are all rede- 

 scribed and figured in parti, vol. iv, Tleport upon Geographical and Geological Explorations and 

 Surveys West of the 100th Meridian. See entry No. 48. Aiichura nuptialis is a Cretaceous spe- 

 cies, and herein wrongly referred to the Jurassic. 



