434 APPENDICES 



129. TAYLOR, RICHARD C. : 



"On the Geology and Natural History of the North- 

 Eastern Extremity of the Alleghany Mountain Range, 

 in Pennsylvania, United States," London's Magazine of 

 Natural History, vol. viii, pp. 529-541. London, 1835. 

 Confirms Audubon's account of the climbing habits of the 

 rattlesnake. 



130. (ANON.) PEABODY, W. B. O.: 



"Audubon's Biography of Birds; Ornithological 

 Biography," North American Review, vol. xli, pp. 194- 

 231. Boston, 1835. 



131. CHRISTOPHER NORTH (JOHN WILSON) : 



"Audubon's Ornithological Biography," Black- 

 wood's Edinburgh Magazine, vol. 37, pp. 107-124. 

 Edinburgh, 1835. 



\. WATERTON, CHARLES: 



"On Snakes, their Fangs, and their Mode of procur- 

 ing Food," London's Magazine of Natural History, vol. 

 viii, pp. 663-668. London, 1835. 



Reprinted in Essays on Natural History, First Series, re- 

 ferred to above. 



133. WATERTON, CHARLES, Esquire, of Walton-Hall: 



"A Letter to James [Robert] Jameson, Esq." [fol- 

 lowed by 21 lines of fine print, giving titles and mem- 

 bership in scientific societies]. Pp. 1-14. Wakefield, 

 1835. 



Privately printed, and designed mainly to hit Audubon and 

 his snake stories over Jameson's shoulders. Signed, "Walton- 

 Hall, January 27, 1835." "Should you honor me - with 

 a reply, I promise you that I will take an immediate and dis- 

 passionate notice of it; and I will address to you a second, 

 a third, and a fourth letter, and so on. As you have first 



