TWENTY-SEVENTH ANNUAL MEETING. 327 



Wm. Richards and Hubert Grovor Shaw; pp. 247-2o9. Notes oa tho Oxides contained in 

 Cerite, Samarskite, Gadolinitc, and Fer^'usonite, by Wolcott Gibbs, M. D., pp. 260-279. 



Proceedings, N. S.. Vol. XXI, May, 1S93, to May, 1894. 480 pp.; 4pll.; 14 figs. Oncer- 

 tain Substituted Crotonolactones and Mncobromic Acid, by Henry B. Hill and Robert W. 

 Cornelison ; pp. 1-54. A Revision of tho -Vtomic Weight of Barium, second paper, by Tlieo- 

 dore Wm. Richards; pp. 55-91. New Genera and Species of LaboulheniaceiP, by Roland 

 Thaxter, pp. 92-111. Arsenical Poisoning from wall papers and fabrics, by Charles Robert 

 Sanger; pp. 112-177. Laws of Cleavage in Limax, by C. A. Kofoid, pp. 180-20;i Occur- 

 rence of Diamonds in Meteorites, by Oliver Whipple Huntington; pp. 204-211. Double 

 Haloids of Antimony and Potassium, by Francis Gano Benedict; pp. 212-227. On Muco- 

 phenoxychloric Acid, by Harris Eastman Sawyer; pp. 242-250. The Smithville Meteoric 

 Iron, by Oliver Whipple Huntington; pp. 251-260; 1 pi. Contributions from the Gray 

 Herbarium of Harvard University, new series No. 6, by B. L. Robinson. I.— The North 

 American Alsineae ; pp. 273-31:1 II.— Descriptions of Now and hitherto imperfectly known 

 Plants collected in Mexico by C. G. Pringle in 1892 and 1893, pp. 314-330, ;«2-394. On tho 

 Inheritance of Acquired Characters in Animals with a complete metamorphosis, by 

 Alpheus S. Packard, M. D. ; pp. 331-370. On the Group of Automorphic Linear Transfor- 

 mations of a Bilinear Form, by Henry Taber; pp. 371-381. 



Boston Society of Natural History : 



Proceedings, Vol. XXV, May, 1890, to May, 1892. .524 pp.; 16 plates and maps. La- 

 marckianism and Darwinism, by Dr. J. A. Jefifries; pp. 42-49. Asiatic Lepidoptera, by 

 Rev. W. J. Holland, Ph. D. ; pp. 52-82; pi. Ill, IV, V. Notes on some points in the Ex- 

 ternal Structure and Pliylogeny of lepidopterous larvae, by Dr. Alpheus S. Packard ; pp. 

 82-114 ; pll. I, II. Composition of the till or boulder clay, by W^ O. Crosby ; pp. 115-140. 

 Geographic Limits of species of plants in the basin of the Red River of the North, by 

 Warren Upham ; pp. 140-172. Kame Ridges, Kettle Holes, and other phenomena attend- 

 ant upon the passing away of the great ice sheet in Hingham, Mass., by T. T. Bouve; 

 pp. 173-182, with map of the region. On Chemism or the organization of matter, by A. E. 

 Dolbear; pp. 183-201. Geology of the environs of Quebec with map and section, by 

 Jules Marcou ; pp. 202-227 ; pll. VII-IX. Walden, Cochituate, and other lakes inclosed by 

 modified drift, by Warren Upham ; pp. 228-242. Additional notes concerning the Nampa 

 Image, by G. F. Wright ; pp. 242-246. Notes on Central Ara3rican Archieology and Eth- 

 nology, by .J. Crawford, State Geologist and Mineralogist of Nicaragua ; pp. 247-253. The 

 Antiquity of the last Glacial Period, by N. S. Shaler, pp. 258-267. Racsnt Fossils of the 

 harbor and Back Bay, Boston, by Warren Upham ; pp. 305-316. The Catskill Delta in the 

 Post-Glacial. Hudson Estuary, by William Morris Dffvis; pp. 318-335. Remarks on the 

 Pinnidfe, by Alpheus Hyatt ; pp. 335-316. The Tertiary Rhynchophora, by Samuel H. 

 Scudder ; pp. 370-386. The Drainage of the Bernese Jura, by .\ugust F. Foerste, with a 

 supplementary note on the drainage of the Pennsylvania Appalachians; pp. 392-420; pll. 

 X-XII. Pleistocene Changes in East3rn North America, by Baron Garard DeGaer, of the 

 Geological Survey of Sweden; pp. 454-477; with map. Sub-glacial Origin of certain 

 Eskers, by Wm. Morris Davis; pp. 477-499. Gaology of Hingham, Mass., by W. O. Crosby; 

 pp. 499-512; pU. XIV-XVI. 



Vol. XXVI, Part I, November, 1892, to May, 1893; 152 pp. The Origin of Drumlins, by 

 Warren Upham ; pp. 2-25. Deflected Glacial Striae in Somerville, and The Fishing Banks 

 between Cape Cod and Newfoundland, by Warren Upham; pp. 33-48. Evidences of man 

 in Nicaragua, by J. Crawford; pp. 49-58. Bioplastology and the related branches of bio- 

 logical research, by Prof. Alphaeus Hyatt ; pp. 49-125. Traces of Fauna in the Cambridge 

 slates, by J. B. Woodworth; pp. 125-127. 



Marine Biological Laboratory : 



Massachusetts Horticultural Society, Robert Manning, Secretary: 



Transactions of tho Massachusetts Horticultural Society, for the year 1890, Part II; pp. 

 211-348. 



For the year 1891, Parts I and II. 444 pp. ; 2 litho. plates, 11 half-tones. Evergreen Trees, 

 by William C. Strong; pp. 27-4S. Roses, by John N. May ; pp. 49-.58. Remedies for Insects 

 and Fungi Injuring Fruits, by Samuel T. Maynard; pp. 59-71. Chrysanthemums, by John 

 Thorpe; pp. 72-84. The Strawberry and its Culture, by P. M. .\ugur; pp. 86-100. Geo- 

 graphical Distribution of Plants, by W. F. Ganong; pp. 101-117. The Study of Horticul- 

 ture in public schools, by Dr. Charles C. Rounds ; pp. 118-140. Diseases of Trees likely 

 U) follow injuries, by William G. Farlow; pp. 140-15S. Tho Scientific Education of Gar- 

 deners, by Charles L. Allen; pp. 159-174. Ferns, by George E. Davenport; pp. 191 -20s. A 

 Winter Visit to the Bahama Islands, by Henry W. Wilson ; pp. 210-229 ; 11 half-tone plates. 

 Part II, Report of Committees, etc. ; pp. 243-444. 



For the year 1892, Parts I and II. 454 pp. ; 2 pll. Soil and Irrigation of Egypt, by Hon, 



