BIBLIOGRAPHY. 107 
Tennessee discovered in 1823, Pimelodus lutescens ; it was three feet long, excellent to eat, of a 
olivaceous yellow colour, belly white, jaws equal, eyes round, tail forked, first dorsal falciform, 
second dorsal nearly as large as the anal.’’—(RAF., l. c., p. 20.) 
“T send you also the figures ard descriptions of five new fishes No. 3 to 7. Zonipus punctatus, 
Semotilus notatus, Lepemiurus fasciolatus and bilineatus, Luxilus auratilus and Zonargyra virescens. 
All observed in the waters of Kentucky since publishing my Ichthyology 7f the Ohio in 1820, 
except the Lepemiurus.”—(RAF., l. c., p. 22.)] 
RICHARDSON (John). Fauna-Boreali-Americana; or the Zoology of the North- 
ern Parts of British America containing descriptions of the objects of Natural 
History collected on the late Northern Land Expeditions under command of Cap- 
tain Sir John Franklin, R.N. Partthird. TheFish. By John Richardson, M. D., 
F. R.S., F. L. S., Member of the Geographical Society of London, and Wernerian 
Natural History Society of Edinburgh ; Honorary Member of the Natural History 
Society of Montreal, and Literary and Philosophical Society of Quebec; Foreign 
Member of the Geographical Society of Paris; and Corresponding Member of the 
Academy of Natural Science of Philadelphia; Surgeon and Naturalist to the Expe- 
ditions.—Illustrated by numerous plates.—Published under the authority of the 
Right Honorable the Secretary of State for Colonial Affairs—London: Richard 
Bentley. New Burlington Street-—MDCCCXXXVI. 
[Describes n. sp. Silurus (Pimelodus) cenosus and S. (P.) borealis ; also P. nigricans Le Sueur 
called by error ‘ S. (P.) nigrescens”; and refers to the ‘‘ Pimelodon livrée” of Le Sueur as Pime 
ledus insigne. | 
STORER (David Humphreys). A Report on the Fishes of Massachusetts. By D. 
Humphreys Storer, M.D. < Boston Journal of Natural History, vol. ii, 1889, pp. 
289-558. 
{Describes Pimelodus nebulosus.] 
CUVIER (Georges Chrétien Leopold Dagobert) and VALENCIENNES 
(Achille). Histoire Naturelle des Poissons par M. le B.°= Cuvier, Pair de France, 
Grand Officier de la Légion d’honneur, Conseiller de Etat et aux Conseil royal de 
VInstruction publique, ’un des quarante de ’Académie frangaise, Associé libre de 
VAcadémie des Belles-Lettres, Secrétaire perpetuelle de celle des Sciences, Membre 
des Sociétés et Académies royales de Londres, de Berlin, de ( étersbourg, de Stock- 
holm, de Turin, de Gettingue, des Pays-Bas, de Munich, de Modéne, etc.; et par 
M. A. Valenciennes, Professeur de Zoologie au Muséum @’Histoire naturelle, Mem- 
bre de l’Académie royale des Sciences de Berlin, de la Société Zoologique de Lon- 
dres, etc. Tome quinzidme. A Paris, chez Ch. Pitois, éditeur, rue de la Harpe, 
n°. 81. Strasbourg, chez V*®. Lévrault, rue des Juifs, n°. 33, 1840. 
[Contains descriptions of sp. nov. Pimelodus punctulatus, P. furcatus, P. furcifer, P. lemniscatua 
(P. livrée, Le S.), and accounts of seven previously described American species, viz, P. catus, 
ceenosus, borealis, albidus, nebulosus, nigricans, and ceneus. | 
THOMPSON (Zadock). History of Vermont, natural, civil, and statistical. Bur- 
lington, Vermont, 1842. 
{Contains description of n. sp. Pimelodus vulgaris, considered as doubtfully new, and descrip- 
tions and small figures of two or three other species.) 
DEKAY (James E.). Zoology of New York, or the New York Fauna; comprising 
detailed descriptions of all the animals hitherto observed within the State of New 
York, with notices of those occasionally found near its borders and accompanied 
by appropriate illustrations. By James E. Dekay. Part iv. Fishes.—Albany: 
printed by W. & A. White & J. Visscher, 1842. 
(Describes sp. n. Pimelodus atrarius and P. pullus'; also describes P. nigricans and P. catus, with 
notices of various other species. ] 
