BIBLIOGRAPHY. 



Adeney, W. E. 



1912. Report of W. E. Adeney. In Present sanitary condition of New York 



harbor and the degree of cleanness which is necessary and sufficient for 



the water. Report of the Metropolitan Sewerage (Commission of New 



York, 1912, p. 80-121. Wynkoop Hallenbeck Crawford (Jo., New York. 



Allen, E. J. 



1914. Letter telling of deadly effects on swimming prawn of creosote oil in great 

 dilutions. In Net curing by creosote. Fish Trades Gazette, Vol. 31, 

 Feb. 28, 1914, p. 36. London. 



BUTTERFIELD, W. J. A. 



1912. The relation of modern road surfacing to tish life. The Surveyor, Vol. 

 41, Feb. 16, 1912, p. 277-284. London. 



COKER, R. E. 



1920. Progress in biological inquiries. Report of the Division of Scientific 



Inquiry for the fiscal year 1920. Appendix II, Report, U. S. Com- 

 missioner of Fisheries for 1920. Bureau of Fisheries Doc. No. 896. 

 p. 23. Washington. 



COLLINGE, W-VLTER E. 



1921. The effects of oil from ships on certain sea birds. Nature, Vol. 106, Feb. 



24, 1921, p. 830. London. 

 Fishing Gazette (The). London. 



1910. Note by editor, R. B. Marston, containing letter froni R. C-. W. H. Butler 



telling of harmless leakage of a barrel of crude tar into trout ponds. 



The Fishing Gazette, Vol. LX, June 4, 1910, p. 508. 

 Note by editor quoting letter from Arthur J. Belcher (extracted from the 



Daily Mail of June 14) telling of the inmiediate destruction of hundreds 



of trout following the -washing of tar from a freshly tarred road into 



trout brook. Ibid., Vol. LX, June 18, 1910, p. 559. 

 Letter from A. R. Peart telling of experiments showing deadliness to 



fish life of water which has been in contact with fresh crude tar; also 



pointing out that road washings may be expected to reach stream while 



it is still shrunken by preceding drought. Ibid., Vol. LX, June 25, 



p. 607. • 

 Account by Field of destruction of fish and vegetation following tarring 



of roads, and of finding a high tar content in road washings. Ibid.. 



Vol. LXI, July 23, 1910, p. 99-100. 

 Letter (anon.) telling of experiments showing deadliness to trout at various 



dilutions of water which had been in contact with coal tar. Ibid., Vol. 



LXI, July 30, 1910, p. 125-126. 

 Note by editor containing letter from "Elfa" telling of development of 



fungoid growth following the washing of tar from road into stream. 



Ibid., Vol. LXI, Aug. 6, 1910, p. 144. 

 Note by editor quoting note from Percy Wadham on the road -tarring 



question. Ibid., Voh LXI, Aug. 20, 1910, p. 188. 

 Investigation of an epidemic of fish poisoning by tar at Drinkwater Park, 



Manc-nester, by E. J. Sidebotham and A. Sellers. {From Archives 



of the Public Health Laboratory of the University of Manchester, Vol. I, 



1906.) ll)id.. Vol. LXI, Aug. 27, 1910, pp. 210-211. 



1911. Note by editor quoting account from Dunclee (Courier of Aug. 5, 1911, of 



the washing by thunderstorm of tar from freshly tarred road in the 

 River Faiy. the killing of many scores of fine trout, and the ruining of 

 the fishing below. Ibid., Vol.'LXlII, Aug. 12, 1911, p. 163. 

 Letter frojn F. I. C, one technically informed, telling of amounts of 

 naphthaline and phenol bodies allowed in road tar and niaintaining 

 that treatment which renders tar innocuous spoils it for road work. 

 Ibid., Vol. LXIII, Aug. 26, 1911, p. 233. 



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