126 U. S. BUREAU OF FISHERIES. 
JUDGE, JAMES. 
1911. A report on Walrus Island. Appendix A, Hearings before the Com- 
mittee on Expenditures in Department of Commerce and Labor, 
pp. 907-912. [A detailed account of this wonderful bird rookery 
and its birds. Additional information on natives’ egging expedi- 
tions is given on p. 1180.] 
MAILLIARD, JOSEPH, and G. DALLAS HANNA. 
1921. New bird records for North America, with notes on the Pribilof Island 
list. The Condor, Vol. XXIII, pp. 98-95, 1921. [Two species new to 
the Pribilofs are here recorded, and the entire list is corrected up 
to date, as shown in the notes herewith.] 
OBERHOLSER, Harry C. 
1918. Subspecies of Larus hyperboreus. The Auk, Vol. XXXV, p. 470, 1918. 
[Two subspecies of the glaucous gull are recorded here from the 
Pribilofs, one of them for the first time. ] 
invasions, dy lal 
1917. A bird new to the North American fauna. The Auk, Vol. XXXIV,. 
p. 210. [The Kamchatkan pine grosbeak, collected by A. H. Proc- 
tor, is here recorded from St. George Island. ] 
MISCELLANEOUS. 
ASELENG) ie, ees 
1902. The hair seals (family Phocide) of the North Pacific Ocean and Ber- 
ing Sea. Bulletin, American Museum of Natural History, Vol. 16, 
pp. 459-499, 1902. [On page 495 is described Phoca richarcii 
pribilofensis, a new subspecies from the Pribilof Islands, collected 
by ©. H. Townsend. On page 493 Phoca richardii is recorded from 
the islands, and on page 475 True’s record of the ribbon seal 
Histriophoca fasciata is repeated. Allen does not mention the 
bearded seal (Hrignathus barbatus) from the Pribilofs; it is known 
to have been taken on St. George Island on two occasions, however, 
the first authentic record having been made by C. E. Crompton 
from a specimen taken in the winter of 1917-18.] 
Banks, NATHAN; Harrison G. DyAr; TREVOR KINCAID; THEODORE PERGANDE} 
E. A. SCHWARZ; WILLIAM Harris ASHMEAD; and JuUSTUS WATSON FoLSomM. 
1900-1902. A series of papers by the above entomologists appeared in 
Proceedings, Washington Academy of Sciences, Vols. II and 
IV, recording insects collected by the Harriman Expedition in 
Alaska. The papers were reprinted verbatim in Vols. VIII 
and IX of the reports of the Harriman Expedition, published 
by the Smithsonian Institution in 1910. To them was added 
a paper on Myriapoda by O. F. Cook in which three species 
were listed from St. Paul Island, one of them new. [Many 
Pribilof species of insects are mentioned in the above series 
of papers and they will be found invaluable to those making 
a study of the insect life of the islands. ] 
CarpoT, JULES, and J. THRIoT. 
1900-1902. Mosses of Alaska. Proceedings, Washington Academy of 
Sciences, Vol. IV. A joint paper on mosses collected by the 
Harriman Expedition. 
CHAMBERLAIN, RALPH V. 
1921. Linyphiide of St. Paul Island, Alaska. Journal, New York Entomo- 
logical Society, Vol. XXIX, No. 1, pp. 35-42, Plates III and IV, 
March, 1921. [A collection of spiders made on St. Paul Island in 
1910 by Harold Heath is here described. Eleven species are listed 
of which six are described as new; four of them represent new 
genera, which are also described. ] 
COCKERELL, T. D. A. 
1898. New North American insects. Annals and Magazine of Natural His- 
tory, Ser. 7; Vol. II, p. 324, 1898. [On page 324 is described Bombus 
kincaidii, a new species of bumblebee from St. Paul Island, 
Alaska. ] 
DALL, Wo. H. 
1915. A new species of Modiolaria from Bering Sea. The Nautilus, Vol. 
XXVIII, No. 188, 1915. [Musculus phenar is described as new 
from specimens collected on kelp roots at St. George Island by G. 
Dallas Hanna.] 
