APPENDIX. 515 



This boy is larger than that, Naliwudj mindiddo woh-ow kwccwezains e-waidde 



dush. 

 That is what I wanted, Meeh-eu wau iauyaumbaun. 



This is the very thing I wanted, Mee-suh oh-oo wau iauyaumbaun. 



In some of these expressions, tlie pronoun combines with an 

 adjective, as in the compound words ineuwaidde and igeuwaidde, 

 those yonder (in.), and those yonder (an.). Compounds which exhibit 

 the full pronoun in coalescence with the adverb ewaidde^ yonder. 



2. NATUEAL HISTORY. 

 V. 



ZOOLOGY. 



1. Limits of the Range of the Cervus Sylvestris in the Northivestern 

 parts of the United States. By Henry K. Schoolcraft. (North- 

 west Journal.) 



2. Description of the FringiUa Vespertina^ discovered hy Mr. School- 

 craft in the Northioest. By William Cooper. (Annals of the 

 New York Lyceum of Natural History.) 



3. CoNCHOLOGY. — List of Shells collected hy Mr. Schoolcraft, in the 

 Western and Northwestern Territory. By William Cooper. 



HELIX. 



1. Helix albolabris, Say. Near Lake Michigan. 



2. Helix alternata, Say. Banks of the Wabash, near and 

 above the Tippecanoe. Mr. Say remarks, that these two species, 

 so common in the Atlantic States, were not met with in Major 

 Long's second expedition, Until their arrival in the secondary 

 country at the eastern extremity of Lake Superior. 



PLANOEBIS. 



3. Plaxorbis campanulatus, Say. Itasca (or La Biche) Lake, 

 the source of the Mississippi. 



4. Planorbis trivolyis, Say. Lake ]\Iichigan. These two 



