A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF FOSSIL INSECTS. 



43 



insecten. Stett. entom. zeit., 42 : 388-389. 8. Stet- 

 tin. 1 88 1. 



Gives a re'sum6 of Hagen's criticism of Scudder's Devonian 

 insects. 



Douglas, J. \V. et al. A species of stylopidae 

 fossil in amber. Entom. monthL mag., 14 : 18-19. 

 8, London. 1877. 



A notice by the editors of the magazine of Menge's Triaena. 



Dupont, fidoamrd Sur la decouverte d'osse- 

 ments d iguanodon, de poissons et de v^getaux dans 

 la fosse Sainte-Barbe du charbonnage de Bernissart. 

 Bull. acad. sc. Belg., (2), 46 : 387-408. 8. Bruxelles. 

 1878. 



Mentions, p. 395, the occurrence of insect larvae in this weal- 

 dian deposit. 



Eaton, A. E, The oldest fossil insects. Nature, 

 2 3 : 57- 4- London. 1881. 



Reply to Scudder's criticisms (in Devonian insects) of remarks 

 on fossil Ephemeridae in Eaton's Monograph. 



Baton, A. E. See Scudder, S. H. 

 Erichson, W. F. See Maravigna, C. 



Fliche, P. Sur les lignites quaternaires (supra). 



The insects were determined by Matthieu of the Ecole fo- 

 restlere. 



Francius, Johannis. Prodromus arachnolitho- 

 graphiae. 4fisc, cur. acad. nat. cur., (2), 5: 462-464. 

 4. Norimbergae. 1687. 



Refers only to the use to which lapides aranearum are put in 

 medicine. 



Fritsch, A. Fossile anthropoden aus der stein- 

 kohlen und kreideformation Bohmens, 4. Wien. 

 1882. pp. 7, pi. 2. Mojs, u. Neum., Beitr. paldont. 

 osterr.-ung,, 2: 1-7, taf. 1-2. 4. Wien. 1882. 



Describes and figures a carboniferous ephemerid, Palingenia 

 Feisttnanteli, and thtee beetles, mines of a Tinea, eggs cf a saw 

 fly, and cases of a phryganid from the cretaceous beds of Bohe- 

 mia: a resume^ of the very few known cretaceous insects is 

 added from Goss. Brauer and Fritsch both compared the may 

 ttyi P- 3> to the living Palingenia longicauda. 



Geikie, Archibald. A recent find in British 

 palaeontology. Nature, 25 : 1-3. 4. London. 1881. 



Contains an announcement of the discovery of remarkably 

 perfect scorpions in the coal measures of Scotland, with some 

 results of their study by Mr. B. N. Peach. An abstract entitled 

 New carboniferous fossils in Scotland, extracted from the Lon- 

 don Times will be found in Amer. nat., 15: 1021-1022. 8. 

 Philadelphia. 1881. See also Primeval Scottish scorpions. 



Germar, E. F. See Assmann, A. 



Goebel, Severinus. De succino libr. II. quorum 

 prior theologicus, posterior de succini origine agit. 

 8. Francfurt. 1558. 



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

 to insects in amber, among the earliest known. 



Goeppert, H. R. Sull' ambra di Sicilia e sugli 

 oggetti in essa rinchiusi. 4. Roma. 1879. PP- 9 

 figs. Mem. acad. line., (3), mem. sc. fa., 3: 56-62. 4. 

 Roma. 1879. 



On p. 4(58), he reviews the literature of the insects of Si- 

 cilian amber. 



Goldenberg, F. Beitrag zur insectenfauna der 

 kohlenformation von Saarbriicken. Zeitschr. ges. 

 naturw., (3), 6: 184-187,^. 8. Berlin. 1881. 



Describes Anthracoblattina Scudderi . 



Goss, H. See Scudder, S. H. 



