110 



FAUNA OF MAYFIELD'S CAVE. 



COLLETT, J. 



1873. Geological Report of Lawrence County (list of species from Connelloy's, 

 Hamer's, and Donaldson's caves). ^Rep. Ind. Geol. Surv., v, 1873, 305; 

 Am. Nat., vi, 1892, 406. 

 Cope, E. D. 



1869. Observations on some myriapods found in and near caves of the United 



States. Proc. Am. Phil. Soc. for 1869, 178, 179-182. 

 1871. Life in the Wyandotte Cave. <Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., ser. 4, vill, 368- 



370; Indianapolis Journal, Sept. 5, 1871. 

 1872a. On the Wyandotte Cave and its fauna. C Am. Nat., VI, 406-422, figs. 109- 



116; Rep. Ind. Geol. Surv. for 1872, in and iv, 157-182, 7 figs. 

 18726. Descriptions of species from the Wyandotte Cave; also from Mammoth 

 Cave.<Rep. Ind. Geol. Surv., iv, 173-182, 1 fig. 

 The Fauna of the Nickajack Cave.<Am. Nat., vi, 1-17, pi. vii, 13 figs. 



1881. 

 Cox, U. 

 1904 



O. 



'Rep. Bureau Fisheries 



Adv. 

 1897, 



A revision of the cave fishes of North America, 

 for 1904, 379-393, pis. i-vi (Jan., 1906). 

 Cunningham, J. I. 



1893. Blind animals in caves. <Nature, XLVII, 439. 

 Davenport, C. B. 



1903. The animal ecology of the Cold Spring sand spit, vi^ith remarks on the 



theory of adaptation. <Decennial Pub. Univ. of Chicago, vol. x, 1-22, 

 7 figs. 

 Denny, A. 



See Eigenmann, C. H., and Denny, A. 

 Dyar, Harrison G. 



1902. List of North American Lepidoptera and key to the literature of the order. 

 Bull. U. S. Nat. Mus., Lii, xix, 723. 

 Eigenmann, C. H. 



1890. The Point Loma blind fish and its relatives. <Zoe, I, 65-72, pis. ii-iii. 

 1897a. The Amblyopsidae, the blind fish of America. <Rep. Brit. Assoc. 



Sci. for 1897, Toronto meeting, 685-686. 

 18976. The origin of cave faunas. Abstract. <Proc. Ind. Acad. Sci. for 



229-230 (1898). 

 1897c. Amblyopsidae and the eyes of blind fishes. <Proc. Ind. Acad. Sci. for 1897, 

 230-231 (1898). 

 Degeneration in the eyes of Amblyopsidae, its plan, process, and causes. 



Proc. Ind. Acad. Sci. for 1898, 239-241 (1899). 

 A case of convergence. < Science, n. s., ix, 280-282; Proc. Ind. Acad. Sci. 



for 1898, 247-251, 3 figs. (1899). 

 The blind fishes of North America.<Pop. Sci. Mon., LVI, 473-486. 

 The eyes of the blind vertebrates of North America. I. The eyes of the 

 Amblyopsidae. <Archiv. f. Entwickelungsmechanik, Vlll, 545-618, 5 pis. 

 Notes on the blind fishes. Science, n. s., ix, 370. 



Cave animals: their character, origin, and their evidence for or against 

 the transmission of acquired characters. In brief.<Proc. Am, Assoc. 

 Adv. Sci., Columbus meeting, 255; Science, n. s., x, 883. 

 The bhnd fishes. Biol. Lectures, Marine Biol. Lab. at Woods Hole, Lecture 



vill, 111-126 (1900). 

 Degeneration in the eyes of the cold-blooded vertebrates of the North 

 American caves.< Proc. Ind. Acad. Sci. for 1899, 31-46, 10 figs. (1900); 

 Science, n. s., xi, 492-503, 10 figs. 

 The structure of blind fishes. Pop. Sci. Mon., LVII, 48-58, figs. 1-8. 

 Causes of degeneration in blind fishes. <Pop. Sci. Mon., LVII, 397-405. 

 A contribution to the fauna of the caves of Texas.<Science, n. s., xii, 



301-302. 

 Description of a new cave salamader, Spelerpes stejnegeri, from the caves 

 of southwestern Missouri. <Trans. Am.Mic. Soc, xxii, 189-192, pis. xxvii, 

 xxviii. 



1904. The eyes of the blind vertebrates of North America. V. The history of the 

 eye of Amblyopsis from the beginning of its development to its disinte- 

 gration in old age. E. L. Mark anniversary volume, 167-204, pis. xii-xv. 

 Abstract in Proc. Ind. Acad. Sci. for 1901, 101-105. 



1898. 



1899a. 



18996. 

 1899c. 



1899d. 

 1899e. 



1899/ 

 189dg. 



1900a. 

 19006. 

 1900c. 



1901. 



