314 



BULLETIN OF THE BUREAU OF FISHERIES. 



1870. Aug. Dum^ril. 



Hist. Nat. des Poiss. ou Ichth. Gen., t. second, Ganoides, Dipn^s, Lophobranches, pp. 



1-624, 1870. 



Only three species from the Ohio Basin are mentioned in this work. 



1872. F. W. Putnam. 



The Blind Fishes of Mammoth Cave and their allies. <[ American Naturalist, vol. vi, no. i, 

 January, 1S72, pp. 6-30, pis. i, 2. 



In this article Prof. Putnam states that Prof. Cope obtained specimens of Amhlyop- 

 sis spelcB2is from Wyandotte Cave and from wells in its vicinity, that there is in the 

 Museum of Comparative Zoology a specimen labeled "from a well near Lost River, 

 Orange County, Ind.," and that he has examined a number of specimens from Mam- 

 moth Cave. He also refers to the type specimen of Typhlichthys subterraneus which 

 was obtained by J. E. Younglove, Esq., "from a well near Bowling Green, Ky.," and 

 further states that he has examined of this species seven specimens collected in Mam- 

 moth Cave by Mr. Alpheus Hyatt in September, 1859; one from Moulton, Lawrence 

 County, Ala.., presented by Mr. Thomas Peters; and one from Lebanon, Wilson County, 

 Tenn., presented by Mr. J. M. Safford. This paper also contains the original descrip- 

 tion of Chologasfer agassizii, based on a specimen from a well in Lebanon, Tenn. Moulton 

 is in the Tennessee Basin, while Lebanon is in the Cumberland Basin. 



1876. David Starr Jordan. 



Manual of the Vertebrates of the Northern United States, Including the District East of the 

 Mississippi River, and North of North Carolina and Tennessee, Exclusive of Marine Species. 

 By David Starr Jordan, M. S., M. D., professor of Natural History in Northwestern Christian 

 University and in Indiana State Medical College. Chicago: Jansen, McClurg & Co. 1876, 

 PP- 1-342. 

 In this volume the following species are mentioned from specific streams in the 

 region covered by the present paper: 



