408 



LE NATURALISTE 



r 



Anobiridae et Bostrjchidae du glode. 11 prie les perfonnes qui \ou- I nus insularis Motsch. 

 dront bien entrcr en relation avec lui, de lui adresser la liste de leurs ^' ' "— 



doubles. 



M. Ernest Lelicvre, Entrc-les-Ponls, 22, a AmLoisc (Indre-et- 

 Loire), offre des chenilles vivanles de Bombyx (Gastropacha et La- 

 nestris, etde B. C. Gaslropacha et Catax, L. Evcria, Knoch, God), se 

 nourrissant sur repine, le prunier, lepruncUier, le saule, le poirier, le 

 ch^ne, etc., conlre d'autres chenilles de Bombjcides enropceimes ou 

 exoliques. 



DEMANDES ET OFFRES 



Nous serons obliges k ceux de nos lecleurs qui pourraient nous 

 procurer en quanlite les animaux suivants, de vouloir bien nous en 

 informer en nous indiquant le nombre dont iis disposent ou qu'ils 

 comptenl pouvoir obtenir; dans ce dernier cas, nous fixer sur le dclai 

 approxiniatif; ils voudront bien nous faire savoir en mSme temps ce 

 que coutera chaque sujet, que nous sommes prSt a regler soil par 

 Yoic d'^change, soil centre argent. 



HiRissox — Taupe — Chauve-souris de toutes les espcces, surlout 



I.EZARDs vert ou des murailles grands exemplai- 

 LKtfVREs, toutes les especes. — VipiREs, les deux types 



Choueites brachyotle, hulolte, effraie^ chevecbe- — 



Herons 



MouETTES rieuses et irydacliles. 



HupPEs puput. — Grimpereaux fami- 



Ics plus communes 



res. — Cc 



communs. 



Pics vert et epeiche. 



blongios, butor. — Coucous. 



liers. — AIahtin-P£chedrs. 



Scorpions, les deux especes europ^ennes. 



Nous prions egalement les geologues qui pourraient disposer de 

 nombreux echanlillons des types ci-apr6s de vouloirbien nous dire s'ils 

 £ont disposes h les echanger ou h les vendre; nous prefererions cette 



derniere proposition; 

 Pointes de cidaris florigemma. 

 Hemicidaris crenularis. 

 Vertebres d*Ichtiosaure. 

 Hippurytes toucasi, 

 Belemnites mucronalus. 

 Micraster cor-testudinarium, 

 Belemnites triparlHus. 

 Belemnites gigantcus. 

 Empreintes de volzia ou de pleropbyllum sur le gres. 



Ceratites nodosus. 

 (keratites bipartitus. 

 Productus horridus. 



Calceola. 



Spirifer vernenilli. 

 . Cerilhes du calcaireparisien. 

 Dents de squale du calcaire parisien. 

 Natica crassatina. 

 Molaire d'elephas primigenius. 



LIVRES NOUVEAUX 



Ernest Olivier; — Les fruits indigenes de la Flore de TAllier 

 (extraitdcs Annales de la Societe d*horticulture de I'Allier) broch. 

 de 16 pages. 



United states commission of fish and fisheries. 



Part. vr. Report of the commissionner for 1878. 



A. — Inquiry Into the decrease of food fishes. The natural History of 



marine annals. 



B. — The propagation of food-fishes in the waters of the united 

 states. Vol. in-S** 988 pages, 35 planches el figures intercallees 

 dans le texte, 



Untomologische Naohrichten 



1881. Heft VIII 



Stettin. VHI Jahrgang 

 Kriechbauraer, Ichneumoniden-Studien.~ Tan- 



ere, Ein neue Limenitis-Art vom Amur — V. Ein, monstroser Prio- 



Ueber den Generationwechsel der Gall- 

 "wes pen — Von HopfTgarten, Bericht iiber eine entomologische 

 Reise nach Dalmatien, der Herzegowina und Montenegro un Jahre 

 1880. — Schmidt-Gobel^ Ueber Rhynchites Bacchus. 



Proceedings of the Boston Society of natural history. 



Boston^ vol XX. Part n, noveraber 1878. April 1879. — D^ H, A. 

 Hagen. Larvae of Insects discharged through the Urethra [condu^ 

 ded). — Birds swarming after White Ants. — D^ S. Kneeland. 

 Traces of the Mediterranean Nations in the Northern Ocean. 

 D^ H. A. Hagen, Remarks on White Ants. — Prof, N. S, Shaler. 

