182 



FOSSIL VERTEBRATA OF NORTH AMERICA. 



[BULL. 179. 



Osborn, H. F. Continued. 1896 C 



Prehistoric quadrupeds of-the Rockies. 



The Century Magazine, lii, pp. 705-715, with 

 8 engravings illustrating restorations of fossil 

 mammals. 

 1897 A 



Lambdotherium not related to Palseo- 

 gyops or the Titanotheres. 



Amer. Naturalist, xxxi, pp. 55-57. 

 1897 B 



Reconstruction of Phenacodus pri- 

 rmews, the most primitive ungulate. 



Amer. Naturalist, xxxi, p. 980. 



A synopsis of a paper read before the Brit. 

 Assoc. Adv. Sci. at Toronto, 1897. 



An abstract of this paper is found on p. 684 

 of the report of the meeting. 



1897 C 



Trituberculy : A review dedicated to 

 the late Professor Cope. 



Amer. Naturalist, xxxi, pp. 993-1016. 



Appended is a bibliography of the subject. 

 The paper is reviewed by M. Schlosser in 

 Neues Jahrb. Mineral, 1901, i, p. 151. 



1897 D 



Report on the phylogeny of the early 

 Eocene Titanotheres. 



Anatom. Anzeiger, xiii, p. 551. 

 Report of paper read before New York Bio- 

 logical Society, Apr. 5, 1897. See also Science 

 (2), vi, p. 107. 



1897 E 



The origin of the teeth of the Mam- 

 malia. 



Science (2), v, pp. 576-577. 



1897 F 



The Ganodonta, or primitive Eden- 

 tates with enameled teeth. 



Science (2), v, pp. 611-612. 



1897 G 

 The Huerfano Lake basin, southern 



Colorado, and its Wind River and 

 Bridger fauna. 



Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist, ix, pp. 247-258. 



Brief review in Neues Jahrb. Mineral., 1900, 

 p. 132. 



1898 A 

 Paleontological problems. 



Science (2), vii, pp. 145-147. 



Origin of the Mammalia. 



Science (2), vii, pp. 176-178. 



Discussion before Ainer. Soc. Naturalists. 



1898 C 



A complete skeleton of Teleoceras, the 

 true rhinoceros from the upper Miocene 

 of Kansas. 



Science (2), vii, pp. 554-557, with 1 fig. in the 

 text. 



Osborn, H. F. Continued. 1898 D 



The life and works of Cope, illustrat- 

 ing the training of a naturalist and the 

 essential characteristics of a great com- 

 parative anatomist. 



Preface to second edition of Professor Cope's 

 Syllabus of Lectures on the Vertebrata, pp. 

 iii-xxxv. 



1898 E 



A complete skeleton of Teleoceras fos- 

 siger. Notes upon the growth and 

 sexual characters of this species. 



Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., x, pp. 51-59, 

 with pis iv, iv A. 



1898 F 

 A complete skeleton of Coryphodon 



radians. 



Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., x, pp. 81-91, 



with pi. x and 2 figs, in the text. 



1898 G 



Remounted skeleton of Phenacodus 

 primsevus. Comparison with Euproto- 



Bull. Mus. Nat. Hist., x, pp. 159-164, with 

 pi. xii and 4 text tigs. 



1898 H 

 Evolution of the Amblypoda. Part 



I. Taligrada and Pantodonta. 



Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., x, pp. 169-218, 



with 29 figs, in the text. 



18981 



The extinct rhinoceroses. 



Mem. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., i, pp. 75-164, 

 with pis. xiiA-xx, with 49 figs, in the text. 



Pp. 121-125 of this memoir are devoted to the 

 bibliography of the rhinoceroses. 



A notice of this memoir is found in Natural 

 Science, 1898, xiii, pp. 151-169. 



1898 J 

 Additional characters of the great 



herbivorous dinosaur Camarasaurus. 

 Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., x, pp. 219-233, 



with 13 figs, in the text. 



1898 K 



Paleontological notes. 

 Science (2), vii, pp. 164-165. 



1898 L 



A placental marsupial. 

 Science (2), vii, pp. 454-456, with 1 fig. in the 

 text. 



1898 M 

 A complete skeleton of Coryphodon 



radians. Notes upon the locomotion 



of this animal. 



Science (2), vii, pp. 585-588, with 1 fig. in the 



text. 