Haeckel, Ernst (Heinrich). Allgemeine ent- 

 wJckelungsgeschichte der organismen. Kritische 

 grundziige der mechanischen wissenschaft von den 

 entstehenden formen der organismen, begriindet 

 durch die descendenz-theorie. Also entitled : Gene- 

 relle morphologic der organismen. Allgeme.ine 

 grundziige der organischen formen-wissenschaft, me- 

 chanish begriindet durch die von Charles Darwin 

 reformirte descendenz-theorie. Zweiter band. 8. 

 Berlin. 1866. pp. 160, 462, pi. S. 



In the introduction Insects are treated on pp. (34-102, and the 

 views entertained of the primeval forms of the different groups 

 supported in part by paleontological evidence. 



Haeckel, E. (H.) Natiirliche schopfungsge- 

 schichte. Gemeinverstandliche wissenschaftliche vor- 

 triige liber die entwickelungslehre im allgemeinen 

 und diejenige von Darwin, Goethe und Lamarck im 

 besonderen. Vierte verbesserte auflage. 8. Berlin. 

 1873. PP- 46, 688, pi. (i), 15. 



TRANSLATION: The history of creation: or the 

 development of the earth and its inhabitants by the 

 action of natural causes. A popular exposition ot 

 the doctrine of evolution in general, and of that of 

 Darwin, Goethe, and Lamarck in particular. The 

 translation revised by E. Ray Lankaster. 2 vois. 

 12. New York. 1-876. i, pp, 20, 374, pi. (I), 1-3; 

 ii, pp. 8, 408, pL 4-15. 



Insects are treated on pp. 490-501 (transl., 2 : 178-101) and 

 their pedigrees considered, partly from geological considerations. 



Haesbert, M. J. De conchylio et ape petrifactis 

 (supra}. 

 Reports a fossil bee in the collection of Scheidius, figured tab. 



2, fig. 4. 



Hagen, H. A. Ueber . . , Heterophlebia dislo- 

 cata (supra). 



Dr. Hagen informs me that the most important vein is given 

 in ilie wrong place by the lithographer. 



Hagen, H. A. Notes on Tarsophlebia West- 

 woodii Giebel, a fossil dragon fly. Entom. month!, 

 ma?., i: 160-161. 8. London. 1864. 



Hagen, H. A. Synopsis of the Psocina without 

 ocelli. Entom. monthl.mag., ii : 121-124. 8. London. 

 1865. 



Atropos resinata from copal is described on p. 121. 



Hagen, H. A. The oldest fossil insects. Nature, 

 24^356-357. 4- London. 1881. 



Is chiefly concerned with the determination of a species of 

 Pecopteris found in the Devonian insect beds, and the conclusion 

 is drawn that " those oldest insects will have to be considered as 

 belonging to the lower carboniferous." 



Hagen, H. A. Fossil insects of the Dacota group. 

 Nature, 25: 265-266. 4. London. 1882. 



A brief note recording the discovery of galls and mines in 

 fossil leaves from Kansas and Nebraska. 



Hagen, H. A. On amber Psocina from Prussia. 

 Psyche, 3 : 279. 4. Cambridge. 1882. 



Concludes from them that before tertiary times a great devel- 

 opment of genera and species had occurred. 



Hagen, H. A. See Dohrn, C. A. ; Krantz, A. ; 

 and Scudder, S. H. 



Hartmann, P. J. Succincta succini prussici his- 

 toria et demonstratio (supra). 



An abstract will be found in Ada erud., 1700: 332-336. 4. 

 Lipsiae. 1700. 



van Hasselt, A. W. M. See Wyenbergh, H. 



Haughton, Samuel. Description of a fossil 

 spider, Architarbus subovalis, from the middle coal 

 measures, Burnley, Lancaster. Journ. geol soc. Ire- 

 land, n.s., 4: 222-223, figs. 8. Dublin, etc. 1877. 



Gives a figure, without description, both of the original and of 

 the new and better specimen. 



