1032 MONOGRAPHS OF NORTH AMERICAN RODENTIA. 
1874.—"T. J. S.” The white-tailed deer. < Forest and Stream, Dee. 17, 1874. 4 
“Wolverine.” Deer shedding their horns. < Am. Sports. 1874. 
Anon. Albino deer from South Carolina. < Forest and Stream, March 5, 1874. 
Anon. The antlered doe. < Am. Sports. May 2, 1874. 
Anon. The buffalo’s fate. <Am. Sports. Dec. 19, 1874. 
[On the trade in flesh and bones. From the New York Tribune.) 
Anon. (W.F. Parker.). Elk antlers. < Am. Sports. Feb, 21, 1874, with fig. 
Anon. Elk antlers. < Am Sports. March 21, 1874. 
Anon. Large antlers [of Cervus canadensis]. Forest and Stream, March 5, 1874. 
Anon. On migration of buffalo. < Am. Sports. Noy. 21, 1874. 
Anon. The quadrupeds of Arctic lands [on reindeer]. < Forest and Stream, March 5, 1874. 
Anon. Slaughter of reindeer. < Am. Sports. March 7, 1874. 5 
Anon. Stratagem in deer hunting. < Am. Sports. Jan. 24, 1874. 
Anon. Woodland cariboo, or American reindeer, of Newfoundland. < Forest and Stream, 
July 2, 1874. 
1875.—Alaska [i. e., H. W. Elliott]. The leap of the bighorns [Ovis montana]. < Am. Sports. Marcl. 
13, 1875. 
Batty, J.H. Diseased liver in deer. < Forest and Stream, Jan. 7, 1875. 
Batty, J. H. [On presence of a canine tooth in Cariacus virginianus.] < Vorest and Stream, 
Feb. 6, 1875. 
Caton, J.D. Antlers [their mode of growth, etc.]. < Rod and Gun, Noy. 27, 1875. 
Caton, J.D. Wounds from deers’ antlers. < Am. Sports, April 10, 1875. 
Coues, E. Chips from the buffalo’s workshop. < Forest and Stream extra, printed for special 
distribution, April 1, 1875. 
[A humorous contribu tion to scatology.] 
“BE.” Does with horns. < Forest and Stream, Jan. 28, 1875. 
Fitzinger, L. J. Die Gattungen der Familie der Hirsche (Cervi) nach ihrer natiitlichen Ver- 
wandtschaft. < Sitz. d. K. Akad. Wiss. math.-naturw. Classe, Ixviii, 1. Abth. 1874, pp. 332-362. 
Flower, W.H. On the structure and affinities of the musk deer (Moschus moschiferus, Linn.). 
< Proc. Zool. Soe. Lond. 1875, pp. 159-190, many figg. 
{Includes an important examination of the structure and classification of the ruminants at large.) 
“Pacific.” No gallin deer. < Forest and Stream, Feb. 4, 1875. 
“Tahawas.” Freaks of nature in deer. < Forest and Stream, Feb. 11, 1875. 
“W. W.E."’ Worms in deers’ livers. < Forest and Stream, Jan. 28, 1875. 
1876.—Allen, J. A. Memoirs of the Geological Survey of Kentucky. | N. 8. Shaler, director. | Vol. i, 
Part ii. | — | The American bisons, | living and extinct. | By J. A. Allen. | With twelve plates 
and map. | — | University press, Cambridge: | Welch, Bigelow, & Co. | 1876. 
Memoirs of the Museum of Comparative Zodlogy, | at Harvard College, Cambridge, Mass. | 
Vol. iv. No.10.|—| The American bisons, | living and extinct. | By J. A. Allen. | Published 
by permission of N. §. Shaler, director of the .Kentucky | Geological Survey. | With 12 plates 
and a map. | University press, Cambridge: | Welch, Bigelow, & Co. | 1876. 
4°. pp. ivix, 1-246, 1 col. map, 12 pll., 13 l., 2 woodcuts in text. Ed. of 500 copies. 
[These two publications were simultaneous, and only differ in the titles. The following are the contents:— 
Title. p.i. 
eines note (N.S. Shaler). p. iii. 
Introduction. pp. v-ix. 
Part I. 
1. Distinctive characteristics and affinities of the bisons. pp. 1-3. 
2. General historical account of the remains of extinct bisons hitherto found in North America. pp. 3-7. 
3. Description of the extinct species. pp. 7-31. 
4, Geographical distribution and geological position of the remains of the extinct bisons of North America, 
pp. 32-35. 
5. Relation of the existing species of bisons to the extinct species. pp. 35, 36. 
6. Description of the existing species. pp. 36-70. 
