342 KANSAS ACADEMY OF SCIENCE. 



WEST VIRGINIA. 



MORGANTOWN.— West Virginia Agricultural Experiment Station: 



Bulletin No. 31. Catalogue of the West Virginia Scolytidae and their ene- 

 mies, by A. D. Hopkins; pp. 121-164. 



WISCONSIN. 



MADISON.— Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts, and Letters: 



Transactions, Vol. IV, lS76-'77, 306 pp. ; 2 pll. ; 2 maps. Notes on Cladocera, 

 bv Edwin A. Birge; pp. 77-112; pll. I, II. Fauna of the Niagara and Upper 

 Silurian rocks, by F. H. Day, M. D. ; pp. 113-125. Discoveries illustrating the 

 literature and religion of the Mound Builders, by Edmund Andrews; pp. 126- 

 131. How did the aborigines of this country fabricate copper implements? 

 by P. R. Hoy, M. D.; pp. 132-137. On the descent of animals, by Prof. H. 

 Oldenhage; pp. 138-146. Why are there no upper incisors in the Ruminantia? 

 by P. R. Hoy, M. D. ; pp. 147-150. Boiler explosions, by Charles I. King; pp. 

 151-163. Mind in the lower animals, by J. S. Jewell, M. D. ; pp. 164-187. An- 

 tiquities and platycnemism of the Mound Builders of Wisconsin, by J. N. 

 DeHart, M. D. ; pp. 188-200. Extent and significance of the Wisconsin kettle 

 moraine, by T. C. Chamberlin; pp. 201-234. Rotation as a factor of motion, by 

 Prof. J. G. McMurphy; pp. 235-240. Recent progress in theoretical physics. 

 Magnetic rotary polarization of light, by J. E. Davies, pp. 241-264. 



Vol. IX, 1S92-1S93, Parts 1, 2. 644 pp.; 15 pll. Analogies between the equations 

 of elasticity and electro-magnetism, by John B. Davis; pp. 3-20. Trip to the 

 Liparl islands in 1S89, by Wm. H. Hobbs; pp. 21-32; pi. I. Methods of psy- 

 chological study, by J. J. Blaidsell; pp. 33-43. Flora of Madison and vi- 

 cinity, by L. S. Cheney and R. H. True; pp. 45-1.35; pi. II, large and folded 

 in. The direction of social reform, by David Kinley; pp. 137-151. Supplementary 

 List of parasitic fungi of Wisconsin, by J. J. Davis, Racine, Wis. ; pp. 154-188. 

 Cyclopidae and Calanidae of Central Wisconsin, by C. Dwight Marsh; pp. 189- 

 224; pll. III-VI. The progress of geological surveys in the state of Wisconsin, 

 by William P. Blake; pp. 225-231. Contribution to the flora of the Lake Superior 

 region, by L. S. Cheney; pp. 233-254. Geology of the Waterloo quartzite area, 

 by Ira M. Buell; pp. 255-264; pll. VII-IX. Notes on Cladocera, III, by E. A. 

 Birge; pp. 275-316; pll. X-XIII. Structure and afflnities of Bunops scutifrons 

 Birge, by Harriet Bell Merrill; ppl 319-342; pll. XIV, XV. 



MILWAL'KEE.— Public Museum of the City of Milwaukee: 



Eleventh Annual Report of the Board of Trustees, September 1, 1892, to 

 August 31, 1893; 98 pp. 

 Twelfth Annual Report, September 1, 1893, to August 31, 1894. 76 pp. 



WYOMING. 



XiA RAMIE.— University of Wyoming: 



CANAD.A.. 



•CHICOUTIMI, QUE.-M. r.\bbe V.-.A.. Huard: 



Le Naturaliste Canadien, monthly, Vol. XXI, January to December, 1894, 200 pp. Cours 

 d'Entomologie Populaire, par G Beauliou, pp 28-29; 42-4.5; 58-61; 74-77; 10.5-108; 117-121; 

 15:M56; 165-168. L'Abbe Provancher, par V.-A. Huard, pp. :3S-41 ; 53-58; 85-88; 101-104; 

 131-137; 149-1.52; 182-185. Formation du Saguenay, par P.-H. Duma.?, pp. 61-65; 77-80; SH- 

 92; 121-125; 137-140; 168-173; 186-189. Entomologie Pittoresque: Nos amies les mouches, 

 pp. 9:^-97 ; 125-132. 



Traite Elementaire de Zoologie, pp. 1-48. 



HALIFAX, N. S.— Nova Scotia Institute of Natural Science: 



Proceeding.s and Transactions, Second Series, Vol. 1, 1890-93, 380 pp. ; 7 pll. Surface Geol- 

 ogy of southeastern Nova Scotia, by Prof. L. W. Bailey, pp. 1-9. The Magdalene Islands, 

 by Rev. G. Patterson, pp. 31-57. Pictou Island, by Prof. A. H. MacKay, pp. 76-83, map. 

 Flora of Nova Scotia, Part I, by Dr. George Lawson, pp. 84-110. Concretionary Structure 

 in rocks, by T. C. Weston, pp. 137-142. Post-glacial extension of the southern part of Nova 

 Scotia, by W. H. Prest, pp. 14;M47. Visibility of Venus to the naked eye, by A. Cameron, 

 pp. 148-1.59; 344-:i.58. Trap minerals in Nova Scotia, by Eev. Dr. Thomas McCuUough, pp. 

 160-166. Geology of Capo Breton: The Lower Silurian, by Edwin Gilpin, jr., pp. 167-174. 

 the Fletcher stone, by K. G. T. Webster, pp. 208-214. The Miocene Tertiary of the Cypress 

 Hills, N. W. T., pp. 223-227; 1 pi. The Pictou coal field, by Henry S. Poole, pp. 228-343; 7 

 maps and plates. Flora of Newfoundland, Labrador, etc., by Rev. A. C. Waghoroe, pp; 

 359-373. 



