ACCESSIONS TO THE LIBRARY. 307 
ian rocks of Manitoba, by E. O. Ulrich, 27-57; 2 litho. pll. Paleozoic fossils, by E. Bil- 
lings, 144 pp.; 9 pll.; numerous figures. 
Vol. III, part I. George M. Dawson, director. On some new, imperfectly characterized 
or previously unrecorded species of fossils from the Guelph formation of Ontario, by J. F. 
Whiteaves, 43 pp.; 8 pll.; 4 figs. Part II. Revision of the fauna of the Guelph formation 
of Ontario, with descriptions of a few new species and systematic list, with references, of 
the fossils of the Hudson river or Cincinnati formation at Stony mountain, Manitoba, by 
J. F. Whiteaves, pp. 45-128; 7 pll. Part III. The fossils of the Galena-Trenton and Black 
river formations of Lake Winnipeg and its vicinity, by J. F. Whiteaves, pp. 129-242; 7 pll. 
Maps, in folio, of Labrador peninsula—southwest sheet, southeast sheet, northwest 
sheet, northeast sheet. 
Ottawa Field Naturalists’ Club: 
The Ottawa Naturalists’ Monthly, vol. X, Nos. 10-12, pp. 185-232. The living chimera 
and its egg, by Prof. E. E. Prince, pp. 185-189. Ottawa spiders and mites, by W. Hague 
Harrington, pp. 190 and 191. Clouds, by J. A. Dresser, pp. 192-196. The barren lands of 
Canada, by G. M. Dawson, pp. 201-207. The Labrador area, by A. P. Low, pp. 208-216. Hy- 
menoptera parasitica-proctotrypide, by W. Hague, pp. 217-219. Stephanoceros, by Walter 
S. Odell, pp. 219-22. 
Vol. XI, Nos. 1-11; pp. 1-208. Contribution to the paleontology of the Post-Pliocene de- 
posits of the Ottawa valley, by Henry M. Ami, pp. 20-26. ‘‘ Weather,’’ by Otto J. Klotz, pp. 
45-61. Carp culture, by J. Craig, pp. 65, 66. Fruit-growing in Canada, by John Craig, pp. 
73-93. The pelican (Pelecanus erythrorhynchos Gmelin), by Prof. Edward E. Prince, pp. 
98-101. On the composition of Canadian virgin soils, by Frank T. Shutt, pp. 106-108. Fila- 
ria oculi—a parasite in the eye of the horse, by Dr. A. G. Hopkins, pp. 113-114. Notes on 
Ottawa birds, by W. T. Macoun, F. A. Saunders, Miss G. Harmer, and H, B. Small, pp. 116- 
122, The cryptogamic flora of Ottawa, by Prof. John Macoun, pp. 129-140, 161-172, 193-204. 
Notes on the birds of the Magdalen islands, by Rey. C. J. Young, pp. 145-158. Recent con- 
clusions in Quebec geology, R. W. Ells, pp. 173-176. Geological formations, by R. W. Ells, 
pp. 177-189, 
Vol. XII, Nos. 4-8, 1898, 160 pp. The cryptogamic flora of Ottawa, by Prof. John 
Macoun, pp. 25-32; 49-56; 93-100. The Cretaceous of Athabasca river, by J. B. Tyrrell, pp. 
37-41. Vegetation in the Bermudas, by H. B. Small, pp. 101-104; 109-114; 153-157. On some 
fossil cephalopoda, by J. F. Whiteaves, pp. 119-127. Change of function in fishes’ fins, by 
Prof E. E. Prince, pp. 129-132. 
Ottawa Literary and Scientific Society: 
Transactions, No. 1, 1897-98, 87 pp. The fur seal of the North Pacific, by J. M. Macoun, 
pp. 63-74, Utilization of moss lands, by Thomas MacFarlane, pp. 79-87. 
ToRONTO, ONT.—Canadian Institute: 
Proceedings I, part 1, Nos. 1 and 2,72 pp. The dwarf domestic animals of pygmies, by 
R. G. Haliburton, pp. 3-7. The gametophyte of Botrychium virginianum, pp. 8-10. The 
histology and physiology of the gastric glands, by R. Bensley, pp. 11-16. The Panis—a 
historical outline of Canadian Indian slavery in the eighteenth century, by James Cleland 
Hamilton, pp. 19-27. A probable solution of the secondary undulations found upon self- 
recording tide gauges, by Napier Denison, pp. 28-31. Somes lapsed names in Canadian. 
local nomenclature, by Rev. Henry Scadding, pp. 33-38. The origin of the Salishan tribes 
of British Columbia and Washington, by John Campbell, pp. 39-50. Moss litter, by Thomas 
W. Gibson, pp. 91-54. The Great Lakes as a sensitive barometer, by Napier Denison, pp. 
55-63. Mineralogical notes on Sudbury anthracite, by G. R. Mickle, pp. 64-66. . 
Proceedings, new series, vol. I, No. 6, pp. 119-135. The anatomy of the orang-outang, by 
A. Primrose, pp. 119-121. The transportation question, by J. S. Willison, pp. 122-133. The 
origin of ocean tidal secondary undulations, by F. Napier Denison, pp. 134, 135. 
Transactions, vol. V, part 2, May, 1898, pp. 167-368; 10 pll. The Denes of America identi- 
fied with the Tungus of Asia, by Rev. John Campbell, pp. 167-224. Spatial thresholds of 
colors and their dependency on contrast, by W. B. Lane, pp. 225-242. Joseph Brant in the 
American revolution, by Captain Ernest Cruikshank, pp. 243-264. The gametophyte of 
Botrychium virginianum, by Edward C. Jeftrey, pp. 265-294; 4 pll. The Picts, by Rev. Neil 
-MacNish, pp. 295-304. The function of indirect vision and the use of colored and smoked 
eye-glasses, by A. Kirschmann, pp. 305-310. Counting and time reckoning, by John Thor- 
burn, pp. 311-324, Late formations and great changes of level in Jamaica, by J. W. Spen- 
cer, pp. 325-357; 7 pll. Resemblances between the declivities of high plateau and those of 
submarine Antillean valleys, by J. W. Spencer, pp. 359-368, 
Supplement to vol. V, part 1, plates to accompany Doctor Maclean’s paper on picture 
writing of the Blackfeet. 
