4C)0 Bibliographical Notice. 



I\'(/s. S A, Sb. Eozoon cnjiaJense. Vertical sections, showing Nummu- 

 litid shells mostly laid open, but partly (in fig. 8 b) showing 

 thin outer walls and pores, a (in fig. 8 a), stolon uniting 

 four shells and passing through infundibulum in each shell. 



Ft;/. 9. liozooti cnnadense. Vertical seL'tion at and near surface, showing 

 sup])lenientary canal-system ramifying in supplementary 

 skeleton and pseudopodia (in olivine) forming a branching 

 network outside the specimen; at base five large Nummu- 

 litid shells, with their surfaces ground down, so that the shells 

 are opened. X 1^. 



BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTICE. 



Recsnt Foreign awl Colonial Natural History Periodicals. 



(1) Annnles Seientijiques de VUn'versite de Jasstj. Tome vii. 



3™" Fascicule. Juillet 1932. 



(2) Sijuthsonian Institutioii, U.S. Nat. Jlhis. BidletinlQ. Asteroidea 



of the North Pacific, and Adjacent Waters. By Walter 

 Kbnrick Fisher, Assistant Professor of Zoplogy, Stanford 

 University, California. Parti. Phanerogamia and Spinidosa. 

 "Washington, ]yil. 



(3) Proccc'lings of the Washington Acadeing of Sciences. Yol. xiii. 



1911. 



(4) Records of the Indian Museum. (A Journal of Indian Zoologg.) 



Vol. vii. part 3. July 1912. 



(1) Ikclctdes a very varied assortment of papers on mineralogy, 

 Crustacea, cave-fauna, Protozoa, parasites of Trichoptera, &c. 



(2) An exceedingly elaborate publication, of which it is stated 

 that " The region covered by the present report, embraces the 

 western coast of North America from the thirty-second parallel of 

 latitude to Point Barrow on the Arctic Ocean, all of Bering Sea, 

 the coast of Asia from East Cape to Sakhalin, and the Kuril 

 Islands. It thus includes all the waters north of a line drawn from 

 the southern end of Sakhalin to the southern boundary of the 

 United States 



" In tho preparation of this report six thousand nine hundred and 

 twenty-seven specimens have been listed, and many more examined " 

 belonging to seven principal collections. 



This report runs to 419 quarto pages, and is illustrated by 122 

 excellent plates. 



(3) Includes papers on the mammals of the Lake Maxinkuckee 

 Region; the collapse of recent beds at Staunton, Virginia; remarks 

 on the fossil turtles accredited to the Judith River formation ; and 

 on the systematic value of Rana chinensis, Osbeck. 



(4) Includes a series of short pajjers on Gordius, CheJonia, Ollgo- 

 chceta, Sgmhiotica, a freshwater Medusa, a new Thrips, Crinoids, 

 Earthworms, Aj)its, &g., and on malaria mortality. 



