412 W. Bateson 



Bibliography. 



This list is far from complete in a bibliographical sense, but I tnist that no 

 title of importance is omitted. 



In compiling it I have not felt it necessary to include special notices of the 

 various publications in which the "biometrical"' school have persistently impugned 

 the accuracy and significance of Mendelian results. These papers, with references 

 to many others of the same class may be found by those curious to see them in the 

 jiublished volumes of Biometrika. 



Similarly I have not attempted here to discuss the papers in which Darbi- 

 shire (44) has recorded his extensive experiments on the colours of mice, or the 

 voluminous treatises which profess to be an investigation of heredity in the Shirley 

 Poppy. [Biometrika II and IV.) The former work would certainly be important 

 were it possible to disentangle the materials it contains. The studies of the Shirley 

 Poppy are of a diiferent character, and their value may be surmised from the fact 

 that the fathers of the offspring recorded were unknown, the mother-plants being 

 left uncovered, freely exposed to the visits of insects. 



1) Allen, G. M., The heredity of coat color in mice. Proc. Am. Acad. Arts and 



Sei., Vol. XL No. 2. 1904. [See also Castle.] 



2) Bateson. W., Mendel's Principles of Heredity. Cambridge 1902. 



3) — , Note on the Resolution of Compound Characters by Crossbreeding. Proc. 



Camb. Phil. Soc, Vol. XII Nr. VI p. 50. 1902. 



4) — , The present state of knowledge of colour-heredit}' in mice and rats. Proc. 



Zool. Soc, 190^, Vol. II p. 71. [On p. 73 the use of the terms "Cinnamon 

 Agouti" and Golden Agouti is accidentally reversed.] 



5) — , Variation and Differentiation in Parts and Brethren. Printed for the author. 



Camoridge 1903. 



6) — , Presidential address to Section D. Brit. Ass. Report Cambridge. 1904. 



7) — , An address on Mendelian Heredity and its application to Man. Brain. XXIX, 



1906. p. 157. 



8) — , and Gregory, R. P., On the inheritance of Heterostylism in Primula. 



Proc. Roy. Soc. B., Vol. 76, 1905, p. 581. 



9) — . and Punnett, R. C, A suggestion as to the nature of the walnut Comb in 



Fowls. Proc. Camb. Phil. Soc, XIII, 1905, p. 165. 



10) —, and Saunders, E. R., Reports to the Evolution Committee of the Royal 



Society. I. 1902. 

 10 a) —, —, and Punnett, R. C. Ibid. II. 1905. 

 10b) —, —, — . Ibid. III. 1906. 



11) Bell, A. Graham, On the development by Selection of Supernumerary Mammae 



in Sheep. Science, IX. 1899, p. 637; ibid., XIX, 1904, p. 767; also Multi- 

 nippled Sheep, privately printed. Washington 1904. 



12) Biff en, R. H., Mendel's laws of Inheritance and Wheat breeding. Journ. 



Agric. Sei., I, i. Cambridge 1905. 



