164 KANSAS ACADEMY OF SCIENCE. 
NEW JERSEY. 
TRENTON.—Wew Jersey Agricultural College Experiment Station, Byron D. Halsted, Botanist: 
Annual Report of Botanical Department for 1890, 130 pp.; 24 pll.; 6 figs. 
Annual Report for 1891, 105 pp.; 24 ills. 
Annual Report for 1892, 111 pp.; 35 ills. 
Annual Report for 1893, 149 pp.; 73 ills. 
Annual Report for 1894, 147 pp.; 81 ills. 
Annual Report for 1895, 187 pp.; 70 ills. 
NEW MEXICO. 
Las Cruces.—7.. D. A. Cockereil, Author: 
The Smaller Bees of the genus Andrena, found in New Mexico, by T. D. A. Cockerell, 6 pp. 
New Bees of the genus Halictus, from New Mexico, by T. D. A. Cockerell, 7 pp. 
On a small collection of Coccide from the Island of Grenada, by T. D. A. Cockerell, 3 pp. 
NEW YORK. 
ALBANY.—New York State Land Survey, Verplanck Colvin, Superintendent: 
Report on Progress, 1894, bound in green cloth, 406 pp.; 17 pll. Report on the Iron De- 
posits of the northeastern portion of the Adirondack region, with Industrial memoranda, 
pp. 159-176. Adirondack fishes, with descriptions of new species, from researches made in 
1882, by Fred. Mather, pp. 177-240; 1 pl. Plants of the Summit of Mt. Marcy, by Chas. H. 
Peck, pp. 243-254. Lepidoptera of the Adirondack region, by J. A. Lintner, pp. 257-287. 
The Winter Fauna of Mt. Marcy, by Verplanck Colvin, pp. 291-303; 2 pll. 
Joseph McDonough, ‘‘¥e Olde Booke Man”: 
Catalogues, regularly. 
AusBion.— Frank H. Lattin, Publisher: 
The Oologist, 1895, Nos. 1-4; 76 pp. Contains, besides other articles, Water Birds of 
Heron Lake, by P. B. Peabody, pp. 14-16. Notes on the Blue-headed Vireo in Massachu- 
setts, by J. H. Bowles, pp. 21 and 22. Breeding time of our birds in the extreme part of 
Western New York, by Edward Reinecke, pp. 45-47. Norway’s Bird Islands, Translated 
from Doctor Brehm’s ‘‘ From the North Pole to the Equator,” by Agnes Gaines, pp. 65-69. 
Walter F. Webb, Publisher: 
The Museum: A Journal devoted exclusively to research in natural science. Vol. I, Nos. 
3-12, 1895, pp. 65-380; numerous engravings. Contains, among other articles, Notes on the 
Nesting of the duck hawk, by William F. Wake, pp. 69 and 70. Industries of animals, by 
Frank C. Baker, pp. 71-76. Hudsonian Chickadee, by Winfred A. Stearns, pp. 76-78. The 
Chimney Swift, by C. O. Ormsbee, pp. 83-85. Vanilla and its cultivation, by F. H. Knowlton, 
pp. 88-90. Habits of certain rare northern birds in Commander Islands and Kamtskatka, by 
Leonhard Stejneger, pp. 101-102, Concretionary Granite, by C. O. Ormsbee, pp. 105 and 
106. Coral, pp. 106-109. On the Preparation of Mammal Skins for Study, pp. 109-112, 138- 
141. Notes on Whistling Swan, by Nathan L. Davis, pp. 114-116. American Dipper, Cin- 
clus mexicanus, by A. G. Prill, pp. 116-118. Winter Birds, by W. S. Johnson, pp. 118 and 
119. The Rodents of Michigan, by Morris Gibbs, pp. 145-152. An Ancient Lake in Central 
Vermont, by C. O. Ormsbee, pp. 172-176, 200-202. Notes on the reported extinction of the 
genus Achatinella and marvelous development of a Florida fasciolaria, by John Ford, 
pp. 180-181. Red-shouldered Hawk, by Arthur M. Farmer, pp. 187-188. The American 
flamingo, by Adolphe B. Covert, pp. 202-204. Asphaltum and the Pitch Lake of Trinidad, 
by W. O. Crosby, pp. 205-210. New or little-known plants, pp. 211-214. An Arizona agave, 
pp. 215 and 216. The swallow-tailed kite, Hlanoides forjficatus, pp. 229-233. Cyprea, by 
Dr. T. H. McCoy, pp. 233-236. Directions for collecting and preserving fish, by Tarleton H. 
Bean, pp. 236-240. The Everglade Kite, pp. 242-246. Lobster Hatching at the Woods Holl, 
Mass., station of the U.S. F.C., by C. C. Purdum, pp. 247-248. Occurrence of nickel ore 
at Keokuk, Iowa, by Geo. M. Crofts, pp. 248-249. Changes in land and sea, by Chas. T. 
Whiting, pp. 266-268, 297-299. The Florida gopher or land tortoise, by Charles H. Coe, pp. 
99-302. Giant kites for scientific purposes, pp. 302, 303. An Hour with Baird’s and Le- 
conte’s sparrows near St. Louis, Mo., by O. Widman, pp. 305-309. The American crow, pp. 
309-316. The Great Auk, Alea impennis, pp. 325-327. Notes on hibernating mammals, by 
C. C. Abbott, pp. 327-330. Our friend, the skunk, by W. H. Kitchell, pp. 332-336. Breeding 
habits of toads, by F. P. G., in “Outdoor World,” pp. 339-340. Meteorites, pp. 345-350. 
Keokuk Geology, by Geo. M. Crofts, pp. 358-360. Notes on the northern raven in Maine, by 
A. H. Norton, pp. 361-368. The gigantic birds of Southern Patagonia, pp. 363-368. 
Vol. II, Nos. 1-3 and 5-12. Showy sea shells, pp. 17-22; 21 figs. The summer cruise of 
the Albatross, pp. 41-45; 3 ills. Showy sea shells, pp- 69-72; 13 figs. Rare birds in On- 
tario, by J. Maughan, pp. 128-131. The Antarctic continent, by C. O. Ormsbee, pp. 240-245. 
Vol. III, Nos. 1and 2. Land and fresh-water shells of Dodge county, Wisconsin, pp. 11-12. 
