82 PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL MUSEUM. vol. xxx. 



ADDITIONAL RICCORDS. 



Besides the stations given above, tlie following localities are repre- 

 sented by specimens in the United States National Museum: Barger's 

 Spring, near Hinton, West Virginia; Union County and Winehouse 

 Cave, Tennessee; Mammoth Cave, Kentucky, and Jefferson County, 

 Missouri, The following localities ma}' now be added to the Indiana 

 list: Maj^'field's and Truitt's caves, Ston}^ and Leonard's springs and 

 Griffey Creek, Monroe Count}'; and Twin Caves, Lawrence County. 



BIBLIOGRAPHY. 



Blatchley, W. S., Indiana caves and their fauna. Ann. Rep. Dept. Geol. Ind., 1896 

 (1897), pp. 121-212, pis. iv-xiii, figs. Habits and distribution. 



BuTLEB, A. W., Contributions to Indiana Herpetology, No. 3. Journ. Cin. Soc. Nat. 

 Hist., XIV, 1891-2, pp. 169-179. Sums up existing knowledge of the species. 



Cope, E. D., On a new species of Salamander from Indiana. Am. Nat., XXIV, 1890, 

 pp. 966-7, figs. {Gyrinopliihts macnUcandns.) 



Geographical Distribution, pp. 1199-1234 in The Crocodiiians, Lizards, and 



Snakes of North America. Ann. Rep. Smith. Inst., 1898 (1900), 1294 pp., 36 pis., 

 figs. The portion on distribution includes batrachia. 



EiGENMANN, C. H., Degeneration in the eyes of the cold-blooded vertebrates of the 

 North American caves. Proc. Ind. Ac. Sci., 1899 (1900), pp. 31-46. 



Degeneration in the eyes of the cold-blooded vertebrates of the North Amer- 

 ican caves. Science, N. S., XL, 1900, pp. 492-503. A reprint of the above. 



The Blind Fishes of North America. Pop. Sci. Mo., LVI, 1899-1900, pp. 



473-486, figs. Refers to and figures *S'. maculiraitdus. 



The eyes of the blind vertebrates of North America, II. The eyes of 



Typ}domol(je rathhuni Stejneger. Trans. Am. Micr. Soc, XXI, 1899, pp. 49-56, 

 pis. Ill and IV. Refers to *S'. macidicaudus and figures the eye. 



Description of a new cave salamander, Spelerpes stejnegeri, from the caves 



of southwestern Missouri. Trans. Am. Micr. Soc, XXII, 1901, pp. 189-192, 



pis. xxvii-xxviii. Refers to and figures S. macuHcaudus. 

 EiGENMANN, C. H., and Kennedy, C, Variation notes. Biol. Bull., IV, 5, April, 



1903, pp. 227-30, figs. Description and figures of a melanistic S. viaculicaudus!. 



The figures are reprinted on page 131 of " Indiana University, 1820-1904." Roy. 



Svo. Bloomington, Ind., 1904. 

 Gaines, Angus. Batrachia of Vincennes, Indiana. Am. Nat., XXIX, 1895, pp. 53-6. 

 Hay, O. p.. Note on Gyrinoplulus macidicaudus Cope. Am. Nat., XXV, 1891, pp. 



1 13.3-5. Points out inapplicability of Gyrliiophilus. Spelerpes must be substituted. 

 The Batrachians and Reptiles of the State of Indiana. Ann. Rep. Dept. 



Geol. Ind., 1891, pp. 409-602, pis. i-iii. Habits and distribution. 



EXPLANATION OF PLATES. 

 Plate VIII. 



Spelerpes moculiraudus (Cope). 



Fig. 1. Larva, 17.5 mm. long x 4. Lateral view. 



2. Larva, 21 mm. long x 4. Lateral view. 



3. Larva, 36.5 mm. long x 2. Lateral view. 



4. Larva, 48 mm. long x 2. Lateral view. 



5. Larva, 51.7 mm. long x 2. Lateral view. 



6. Young adult, 55 mm. long x 2. Lateral view. 



7. Young adult, 55.5 mm. long x 2. Lateral view. 



