8 Bulletin io 302 



aiice of Pidvinulina elegans d'Orbigny, in the Eocene, and the 

 absence of its relative, Pulviiiulina partschiana d'Orbigny, a 

 deep water species, by the presence in the Miocene of such 

 species as Rotalia beccarii ( L,inne ), Nonio7iina depressula 

 (Walker & Jacob), and in the Pleistocene by the abundance of 

 Polystomella striato-punda ( Fichtel & Moll ) . 



The bibliography herein given contains a list of the litera- 

 ture which has been most helpful in the preparation of this 

 report and is intended to include nearly ever3'thing which has 

 been published on American Tertiary Foraminifera. Only a 

 limited number of the most useful European works are cited 

 here. 



Bibliography. 



Agassis, Alexander, A Contribution to American Thalas- 

 sography. Three Cruises of the United States Coast 

 and Geodetic Survey Steamer Blake. 



Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool. Harvard, vols, xiv, xv,i888; 

 and two vols. 8° London. 



Report upon Deep-Sea Dredgings in the Gulf Stream 



during the third Cruise of the U. S. Steamer Bibb. 

 Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool. Harvard, vol. i, pp. 363- 

 386, 1867. 

 Aldrich, T. H., Notes on the Distribution of Tertiary 

 Fossils in Alabama and Mississippi. 



Jour. Cincin. Soc. Nat. Hist., vol. viii, pp. 256-7, 

 1885. 



Andreae, A., Ein Beitrag zur Kenntniss des Elsasser Ter- 



tiars. 



Abhandl. Geol. Special- Karte Elsass-Lothringen, vol. 



ii, Heft iii, 331 pp., 12 plates, 1884. 

 Ansted, D. T., The Deposits of the North Atlantic in Deep 



Water, and their Relation to the White Chalk of the 



Cretaceous Period. 



Pop. Science Rev., vol. ix, pp. 22-33, pi. Iv. 1870. 

 Bailey, J. "W., On some New Localities for Infusoria, 



Fossil and Recent. 



