764 PROCEEDINOS OF THE NATIONAL MUSEUM. vol. xxviii. 



1893. NuTTiNc (('. t'. ). — Report on Zouliijii'"'' l'"xi>l<>rrtti()n8 on the Lower Saskatch- 

 ewan Itiver during Summer of ISill. 



1895. Mkhhiam (C. Mart.). — Synopsi.s of the Ameriean Shrews of the Genus Sorex. 

 North American Fauna, No. 10, pp. 57-98. 



IS9H. Ai.i.KN (J. A.). — Revision of tiie Chickarees, or Nortii American Red Squirrels 

 (Suhgenus Tamiasciurus). Author's edition, Bulletin of the American 

 Museum of Natural History, X, pp. 249-298, 22 July. 



1899. lv[issKi,i. (Fuank). — Explorations in the Far North. Report of an Expedition 

 under the Auspices of the University of Iowa during the Years 1892-1894, 

 with Observations on Natural History of (irand Rapi<ls. 



1899. I'uEBLE (Edward A.). — Revision of the Jumping Mice of the (ienus Zapus. 

 North American Fauna, No. 15. 



1899. WiLLSON (Beckles). — The Great Comi)any. Being a History of the Hon- 



ourable Company of Merchants- Adventurers trading into Hudson's Bay. 



1900. BuYCE (George). — The Remarkable History of the Hudson's Bay Company, 



Including that of the French Traders of North-Western Canada and of the 



North-West, XY, and Astor Fur Companies. 

 1900. Merriam (C. Hart). — Descriptions of 26 New Mammals from Alaska and 



British North America. Procefnlings of the Washington Acadeni}- of Sciences, 



1900, pp. lo-30. 

 1902. Preble (Edward A.). — A Biological Investigation of the Hudson's Bay 



Retiion. North American Fauna, No. 22. 



LIST OF PLATES. 



Plate XXX. 



(Facing page 673.) 



The Ramparts on Mackenzie River. The river here is only about one-third its 

 usual width, l)ut is 8H0 feet deep. It is forced between two great perpendicular 

 stretches of sandstone rock, from 180 to 800 feet high, and continues so for about 

 1 mile, when it again widens out. 



Plate XXXI. 



(.Facing page 68S.) 



Fort McPherson, the most northerly post of the Hudson's Bay Company. It is 

 on Peel River, within the Arctic Circle, 2,000 miles north of Edmonton. The mid- 

 night sun shines here for al)Out two weeks. Tlie Eskimo frequently come as far 

 south as McPherson to trade. 



Plate XXXII. 



(Fiicing page 702.) 



Huilson's Bay Company's j:)ost, Chipewyan, on Athabasca Lake, 500 miles north 

 of Edmonton. 



Plate XXXIII. 



(Facing page 784.) 



Hislup and Nagle trading steamer, bringing their supplies into the post at Resolu- 

 tion, (ireat Slave Lake. 



Plate XXXIV. 



(Facing page 7.'')0.) 



Fort Good Hope, Hudson's Bay Comjtany, on the Arctic Circle, Mackenzie River. 



