114 REPORT OF THE SECRETARY. 



1196. The Revival of Inorganic Chemistry, by H. N. Stokes. (From the Smith- 

 sonian Report for 1898, images 289-306. ) Octavo pamphlet. 



1197. Scientific Ballooning, by Reverend John M. Bacon. (From the Smith- 

 sonian Report for 1898, pages 307-319.) Octavo pamphlet. 



1198. The Tundras and Steppes of Prehistoric Europe, by Professor James Geikie. 

 (From the Smithsonian Report for 1898, pages 321-347, with colored map.) Octavo 

 pamphlet. 



1199. Modification of the Great Lakes by Earth Movement, by C. K. Gilbert. 

 (From the Smithsonian Report for 1898, pages 349-361.) Octavo pamphlet. 



1200. The Plan of the Earth and its Causes, by J. W. Gregory. (From the 

 Smithsonian Report for 1898, pages 363-388.) Octavo pamphlet. 



1201. Funafuti: The Story of a Coral Atoll, by W. J. Sollas. (From the Smith- 

 sonian Report for 1898, pages 389-406.) Octavo pamphlet. 



1202. Oceanography, by M. J. Thoulet. (From the Smithsonian Report for 1898, 

 pages 407-425.) Octavo pamphlet. 



1203. The Relation of Plant Physiology to the Other Sciences, by Doctor Julius 

 Wiesner. (From the Smithsonian Report for 1898, pages 427-444. (Octavo pam- 

 phlet. 



1204. Pithecanthropus erectus: A form from the Ancestral Stock of Mankind, by 

 Eugene Dubois. (From the Smithsonian Report for 1898, pages 445^59, with three 

 plates. ) Octavo pamphlet. 



1205. On our Present Knowledge of the Origin of Man, by Ernst Haeckel. (From 

 the Smithsonian Report for 1898, pages 461—480.) Octavo pamphlet. 



1206. The Laws of Orientation among Animals, by Captain G. Reynaud. (From 

 the Smithsonian Report for 1898, pages 481-498.) Octavo pamphlet. 



1207. The Fresh-Water Biological Stations of the World, by Henry B. Ward. 

 (From the Smithsonian Report for 1898, pages 499-513.) Octavo pamphlet. 



1208. The Theory of Energy and the Living World. The Physiology of Alimen- 

 tation. By A. Dastre. (From the Smithsonian Report for 1898, pages 515-549.) 

 Octavo pamjjhlet. 



1209. The Economic Status of Insects as a Class, by L. O. Howard. (From the 

 Smithsonian Report for 1898, }mges 551-569.) Octavo pamphlet. 



1210. Recent Advances in Science, and their Bearing on Medicine and Surgery, 

 by Professor R. Virchow. (From the Smithsonian Report for 1898, pages 571-578.) 

 Octavo pamphlet. 



1211. A Sketch of Babylonian Society, by F. E. Reiser. (From the Smithsonian 

 Report for 1898, pages 579-599.) Octavo pamphlet. 



1212. The Excavations of Carthage, by Philippe Berger. (From the Smithsonian 

 Report for 1898, pages 601-614. ) Octavo pamphlet. . 



1213. The Transportation and Lifting of Heavy Bodies by the Ancients, by 

 J. Elfreth Watkins. (From the Smithsonian Report for 1898, pages 615-619, with 

 4 jilates. ) ( )ctavo pamphlet. 



1214. The Past Progress and Present Position of the Anthropological Sciences, by 

 E. W. Brabrook. (From the Smithsonian Report for 1898, pages 621-636.) Octavo 

 pamjihlet. 



1215. The Origin of African Civilizations, by L. Frobenius. (From the Smith- 

 sonian Report for 1898, pages 637-650, with a colored map. ) Octavo pamphlet. 



1216. Dogs and Savages, by Doctor B. Langkavel. (From the Smithsonian Report 

 for 1898, pages 651-675. ) Octavo pamphlet. 



1217. The Life and Works of Brown-Sequard, by M. Berthelot. (From the 

 Smithsonian Report for 1898, pages 677-969. ) Octavo pamphlet. 



Report upon the condition and progress of the U. S. National Museum during the 

 year ending June 30, 1897, by Charles D. Walcott, acting assistant secretary of the 

 Smithsonian Institution in charge of the U. S. National Museum. ( From the Annual 

 Report of the U. S. National Museum for 1897, pages 1-245.) Octavo pamphlet, 



