VIII EVOLUTION 



1 GENERAL 



B&iley, I. W. The evolutionary history of the foHar ray in 

 the wood of the dicotyledons, and its phylonenetio sipiifi- 

 caoce [London. 1912.) 

 "BibUottraphy." p. 660. 



and Sinnott, E. W. Anatomical evidences of reduc- 

 tion in certain of the Amentiferae. [Chicago. 1914.) 



"BibUography." p. 58. 



A botanical index of cretaceous and tertiary climates. 



[New York. 1915.) 



The climatic distribution of certain types of angio- 



sperm leaves. (Lancaster, Pa. 1916.) 



Bailey, L. H. Sketch of the evolution of our native fruits. 



.•^(■f PoMdUKlV — T'nited St.\te.s. 

 Bateson, William. The methods and scope of genetics. 



Cambridge [Eng.]. 1908. 



Problems of genetics. New Haven, etc. 1913. 



The progress of genetics .since the rediscovery of 



Mendel's papers. (Jena. 1906.) 



•■ Bibliograpby," pp. 412-418. 



BesBey, C. E. Bailev's Survival of the unlike. [Review. 

 Haston. etc. 1897.) 



Evolution and classification. [Lincoln, Neb. 1894.) 



The phvlogenv and taxonomv of angiospenns. 



[Chicago. 1897.1 



Brooks, W. K. The law of heredity. (Reviewed by Asa 



(Iray in AnHofer reriew, 1884, i, 208-214.) 



Carnegie institution, Washinglon, D. C. Announcement 

 rpf ."Station for experimental evolution, Cold Spring Harbor, 

 New York [Washington. 1905.] 



Chauveaud, Gustave. La constitution et revolution luor- 

 phologique du corps chez les plantes vasculaires. [Paris. 

 1914. 1 



Cloa, Dominique. De I'origine de la v£g6tation du globe. 

 [Toulouse. 1867.] 



Cook, O. F. Methods and causes of evolution. Washington. 



l'M)H. 



Coulter, J. M. The origin of gymnosperms and the seed 



habit .See flVMNOSPERMAE. 



Darwin, Charles. The effects of cross- and self-fertilization 

 in the vegetable kingdom. (Reviewed by Asa Gray in 

 American journal of tcienee and arlt, 1877, 3d ser., xiii, 125- 

 141.) 



On the origin of species by means of natural selection, 



or the preservation of favored races in the struggle for life. 

 New ed., frotii ihi- tith English ed. New York. 1873. 



■Mt, E. M., and Hayes, II. K. Heterozygosis in evolution 

 and m plant brec<ling. Washington. 1912. 



" BilJioirrBphy," pp. 4ft-5l. 



Farlow, W. G. The conception of species as affected by 

 ri'i-iit invextigations on fungi. Boston. 1898. 



Vegetable parasites and evolution. Salem, Mass. 



1887. 



OatM, K K. The nutcnal [nc| basis of Mendelian pheno- 

 mena New York. 1910. 

 " (.iicratur* dt«d," p. il3. 



Omelin, J. G., praeses. Sermo academicus de novarum 

 vcgetabilium post creationem divinam exortu. Tubingse. 

 (1749.) 



Hall, H. C. van. Over het verdwijnen en ontstaan van 

 soorten (species) in het plantenrijk. Amsterdam. 1867. 



Harris, J. A. The selective elimination of organs. [New 



York. 1910.] 

 Lotsy, J. P. Vortriige Uljer botanische stammesgeschichte, 



gehalten an der Reichsuniversitiit zu Leiden. Bd. i, ii ; iii, 1 . 



Jena. 1907-11. 



"Litcratur." i, 764-775; ii, 780-815. 



MacDougal, D. T. Alterations in heredity induced by 

 ovarial treatments. [Chicago. 1911.] 



Discontinuous variation. (New York. 1906.] 



Discontinuous variation in pedigree-cultures. [New 



York. 1906.) 



- Heredity and environic forces. Washington. 1907. 

 MacMillan, Conway. Some considerations on the alterna- 

 tion of generations in plants. Lincoln. 1896. 



"List of papers referred to," pp. 36—41. 



Macnamara, N. C. Organic evolution: Darwinian and 



de Xricsian. Washington. 1912. 

 Meehan, Thomas. Bud varieties. 



nrnr. Acad. nal. sci. Phila., 1870, pp. 128-130. 



Objects of sex and of odor in flowers. Philadelphia. 



1881. 



Variations in natiu-e. Salem, Mass. 1883. 



Naudin, Charles. L'h<5r6dit^ et I'inn^itf. [Paris. 1888.) 



•- On the nature of heredity and variability in plants. 



(Reviewed by Asa Grav in American journal of science artd 



iirts. 1876, 3(f ser., xi, 1.5.V1.56.I 

 Noll, Fritz. L'eber frostharte knospeu-variationen. 



l.anJirirltchaflliehe jahrbiicher, 1885, xiv, 707-712. 



Pokomy, Alois. De I'origine des plantes alpines, traduit 

 dc I'allemand par .\. ft-eudhomme de Borre. (Li^ge. 

 1871.) 



Punnett, K. ('. Mendelisni. 3d ed. New York. 1911. 



Shull, G. H. Importance of the mutation theory in practical 

 breeding. (Washington. 1907.) 



A new Mendelian ratio and several types of latency. 



(Boston, etc. 1908.) 



The " presence and absence " hypothesis. [New 



York. 1909.) 



Some new cases of Mendelian inheritance. [Chi- 

 cago 1908] 



Sinnott, K W. The anatomy of the node as an aid in the 

 cltus.sificati()ii of angiospenns. [Lancaster, Pa. 1914.) 



and Bailey, I. W. I'oliar evidence as to the ancestry 



and early climatic environment of the angiosperms. (Lan- 

 caster, Pa. 191. 5.) 



Nodal anatomy and the morphology of stipules. 



[Lancaster, Pa. 1914."] 



The origin and dis|>ersal of herbaceous angiospcrms. 



(I^mdon, etc. 191 1.) 



Strasburger, Eduard. l'eber die Ixxleutung phyloge- 

 notisihcr niethoden fUr ilii' crforschung lebender wesen. 

 .lonn I.S71. 



