BIBLIOGR. APPENDIX—G. PERISSODACTYLA. 1033 
Parr II. 
1. Geographical distribution, past and present, of Bison americanus. pp. 71-191. 
2. Products of the buffalo. pp. 191-201. 
3. The chase. pp. 202-215. 
4. Domestication of the buffalo. pp. 215-271. 
Appendix i. pp. 223-231. 
Appendix ii (N.S. Shaler). pp. 232-236. 
Index. pp. 237-240. 
Map and 12 plates, each with unpaged explanatory leaf. 
A complete and thoroughly reliable history of the most conspicuous and most important quadruped of Amer 
ica, prepared with the greatest care and pains, after protracted and patient research, by one of the most eminent 
therologists of the country.] 
1876.—Caton, J.D. The American antelope or prong buck. < Am. Nat. x, 1876, pp. 195-205, with 13 
fiow. 
oD 
Caton, J.D. A new Californian deer [C. macrotis var. cealifornicus]. < Rod and Gun, Aug. 12, 
1876. 
Caton, J.D. A new Californian deer [Cervus macrotis var. californicus]. < Am. Nat. x, 1876, 
pp- 464-469. _ 
G. W.B. Hunting wapiti on the Loup. < Forest and Stream, May 4 and 11, 1876. 
Murphy, J.M. Animals and scenery of the Northwest. < Rod and Gun, June 17, 1876. 
{Chiefly relates to Ovis montana.] 
Petrie, J.L. Antelope hunting in Kansas. < Forest and Stream, Noy. 9, 1876. 
Severtzoff, N. [Identity of Cervus canadensis with the Persian deer, C. maral.] < Nature, 
Noy. 16, 1876, p. 66. 
1877.—Allen, J. A. History of the American bison, Bison americanus. <Ann. Rep. U. S. Geol. 
Surv. Terr. for 1875, 1877, pp. 443-587. [Ed. of 7,000 cop.; also separate, 1,000 eop.] 
[A republication of the original memoir (see 1876) under Dr. Cones’s editorship, with the following changes:— 
1. The omission of the illustrations, explanatory pages, and textual references. 
2. The omission of the portion relating to the extinct species, the present reprint being confixed to the one 
existing species, beginning at page 36 of tho orginal. 
3. The incorporation of the appendices in the body of the text. 
4. The addition of much new matter by the author himself. 
5. Various minor modifications with the slight alteration, chiefly verbal, of context incident thereto. 
6, Alteration of the title and substitution of editorial preface for the preliminary matter of the original. 
No editorial abridgment or digest of any part of the memoir was made, the portions of the memoir here repro- 
duced being according to copy furnished by author, who added much new matter and made some little changes 
passim in the context. A few editorial notes, chiefly explanatory of modifications of the text, are introduced 
in brackets.] 
Caton, J.D. The | antelope and deer | of | America. | A comprehensive scientific treatise upon 
the natural | history, including the characteristics, habits, | affinities, and capacity for domés- | 
tication of the | Antilocapra and Cervidx of North America. | By | John Dean Caton, LL. D. | 
New York: | published by Hurd & Houghton. | Boston: H. O. Houghton and Company. | 
Cambridge: The Riverside Press. | 1877. 1 vol. 8°. pp. i-xyi(inel. titles and portrait), 
17-426, with 54 woodcuts. 
[In most respects the best treatise extant on the subject. Of the Cervide, all of which the author refers to 
the genus Cervus, 8 N. Amer. spp. are recognized :—CC. alces, canadensis, taraudus, tarandus arctica, macrotis, 
columbianus, virginianus, and acapulcensis.] 
“El Cazador.” Big horn [Ovis montana] hunting in California. < Forest and Stream, Jan. 
11, 1877. 
Murphy, J. M. Shooting the mountain goat. < Rod and Gun, Jan. 6 and 11, 1877. 
Snow, M. A deer hunt in California. < Forest and Stream, Feb. 22, 1877. 
“Penobscot.” Antlered docs. < Forest and Stream, Mar. 8, 1877. 
“Penobscot.’’ Habits and peculiarities of the moose. < Forest and Stream, Feb. 22, 1877. 
Anon. Fate of the buffalo—its successors. < Forest and Stream, Mar. 15, 1877. 
Editorial—Restoration of the Sivatherium. < Am. Nat. xi, July, 1577, pp. 435, 436, figg. 81, 82. 
G.—PERISSODACTYLA. 
(Including titles of a few articles on related fossil orders for which no separate head has been made.} 
1733.—Lamorier, —. Mémoire ot l’on donne les raisons pourquoi les cheyaux ne vomissent point. 
< Mém. Acad. Sci. Paris, 1733, pp. 511-516. 
