788 



INDEX. 



Buckland, Dr., invites Agassiz to 

 England, 232; acts as his guide 

 to fossil fishes, 250; to glacier 

 tracks, 306 ; a convert to glacial 

 theory, 307, 309, 311 ; mentioned 

 by Murchison, 468. 



Burkhardt, 320, 442, 479, 494, 647. 



CABOT, J. E., 466. 



Cambridge,. 457-459, 461. 



Cambridge, first mention of, 252. 



Campanularia, 494. 



Carlsruhe, Agassiz at, 30, 33. 



Caiy, T. G., 581, 680. 



Castanea, 660. 



Charleston, S. C., 491. 



Charpentier, 231, 261, 358. 



Chavannes, Professor, 15. 



Chelius, 30. 



Chemidium, 709. 



Chemidium-like sponge, 704. 



Chi em, lake of, 84. 



Chilian, valley of, 756. 



Chironectes pictus, 701. 



Chorocua Bay, 733. 



Christinat, Mr., 159, 459, 478. 



Civil war, 568, 570, 575, 577, 579, 

 591. 



Clark. H. J., 494, 539. 



Coal deposits at Lota, age of, 753. 



Coal mines at Sandy Point, 718. 



Coast range, 755. 



Coelenterata, Owen on the term, 

 575. 



Collections, growth of, 507; em- 

 bryological, 507; appropriation 

 for; place of storage; sale, 508. 



Conception Bay, 750. 



Con9ise, Parsonage of, 134. 



Connecticut geology, 415. 



Connecticut River, 413. 



Connor's Cove, 746. 



Corcovado Gulf, 746. 



Corcovado Peak, 746. 



"Contributions to Natural History 

 of the United States," 533, 536, 

 538, 539, 542, 553. 



Copley medal, 572. 



Corafcollection, 487, 490. 



Cordilleras, 755. 



Cornell University, 662. 



Cotting, B. E., 444. 



Coulon, H., 300, 301. 



Coulon, L., 190, 199, 208, 215. 



Coutinho, Major, 632, 636. 



Crinoids, deep-sea and fossil, com- 

 pared, 705. 



Ctenophorae, 489. 

 "udrefin, 1, 9. 

 uricu, 753, 756. 

 uvier, Georges, dedication to, 



75; notes on Spix fishes, 108 ; 



reception of Agassie, 164; gives 



material for fossil fishes, 166 ; 



last words, 168. 

 Cyclopoma spinosum, curious 



dream about, 181. 

 Cyprinus uranoscopus, 76. 



DANA, J. D., 414, 421, 436. 

 Darwin, C., accepts glacier theory, 



342; cm "Lake Superior," 469 ; 



on Massachusetts cirrepedia, 



469 ; estimation of Darwinism, 



647; of Agassiz, 666. 

 Davis, Admiral, 454, 458. 

 Deep-sea dredgings, 671, 672, 690- 



704, 715. 



Deep-sea fauna, 707. 

 De Kay, 436. 

 De la Rive, A., invites Agassiz to 



Geneva, 276. 

 Desor, 28-2, 287, 300, 317, 320, 324, 



332, 442, 446, 448, 450. 

 Dinkel, Joseph, 92, 137, 141, 174, 



177, 189, 250, 287. 

 Dinkel, his description of Agassiz, 



93. 



Dollinger, 45, 52, 54, 90, 150. 

 Dravton, 422. 

 Drift-hills, 654. 



EASTER fete, 10, 11. 



Echinarachnius parma, 489. 



Echinoderms, relation to medusae, 

 489. 



Eden Harbor, 745. 



Egerton, Lord Francis, buys origi- 

 nal drawings, 262. 311. " 



Egerton, Sir Philip,' 232, 249, 251, 

 262, 562. 



Elizabeth islands, 718. 



Embryonic and specific develop- 

 ment, 490. 



Emerson, R. W., 459, 525, 619, 

 621. 



Emperor of Brazil, 625, 632, 634, 

 637, 640. 



England, first visit to, 248; gener- 

 osity of naturalists, 250 ; second 

 visit to, 306. 



English Narrows, 745. 



Enniskillen, Lord, 251, 562. 



Equality of rac< s. 604. 



