164 ROYAL SOCIETY OF CANADA 



HuAED, L'Abbé V. A. 



Comment certains poissons survivent au dessèchement des pièces d'eau 

 t ou ils habitent. 



Le Naturaliste Canadien, July, 1903, Vol. XXX, No. 7, pp. 100-103. 



Knight, Pkof. A. P. 



Sawdust and Fish Life. 



Queen's Quarterly, Jan., 1903, Vol. X, pt. Ill, pp. 367-379. 



Prince, Prof. E. E. 



The Fish-way problem. 



Thirty-fifth Annual Report of the Department of Marine and 



Fisheries, Ottawa, pp. LXI-LXXXI. 

 The hatching of shad. 



Idem, pp. LXXXII-LXXXVI. 



Williams, J. B. 



A Further Note on the Blue-tailed Lizard. 



Ottawa Naturalist, June, 1903, Vol. XVII, No. 3, p. GO. 



Invertebeata. 

 Bailey, G. W. 



■The Land Snails of New Brunswick. 



Bulletin of the Natural History Society of New Brunswick, No. 

 XXI, Vol. V, pt. 1, pp. 15-34. 



CoE, W. K., and Kunkel, B.W. 



A new species of Nemerteau {Ccrehratulus melanops) from the Gulf of 

 St. Lawrence. 



Biological Bulletin, Boston, Feb., 1903, Vol. IV, No. 3. 



Quoted in " Science,"' March 6, 1903, p. 385. 



Dall, Dr. W. H. 



Synopsis of the Family Astartida?, with a review of the American species. 

 (Includes, incidentally, a revision of the nomenclature of all the recent 

 species of Astarte from tjie Atlantic and Pacific coa.sts of Canada.) 



Proceedings of the U. S. National Museum, Vol. XXVII, pp. 933- 



951, with Plates LXII and LXIII. 

 Synopsis of the Carditacea and of the American Species. 

 (Includes, also, incidentally, a revision of the nomenclature of all the 

 Canadian species of this family.) 



Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, 



Nov., 1902 (issued Jan. 20, 1903), pp. 096-716. 

 Note on the preceding paper. 



(In this note Dr. Dall suggests that, as the name Miodon, Carpenter 

 (1864), was used for an ophidian by Dumeril in 1859, that Carpenter's 

 genus be called Miodontiscus. If this suggestion be adopted, the little 

 marine bivalve from the Vancouver region, that has so long been called 

 Miodon prolongatus, will have to be called Miodontiscus prolongatus.) 



The Nautilus, April, 1903, Vol. XVI, No. 12, p. 143. 



