ACCESSIONS TO THE LIBRARY. 165 
HamMILtTon.— Colgate University, Department of Geology: 
Circular of Information, Courses of Instruction, etc., 1894-’95, 20 pp. 
A. P. Brigham, Colgate University: 
The Composite Origin of Topographic Forms, by Albert Perry Brigham, Bulletin Am, 
Geog. Soc., Vol. XX VII, pp. 161-174. 
Drift Boulders between the Mohawk and Susquehanna Rivers, by A. P. Brigham, pp. 
213-228. American Journal of Science, Vol. XLIX, March, 1895. 
The New Geography, by Albert Perry Brigham, 8 pp. Appleton’s Popular Science 
Monthly for April, 1896. 
IrHAcA.—Cornell University—Agriculltural Experiment Station: 
Bulletins. 
M. V. Slingerland, Cornell University: 
Bulletin No. 93, Entomological Division. The Cigar-Case-Bearer in Western New York, 
by M. V. Slingerland, pp. 213-230; 11 figs. 
No. 104. Climbing Cutworms in Western New York, by M. V. Slingerland, pp. 553-600; 
5 pll.; 2 figs. 
No. 107. Wireworms and the Bud Moth, by M. Y. Slingerland, pp. 35-66; figs. 14-39. 
No. 108. The Pear Psylla and the New York Plum Seale, by M. V. Slingerland, pp. 68-86 ; 
figs. 40-47. 
No. 123. Entomological division, December, 1896. Green Fruit Worms, by M. V. Slinger- 
land, 14 pp.; 4 pll. 
NEw Bricuton.— Natural Science Association of Staten Island: 
Proceedings, Vol. IV, Nos. 13-20, pp. 56-89, title page and index. 
Vol. V, Nos. 1-10, 97 pp., title page and index. 
Vol. VI, Nos. 1 and 2, 10 pp. 
New YorkK.—Linnean Society of New York: 
Abstract of the Proceedings for the year ending March 7, 1890, 10 pp. 
For the year ending March 26, 1895, with notes on Cuban mammals, by Juan Gundlach, 
and salamanders found in the vicinity of New York city, with notes upon extra-limital or 
allied species, by William L. Sherwood, 42 pp. 
For the year ending March 24, 1896, the Snakes found within 50 miles of New York city, 
by R. L. Ditmars, 18 pp. 
New York Academy of Sciences: 
Transactions Vol XIV, 281 pp.; 49 pll. On Fluoplumbates, by Bohuslay Brauner, pp. 1-6. 
Dislocation in certain portions of the Atlantic coastal plain strata and their probable 
causes, by Arthur Hollick, pp. 8-20; 5 figs. On Enumeration of the plants collected by Dr. 
T. E. Wilcox and others, in southeastern Arizona in 1892-94, by N. L. Britton and T. H. 
Kearney, jr., pp. 21-44. Additional notes on the classification of lepidopterous larve, by 
Harrison G. Dyar, pp. 49-62; 4 figs. On a granite-diorite near Harrison, Westchester 
county, N. Y., by Heinrich Ries, pp. 80-86; 4 figs. Notes on certain variations in the Bio- 
logical characters of two species of bacteria, pp. 94-99. The Protolenus Fauna, by G. F. 
Matthew, pp. 101-153; 11 pll. A study of the Polarization of the light emitted by incandes- 
cent solid and liquid surfaces, by R. A. Millikan, pp. 155-185; 6 figs. Effusive and dike 
rocks near St. John, N. B., by W. D. Matthew, pp. 187-218; 6 pll.; 2 figs. Observations on 
the yolk nucleus in the eggs of Liumbricus, by Gray N. Calkins, pp. 222-230; 5 figs. The 
significance of muscular variations, illustrated by reversions of the antibrachial flexor 
group, by Geo. S. Huntington, pp. 231-259; 30 pll. Two new Cambrian graptolites, with 
notes on other species of Graptolitide of that age, by G. F. Matthew, pp. 262-273; 2 pll.; 
1 fig. 
Catalogue of Exhibits, March 13, 1895, 54 pp. ; 1 fig. 
New York Botanical Garden: , 
Bulletin of the New York Botanical Garden, Vol. I, No. 1, 21 pp.; 1 map. 
New York Microscopical Society: 
New York Microscopical Journal, a quarterly magazine, Vol. XI, Nos. 1-3, 1895, 96 pp.; 
pl. 45-51. The Dermal Armor of the Sturgeon, by George William Kosmak, pp. 1-21; pll. 
45-48. Some remarks on clarification, and also on a new clarifier for microscopical pur- 
poses, by Edwin A. Schultze, (from the German of Dr. Wilhelm Lenz, Zeitschr. f. wiss. 
Mikr. xi, 16, 1894,) pp. 22-26. Notes on the seventeen-year cicada, Cicada septendecim, by 
E. G. Love, pp. 37-46; pl. 49 (colored). An undescribed Vasicola with an interesting 
habit, by Dr. Alfred C. Stokes, pp. 47-51 (illustrated ). Interesting features of well-known 
plants of New York harbor, by Carlton C. Curtis, pp. 63-73; pll. 50 and 51. The Relation 
of aperture to the determination of minute structure, by Charles F, Cox, pp. 74-85. 
