162 THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF CANADA 
MAMMALS. 
ALLEN, J. A. 
The Black Bear of Labrador. 
Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History, vol. xxviii, 1910, 
pp. 1-6. 
Mammals from the Athabasca-Mackenzie region of Canada. 
Idem, vol. xxviii, 1910, pp. 7-17. 
BENSLEY, B. A. 
Practical Anatomy of the Rabbit. An elementary laboratory text-book in 
mammalian anatomy, pp. 1-203, with eight plates and 56 text-figures, 
1910. 
Part I. A general consideration of the structure of the rabbit. 
Part II. Osteology of the rabbit. 
Part III. Dissection of the rabbit. 
The University Press, Toronto, and P. Blackiston’s Son and Co., Phila- 
delphia. 
Brooks, ALLAN. 
The “ Wapiti’”’ of the Crees. 
Forest and Stream, January, 1910, vol. Ixxiv, No. 3, p. 92. 
In “The Mammalia of Canada” published by the Canadian Institute 
in 1888, Mr. J. B. Tyrrell pointed out that “ Wapatik”’ the Cree name 
for the Mountain Goat, is misapplied when used to denote the American 
Elk (Cervus canadensis, Erxl.). 
GOLDMAN, Epwarp A. 
Revision of the Wood Rats of the genus Neotoma. 
U. S. Department of Agriculture, Bureau of Biological Survey, North 
American Fauna, No. 31, pp. 1-107, pls. i-viii, with text-figures (maps 
shewing distribution) 1-14. 
The genus is well represented in western Canada. 
GRANT, Mapison. 
Condition of wild life in Alaska. 
Annual Report of the Smithsonian Institution, 1909 (1910), pp. 521- 
529. 
This article has reference to the mammals of western (Canada 
as well as to those of Alaska. 
MACKENZIE, J. J. 
Human Evolution and Human Disease. 
Transactions of the Canadian Institute, 1910, vol. viii, pp. 535-547. 
Moore, Wm. H. 
A Shrew new to New Brunswick. 
The Ottawa Naturalist, March, 1910, vol. xxiii, No. 12, pp. 217-218. 
The species has been identified as Neosorex albibarbis (Cope). 
Comments are made on the common mole, and other shrews, taken at 
the same locality, viz., Scotch lake. 
