XXVIII. 



AGRICULTURE IN THE WESTERN STATES AND 

 TERRITORIES. 



1860-1900. 



Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, New Mexico, 

 Arizona, Utah, Idaho, Nevada, California, 

 Oregon, and Washington. 



1. Brigham, A. P. — Geographic Influences, Chap- 



ters VIII, IX, X. 



2. Bogart, E. L., and Thompson, C. ^l. — Readings 



in the Economic History of the United States, 

 pp. 622-627. 



3. Bowman, Isaiah. — Forest Physiography. See 



Table of Contents. 



4. Berglund, A. — The Wheat Situation in Washing- 



ton, in The Political Science Quarterly, Vol. 

 XXIV, pp. 489 and following. 



5. Coman, Katherine. — Economic Beginnings of the 



Far West (1912), Vol. II, pp. 291-306. 



6. Davis, A. P. — Reclamation of the Arid West by 



the Federal Government, in Annals of the 

 American Academy of Political and Social 

 Science, Vol. XXXI, pp. 203-218. 



7. Dunn, H. D. — California: Her Agrictdtural Re- 



sources, in Annual Report of the United 

 States Department of Agriculture, 1866, pp. 

 581-610. 



8. Hibbard, B. H. — Tenancy in the Western States, 



in The Quarterly Journal of Economics, Vol. 

 XXVI (1912), pp. 363-376. Reprinted in 

 Carver's Selected Readings in Rural Eco- 

 nomics, pp. 536-546. 



9. Hill, J. J." — Highzcays of Progress. 



10. Mead, Elwood. — Rise and Future of Irrigation 

 in the United States, in Yearbook of the 

 United States Department of Agriculture, 

 1899, pp. 591-612. 



74 



