EOYAL SOCIETY OP CANADA 



63 



Patterson, Rev. George. Continued. 



The Magdalenolslaiids. 



Ti-tntsttctions of Nova Scotian Institute of Natural 

 Si-i,-iiee, 1890-1. 8vo., 31-57. 



The Portuguese on the Northeast Coast of Amer- 

 ica, and the first European Attempt at Colon- 

 ization there. A lost chapter in American his- 

 tory. 



Transactions Royal Society of Canada. Vol. VIII., 

 Seo. 2, 1890, pp. 127-173. 

 The Beothiks, or Red Indians of New foundland. 



Ibid., Vol. ix., Sec. 2, 1891, pp. 123-171. 

 Beothik Vocabularies, with a few Notes on a 

 Paper on the Beothiks in the Transactions of 

 the Royal Society of Canada for 1801. 



Ibid,, Vol. x., Sec. 2, 1892, pp. 19-32. 

 Sir William Alexander and the Scottish Attempt 

 to Colonize Acadia. 



Ibid., pp. 79-107. 



The First Theological Hall in the British Colonies. 

 T/uologue, Vol. in , Nos. 1 and 2. 1891-92. 8vo., 

 pp. 1-7, 33-40. 



The French Protestant Emigrations to Nova 

 Scotia. A prize essay, 1893. 



In manuscript in Library of King's College, AVind- 

 sor, N.S. 

 Sable Island, its history and phenomena. 



Transaction* nftlie Royal Societyof Canada, Vol. xn. 

 Seo. 2, 1891, pp. 1-49. 



Penhallow, D. P. 



Note on Circidiphyllum Japonicum. 



Gardener's Monthly, November, 1879. 

 Fabrication of Aino Cloth. 



American Naturalist, 1S80, p. 553. 

 The Manufacture of Miso by the Japanese. 



Kansas City Review, November, 1881, p. 437. 

 Note on a few of the Useful Plants of Northern 

 Japan. 



American Naturalist, February, 1881, p. 119. 

 Phenomena of Growth in Plants. 



Proceedings American Association for Advancement 

 of Science, 1881 & 1882. 

 The Temperature of Trees. 



Proceedings Boston Society Natural History, Vol. 

 xxi., 1881. 

 Yellows in Peach Trees. 



Proceedings Massachusetts Horticultural Society, 1882. 

 Report on Meteorology. 



Houghton Farm, Series I. , No. 1 

 Soil Temperature. 



Ibid. Series I., No. 2. 



Yellows in Peaches. 



Houghton farm. Series in., No. 2. 



The Normal Condition of Vegetable Structure 

 with reference to Cell Contents. 

 Ibid. Series in., No. 1 



Peach Yellows. 



.Cultivator and Country Gentleman, August 30, 1883. 



Note on Peach Curl. 

 Ibid. 



Note on Disease of Plants. 



Proceeding* American Association for Advancement 

 of Science, 1852 & 1883. 



Penhallow, D. P. Continued. 



Review, Lawes, Gilbert & Masters. Experiments 

 on Mixed Herbage of Permanent Meadows. 

 Botanical Results. 



American Journal of Science, XXVI.t 396. 

 Effects of Sulphur on Plants. 



Cultivator and Country Gentleman, November 15, p. 

 920. 

 Peach Yellows. 



Quarterly Report of Ptnntylvania Board of Agricul- 

 ture, 1883, p. 66. 



Report on the Experimental Orchard at Houghton 

 Farm. 



Houghlon Farm. Series in., No. 3. 

 Peach Yellows. 



Ibid. Appendix 3. 

 Meteorology. 



Ibid. Series I., No. 3. 

 Soil Temperature. 



Ibid. Series i., No. 4. 

 Relation of Root and Leaf Areas in Corn. 



Proceedings American Association for Advancement 

 of Science, 1883. 



Notes on the Trees and Shrubs of Northern Japan. 



Transactions Montreal Horticultural Society, 1883. 

 Some Peculiarities of Plant Growth. 



Science, III., 354. 

 Diseases of Plants. 



Popular Science Monthly, xxv., 385. 

 Relations of Natural Science to a Medical Course. 



Montreal Gazette, October 3, 1884. 

 Plants in their Relation to Disease. 



Proceedings Kansas Horticultural Society, 1884. 

 Botanic Gardens. 



Tenth Annual Report Montreal Horticultural Society, 

 1855. 



Plants in their Relation to Disease. 



Massachusetts State Board of Agriculture, 1885. 



Plants in their Relation to Disease. 



Transaction! American Horticultural Society, 1385. 

 p. 167. 



The Relation of the Annual Rings of Exogens to 

 Age'. 



Canadian Record of Sciencei 1., p. 162. 



Distribution of the Reserve Material of Plants in 

 Relation to Disease. 

 Ibid., i., 193. 



Traditions of the Ainu of Northern Japan. 

 W.U.i.,193. 



First Annual Report of the Montreal Botanic 

 Gardens, Montreal, 1885. 



Movements of Tendrils in Cucurbita maxima and 

 pepo. 



American Journal of Science, xnni.,4!>-SJ, 100-114, 178- 

 189. 



Origin and Final Settlementof the Ainu in Japan. 

 Canadian Record of Science, n., 11. 



Variation of Water in Trees and Shrubs. 



Ibid., II-, 105. Also in American Naturalist, April, 

 1886. p. 425. 



Physical Characteristics of the Ainu. 

 Canadian Record of Science, II., 119. 



