BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE U. y. NATIONAL MUSEUM. 731 



Leonhard Stejneger. Oil the Type Specimen o( Eurijzona eurizonoides. 

 Proc. Boston Soc Nat. Hist., xxill, pp. 461-464. 



The type of Euryzona eurizonoides is in the Museum of the Boston Society of Katural History, 

 from which it was borrowed for comparison with the new Japanese species described by the 

 author as Euryzona sepraria. 

 Lkonhard Stejneger. Pars Propatagialis Musculi cucullaris. 



Science, X, August 5, 1887, pp. 70-71, figs. 1, 2. 



Calls attention to the fact that the muscle in the bird-wing, described in a previous number as 

 ^ new by Dr. E. W. Shufeldt, is in reality a well-l£nown muscle describe 1 by Fiirbiinger i.nder 

 the above name. 



XjEONHArd Stejneger. Diagno.sis of a New Species of Tiirusli {Tardus celamopn sp. 

 jjov.) from Japan. 



Science, X, August 26, 1887, p. 108. 



Preliminary diagnosis of the new species Turdus celceiiops, contained in a collection received 

 by the U. S. National Museum from the authorities of the Tokio Educational Museum. (Ace. 

 19178.) 

 Leonhard Stejneger. The British Marsh Tit. 



Zoologist, 3d ser., Xl, October, 1887, pp. 379-381. 



Eeprint »f the author's paper in the "Proceedings of the (J. S. National Museum," IX, 1886, 

 pp. 2O0, 201, describing as new Parus palustris dresseri from the British Islands. 



Leonhard Stejneger. On the Sliedding of the Claws in the Ptarmigan and Allied 

 Birds. 



Zoologist, 3d ser., xi, July, 1887, pp. 258-260. 



Reprint of the author's paper in the "American Naturalist,' xvni, pp. 774-776. 

 Leonhard Stejneger. Pyrrlmla cassini (Baird). 



L. M. Turner's Contrib. Nat. His. Alaska, pp. 169-170. 



'I'his accoxmt of the status of Pyrrhula cassini was written in 1885 for Mr Turner and in 

 corporated by him in his report. 

 Leonhard Stejneger. How the Great Northern Sea-cow {Bytina) became extermi- 

 nated. 



American Naturalist, xxi, December, 1887, pp. 1047-1054. 



Maintains that liytina gigas was e^Lterminated in 1768. " It was simply due to man's greed, 

 and he accomplished it within the short time of twenty- seven years." 



Leonhard Stejneger. Robert Ridgway's Nomenclature of Colors for Natui-alists 

 and Compendium of Useful Knowledge for Ornithologists. Boston, Little, Brown 

 & Company, 188G. 



Naturen, 1887, p. 223. 

 Review of the above. 

 Charles H. Townsend. Notes on the Natural History and Ethnology of Northern 

 Alaska. 



Peport of the Cruise of the Revenue Marine Steamer Corwin, in the Arctic Ocean in the year 

 1885 >1887), by Capt. M. A. Healy, U. S. R. M., Commander, pp. 81-102. Four plates. 



The birds of the Kowak River region are treated of on pp. 90-94, and those "obtained at vari- 

 ous places between the Aleutian Islands and Kotzebue Sound" on pp. 98-101. A beautiful 

 colored plate, by Robert Ridgway, representing Plectrophenax hyperboreus, from specimens in 

 the U. S. National Museum, accompanies the reports. All the birds collected by Mr. Town- 

 send during the cruise are in the Museiim. 



Charles H. Townsend. Field Notes on the Mammals, Birds, and Reptiles of North- 

 ern California. 



Proc. 77. ,S. Nat. Mus., x, 1887, pp. 159-241. Plate v. 



Birds, pp. 159-163 and 190-237. The whole material upon which these observations are based 

 was collected by the author from 1883 to 1885 for the U. S. National Museum, while stationed 

 in northern California as an assistant of the U. S. Fish Commission. 



Frederick W. True. Report on the Department of Mammals in the U. S. National 

 Museum, 1885. 



Report of the Smithsonian Institution, 1885 (1886), Part ii, pp. 79-84. 

 Frederick W. True. Report on the Department of Comparative Anatomy in llio 

 U. S. National Museum, 1885. 



Report of the Smithsonian Institution, 1885 (1886), Part ii, pp. 99-102. 

 Frederick W. True. The Fisheries of the Great Lakes. 



The Fisheries and Fishery Industries of the United States, ii, 1887, Part xvn, pp. 633-673. 



