36 PROCEEDINGS OF THE BALTIMORE MEETING 



Jurassic saurian remains ingested witliin fish. Annals of the Carnegie 

 Museum, 1911, Tolume 8, pages 182-187, 2 plates. 



New elasmobranchs frpm Solenhofen in the Carnegie Museum. Amer- 

 ican Journal of Science. 1911. fourth series, volume 31. pages 399-4(>4, 

 3 plates. 



Paleontology. Fishes. [Record of progress during the year.] Amer- 

 ican Tear Book. 1910 (1911 1. 



Triassic fishes of Connecticut. Connecticut State Geological Natural 

 History Survey. 1911. Bulletin number 18. pages 1-TT. 11 plates and 

 8 figures. 

 1912. Mesozoic and Cenozoic fishes. [Summary of recent literature.] '^ Bulle- 

 tin of the Geological Society of America. 1912. volume 23. pages 228- 

 232. 



Tertiary fish-remains from Spanish Guinea in west Africa. Annals of 

 the Carnegie Museum. 1912. volume 8. pages 370-378. 2 plates. 



1914. Notes on Triassic fishes belonging to the families Catopteridie and 



Semionotidie. Annals of the Carnegie Museum. 1914. volume 9. pages 

 139-148, 2 plates. 



1915. Columbus on the Remora. Copeia. 1915. number 19. pages 11-12. 

 Dipterus remains from the Upper Devonian of Colorado. Annals of the 



Carnegie Museum. 1915. volume 9. pages 279-284. figures. 

 Early figures of the Remora. Nature. 1915. volume 95. pages .344-.345» 



figures. 

 Olden-time knowledge of Hippocampus. Smithsonian Report. 1915. 



The following adcliTional titles indicate his wide range of interest. 

 They do not. however, include his publications in the field of genealogy: 



1898. On remains of struthioUthus chersonensis of northern China. Bulletin 



of the Museum of Comparative Zoology. 

 Discovery of fossil egg of Struthiolithus. Geological Magazine. October, 

 1898. 



1899. Plastiline. a new modeling compound. Science. February. 1899. 



1904. Recent zoopaleontology. Abstract. Science, volume 19. 

 Geo-biological terms. Science, volume 20. page 51. 

 Fossil plumage. American Naturalist. 



Second century criticism of Vergil's Etna. Science. 



1905. Anaximander. earliest precursor of Darwin. Popular Science. Decem- 



ber. 1905. 

 Greek ideas of vulcanism. Popular Science. October. 1905. 



1906. Vesuvius in the early middle ages. Popular Science. December. 1906. 



1907. Illu.strations of medieval earth science. Popular Science. July. 1907. 



1908. Dates of early Santoren and Ischian eruptions. Science. May. 1908. 

 Review of J. M. Clarke's early devonic history of New York and East- 

 ern North America. American .Journal of Science, July. ir>08. 



1900. Recent literature on ancient animal names and effigies. American Jour- 



nal of Philosophy. October. 1909. 



