460 



INDEX 



Clausius, Rudolf Julius Emanuel, 



347 

 Cockerell, Theodore Dru Alison, 278, 



,393 

 ,odn 



Codman, Dr. John, 98 

 Comstock, Theodore S., 435 

 Conant, Dr. F. S., 444 

 Concave grating, invention of, 415, 



416 



Conn, Dr. Herbert William, 442 

 Connecticut, Report of a geological 



survey by Percival and Shepard, 



106 



Conrads, Timothy Abbott, 273 

 Contributions to the Natural History 



of the U. S., by J. L. R. Agassiz, 



159 



Convection, researches in, 37 



Cooking range, 33 



Coolidge, Joseph, 86 



Cope, Edward Drinker, ancestry 

 and birth, 314; lack of early train- 

 ing, 316; papers on herpetology, 

 318, visit to Europe, 319; pro- 

 fessor at Haverford College, 319; 

 marriage, 319; work in paleon- 

 tology, 320, 321; discoveries of 

 new types, 322; publications, 322, 

 328, 329; surveying in New Mex- 

 ico, 323; private expeditions, 325; 

 domestic life, 326; lines of research 

 pursued, 327; classification of 

 fishes, 327; and of amphibians, 

 328; contributions to fossil mam- 

 mals, 329; reclassification of ungu- 

 lates, 330; philosophical writings, 

 331 ; owner and editor of American 

 Naturalist, 335; professor at Uni- 

 versity of Pennsylvania, 336; 

 honors, 337; personal qualities, 

 338; death, 340 



Cope, Thomas Pirn, 315 



Copernicus, 258 



"Cope's Bible," 322 



Copley medal, 243, 360, 361, 384 



Coral islands, 238, 267, 442 



Coral reefs, Darwin's theory con- 

 cerning, 148, 258-260 



Corals and Coral Islands, by J. D. 

 Dana, 242 



Corcoran Gallery of Art, 138, 279 



Coues, Elliott, 84, 203 



Cretaceous period, 257 



Crocodile, True, in Florida, 198 



Crocodilians, Lizards, and Snakes of 

 North America, by E. D. Cope, 329 



Crosby, Dr. W. O., 163 



Crustacea of the Wilkes Expedition, 

 report on, 239, 245-246 



Crystallography, 244-245 



Cuvier, Georges Leopold Chretien 

 Frederic Dagobert, Baron, 41, 48, 

 50, 69, 153, 177, 194 note, 330 



Cuvier prize, 308 



Cyclopima spinosum, 154 



Dalton, Dr. John Call, 45, 175 



Dana, Edward Salisbury, 115 note, 

 236, 239, 245, 264 



Dana, James Dwight, birth and an- 

 cestry, 233; early influences, 234, 

 235; naval schoolmaster, 235; 

 assistant to Prof. Silliman, 236; 

 System of Mineralogy, 236; mem- 

 ber of Wilkes Exploring Expedi- 

 tion, 236; preparation of reports, 

 239, 245; marriage, 239; editor of 

 American Journal of Science, 240; 

 Darwin compared with, 241 ; phys- 

 ical weakness, 242; publications, 

 242; death, 243;, honors, 243; 

 mineralogical classification, 244; 

 principle of cephalization, 246; at- 

 titude toward evolution, 248; 

 work in geology, 251; doctrine of 

 permanence of continents and 

 oceans, 252; and of mountain- 

 making, 254; study of coral reefs, 

 258; and of volcanoes, 261; "Ta- 

 conic Question," 262; religious 

 views, 264, 266; personal character, 

 266; also 104, 115 note, 313 



Darwin, Charles Robert, Origin of 

 Species, 193; J. D. Dana com- 

 pared with, 241; theory concern- 

 ing coral reefs, 258, 259; on 

 toothed birds, 301; also 168, 188 

 note, 236, 249, 270, 272, 331, 332, 



43i 



Darwiniana, by Asa Gray, 226 

 Davy, Sir Humphrey, 44, 95, 97 

 Day, Dr. Jeremiah, 102, 115 

 De Blainville, see Ducrotay de 



Blainville, Henri Marie 

 De Candolle, Augustin Pyrame, 219 

 Deep-sea fishes, works on, 401 

 De Kay, James E., 273 

 Delano, Columbus, 294 



