150 KANSAS ACADEMY OF SCIENCE.” 
The lichen-flora of Chicago and vicinity, by William Wirt Calkins,52pp. (Bulletin No.1, 
Geol. and Nat. Hist. Survey.) 
#ield Columbian Museum: Publication 2. Vol.I, No.2. The authentic letters of Colum- 
bus, by William Eleroy Curtis, pp. 91-202; 18 illustrations. 
Publication 3. Geological series, Vol. 2 No.1. Handbook and catalogue of the meteor- 
ite collection, by Oliver C. Farrington, pp. 1-80; 6 pll. 
Publication 4. Botanical series, Vol. I, No.1. Contribution to the flora of Yucatan, by 
Charles Frederick Millspaugh, 64 pp.; 4 pll. 
Publication 5. Zoological series, Vol. I, No. 1. On the structure and development of 
the vertebral column of Amia, by O. P. Hay, 62 pp.; 3 colored plates. 
Publication 6. Keport series, Vol. I, No.1. Annual report of the dirsctor to the board 
of trustees for the year 1894-95, 80 pp. 
Publication7. Zoological series, Vol. I, No.2. On certain portions of the skeleton of 
Protostega gigas, by O. P. Hay, pp. 55-56; pll. rv and v. 
Publication 8. Anthropological series, Vol. I, No.1. Archeological studies among the 
ancient cities of Mexico, by Wm. H. Holmes, 138 pp.; 18 pll.; 41 figs. 
Publication 9. Botanical series, Vol. I, No.2. Flora of West Virginia, by Charles eh 
erick Millspaugh and Lawrence William Nuttall, pp. 65-276; pll. v-v11. 
Publication 10, Ornithological series, Vol. I, No.1. Contribution to the ornithology of 
San Domingo, by George K. Cherrie, 26 pp. 
Publication 11. Zoological series, Vol. I, No. 3. On sundry collections of mammals, by 
D. G. Elliot, pp. 65-95; pll. vi1-x111; figs. 1-3. 
Publications 12 and 13. On some collections of fishes and on the skeleton of Toxochelys 
latiremis, by O. P. Hay, pp. 85-106; 2 pll. 
Publication 14. Annual report of the director to the board of trustees for the year 1895-’96, 
pp. 8-106. 
University of Chicago —Department of Geology: Journal of Geology, semi-quarterly, about 
120 pageseach. Vol. III, 1895, 1004 pp.; 10 pll.; and numerous figures and views. The basic 
massive rocks of the Lake Superior region, by W. S. Bayley, part V, pp. 1-20; figs. 1-4. A 
petrographical sketch of gina and Methana, by Henry S. Washington. Part II, pp. 21-46, 
133-168; 2 diagrams. Lake basins created by wind erosion, by G. K. Gilbert, pp. 47-49. 
On Clinton conglomerates and wave marks in Ohio and Kentucky, by Aug. F. Foerste, pp. 
50-60, 169-197. Glacial studies in Greenland, Le) T. C. Chamberlin, pp. 61-69, 198-218, 
469-480, 565-582, 668-681; pl. Iv; figs. 15-16, 17-22, 23-30, 31-42, 48-51; 1 map. Studies for 
students: Agencies which transport materials on the earth’s surface, by Rollin D. 
Salisbury, pp. 70-97. Sedimentary measurement of cretaceous time, by G. K. Gilbert, pp. 
121-127. Use of the aneroid barometer in geological surveying, by C. W. Rolfe, pp. 128-137; 
pll. rt. The classification of European glacial deposits, by James Geikie, pp. 241-269. 
The classification of American glacial deposits, by T. C. Chamberlin, pp. 270-277. The 
variations of glaciers, by Harry Fielding Reid, pp. 278-288. Stratigraphy of the Saint 
Louis and Warsaw formations in southeastern Iowa, by C. H. Gordon, pp. 289-311; pl. v; 
figs. 1-6. Algonkian rocks of the Grand Canon of the Colorado, by Charles D. Walcott, pp. 
312-330; pl. v1; fig. 1. New light on isostasy, by G. K. Gilbert, pp. 331-334. Studies for 
students: James D. Dana, as a teacher of geology, by Oliver C. Farrington, pp. 335-340. 
Mesozoic changes in the faunal geography of California, by James Perrin Smith, pp. 369- 
384. The age and succession of the igneous rocks on the Sierra Nevada, by H. W. Turner, 
pp. 385-414; pl. vir; figs. 1-3. The stratigraphy of the California coast ranges, by H. W. 
Fairbanks, pp. 415-433. Studies in the Neocene of California, by George H. Ashley, pp. 434— 
454; pll. viti-x. Some cretaceous beds of Rogue river valley, Oregon, by F. M. Anderson, 
pp. 455-468; 4 sections. Studies for students: Geologic study of migration of marine in- 
vertebrates, by James Perrin Smith, pp. 481-495. Notes on the glacial deposits of south- 
western Alberta, by George M. Dawson, pp. 507-511. Experimental application of the 
photo-topographical method of surveying to the Baird glacier, Alaska, by Otto J. Klotz, 
pp. 512-518. The cambro-silurian question in Missouri and Arkansas, by C. R. Keyes, pp. 
519-526. Notes on the examination of a collection of interglacial wood from Muir glacier, 
Alaska, by F. H. Knowlton, pp. 527-532; fig. 1. Lake Passaic: An extinct glacial lake, by 
R. D. Salisbury and H. B. Kummel, pp. 533-560; map of Lake Passaic. Description of a 
new species of Petalodus ( P. securiger) from the carboniferous of Illinois, by O. P. Hay, 
pp. 561-564; figs. 1 and 2. James Dwight Dana, and his work as a geologist, by Henry 
Shaler Williams, pp. 601-621. Glacial and interglacial deposits near Toronto, by A. P. 
Coleman, pp. 622-645; 2cuts. Origin of certain features of coal basins, by H. Foster Bain, 
pp. 646-654; figs. land 2. Preglacial gravels on the quartzite range near Baraboo, Wis., 
by R. D. Salisbury, pp. 655-667. The classification of the upper paleozoic rocks of central 
Kansas, by Charles S. Prosser, pp. 682-705; 2 illustrations. The Greenland expedition of 
1895, by Rollin D. Salisbury, pp. 875-902. A circuminsular paleozoic fauna, by S. Weller, 
