A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF FOSSIL INSECTS. 



Separate also entitled: On British fossil arthropoda. 8. 

 London. 1873. pp. 9, figs. 11. Discusses the affinities of 

 " Eurypterus? (Euphoberia) ferox," referring it to the Myria- 

 pods. 



"Woodward, H. On the discovery of a fossil 

 scorpion in the British coal measures. Quart, journ. 

 geol. soc. Land., 32 : 57-59, //. 8. 8<>. London." 1876. 



Describes and figures three distinct fragments of a scorpion, 

 referred to one species called Eoscorpius anglicus. An abstract, 

 under the title " The discovery of a fossil scorpion in the Eng- 

 lish coal measures" is given in Hardw. set gossip, 1876: 20. 

 8<>. London. 1876. 



Woodward, H. On a remarkable fossil orthop- 

 terous insect from the coal measures of Scotland. 

 Quart, journ. geol. soc. Lond. y 32 60-64, P?* 9 f 8. 

 London. 1876. 



Describes and figures Lithomantis carbonarius, which with 

 Westwood, Waterhouse and McLachlan he considers as be- 

 longing in "the neighbourhood of the Mantidae." Corydalis 

 (Gryllacus) Brongniarti and a modern species of Blepharis are 

 also figured for comparison as related to it. A list of fifty-eight 

 paleozoic insects is appended. An abstract, under the title 

 "Remarkable fossil ortnopterous insect from the coal measures 

 of Britain," appeared in Hardw. sc. gossip, 1876 : 20. 8. 

 London. 1876. See also Heer, O. 



Woodward, H. On the occurrence of Branchi- 

 pus (or Chirocephalus) in a fossil state, associated 

 with Archaeoniscus and with numerous insect re- 

 mains in the eocene fresh-water limestone of Gurnet 

 Bay, Isle of Wight. Geol. mag., n. s., 5 : 88-89. 8. 

 London. 1878. 



Abstract of the next, with slightly differing title, but published 

 earlier than it, and containing a fuller list of insects. 



Woodward, H. On the occurrence of Branchi- 

 pus (or Chirocephalus) in a fossil state, associated 

 with Eosphaeroma and with numerous insect remains 

 in the eocene fresh-water (Bembridge) limestone of 

 Gurnet Bay, Isle of Wight. Quart, journ. geql. soc. 

 Land., 35 : 342-3 50, //. 14. 8. London. 1879. 



The insects are mentioned on p. 344, mostly in a List of 

 insect remains from Gurnet Bay, near Gowes, Isle of Wight, 

 determined by the late Frederick Smith. One hundred and 



twenty-five specimens are mentioned but only eighteen genera 

 or families specified and one species. 



Woodward, H. See Evans, C. E. 



Woodward, H. et al. Notes on fossil insect re- 

 mains. Geol. mag., 10 : 1-2. 8. London. 1873. 



A resume", by the editors of the journal, of papers that have 

 appeared on the subject in their magazine, by Phillips, Kirkby, 



Scudder, Woodward and Butler. 



Worthen, Amos Henry 

 Worthen, A. H. 



Wyman, Jeffries. See Deane, J. 



See Meek, F. B., and 



Yxem, E. Versteinerte insecten-zellen. Ber. 

 naturw. ver. Harzes, 1840-46, 2 e anfl.,p. 26. 4. Werni- 

 gerode. 1856. 



Exhibition of drawings of insect-cells like bee-comb from Juras- 

 sic (?) beds at Chausseebau near Harsleben. 



Zaddach, Ernst Gustav. Ueber die bernstein- 

 und braunkohlenlager des Samlandes ; erste ab- 

 handlung. Schrift, phys-okon. gesellsch. Konigsb., \ : 

 1-44, //. 1-4. 4. Konigsberg. 1860. 



Notices, pp. 3-4, the numbers of insects found in amber, all 

 distinct from living forms; and on pp. 20-21 gives a table of the 

 number of genera and species of the different orders of insects, 

 with special mention of the remarkable genera Archaea and 

 Amphientomum. 



