364 
Eigenmann, C. H. 
— The freshwater fishes of western 
Cuba. Bull. U. S. Fish Comm. 1902 
(1904), 22, 211-236. 2 pls. & figs. 
1904.1 
On a _ Leptocephalus of the 
conger eel (Contrib. Zool. Lab. Indi- 
ana Univ. no. 54) Science, 1904, n. s. 
19, 629-630. fig. 1904.2 
Divergence and convergence in 
(Contrib. Zool. Lab. Indiana 
Biol. Bull. Woods Hole, 
fishes 
Univ. no. 64) 
1905, 8, 59-66. 4 figs. 1905.1 
—— The fishes of Panama. Science, 
1905, n. s. 22, 18-20. 1905.2 
The mailed cat-fishes of South 
America [Loricariidze} Science, 1905, 
n. s. 21, 792-795. 1905.3 
— The freshwater fishes of South 
and Middle America. Pop. Sci. Mon- 
thly, 1906, 68, 515-530. - 1906.1 
Fowler’s “ Heterognathous 
fishes ’’ with a note on the Stethaprioni- 
nz (Contrib. Zool. Lab. Indiana Univ. 
no. 90) Amer. Naturalist, 1907, 41, 
767-772. 1907.1 
On a collection of fishes from 
Buenos Aires (Contrib. Zool. Lab. In- 
diana Univ. no. 80) Proce. Washington 
Acad. Sci., 1907, 8, 449-458. 3 pls. 
1907.2 
On further collections of fishes 
from Paraguay. Ann. Carnegie Mus., 
1907, 4, 110-157. 15 pls. 1907.3 
The peeciliid fishes of Rio Grande 
do Sul and La Plata basin. Proc. 
U.S. Nat. Mus., 1907, 32, 425-433. 11 
figs. 1907.4 
Preliminary descriptions of new 
genera and species of tetragonopterid 
characins (Zoological results of the 
Thayer Brazilian expedition) Bull. 
Mus. Comp. Zool. Harvard College, 
* 1908, 52, 91-106. 1908.1 
Adaptation (In Fifty years of 
Darwinism; modern aspects of evolu- 
tion: centennial addresses in honor of 
Charles Darwin, before the American 
Association for the Advancement of Sci- 
ence, Baltimore, Friday, January 1, 
1909, p. 182-208. 2 pls. New York, 
1909) 1909.1 
Cave vertebrates of America, a 
study in degenerative evolution. Wash- 
ington, D. C., 1909. 241 p. 29 pls. & 
AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY 
EIG 
72 figs. (Carnegie Institution of Wash- 
ington Pub. no. 104) 1909.2 
The freshwater fishes of Pata- 
gonia and an examination of the Archi- 
plata-Archhelenis theory (In Reports 
of the Princeton University expeditions 
to Patagonia 1896-1899, vol. ii, pt. 1, 
Zoology, p. 227-3874. 7 pls. & fig. 
Princeton, 1905-11) 
Some new genera and species of 
fishes from British Guiana (Reports on 
the Expedition to British Guiana of the 
Indiana University and the Carnegie 
Museum 1908, no. 1) -Ann. Carnegie 
Mus., 1909, 6, 4-54. 1909.4 
Catalogue (and bibliography of} 
the freshwater fishes of tropical and 
south temperate America (In Reports 
of the Princeton University expeditions 
to Patagonia 1896-1899, vol. ii, pt. 2, 
Zoology, p. 375-511. Princeton, 1905- 
11) 1910.1 
Description of a new species of 
Pygidium. Ann. Carnegie Mus., 1911, 
7, 214. pl. 1911.1 
Description of two new tetra- 
gonopterid fishes in the British Museum. 
Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., 1911, 8. ser. 7, 
215-217. 1911.2 
New characins in the collection 
of the Carnegie Museum. Ann. Carne- 
gie Mus., 1911, 8, 164-181. 6 pls. & 2 
figs..s 1911.3 
— The Cuban blind fishes. Proc. 
7. Intern. Zool. Congr., Boston, 1907 
(1912), 697-698. 1912.1 
The freshwater fishes of British 
Guiana, including a study of the ecologi- 
cal grouping of species, and the relation 
of the fauna of the plateau to that of the 
lowlands. Mem. Carnegie Mus., 1912, 
5, 1-578. 103 pls. 1912.2 
The origin of the fish-fauna of 
the fresh waters of South America. 
Proc. 7. Intern. Zool. Congr., Boston, 
1907 (1912), 958-959. 1912.3 
For full account, see ‘‘ Reports of the Princeton 
University Expeditions to Patagonia,” vol. iii, 
1905-11. 
Some results from an ichthyolo- 
gical reconnaissance of Colombia, South 
America. Part I. Indiana Univ. Studies, 
1912) nox 16; 1-27. 1912.4 
This publication constitutes no. 8 of the Indi- 
ana University Bulletin, vol. 10. The ‘ Uni- 
versity Studies ’’ form a subseries of the Bulletin, 
the separate numbers of which are published at 
irregular intervals. 
