334 AM.V.s'AS ACADEMY OP SCIENCE. 



Fishes; pp. 18-22. An Ornithological Paradise, some observations gleaned from 

 a sojourn on -the famous Farallone Islands, by C. Barlow, Santa Clara, Calif. ; 

 pp. 37-44; 4 fig's. Arctic jSTotes on the habits of certain northern birds in Com- 

 mander Islands and Kamtschatka, by Leonhard Stejneger; pp. 53-58. 



HAMILTOIm.— Colgate University, Department of Geology: 



Circular of Information, Courses !of Instruction, etc. 1892-1893, 12 pp. 

 1893-1894, 23 pp. 



Prof. A. P. Brigham, Colgate University; 



The Geology of Oneida County, by Albert Perry Brigham, 17 pp. (Transac- 

 tions Oneida Historical Society, 1887-1888.) 



A Chapter in Glacial History, by Albert P. Brigham, 13 pp. (Trans. Oneida 

 Hist. Soc, 1889-1S92.) 



Rivers and the Evolution of Geographic Forms, by Albert P. Brigham, 21 

 pp.; 2 half tones. (Bull. Amer. Geog. Soc, March, 1892.) 



The Finger Lakes of New York, by Albert P. Brigham, 21 pp. (Bull. Amer. 

 Geog. Soc, Vol. XXV, No. 2, 1893.) 



ITHACA.— Cornell University— Agricultural Experiment Station: 



Bulletin of the Entomological Division. No. 23. Insects Injurious to Fruits; 

 pp. 101-126. 

 Bulletin No. 33, Entomological Division. Wireworms; pp. 191-272. 



Prof. M. V. Slingerland, Cornell University: 



Bulletin No. 44, Entomological Division. The Pear-Tree Psylla, by Mark V. 

 Slingerland, Assistant Entomologist; pp. 161-186. 



No. 50. The Bud Moth, by Mark Vernon Slingerland; pp. 1-30. 



No. 58. The Four-Lined Leaf-Bug, by M. V. Slingerland; pp. 205-239. 



No. 61. All Divisions. Sundry Investigations of the year; pp. 297-350; 21 

 pll. and figs. 



No. 64. Entomological Division. On Certain Grass-Eating Insects, by Eph- 

 raim Porter Felt; pp. 45-102; pll. I-XIV. 



No. 78. The Cabbage-root Maggot, with notes on the onion maggot and 

 allied insects, by M. V. Slingerland; pp. 479-578; 18 figs. 



No. 83. A Plum Scale in western New York, by M. V. Slingerland; pp. 677- 

 700; 5 figs. 



NEW BRIGHTON.— Natural Science Association of Staten Island: 



Proceedings, Vol. Ill, November, 1891, to October, 1893, about 100 pp. Vol. 

 IV, Nos. 1-12, 53 pp. 



NEW YORK.— Astor Library: 



Forty-Fifth Annual Report of the Trustees for the year 1893; 41 pp. 



Linnaean Society of New York: 



Abstract of the Proceedings for the year ending March 2, 1892. 8 pp. 



For the year ending March 1, 1893, with a paper on "Milicete Indian Natural 

 History," by Tappan Adney; 41 pp. 



For the year ending March 27, 1894, with recent progress in the study of 

 North American mammals, by J. A. Allen, and a consideration of some orni- 

 thological literature, with extracts from current criticism, by L. S. Foster; 

 104 pp. 



New York Academy of Sciences: 



Transactions, Vol. XII, 1S92-1893. 270 pp.; 8 pll. Additions to the Palaeo- 

 botany of tiie Cretaceous formation on Staten Island, by Arthur Hollick; 

 pp. 28-39. Notes on the clays of New York and their economic value, by Hein- 

 rich Ries; pp. 40-47. The North American species of the genus Lespedeza, by 

 N. L. Britton; pp. 57-68. On an occurrence of Gabbro (Norite), near Van Arts- 

 dalen's Quarry, Bucks county, Penn., by J. F. Kemp; pp. 71-77. Fact and Fal- 

 lacy in the boomerang problem, by C. H. Emerson, Whitehall, N. Y. ; pp. 77-92. 

 A Geological Reconnoisance in the vicinity of Gouverneur, N. Y., by C. H. 

 Smyth, Jr.; pp. 97-108. On Phosphate Nodules from the Cambrian of southern 

 New Brunswick, by W. D. Matthew; pp. 108-120; 4 pll. The Sunapee Saibling; 

 a fourth New England variety of Salvelinus, by John D. Quackenbos; pp. 139- 

 151. Plant Distribution as a factor in the Interpretation of Geological Phe- 

 nomena, with special reference to Long Island and vicinty, by Arthur Hol- 

 lick; pp. 189-202. Petrography of the Gneisses of the town of Gouverneur, N. T., 

 by C. H. Smyth, Jr.; pp. 203-217. On recently discovered deposits of diato- 



