302 KANSAS ACADEMY OF SCIENCE. 



U. S. Government Collections, by R. W. Shufeldt, M. D., pp. 369-436; pll. XV- 

 XCVI. 4. The Shofar— its use and origin, by Cyrus Adler, Assistant Curato^ 

 of Oriental Antiquities, pp. 437-4.50; pll. XCVII-C. 5. The Crump Burial Cave, 

 Blount county, Ala., by Frank Burns, U. S. Geological Survey, pp. 451-454; 

 pi. CI. 6. Minute stone implements from India, by Thomas Wilson, Curator 

 of Prehistoric Anthropology, pp. 455-460; pll. CII, CIII. 7. Comparative Oology 

 of North American Birds, by R. W. Shufeldt, M. D., pp. 461-493. 

 United States Commission of Fish and Fisheries, Marshall McDonald, Commis- 

 sioner: 



Bulletin, Vol. VI, 1SS6, 15x23 cm., bound in black cloth, 495 pp.; 7 pll.; 19 figs. 

 Contains 130 short articles giving general accounts of the fisheries of the 

 Atlantic Coast, Pacific Coast, Gulf of Mexico, the Great Lakes, New Englana, 

 Canadian, Newfoundland and Labrador, Scotch, Maltese, Australian, Nor- 

 wegian, and Japanese fisheries; with accounts of cod, mackerel, halibut, 

 lierring, sardine, salmon, lobster, oyster, and other fisheries; natural history 

 of fishes; enemies of fish and oysters; deep-sea research and tools; and fish 

 culture in general, including the culture and distribution of shad, whitefish, 

 catfish, salmon, trout, carp, striped bass, goldfish, and other fishes, with in- 

 structions for fish culture and distribution of fish. 



Vol. VII, 1S87, same size, 475 pp.; 23 pll.; 55 figs. Contains the following, 

 among other titles: The Canadian and American fisheries of the Great Lakes, 

 by John H. Russell, pp. 7-11. Loch Leven trout introduced in the United 

 States, by Charles W. Smiley; pp. 28-32. Notes upon Fish and the Fisheries, 

 pp. 33-48. Hatching cod in Norway, by Carl Rognerud, pp. 113-119. Report or 

 the fishes observed in Great Egg Harbor bay. New Jersey, during the summer 

 of 1887, by Tarleton H. Bean, pp. 129-152; pll. I-III. American sardine industry 

 in 1886. by R. Edward Earll and Hugh M. Smith, pp. 161-192. Results of in- 

 vestigations of the schooner Grampus on the Southern mackerel grounds in 

 the spring of 1SS7, by D. E. Collins, T. H. Bean, and Richard Rathbun, pp. 

 217-267. The Aquarium: A brief exposition of its principles and management, 

 by William P. Seal, pp. 274-2S2. The Beam-trawl fishery of Great Britain, with 

 notes on beam-trawling in other European countries, etc., by J. W. Collins, 

 pp. '289-407; pll. IV-XXIII; 34 figs. Results of salmon planting in the Hudson 

 river, by Fred Mather, pp. 409-424. Review of the Mackerels (Scombrinae) of 

 America and Europe, by Fletcher B. Dresslar and Bert Fesler, pp. 429-446; 

 pll. I-XI. 



Vol. VIII, 1888, 18x27 cm., bound in black cloth, 494 pp.; 74 plates and maps; 

 76 figs. Albatross Explorations: Alaska, Washington and Oregon, by Z. L. 

 Tanner, U. S. N., commanding, pp. 1-96; pll. I-XII; map of Alaska peninsula, 

 80x160 cm., also map of the western coast of the United States from Umpqua 

 river to Vancouver Island, 30x60 cm. Exjilorations of the Allegheny region 

 and Western Indiana, by David Starr Jordan, pp. 97-173; pll. XIII-XV; figs. 

 1-13. Suggestions for improving fishing vessels, by J. W. Collins, pp. 175-192; 

 pll. XVI-XXVII. Fishes of Yucatan, by Tarleton H. Bean, pp. 193-206; pll. 

 XXVIII-XXIX. Recent methods of hatching fish eggs, by Wm. F. Page, pp. 

 207-218; pll. XXX-XXXIV; figs. 1-4. Report on Michigan fishes, by C. H. Boll- 

 man, pp. 219-225. Sturgeon industries of the eastern coast, by John A. Rj'der, 

 pp. 231-328; pll. XXXVII-LIX. Review of Serranidae in the waters of America 

 and Europe, by David Starr Jordan and Carl H. Eigenmann, pp. 329-441; pll. 

 LX-LXIX. Transplanting of lobsters to the Pacific coast, by Richard Rath- 

 bun, pp. 443-472; pll. LXX, LXXI. Invertebrates of lakes Geneva and Men.dota, 

 Wis., by S. A. Forbes, pp. 473-494; pll. LXXII-LXXIV. 



Vol. IX, 1889, 516 pp. ; 166 pll. Explorations in Colorado and Utah during 

 the summer of 1889, by David Starr Jordan, pp. 1-40; pll. I-V. Streams and 

 lakes of the Yellowstone National Park, by David Starr Jordan, pp. 41-63; 

 pi. VI-XXII; map of the park 36x50 cm. Two species of larval Dibothria from 

 the Yellowstone National Park, by Dr. Edwin Linton, pp. 65-79, 337-361; pll. 

 XXIII-XXVII, CXVII-CXIX. Fishes of Missouri and Arkansas, by S. B. 

 Meek, pp. 113-141; pi. XLII. Fishes of Alabama and Tennessee, by Charles H. 

 Gilbert, pp. 143-159; pi. XLIII. Salmon and salmon rivers of Alaska, by Tarle- 

 ton H. Bean, pp. 165-208; pll. XLV-LXXIX, including several maps folded in. 

 Embryology of the sea bass (Serranus atratus), by Henry V. Wilson, pp. 209- 

 277; pll. LXXXVIII-CVII; 12 figs, in text. Fishing grounds off west coast or 

 Florida, by A. C. Adams and W. C. Kimball, pp. 289-312, pi. CXI; 1 figure in 

 text. Giant scallop fishery of Maine, by Hugh M. Smith, pp. 313-335; pll. CXII- 



