MUSEUM OF COMPAKATIVE ZOOLOGY. 133 



APPENDIX. 



List of Pajoers and WorTcs relating to the Geology, Mineralogy, and Physi- 

 cal Geography of Lake Superior. 



The writer does not claim that this list contains all that has been 

 written on these subjects relating to Lake Superior, for it is simply the 

 outgrowth of a desire, arising after part of the body of this paper was 

 written, to save others the trouble of doing over again the work that he 

 had already done. It is not intended as a bibliography in the approved 

 modern sense, but simply to serve as a stepping-stone to those who may 

 hereafter desire to take up the study of this most interesting region. 

 Papers and works, which from their titles appear to belong to different 

 departments or to other localities, have been given, when matter re- 

 lating to these subjects or this region, as the case may be, has been 

 found in them. All papers given here that the writer has not seen are 

 marked with an asterisk (*). 



In the preceding text, in quoting from the various authors referred to, 

 the intention has been to make the spelling, punctuation, and italics 

 identical with the originals, which accounts for certain peculiarities that 

 the reader will observe. 



Agassiz, Alexander. 



On tiie Position of the Sandstone of the Southern Slope of a Portion of 



Keweenaw Point, Lake Superior. Proc. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist., 1S67, xi. 



211-246. 

 Agassiz, Louis. 



On the Fislies of Lake Superior. Proc. Am. Assoc. Adv. Sci., 1S4S, i. 



30-32. 

 The Terraces and Ancient River Bars, Drift, Boulders, and Polished Sur- 

 faces of Lake Superior. Proc. Am. Assoc. Adv. Sci., 1848, i. 68-70. 

 On the Origin of the Actual Outlines of Lake Superior. Proc. Am. Assoc. 



Adv. Sci., 1848, i. 79. 

 Remarks upon the Unconformability of the Palaeozoic Formations of the 



United States. Proc. Am. Assoc. Adv. Sci., 1851, vi. 254. 

 On Marcou's "Geology of North America." Am. Jour. Sci., 1859, (2,) 



xxvii. 134-137. 



