385 



habits of Ophion cecropiaB, ISS; on 

 the structure of the head in insects, 

 210; on a partially formed pupa of 

 Sphinx cinerea, 212; on zones of life 

 in high mountains, 230; on ancient 

 pottery from India, 357. 



Sea Serpent, 245. 



Selandria, 110. 



cerasi, 321. 



Serpents, monstrosity in, 103. 



Shute, J. G., on the mode of birth in 

 the Opossum, 332. 



Smith, S. I., notes on the fertilization 

 of Orchids, 32S; description of a species 

 of Samia, 342. 



Sorex Thompsoni, 109. 



SoricidfB of N. England, 172. 



Soundings, deep-sea, 1. 



Species, complemental, 107; equivalent, 

 100; representative, 106. 



Splijerium solidulum, 162. 



Sphargis coriacea, 326. 



Sphhigicampa, 290. 



distigma, 290. 



Sphyropicus varius, habits of, 55, 248. 



Spirifer glans cerasus, 24. 



Spinferina, observations on the, 24. 



subtexta, 25. 



Sprague, C. J. Is the Heath indigenous 

 to the United States ? — 38, 207. 



Stimpsox, W. The fossil Crab of Gay 

 Head, 191 ; Malacozoological Notices, 

 No. 1, 249; on the genus Gundlachia, 

 249. 



Stodder, Charles, on the structure of 

 the valve of the DiatomaceiE, 2; on 

 Diatomaceous Earth from Randolph, 

 Mass., 319. 



Storer, F. H., on pseudomorphism of 

 cast iron into plumbago, 152. 



StreptorhyncJius lens, 28. 



Striatopora oarhonaria, 32. 



Strongylogaster, 117. 



multicolor, 120. 



unicus, 120. 



Synalrema, 117. 



Syringopora Harveyi, 32. 



Tabanus, 304. 



Taxonus, 117 



dnbitat'us, 119. 



nigrisoma, 1 19. 



unirmctus, 119. 



Temnodon saltator, habits of, 189. 



Temperature of frozen well at Brandon, 

 81. 



Tentacles, mode of development in Hy- 

 droids, 88. 



Tenthredo, 116, 117. 



American species of, 1 16. 



semihiteus, 121. 



Tertiary beds, subdivisions of.il74. 



Tewksbury, Heath growing in. 38. 



Thoreau, H. D., notice of death of, 70. 



Toxopneustes drobachieusis, distribu- 

 tion of, 191. 



Tropidonotus ordinatus, 61. 



Turdus plumbeus, 309. 



TyphlocyiKt aiirea, ;!15. 



'■ — binotata, 315. 



PROCEEDINGS B. S. N. H. — VOL. IX 



TyplUocyba pallidiila, 315. 



Verrill, A.E.,on Heliastrrea,33 ; Board- 

 man's Catalogue of Birds of Calais, 

 122 ; Notes on the Natural History of 

 Anticosti, 132; Mammals observed at 

 Anticosti during the summer of 1861, 

 135 ; catalogue of the Birds observed 

 at Anticosti and vicinity, 137; descrip- 

 tion of a species of Passerella supposed 

 to be new, from Anticosti, 143; list of 

 the Plants collected at Anticosti and 

 the Mingan Islands during- the summer 

 of 1861, 146 ; Notice of a species of Neo- 

 sorex from Massachusetts, and of 

 Sorex Thompsoni from Maine, 164 ; list 

 of the species of the family Soricidte 

 known to inhabit New England, 172; 

 Eeview of the Polyps of the Eastern 

 coast of tlie United States, with de- 

 scriptions of new and imperfectly 

 known species, 179; catalogue of the 

 Reptiles and Batrachians found in the 

 vicinity of Norway, Oxford Co., Me., 

 195; on Zircon and Corundum from 

 Greenwood, Me., 201; Supplementary 

 Notice of Neosorex palustris, 225; on 

 the occurrence of Caribou. 226 ; on fau- 

 nal distinctions, 232 ; additions to the 

 catalogue of the Birds found in the vi- 

 cinity of Calais, Me., and about the Bay 

 of Fundy, 233; Synopsis of Halcyonoid 

 Polyps of N. Pacific Exploring Expe- 

 dition, 253; notice of the eggs and 

 young of Desmognathus fusca, 253; 

 observations on the migrations of 

 Hirundo luuifrons, 276 ; on Matricaria 

 inodora and Sedum rhodiola, 327. 



Walker, Dr. W. J., donation to Building 

 Fund, 111. 



Walsh, B. D., on certain remarkable 

 or exceptional larvK, &c., 280; refer- 

 ences to such articles, furnished by the 

 writer to Agricultural Journals, as 

 contain new facts in economic Ento- 

 mology, 309. 



Waterston, Rev. R. C, remarks on 

 the decease of Dr. B. D. Greene, 104. 



Wells, Samuel, Jr., on the wool of 

 the Vicuna, 199. 



White, Charles A., description of 

 new species of fossils from the Devon- 

 ian and Carboniferous rocks of the 

 Mississippi Valley, S; observations on 

 the Spiriferina, 24; observations on 

 the summit structure of Pentremites, 

 the structure and arrangements of cer- 

 tain parts of crinoids, and descriptions 

 of new species from the carboniferous 

 rocks at Burlington, Iowa, 40. 



White, Dr. J. C, on the Society's col- 

 lection of skeletons, 335. 



Whittlesey, Chas. The Penokie Min- 

 eral Range, 235. 



Wilder, B. G., on the muscles which 

 move the snout of the hog, 1 ; on the 

 muscular differences between the limbs 

 of jNInn and Quadrumana, 36; on a 

 living Troglodytes uiger, 113; con- 



25 APRIL, 1805. 