Zaddach, E. G. Amber ; its origin and history, 

 as illustrated by the geology of Samland. Quart, 

 journ. science, 5 : 167-185, //. (2). 8. London. 

 1868. 



Mainly compiled from the author's previous writings on the 

 amber beds. It contains, however, as new matter, a plate of 

 amber insects with explanation by Frederick Smith and pp. 

 184-185, a list of the principal works on amber and the organic 

 remains preserved in it, furnished by the editors. 



O Termiten im Bernsteinwakle. Neuepreuss.prov.- 

 bldtt., (3), I : 61-64. 16. Konigsberg. 1858. 



A popular account, drawn from Hagen's Monographic der 

 termiten. 



APPENDIX. 



In this appendix I have placed not only such references as were overlooked in printing the preceding pages, and those that 

 have been published during the two years of its passage through the press, but also all contributions to the literature of fossil 

 insects of which only incomplete memoranda could be obtained, through allusions to them in the works of others. Diligent 

 search has been made for the early literature of the subject, and especially of amber insects. Perhaps not one half the works or 

 papers concerning amber referred to in bibliographies have been procurable in this country, and of those seen comparatively 

 few contain references to insect-enclosures. The scattered allusions to amber insects taken from older authors and published 

 later than the seventeenth century have in general been left unnoticed, as "wholly valueless and uninteresting', biit all others, 

 where possible, have been introduced into the list in a more or less perfect form. The best notice of the early literatiire of amber 

 will be found in Boehmer's Bibl. script, hist, nat., 4, i : 468-477. 8. Lipsiae. 1788. The few papers concerning the relationship 

 of the Merostomata and Arachnida have also been introduced into this appendix, but tJie extetisive literature of the Merostomata 

 generally has not been added, as it should be, were the views of Van Beneden and Lankester to prove correct. 



I am much indebted to many correspondents, but especially to Dr. H . A . Hagen, for assistance in preparing this bibliog- 

 raphy, which will certainly strike even those well acquainted with the subject as unexpectedly extensive. More than four hun- 

 dred authors are represented as having concerned themselves more or less with fossil insects. S. H. S. 



Agassiz, Jean Louis Rodolphe. The primitive 

 diversity and number of animals in geological times. 

 8. [New Haven. | 1854. pp. 16. Am. journ. sc., 

 (2), 17 : 309-324. 8. New Haven. 1854. 



Devotes a paragraph on p. 8 (316) to insects, and prophesies 

 their discovery anterior to the carboniferous period. 



Aldrovandus, Ulysses. De animalibvs insectis 

 libri septem cvm singvlorvm iconibvs ad viuum 

 expressis. f. Bononiae. 1638. t. p., pp. (8), 767, 



(44)- 



The section, p. 700, De vermibus in lapidibus, & metallis 

 nascentibus cap. 8, contains nothing original. 



Aldrovandus, U. Mvsaevm metallicvm in libros 

 IIII distribvtvm. f. Bononiae. 1648. t. p., ff. 2, 



PP-979>('3)- 

 Cap. 18, De svccino, sev electro, pp. 403-418, refers briefly to 



insect inclusa on p. 406, under the side heading Quae animantes 

 in svccino sint. 



Andr, E~douard. See Brongniart, C. J. E. 



Assmann, A. Ueber die von Germar beschrie- 

 benen und im .palaontologischen museum zu Miin- 

 chen befindlichen insekten aus dem lithographischen 

 schiefer in Bayern. Amtl. her. versamml. deutsch. 

 naturf., 50 : 191-192. 4. Miinchen. 1877. 



A brief statement of his views of the modern groups in which 

 Germar's species should be placed. 



Aurifaber, Andr. Succini historia, oder Bericht 

 woher der agt- oder bornstein urspriinglich komme. 

 4. Konigsberg. 1551. 



Not seen. Dr. Hagen informs me that it contains references 

 to insects in amber, and is therefore one of the earliest works 

 mentioning them. He thinks, indeed, that Munster's earlier 



