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KANSAS ACADEMY OF SCIENCE. 
nomena, by A. M. Worthington, pp. 197-212; 15 pll.; 1 fig. The waste and conservation of 
plant food, by Harvey W. Wiley, pp. 213-235. Four days’ observations at the summit of 
Mount Blanc, by M. J. Jansen, pp. 237-247. Weather making, ancient and modern, by Mark 
W. Harrington, pp. 247-270. Variation of latitude, by J. K. Rees, pp. 271-279. Develop- 
ment of the cartography of America up to the year 1570, by Sophus Ruge, pp. 281-296; 29 pll. 
Antarctica, a vanished austral land, by Henry O. Forbes, pp. 297-316. The promotion of 
further discovery in the Arctic and the Antarctic regions, by Clements R. Markham, pp. 
317-341. The physical condition of the ocean, by W. J. L. Wharton, pp. 314-356. The origin 
of the oldest fossils and the discovery of the bottom of the ocean, by W. K. Brooks, pp. 
259-376. The relations of physiology and chemistry to morphology, by Giulio Fano, pp. 
377-389. The work of the physiological station at Paris, pp. 391-412; 9 pll.; 3 fig. The method 
of organic evolution, by Alfred R. Wallace, pp. 413-435. The part played by electricity in 
the phenomena of animal life, by M. Ernest Salvay, pp. 437-450. The influence of certain 
agents in destroying the vitality of the typhoid and of the colon bacillus, by John §S, Bil- 
lings and Adelaide Ward Peckham, pp. 451-458. Modern developments of Harvey’s work 
in the treatment of diseases of the heart and circulation, by T. Lander Brunton, pp. 459- 
478. Ants’ nests, by August Forel, pp. 479-505; 2 pll. Evolution of modern society and its 
historical aspects, by R. D. Melville, pp. 507-521. Migration and food quest, a study in the 
peopling of America, by Otis T. Mason, pp. 523-539; 1 pl. The Guanches: the ancient in- 
habitants of Canary, by J. W. Gambier, pp. 541-553; 15 figs. Psychology of prestidigita- 
tion, by Alfred Binet, pp. 555-571. A discovery of the Greek horizontal curves in the Maison 
Carree at Nimes, by Wm. Henry Goodyear, pp. 573-588; 6 pl. The methods of archeolog- 
ical research, by Sir Henry Howorth, pp. 589-608. The art of casting bronze in Japan, by 
W. Gowland, pp. 609-651; 7 pll.; 7 figs. Study and research by Rudolph Virchow, pp. 653- 
665. Scientific problems of the future, p. 679. Founding of the Berlin university and 
transition from the philosophic to the scientific age, by Rudolph Virchow, pp. 681-695. The 
Institute of France in 1894, by M. Loewy, pp. 697-708. Herman yon Helmholtz, by Arthur 
A. Rucker, pp. 709-718. Sketch of Heinrich Hertz, by Helene Bonfort, pp. 719-726. 
Contributions to Knowledge. No. 980. On the densities of oxygen and hydrogen and on 
the ratio of their atomic weights, by Edward W. Morley, 117 pp.; 40 figs. 
No. 989. The composition of the expired air and its effects upon animal life, by J.S. Bil- 
lings, S. Weir Mitchell, and D. H. Bergey, 80 pp. 
No. 1033. Argon, a new constituent of the atmosphere, by Lord Rayleigh and Prof. Wil- 
liam Ramsay, 43 pp.; 5 figs. 
No. 1034. Atmospheric actinometry and the actinic constitution of the atmosphere, by 
E. Duclaux, 48 pp. 
No. 981. (Vol. XXX) Oceanic Ichthyology, a treatise on the deep sea and pelagic fishes 
of the world, based chiefly upon the collections made by the steamers Blake, Albatross and 
Fish Hawk in the northwestern Atlantic, with an atlas containing 417 figures, by George 
Brown Goode and Tarleton H. Bean, 553 pp. Bound in cloth. Vol. XXXI, atlas to above, 
123 pl. Bound in cloth. 
No. 985. Life-histories of North American birds, from the parrots to the grackles, with 
especial reference to their breeding habits and eggs, by Charles Bendire, 518 pp.; 7 colored 
lith. pll. Bound in cloth. 
Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections, 15x24 cm., unbound. No. 971. Indexes to the 
literatures of cerium and lanthanum, by W. H. Magee, 44 pp. No. 972. Index to the lit- 
erature of didymium, 1842-1893, by A. C. Langmuir, 22 pp. No. 1037. Methods for the de- 
termination of organic matter in the air, by David Hendricks Bergey, 28 pp.; 3 figs. 
An account of the Smithsonian Institution, its origin, history, objectsand achievements, 
by G. Brown Goode, 1895, 36 pl.; 6 illustrations. 
Fe ee of the Smithsonian Institution at the Cotton States Exposition, Atlanta, 
95, 40 pp. 
Smithsonian Institution — Bureau of Ethnology, J. W. Powell, Director: Annual Reports 
of the Director, 21x29 em., bound in olive-green cloth. Thirteenth Report, for the year 
1891-92, 462 pp.; 60 pll.; 330 figs. Prehistoric textile artof eastern United States, by William 
Henry Holmes, pp. 3-46; pll. 1-1x; figs. 1-28. Stone art, by Gerard Fowke, pp. 47-187; figs. 
29-278. Aboriginal remains in Verde valley, Arizona, by Cosmos Mindeleff, pp. 179-261; pll. 
x-L; figs. 279-305. Omaha dwellings, furniture, and implements, by James Owen Dorsey, 
pp. 263-288 ; figs. 306-327. Casa Grande ruin, by Cosmos Mindeleff, pp. 289-319; pll. LI-Lx; 
figs. 328-330. Outlines of Zuni creation myths, by Frank Hamilton Cushing, pp. 321-448. 
Bulletins: Commemoration of the fourth centenary of the discovery of America, 398 pp.; 
42 pl.; 157 figs. 
History of the participation of the United States in the Columbian Historical Exposi- 
tion at Madrid, by Rear-Admiral Stephen B. Luce, United States Navy, pp. 1-18; pll. 1-111. 
Report upon the collections exhibited at the Columbian Historical Exposition, by 
Daniel G. Brinton, pp. 19-90. 
