HUS 
BIBLIOGRAPHY OF FISHES 
615 
The systematic relationships of 
certain American arthrodires. Bull. 
Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 1909, 26, 263-— 
272. pl. & 8 figs. 1909.2 
Bibliography of Bashford Dean, 
1887-1909 [Privately printed] W ashing: 
ton, D.C. 1910. -12'p. 8°. 1910.1 
Louis Agassiz’s later views on 
the classification of fishes. Science, 
1910, n. s. 82, 925-926. 1910.2 
See also Eastman, C. R. Agassiz’s work on 
fossilfishes. Amer. Naturalist, 1898, 32, 170-185. 
The newly discovered goblin 
shark of Japan. Scient. Amer., 1910, 
102, 186. 3 figs. — Current Literature, 
1910, 48, 402-403. 4 figs. 1910.8 
Notes on the behavior and re- 
eo of Amphioxus. Science, 1910, 
s. 31, 475. 1910.4 
—— The spoonbill fishery of the 
lower Mississippi. Trans. Amer. Fish- 
eries Soc., 1910, 245-247. 1910.5 
Vertebrate paleontology and the 
evidences for recapitulation. Pop. Sci. 
Monthly, 1910, 77, 304-307. 1910.6 
Notes on some upper Devonian 
Arthrodira from Ohio, U.S. A., in the 
British Museum (Natural History) 
Geol. Mag., 1911, 5. dec. 8, 123-128. 
pl. & 3 figs. 1911.1 
The Permian fishes of North 
America (In Case, H.C. Review of the 
Amphibia and Pisces of the Permian of 
North America. Carnegie Inst. Wash- 
ington, 1911, Publ. no. 146, 153-178. 
7 pls. & 4 figs.) 1911.2 
The spoonbill fishery of the 
lower Mississippi. Amer. Mus. Journ., 
LOT S225 eS) es: — Fishing 
Gazette, 1911, 28, 993-995. 6 figs. 
Abstract in Ann. N. Y. Acad. Sci., 1911, 
21, 207. 1911.3 
The Cretaceous chimeroids of 
North America. Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. 
Hist., 1912, 31, 195-228. 2pls. 1912.1 
An extinet giant-shark. The 
race probably died out through its own 
rapacity. Scient. Amer. Suppl., 1912, 73, 
2256 2) figs: 1912.2 
Note on an embryo of Pristis 
cuspidatus. Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. 
Hist., 1912, 31, 327-330. 2 figs. 1912.3 
Notes on Devonie fishes from 
Scaumenac bay, Quebec. Bull. N. Y. 
State Mus., 1912, no. 158, 127-139. 3 
pls. & 6 figs. 1912.4 
(Review of} Les poissons wealdi- 
ens de Bernissart by R. H. Traquair, 
Science, 1912, n. s. 35, 306. 1912.5 
The spawning habits of the sea- 
lamprey, Petromyzon marinus. Amer. 
Naturalist, 1912, 46, 729-740. 5 figs. 
Abstract in Science, 1912, ily Se 35, 460— 
461. — Ann. N. Y. Acad. Sci. , 1912, 22, 
358. 1912.6 
Description of four new Palo- 
zoic fishes from North America. Bull. 
Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 1913, 32, 245— 
250. pl. & 2 figs. 1913.1 
Ramsay Heatley Traquair. Sci- 
ence, 1913, n. s. 37, 509-511. 1913.2 
Sea-lampreys and their nests. 
Amer. Mus. Journ., 1913, 18, 323-325. 
3 figs. 1913.3 
Fishes swallowed by gar-pike. 
Copeia, 1914, no. 11, 2. 1914.1 
Notes on a small collection of 
fishes from Patagonia and Tierra del 
Fuego. Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 
1914, 33, 85-94. 2 figs. 1914.2 
On two ambicolorate specimens 
of the summer flounder, Paralichthys 
dentatus, with an explanation of ambicol- 
oration. Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 
1914, 33, 95-100. 2 figs. 1914.3 
[Review of} A catalogue of the 
fishes of Japan by David Starr Jordan, 
Shigeho Tanaka and John Otterbein 
Snyder. Science, 1914, n. s. 39, 178-179. 
1914.4 
—— The capture of a basking shark 
on Long Island. Copeia, 1915, no. 21, 
1-3. 1915.1 
Fishes of the deep sea. Amer. 
Mus. Journ., 1915, 15, 249-253. 4 figs. 
1915.2 
Toad-stones a myth. N. Y. 
Evening Post, Nov. 27, 1915, sect. 3, 
p. 3. 1915.3 
Refers to detached teeth of the fossil ganoid 
Lepidotus. 
The lung-fish remains of the 
Coal Measures of Ohio, with special 
reference to the supposed amphibian 
Eurythorax of Cope. Bull. Amer. Mus. 
Nat. Hist., 1916, 35, 127-133. 1916.1 
A new pyenodont fish, Celodus 
syriacus, from the Cretaceous ‘of Syria. 
Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 1916, 35, 
135-137. 1916.2 
