1475 



SOCIETIES AXD CLUBS (continued) 

 SCIENCE (APPLIED, MEDICAL, NATURAL, POLITICAL, &c.) (continved)-^ 

 Smithsonian Institution. Contributions to Knowledge (continued): 



Vols. 



13. (1) Kane (E. K.) Tidal Observations in the Arctic Seas 1853-55, reduced 

 and discussed by C. A. Schott. 



(2) MacClintock (Sir Leopold). Meteorological Observations in the Arctic Seas, 

 mkie on board "The Fox," 1857-59, reduced and discussed by C. A. Schott. 



(3) "Whittlesey (C.) Ancient Mining on the Shores of Lake Superior. 



(4, 5, 6) Bache (A. D.) Discussion of the Magnetic and Meteorological Observations 

 made at the Girard College Observatory, 1840-45. Parts II to VI. 



(7) Bache (A. D.) Records and Results of a Magnetic Survey of Pennsylvania 

 and Parts of the Adjacent States in 1840 and 1841 ; with some Additional 

 Records and Results of 1834, 1835, 1843, and 1862. 



(8) Mitchell (S. W.) and Morehouse (G. R.) Researches upon the Anatomy and 

 Physiology of Respiration in the Chelonia. 



14. (1) Bache (A. D.) Discussion of the Magnetic and Meteorological Observations 

 made at the Girard College Observatory in 1840-45. Third and Fourth Sections. 



(2) Draper (Henry, M.D.) On the Construction of a Silvered Glass Telescope, 

 15^ in. aperture, and its Use in Celestial Photography. 



(3) Meek (F. B.) and Hayden (F. V.) Palaeontology of the Upper Missouri ; a 

 Report upon Collections made principally by the Expeditions under Lieutenant 

 G. K. Warren in 1855-56. Invertebrates ; Part I. 



(4) Leidy (Joseph, M.D.) Cretaceous Reptiles of the United States. 



15. (1) Newcomb (S.) Investigation of the Orbit of Neptune, with General 

 Tables of its Motion. 



(2) TMiittlesey (Charles). On the Fresh- Water Glacial Drifts of the North- 

 western States, 



(3) Pumpelly (Raphael). Geological Researches in China, Mongolia, and Japan 

 during 1862-65. 



(4) Hayes (Isaac I., M.D.) Physical Observations in the Arctic Seas, made on 

 the West Coast of North Greenland, &c. during 1860-61. Reduced and 

 discussed by C. A. Schott. 



16. (1) Dean (John, M.D.) The Gray Substance of the Medulla Oblongata and 

 Trapezium. 



(2) Cleaveland (Parker). Results of Meteorological Observations made at 

 Brunswick, Maine, between 1807 and 1859. Reduced and discussed by 

 C. A. Schott. 



(3) Hildreth (S. P.) Results of Meteorological Observations made at Marietta, 

 Ohio, between 1826 and 1859 ; to which are added Results of Observations 

 taken at Marietta, by Joseph Wood, between 1817 and 1823. Reduced and 

 discussed by C. A. Schott. 



(4) Pickering (Chas.) On the Gliddon Mummy Case in the Smithsonian Museum. 



(5) Cofiin (Professor James H.) The Orbit and Phenomena of a Meteoric 

 Fire-Bali seen July 20, 1860. 



(6) Gould (Benjamin Apthorp). On the Transatlantic Longitude. 



(7) Swan (James G.) The Indians of Cape Flattery, at the entrance to the 

 Strait of Fuca, Washington Territory. 



17. Morgan (Lewis H.) Systems of Consanguinity & Afl&nity of the Human Family. 



18. (1) Tables and Results of the Precipitation, in Rain and Snow, in the L^nited 

 States ; and at some Stations in adjacent parts of North Ajnerica, and in 

 Central and South America. Discussed under the direction of Joseph Henry. 

 (2) StockweU (John N.) Memoir on the Secular Variations of the Elements 

 of the Orbits of Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and 

 Neptune ; with Tables of the same. Together with the Obliquity of the 

 Ecliptic and the Precession of the Equinoxes in both Longitude and Right 

 Ascension, 



