IO 



A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF FOSSIL INSECTS. 



Edinb. new phil. journ., 7, pp. 293-297, pL 6. 8. 

 Edinburgh. 1829. 



A list, with occasional brief descriptions, of forty-seven species ; 

 the first important notice of the Aix insects. 



Curtis, J. See also Lyell, C. ; Murchison, R. 

 I. ; and Murchison, R. I., and Lyell, C. 



Czech, Carl. Ueber die entwickelung des in- 

 sectentypus in den geologischen perioden. Pro- 

 $ramm reahchule Diisseldorf, 1858, 1-14. 16. Diis- 

 seldorf. 1858. 



Mainly devoted to showing that the insects of the carbonifer- ** 

 ous period were not less completely developed than the existing 

 forms. 



Dale, James Charles. Notes on some libellulae. 

 Ann. mag. nat. hist,, 9 : 257-58. 8. London. 1842. 



Suggests that " Aeshna liassina " Strickland is nearer Cordu- 

 legaster or Petalura. 



Dalman, Johann Wilhelm. Om insekter inne- 

 slutne i copal ; jemte beskrifning pa nagra deribland 

 forekommande nya slagten och arter. 8. Stockholm. 

 1826. Kongl. vetensk.-acad. handl., 1825, 375-411, 

 tab. 5. 80. Stockholm. 1826. 



Describes several new genera and species of insects found in 

 African gum copal. Separate copy not seen. See also Lucas, H. 



ABSTRACT: Des insectes renfermes dans les re'- 

 sines de copal. err.,Bull.sc. nat., 14: 287-290. 8. 

 Paris. 1828. 



A very full abstract including descriptions of the species, 

 signed D. (Desmarest?) 



ABSTRACT : On insects enclosed in copal. Quart, 

 journ. sc. lit. arts, 1828, 227-228. 8. London. 1828. 

 Briefer abstract of same. 



Daua, James Dwight. Fossil larve in the Con- 

 necticut River sandstone. Amer. journ. sc. arts, [2], 

 33 : 451-452. 8. New Haven. 1862. 



Quotes an opinion from Dr. J. L. Leconte that Hitchcock's 

 figure of Mormolucoides articulatus resembles the larva of an 

 ephemerid ; and the consequent wish of Dr. E. Hitchcock that 

 the name should be changed to Palepkemera mediaeva. 



Dana, J. D. On fossil insects from the carbonif- 

 erous formation in Illinois. Amer. journ. sc. arts, (2), 

 37 : 34-35>/<^- 1-2 in text. 80. New Haven. 1864. 



Description and figures of two neuropterous insects, the first 

 recorded from the American coal formations. 



Dana, J. D. Manual of geology ; treating of the 

 principles of the science with special reference to 

 American geological history. Illustrated by over 

 eleven hundred and fifty figures in the text, twelve 

 plates, and a chart of the world. Third edition. 

 8. New York. 1880. pp. 14, 912, (4), pi. 12, map. 



Insects mentioned on pp. 273, 274, 334-336, 342, 343, 350, 351, 

 388, 411, 416; many figures of American, especially palaeozoic, 

 species given. The first edition (1862) gave much less s 



to insects ; the second (1874) does not differ from the third, as 

 regards the insects. 



Dana, J. D. See also Deane, J. 

 Daudet, Henri. Chenilles fossiles. Petites nouv. 

 cntom.,2,no. 145, /. 25. 40. Paris. 1876. 

 First mention of the discovery of caterpillars at Aix. 



Daudet, H. Description d'une chenille fossile 

 trouvee dans le calcaire d'Aix ( Provence). Rev. mag. 

 zool., [3], 4: 415-24, //. 17. 80. Paris. 1876. 



Describes Satyrites incert-us, the first fossil caterpillar of a 

 butterfly known, and discusses its probable affinities. 



Davila JPedro Franco]. Catalogue systematique 

 et raisonne des curiosites de la nature et de Tart qui 

 composent le cabinet de M. Davila. Tome 3. 8. 

 Paris. 1767. pp. 6, 290, pi. 8 [in ist part]. 



