MIT] 



411 



[MIT 



IVEitchilly Samuel Latham. 18. Some account 

 of a terrible hurricane which began to the 

 windward of the Caribbee Islands on the 3rd 

 of September 1804, and proceeded north-west- 

 wardly over the Virgin Islands and Bahamas on 

 the 4th, 5th, and 6th, until it reached Florida, 

 Georgia, and South Carolina, on the 7th, 8th, 

 and 9th ; and of a furious gale from the north- 

 east, which prevailed at the same time, and 

 proceeded south-westwardlj until it met the 

 former. Tilloch, Phil. Mag. XXII., 1805, pp. 

 14-24. 



19. A memoir on the ice islands which 



occupied the northern parts of the Atlantic 

 Ocean in the spring and summer of 1805. New 

 York, Med. Repos. IV., 1807, pp. 225-235. 



— — 20. Discourse on Mineralogy. Tilloch, 

 Phil. Mag. XXXIV, 1809, pp. 125-128. 



21. Information concerning the Canada 



Thistle, a plant which exceedingly annoys the 

 agriculture of the northern and western coun- 

 ties of New York. Amer, Med. Phil, Reg. I., 



1810, pp. 204-211. 



— 22. The physical geography of the first 

 range of mountains extending across New Jer- 

 sey, from the Hudson to the Delaware ; with 

 some experiments on the chalybeate spring at 

 Schooley's Mountain. Amer. Mineral. Journ. 

 I., 1810, pp. 70-79 ; Tilloch, Phil. Mag. 

 XXXVII., 1811, pp. 208-214. 



— 23. Account of the remains of marine ani- 

 mals in a fossil state in New Jersey. Amer. 

 Mineral. Journ. I., 1810, pp. 95-96. 



— 24. An amendment proposed to the geolog- 

 ical chart of the United States, as respects the 

 character of the north side of Long-Island, which 

 is shown to be alluvial and not primitive, as 

 therein stated. Amer. Mineral. Journ. I., 1810, 

 pp. 129-133. 



25. Geological observations on the United 



States. Amer. Med. Phil. Reg. II., 1811, pp. 

 253-256. 



26. Arrangement and description of the 



Cod-fishes of New York. Amer. Med. Phil. 

 Reg. IV., 1813, pp. 618-627. 



27. A detailed narrative of the earth- 

 quakes which occurred on the 16th December 



1811, and agitated the parts of North America 

 that lie between the Atlantic Ocean and Louisi- 

 ana ; and also a particular account of the other 

 quakings of the earth occasionally felt from that 

 time to the 23rd and 30th of January, and the 

 7th and 16th of February 1812, and subse- 

 quently to the 18th of December 1813, and 

 which shook the country from Detroit and the 

 Lakes to New Orleans and the Gulf of Mexico. 

 New York, Trans. Lit. Phil. Soc. I., 1815, pp. 

 280-307. 



Mitchill, Samuel Latham. 28. The leading 

 facts relating to the earthquakes which deso- 

 lated Venezuela, in South America, in the 

 months of March and April 1812. New York, 

 Trans. Lit. Phil. Soc. L, 1815, pp. 308-315. 



29. Description of the volcano and earth- 

 quake which happened in the Island of St. 

 Vincent, on the 30th April 1812. New York, 

 Trans. Lit. Phil. Soc. I., 1815, pp. 315-323. 



■ 30. History of the earthquakes and vol- 

 canoes in the Azores, particularly in the islands 

 of St. George, Pico, and St. Michael, and in 

 the adjoining ocean, during the years 1808 and 

 1811. New York, Trans. Lit. Phil. Soc. I., 

 1815, pp. 324-331. 



31. The history of that extensive commo- 



tion of the atmosphere along the coast of North 

 America, which commenced ofi" Cape Hatteras, 

 on the 23rd of December 1811, and progressed 

 to Massachusetts Bay on the 24th, in the form 

 of a northerly snow storm, causing an unusual 

 number of shipwrecks in Long-Island Sound. 

 New York, Trans. Lit. Phil. Soc. I., 1815, pp. 

 331-340. 



— 32. The Fishes of New York, described 

 and arranged. [1814.] New York, Trans. 

 Lit. Phil. Soc. L, 1815, pp. 354^92. 



— 33. The original inhabitants of America 

 shown to be of the same family and lineage with 

 those of Asia. Tilloch, Phil. Mag. XL VIIL, 

 1816, pp. 4-8; Oken, Isis, 1818, col. 315- 

 319. 



— 34. Sur des fossiles. 



( Transl. from 

 Journ, de Phys. 



New York Nation. Intell.) 

 LXXXIV., 1817, pp. 100-101. 



35. Description of three species of Fish 



(Anguilla oceanica, Gadus albidus, and Salmo 

 amethystus). Philad. Journ. Acad. Nat. Sci. 

 L, 1817, pp. 407-412. 



36. Sur un phenomene de met^orologie 



relatif a la direction dans laquelle se propagent 

 quelquefois les ouragans. {Transl.) Annal. 

 de Chimie, IX., 1818, pp. 66-70. 



37. The Proteus of the North American 



Lakes. Silliman, Journ. IV., 1822, pp. 181- 

 183. 



38. Detection of a mistake into which 



naturalists have been led, in relation to the 

 Mus bursarius or Pouched Rat of Canada. 

 Silliman, Journ. IV., 1822, pp. 183-185. 



39. A group of Polypes, belonging to the 



family of Comatula, with an extraordinary form 

 and configuration, from the Indian Seas. Silli- 

 man, Journ. v., 1822, pp. 46-47. 



40. Chrysodonta larvaeformis, ein bisher 



unbekanntes Reptil aus der Ordnung der Ba- 

 trachier. {Transl. from Amer. Med. Re- 

 corder, 1822.) Froriep, Notizen, IV, 1823, 

 col. 225-227. 



3 F 2 



