BIBLIOGRAPHY OF A. P. BROWN 1/ 



Notes on a collection of fossils from Wilmington, North Carolina. Amos P. 

 Brown and Henry A. Pilsbry. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural 

 Sciences of Philadelphia, 1912, pages 152-153. 



Minerals of Pennsylvania. Amos P. Brown and Frederick Ehrenfeld. Topo- 

 graphic and Geologic Survey of Pennsylvania, 1913, Report 9, pages 1-166. 



Variation in two species of Lucidella from Jamaica. Amos P. Brown. Pro- 

 ceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, 1913, pages 

 3-21. 



Two collections of Pleistocene fossils from the Isthmus of Panama. Amos P. 

 Brown and Henry A. Pilsbry. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural 

 Sciences of Philadelphia, 1913, pages 493-500. 



Notes on the geology of the Island of Antigua. Amos P. Brown. Proceedings 

 of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, 1913, pages 584-616. 



Fresh-water mollusks of the Oligocene of Antigua. Amos P. Brown and Henry 

 A. Pilsbry. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadel- 

 phia, 1914, pages 209-213. 



Oligocene fossils from the neighborhood of Cartagena, Colombia, with notes 

 on some Haitian species. Henry A. Pilsbry and Amos P. Brown. Proceed- 

 ings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, 1917, pages 32-41. 



Discussion of the crystallization of the hemoglobin of the donkey. Amos P. 

 Brown. Quoted in a paper by Jaques Loeb, Science, new series, volume 

 XLV, February 23, 1917, pages 191-193. 



MEMORIAL OF DELORME D. CAIRNES ^ 

 BY CHARLES CAM SELL 



The death of Delorme Donaldson Cairnes at Ottawa on June 14, 1917, 

 just as he was about to leave for his summer's field-work in the Yukon, 

 removed from the field of geology one of the best trained and most indus- 

 trious workers of the yomiger group of geologists in America. His place 

 on the Canadian Geological Survey, to the staff of which he had been 

 attached since May, 1905, will be difficult to fill because of his intimate 

 knowledge of the geology and mineral deposits of Yukon Territory, where 

 he spent in all eleven years of hard, uninterrupted work. 



He was born in the village of Culloden, Oxford County, Ontario, on the 

 21st of August, 1879, and was thus in his thirty-eighth year when he died. 

 Early in his life the family moved to Stratford, where his father was 

 engaged in business. Here he obtained his early education, passing 

 through the public school and the Collegiate Institute up to the point of 

 university matriculation. In 1896 the family moved to the West, and 

 eventually settled at Grand Forks, British Columbia, where for his 



1 Read before the Society December 27, 1917. 

 Manuscript received by the Secretary of the Society December 13, 1917. 



