BIBLIOGR. APPENDIX—C. PRIMATES. 1001 
1875.—Ginther, A. Instructions for making observations on, and collecting specimens of, the mam- 
malia [not including cetacea] of Greenland. < Instr. for Use of Sci. Exped. to Arct. Regions, 
1875, pp. 36-39. (8°. London.) 
Osburn, W. Mammals of the Kansas plains. < Observer of Nature (newspaper published at 
Lawrence, Kansas) of Mar. 24, 1875. 
[Annotated list of 14 spp.] 
Reinhardt, J. Note on additional mammals of Greenland. ... < Man. Nat. Hist. ... of 
Greenland, ... 1875, p. 34. 
1876.—Allen, J. A. Description of some remains of an extinct species of wolf and an extinct species 
of deer from the lead region of the Upper Mississippi. <( Amer. Journ. Sci. and Arts, 3d 
ser. xi, no. 61, Jan. 1876, pp. 47-51. 
[Canis mississippiensis, Cervus whitneyi, spp. nn., p. 49.) 
Allen, J. A. Geographical variation among North American mammals, especially in respect to 
size. < Bull. U.S. Geol. Surv. Terr. vol. ii, no. 4, pp. 309-344. (Pub. Aug. 4, 1876.) 
{An important contribution to the subject.] 
Allen, J. A. Geographical variation among North American mammals, especially in respect to 
size. < Amer. Nat. x, 1876, pp. 625-627. aot 
[Abstract from Bull. U.S. Geol. Surv. Ter. vol. ii, no. 4, pp. 309-344 } : 
Carpenter, W.L. Field notes on the natural history of the Big Horn Mountains [Montana]. 
< Forest and Stream, Noy. 2, 1876, 
Coues, E. An account of the various publications relating to the travels of Lewis and Clarke, 
with a commentary on the zoological results of their expedition. < Bull. U. S. Geol. and 
Geog. Surv. Terr. no. 6, 2d ser. pp. 417-444 (8°, Washington, Government Printing Office, Feb- 
ruary 8, 1876). 
[The mammals and birds described by these authors are discussed and identified as far as practicable. ] 
Gibson, W.H. The complete American trapper, or the tricks of trapping and trap-making. 
A trapper’s repository,.... lvol. Sq.16°. 1 p.1., 1-6, i-xvi, 1-300 pp. Profusely illus- 
trated by the author, an artist by profession. New York, James Miller, publisher, 1874. 
(A very attractive and useful treatise, of popular charaeter.] 
Henshaw, H. W. Notes on the mammals taken and observed in California in 1875 by H. 
W. Henshaw. < Ann. Rep. of Chief of Engineers, U. S. Army, for 1876, Appendix JJ (pp. 
305-312 of separate issue). (Washington, Government Printing Office, “1876”; probably not 
published till 1877.) 
[An annotated list of 30 spp., containing many interesting observations on the habits of the mammals of 
Southern California and adjacent islands.] 
Jordan, D.S. Manual of the vertebrates of the northern United States, including the district 
east of the Mississippi River and north of North Carolina and Tennessee, exclusive of marine 
species. 12°, 342 pp. Chicago, Jansen, McClurg & Co., 1876. 
[Mammals, pp. 5-35.] 
Anon. Pending extermination of large game in America. < Rod and Gun, Dec. 30, 1876. 
[From The London Field.]} 
1877.— Couper, W. Notes on mammals of Canada. < Forest and Stream, June 14, 1877. 
Murphy, J.M. The hunting fields of Wyoming. < Rod and Gun, Dee. 30, 1877. 
[ Stockwell, G. A.] The fauna of Michigan. [pseudon. “Archer”.] < Forest and Stream of May 
3 and earlier, 1877. 
[Annotated list of mammals.] 
C._PRIMATES. 
1817.—Mcckel, J. FP. Beitrag zur Entwickelungsgeschichte der menscblichen Ziihne. < Deutsches 
Archiv fiir Phys. iii, 1817, pp. 556-574. 
1818.—Mitchill, S. L. The original inbabitants of America shown to be of the same family and line- 
age with those of Asia. < Phil. Mag. (Tilloch’s), xlviii, 1816, pp. 4-8; Isis von Oken, 1818, 
col. 315-319. 
1821.—Grifftth, E. General and particular descriptions of the vertebrated animals, arranged conform- 
ably to the modern discoveries and improvements in zoology. .. . . Order Quadrumana 
[and] order Quadrumembria.—London: printed for Baldwin, Cradock, and Joy, .... and 
Rodwell and Martin, .... mdecexxi. [8°. Quadrumana, (eng. title) vii,143 pp., 34 pll. ; 
Quadrumembria, (eng. title) v, 295 pp. 64 pll.] 
