﻿f^28 
  PROCEEDINGS 
  OF 
  THE 
  NATIONAL 
  MUSEUM. 
  vol. 
  xx. 
  

  

  He 
  was 
  president 
  of 
  the 
  Washington 
  Biological 
  Society 
  for 
  the 
  years 
  

   1883 
  and 
  1884; 
  vice-president 
  of 
  the 
  American 
  Association 
  for 
  the 
  

   Advancement 
  of 
  Science 
  in 
  1889, 
  and 
  in 
  the 
  same 
  year 
  he 
  was 
  elected 
  

   a 
  member 
  of 
  the 
  United 
  States 
  National 
  Academy 
  of 
  Sciences. 
  The 
  

   degree 
  of 
  LL. 
  I), 
  was 
  conferred 
  npon 
  liim 
  in 
  1893 
  by 
  the 
  Iowa 
  State 
  

   T'niversity, 
  and 
  in 
  the 
  same 
  year 
  he 
  was 
  elected 
  to 
  corresponding- 
  

   membership 
  in 
  the 
  following 
  foreign 
  academies 
  and 
  scientiflc 
  societies: 
  

   The 
  Geological 
  Society 
  of 
  London 
  ; 
  Isis 
  Gesellschaft 
  flir 
  Naturtuude, 
  

   Dresden; 
  E. 
  Accademia 
  Yaldarnese 
  del 
  Poggio, 
  Moutevarchi; 
  K. 
  K. 
  

   Geologische 
  Eeichsanstalt, 
  Vienna, 
  and 
  in 
  the 
  KaiserlicheLeopoldinisch- 
  

   Carolinische 
  Deutsche 
  Akademie 
  der 
  Naturforscher, 
  Halle 
  an 
  der 
  Saale. 
  

  

  152. 
  

  

  White, 
  C. 
  A. 
  The 
  Permian 
  Formation 
  in 
  North 
  America. 
  <^I5nll. 
  Philos. 
  Sof. 
  Wash- 
  

   ington, 
  vol. 
  iii, 
  pp. 
  104-105. 
  Washington, 
  1S80. 
  

  

  A 
  brief 
  review 
  of 
  tliose 
  North 
  American 
  strata 
  which 
  had 
  been 
  recognized 
  as 
  of 
  Penuian 
  

   age. 
  It 
  was 
  inadvertently 
  omitted 
  from 
  the 
  preceding 
  list. 
  

  

  153 
  

  

  White, 
  C. 
  A. 
  Descripcion 
  de 
  un 
  gran 
  Fossil 
  Gasteropodo 
  del 
  estado 
  de 
  Puehla 
  

   (Mexico). 
  <^L'a 
  Xaturalcza, 
  tomo 
  vi, 
  ])p. 
  219-221, 
  with 
  two 
  iigures. 
  City 
  of 
  

   Mexico, 
  1882. 
  

  

  This 
  is 
  a 
  translation 
  into 
  Spanish 
  and 
  a 
  republication, 
  by 
  Professor 
  Mariano 
  Barceua, 
  of 
  Xo. 
  

   89 
  of 
  the 
  preceding 
  list, 
  from 
  which 
  it 
  was 
  inadvertently 
  omitted. 
  The 
  fossil 
  described 
  is 
  

   lylostoina 
  i^rinceps 
  White. 
  

  

  154. 
  

  

  White, 
  C. 
  A. 
  [Administrative 
  Eeport 
  for 
  the 
  year 
  1883-84] 
  <^Fifth 
  Annual 
  Keport 
  

   of 
  the 
  Director 
  of 
  the 
  U. 
  S. 
  Geological 
  Survey, 
  pp. 
  50-51. 
  Washington, 
  1885. 
  

   Inadvertently 
  omitted 
  from 
  the 
  preceediug 
  list. 
  

  

  155. 
  

  

  White, 
  C. 
  A. 
  [Administrative 
  Report 
  for 
  the 
  year 
  1884-85] 
  <Sixth 
  Annual 
  Keport 
  

   of 
  the 
  U. 
  S. 
  Geological 
  Survey, 
  i)p. 
  42-44. 
  Washington, 
  1885. 
  

   Inadvertently 
  omitted 
  from 
  the 
  preceding 
  list. 
  

  

  156. 
  

  

  White, 
  C. 
  A. 
  Notes 
  on 
  the 
  Mesozoic 
  and 
  Cenozoic 
  paleontology 
  of 
  California. 
  

   <13ulletin 
  U. 
  S. 
  GeologicalSurvey 
  No. 
  15, 
  pp. 
  1-33. 
  Washington, 
  1885. 
  

  

  It 
  is 
  claimed 
  that 
  the 
  Chico 
  and 
  Tejon 
  formations 
  constitute 
  a 
  continuous 
  series; 
  that 
  the 
  

   Aucella-beariug 
  Auriferous 
  Slates 
  are 
  equivalent 
  to 
  the 
  Knoxville 
  division 
  of 
  the 
  Shasta 
  

   formation, 
  and 
  no 
  species 
  of 
  Cretaceous 
  fossils 
  of 
  the 
  Pacific 
  Coast 
  region 
  have 
  been 
  satis- 
  

   factorily 
  identified 
  witlt 
  any 
  from 
  either 
  the 
  interior 
  or 
  Atlantic 
  Coast 
  regions. 
  It 
  was 
  

   inadvertently 
  omitted 
  from 
  tbo 
  jirccediug 
  list. 
  

  

  157. 
  

  

  W^HITE, 
  C. 
  A. 
  On 
  the 
  Fresh 
  Water 
  Inveitebrates 
  of 
  the 
  North 
  American 
  Jurassic. 
  

   Bulletin 
  U. 
  S. 
  Geological. 
  Survey 
  No. 
  29, 
  pp. 
  1-41, 
  pis. 
  i-iv. 
  Washington, 
  1886. 
  

  

  This 
  bulletin 
  contains 
  a 
  summary 
  of 
  all 
  the 
  known 
  North 
  American 
  fresh 
  water 
  Jurassic 
  

   invertebrates, 
  and 
  all 
  are 
  iigured. 
  They 
  are: 
  

  

  Page. 
  

  

  Uniofelehii, 
  n. 
  s 
  Ifi 
  

  

  v. 
  iruloides, 
  n. 
  s 
  17 
  

  

  V. 
  lapUloides, 
  n. 
  s 
  18 
  

  

  V. 
  iiiacropisthui, 
  u. 
  s 
  ... 
  17 
  

  

  V.nucalis 
  Meek 
  & 
  Haydeu 
  19 
  

  

  