SUPPLEMENT. 227 



had with either pasteboard or paper covers; the latter untrimmed 

 and more suitable for binding.) 



MONOGRAPHS. 



1. Repoi't for the years 1881 and 1882, embracing an account 

 of the agricultural features of the state; by Eugene A. Smith, 

 xvi + 615 pp., 8 colored maps. 1883. Cloth-bound, Exhausted. 



2. List of the fresh-water and marine Crustacea of Alabama, 

 with descriptions of the new species and synoptical keys for iden- 

 tification; by C. L. Herrick. Large quarto. 56 pp., 8 plates. Oct. 

 1887. (From Memoirs of the Scientific Laboratories of Denison 

 University.) Exhausted. 



3. Iron making in Alabama; by Wm. B. Phillips. 164 pp. 

 1896. Exhausted. 



4. Iron making in Alabama, second edition; by Wm. B. Phil- 

 lips, viii + 380 pp. 1898. Exhausted. 



5. Plant life of Alabama. An account of the distribution, 

 modes of association, and adaptations of the flora of Alabama, to- 

 gether with a systematic catalogue of the plants growing without 

 cultivation in the state; by Charles Mohr. xii -f 921 pp., colored 

 map, 2 half-tone portraits, and 12 other plates (line-engravings 

 of certain Alabama plants). Oct., 1901. (Published jointly with 

 U. S. National Herbarium.) Postage 32 cents. (The bulk of our 

 edition is bound in black cloth, but not very substantially. Per- 

 sons desiring to put on better bindings of their own can have un- 

 trimmed copies in paper covers by signifying a desire to that ef- 

 fect.) 



6. The underground water resources of Alabama; by Eugene 

 A. Smith, xvi + 388 pp. 30 plates. 1907. Cloth-bound (some in 

 red and some in black). Postage 15 cents. 



7. Iron making in Alabama, third edition; by Wm. B. Phillips. 

 254 pp., 31 plates. Dec, 1912. Cloth-bound (but a few paper- 

 covered copies are available for those who may prefer them). 

 Postage 13 cents. 



BULLETINS. 



1. Preliminary report on the Tertiary fossils of Alabama and 

 Mississippi; by T. H. Aldrich. Contributions to the Eocene paleon- 

 tology of Alabama and Mississippi; by Otto Meyer. 85 pp., 9 

 plates, 1886. Exhausted. 



2. On the phosphates and marls of Alabama; bv Eugene A. 

 Smith. 82 pp. 1892. Exhausted. 



3. A preliminary report on a part of the lower gold belt of 

 Alabama, in the counties of Chilton, Coosa and Tallapoosa; by 

 Wm. B. Phillips. 97 pp., 4 plates (including map). 1892. Ex- 

 hausted. 



4. Report on the geology of northeastern Alabama and adja- 

 cent portions of Georgia and Tennessee; by C. Williard Hayes. 86 

 pp., 2 colored plates (one of which is a folded geological map). 

 1892. Exhausted. 



5. A preliminary report on the upper gold belt of Alabama, in 

 the counties of Cleburne, Randolph, Clay, Talladega, Elmore, 

 Coosa and Tallapoosa; by Wm. M. Brewer. Supplementary notes 

 on the most important varieties of the metamorphic or crystalline 

 rocks of Alabama, their composition, distribution, structure, and 

 microscopic characters; by Eugene A. Smith, G. W. Hawes, J. M. 

 Clements and A. H. Brooks, vii + 202 pp., 3 plates. 1896. Post- 

 age 5 cents. 



6. Preliminary report on the clays of Alabama; by Heinrich 

 Ries. (Includes chapter on the geological relations of the clays of 

 Alabama, by Eugene A. Smith.) viii + 220 pp. 1900. Exhausted. 