On pp. 223-24. Pe'trifications animales de la septieme classe. 

 Entomohtes. 



Dawson, John William. On a terrestrial mol- 

 lusk, a chilognathous myriapod and some new spe- 

 cies of reptiles from the coal formation of Nova 

 Scotia. Quart, journ. geol. soc. Lond., 16, i : 268-77, 

 figs. 1-29. 8. London. 1859. 



Describes and figures Xylobius sigillariae. 



Dawson, J. W. The air breathers of the coal 

 period in Nova Scotia. Can. nat. geol., 8 : 1-12, 

 81-92, 159-75, 268-95, pl> !-& 8. Montreal. 1863. 



Same as the following. 



Dawson, J. W. Air breathers of the coal period : 

 a descriptive account of the remains of land animals 

 found in the coal formation of Nova Scotia, with re- 

 marks on their bearing on theories of the formation 

 of coal and of the origin of species, with illustra- 

 tions. 8. Montreal. 1863. t. p., front., pp. 4, 81, 

 pi. 6, and a plate of photogr. 



Contains, section xii, Invertebrate air breathers, pp. 62-63, and 

 pi. 6 (pars) which describes Xylobius sigillariae. See also p. 67. 



Dawson, J. W. On the conditions of the depo- 

 sition of coal, more especially as illustrated by the 

 coal-formation of Nova Scotia and New Brunswick. 

 Quart, journ. geol. soc. Lond., 22 : 95-169, //. 5-12. 

 80. London. 1 866. 



Merely refers (p. 145) to the occurrence of a myriapod and 

 one insect at the Joggins. 



Dawson, J. W. On some remains of palaeo- 

 zoic insects recently discovered in Nova Scotia and 

 New Brunswick. Can. nat., [n. s.], 3 : 202-206, 

 5 ivoodc. in text. 80. Montreal. 1867. 



Geol. mag., 4 : 385~88,//. IT, figs. 1-5. 8. London. 

 1867. 



H ' aplophlebium Barnesii and four of the Devonian insects are 

 described and figured for the first time by Scudder. 



Dawson, J. W. Acadian geology. The geologi- 

 cal structure, organic remains, and mineral resources 

 of Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and Prince Edward 

 Island. 2d edition, revised and enlarged, with a 

 geological map and numerous illustrations. 8. 

 London. 1868. pp. 27, 694, pi. (9), map, figs. 231, (i) 

 in text. 



Pages 386-88, 524-26, figs. 153, 181-84, contain descriptions and 

 illustrations of carboniferous and devonian insects by Scudder. 

 There is also a Note on the myriapods of the coal formation on 

 pp. 495-96, by the same. 



Dawson, J. W. Note on some new animal re- 

 mains from the carboniferous and devonian of Can- 

 ada. Quart, journ. geol. soc. Lond., 26, i : 166. 8. 

 London. 1870. 



Notices the occurrence of Blattariae from the Nova Scotia coal 

 measures. 



Dawson, J. W. Supplement to the second edi- 

 tion of Acadian geology, containing additional facts 

 as to the geological structure, fossil remains, and 

 mineral resources of Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, 

 and Prince Edward Island. 8. London. 1878. 

 pp. 102. 



This supplement bound with reissue of 2d ed. forms 3d ed. 

 Mentions and figures, pp. 53, 55, 56, some carboniferous in- 

 sects and myriapods which had been described by Scudder since 

 the previous edition. 



Deane, James. On the sandstone fossils of 

 Connecticut River. Journ. acad. nat. sc. Philad., 

 [2]. 3' *73-7&>fl- 18-20. 40. Philadelphia. 1856. 



On pi. 19 are figured tracks of what the author presumes are 

 articulated animals, in which he is supported by the opinions, 

 quoted on p. 177, of Professors Leidy, Wyman, and Dana, the 

 latter believing them probably crustacean. Some are possibly 

 the tracks of insects. 



Deane, J. Ichnographs from the sandstone of 

 Connecticut River. 4. Boston. 1861. pp. 61, 

 pi. 46. 



