162 



EEPOET OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1912. 



EosE, J. N. A new Ecbeveria from 



Mexico. 



Journ. Washingt on 

 Acad. Sci., 1, No. 9. 

 Dec. 4, 1911, pp. 

 267-269, 1 fig. 



• Tumanioca, a new genus of 



Cuciirbitaceae. 



Contr. U.S. Nat. Herl).. 

 16, pt. 1, Feb. 13, 

 1912, p. 21. pi. 17. 



(See also under N. L. Britton.) 



and Paul C. Standlet. Report 



on a collection of plants from the 

 pinacate region of Sonora. 



Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb., 



16, pt. 1, Feb. 13. 



1912, pp. 5-20, pis. 



3-16, fig. 1. 



Smith, John^ Donnell. Undescribed 

 plants from Guatemala and other 

 Central American republics. — 

 XXXIV. 



Bot. Gazette, 52, No. 1, 

 July, 1911, pp. 

 45-53. 

 Standlet, Paul C. The Allioniaceae 

 of Mexico and Central America. 



Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb., 

 13, pt. 11, .July 12. 

 1911, pp. i-ix, 377- 

 430, pis. 74-77. 

 A list of all the members of 

 this family known from southern 

 North America, with keys to 

 the genera and species. The 

 new genus Pisoniella is de- 

 scribed, and 22 new species in 

 various genera. 



The American species of Fa- 



gonia. 



Proc. Biol. Soe. Waah- 

 inpton, 24, Dec. 23, 

 1911, pp. 24.3-250. 



Standlet, Paul C. — Continued. 



A monograph of the species 

 of the New World, recognizing 

 12 species of which 4 are de- 

 scribed as new. 



Three new plants from Alberta. 



Smithsonian Misc. 

 Colls., 56, No. 33, 

 Feb. 7, 1912, pp. 

 1-3. 



A new leather flower from Illi- 

 nois. 



Smithsonian Misc. 



Colls., 56, No. 34, 



Feb. 7, 1912, pp. 



1-3, pi. 1. 



Description of a new species 



of Viorna from southern Illinois. 



Wootonella, a new genus of 



Carduaceae. 



Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash- 

 ington, 25, .Tune 29, 

 1912, pp. 119, 120. 



( See also under J. N, Rose and 



E. O. Wooton.) 



Williams, R. S. New or Interesting 



mosses from Panama. 



Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb., 

 16, pt. 1, Feb. 13, 

 1912, pp. 23, 24. 



\yooTON, E. O.. and Paul C. Standlet. 

 The grasses and grass-like plants of 

 New INIexico. 



Bull. New Mex. Agric. 



Exp. Station, 81, 



1911, pp. 1-175. 



(Issued May, 1912.) 



A discussion of the grasses 



of New Mexico from an economic 



standpoint ; also includes a list 



of the species with keys for 



their identification. 



GEOLOGY AND MINERALOGY. 



Merrill, George P. A second meteoric 

 find from Scott County, Kansas. 



Proc. V. S. Nat. Mus., 

 42, No. 1905, June 

 15, 1912, pp. 295, 

 296, pi. 39. 

 Contains a brief petrographi- 

 cal description of a stone evi- 

 dently belonging to a fall, a 

 single individual of which had 

 been described in a previous pa- 

 per as belonging possibly to the 

 Jerome fall. The name Scott 

 City meteorite was applied. 



Pogue, Joseph B. Mineralogische Mit- 

 teilungen. 



Zeitschr. fUr Krystallo- 

 graphie und Miner- 

 alogie, 49, pt. 5, 

 1911, pp. 455-458, 

 pi. 7. 

 Crystallographic descriptions 

 of (1) calamine crystals from 

 Chihuahua, Mexico; (2) a bio- 

 tite - phlogopite - r u t i 1 e inter- 

 growth showing asterism, from 

 Ottawa, Canada ; and (3) pseu- 

 domorphs of marcasite after 

 pyrrhotite, from Prussia. 