 Evidences of a Gradual Passage from Sedimentary to Volcanic 

 Rocks in the Brighton District. — D' H. A. Hagen. Flies from a 

 Petroleum Lake. — M. W. 0. Crosby. Occurrence of Fossiliferous 

 Boulders in the Drift of Truro, Cape Cod. — D' T. Sterry Hunt. 

 Remarks on the Precambrian Rocks of Great Britain. — M. W. H. 

 Patton. Synopsis of the New fingland Species of Colletes. 

 M. J. S. Kingsley. Notes on N. American Decapoda» — M. W. 0, 



Crosby, A Possible Origin of Petrosilicious Rocks. — M. B. D, 

 Halsled. American Species of Characeae. — D^ Charles S. Minot. 

 Growth as a Function of Cells, — D' C. S. Minot. On Certain Laws 



of Histological Difierentiation. 



Rev. George Fred. Wright. The 



Karnes and Moraines of New England. — M. Warren Upham. Gla- 

 cial Drift of Boston and Vicinity, 



PART. HI. APRIL 1879 — JANUARY 1880. M. Warren Upham. 

 Glacial Drift of Boston and Vicinity (concluded). — Dr. Samul Knee- 

 land. The Mineralized Phosphatic Guanos of the Equatorial Pacific 



Islands. 



Dr. Samuel Kneeland. Phenomena of the Frozen Well 



at Decorah, Iowa. 



Dr. T. M. Brewer. Additional Notes on his 



lists of New England Birds. — Prof. N. S. Shaler. Notes on the Sub- 

 marine Coast Shelf or Hundred-Fathom Detrilal Fringe. — Dr. M. 

 E. Wadsworth, DanaUte from the Iron Mine, Barllett, N. H. 

 Dr. M. E. Wadsworth. Picrolite from a Serpentine Quarry in Flo- 

 rida, Mass. — Mr. W. H, Melville. Analysis of the above Picrolite. 

 Mr. J, H. Huntington. On the Iron Ore of Bartlett. N. H. — Dr, J. 

 W. Fewkes. On the Structure of Rhizophysa filiformis. — Prof. Edw. 

 S. Morse. Remarks on the Antiquities of Japan. — Mr. F. W. Put- 

 nam. Remarks on Chambered Mounds in Missouri. — Dr. H. A. Ha- 

 gen, A New Species of Simulium with a remarkable Nympha-case, 

 M. W. 0. Crosby. Evidences of Compression in the Rocks of the 

 Boston Basin. — Dr. M. E. Wadsseorth. Remarks on the preceding 

 paper.— Dr. J. W. Fewkees. The Tubes in the Larger Nectoclyx of 

 Abyla pentagona. — Dr. W. K. Brooks. Development of the Diges- 

 tive Tract in Molluscs. — Mr. S. H. Scudder. Probable Age of 

 Haulover Beach, Nantucket Harbor.— Mr. F. W.Putnam. Remarks 

 on some Bones of N. E. Indians, and on some Archaeological Explo- 

 rations in Tenessee. — Mr. F. W. Putnam. Remarks on the Orna- 

 mentation of some Aboriginal American Pottery. — Dr. T. M. Bre- 

 wer. Catalogue of Humming Birds in the Society's Museum. 

 Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences^ late lyceum 

 of natural history, vol. I, n° 9. September 1879. — Binney. On the 

 Jaw and lingual dentition of certain Costa Rica Land shells collec- 

 ted by Dr. William M. Galb. — Israel C. Russel. A new form of 

 Compass-Clinometer. — Louis Elsberg. The structure of colored 

 Blood corpuscles. 



N° 10. November 1879. —Louis Elsberg. The structure of colored 

 Blood corpuscles (concluded). — Robert E. C. Stearns. Description 



of a new species or Variety of Land-Snail from California. — Alexis 

 A. Julien. On spodumene and its alterations. 



NoMI-12, March 1880. 



Alexis A.Julien. On spodumene and its 



Alterations (concluded). — W. G. Binney. On certain North Ame- 

 rican species of Zonites etc. — Albert R. Leeds. Lines of discovery 

 in the history of Ozone, with an index of its literature, and an 

 appendix upon the literature of Peroxide of Hydrogen. 

 N* 13. April 1880. — Albert R. Leeds. Index to the literature of Ozone 

 (concluded), with an appendix, upon the history of Autozone and 

 Peroxide of Hydrogen, and an Index to the literature of the same. 



Le gimnt, fimile DEYROLLE 



Evreux. — Imp. Ch, Herissiit. 



