ADDITIONS TO THE LIBKAET. 1 59 



Penfield. Hamlinite, a new rlioniboliedrnl mineral from the Herderite 

 localit)^ at Stoneliam, Me., 511.— 0. C. Marsh. Notice of New Tertiary 

 Mammals, 523. 



New York. Academ}^ of Sciences. Annals. Vol. iv. Nos. 10-12. 

 1889. 

 E. N. S. Eingueberg. The Oalceocrinidee, 388. 



. . . Vol. V. 1889. Nos. 1-3. 1889. 



A. W. Vogdes. A Catalogue of North- American Palaeozoic Crustacea, 

 confined to the non-trilobitic genera and species, 1, 



. . Transactions. Yol. viii. Nos. 1-8. 1888-89. 



1889. 

 G. F. Kunz. Beryls from North Carolina, 2. — A. A. Julien and H. 

 Carrington Bolton. The true cause of Sonorousness in Sand, 9. — G. F. 

 Kunz. Bertrandite from Maine and Colorado and other minerals, 11. — 

 G. F. Kunz. New Minerals from the trap of Bergen Hill, 16. — J. S. 

 Newberry. The new Oil-field of Colorado, and its bearing on the ques- 

 tion of the genesis of Petrolsum, 25. — T. I). Band. Comparison of the 

 Eocks of Philadelphia and New York, 47. — J. J. Friedrich. The Litho- 

 logy of Manhattan Island, 53. — J. Eyerman. The Mineralogy of the 

 French-Creek Mines, Pennsylvania, 56. — D. G. Eaton. Volcanoes, their 

 distribution and phenomena, 82. — A. Hyatt. Modes of evolution in Fossil 

 Shells, 114. — J. S. Newberry. The Man of Spy, discovery of Palseolithic 

 Human Skeletons near Liege, Belgium, 132, — J. H. Furman. The Tin- 

 deposits of North Carolina, 136. — J. S. Newberry. Amber, its History, 

 Occurrence, and Use, 156. — G. F. Kunz. American Ambers, with other 

 Miueralogical Notes, 158. — G. F. Kunz. The Precious and Ornamental 

 Stones of North America, 160. — N. L. Britton. Eemarks on recent Dis- 

 coveries in local Cretaceous and Quaternary Geology, 177. — H. C. Bolton. 

 Jebel Nagous and a New " Mountain of the Bell," 182.— W. E. Hidden. 

 Yttrium Minerals from Llano Co., Texas, 185. — A. E. Ledoux. The Pipe- 

 Creek (Texas) Meteorite, 186. 



. . . Vol. ix. Nos. 1 & 2. 1889-90. 1890. 



D. S. Martin. The origin of Diagonal Trends in the Earth's Crust, with 

 application to the production of normal and reversed faults and the fold- 

 ing of strata, 15. — H. C. Bolton. Eesearches on Sonorous Sand in the 

 Peninsula of Sinai, 21. — J. S. Newberry. The Laramie Group, its geo- 

 logical relations, its economic importance, and its fauna and fiora, 27. — 

 J. J. Friedrich. On some new species of Protozootites, Quaternary and 

 Tertiary, from California, and on the importance of Protozoa as rock- 

 building agents, 32. — J. S. Newberry. The Eock-salt Deposits of the 

 Salina Group in W^estern New York, 39.— F. J. H. Merrill and I). S. 

 Martin. A note on the Coloured Clays recently exposed in railroad cut- 

 tings near Morrisania, N.Y., 45. 



. American Museum of Natural History. Annual Eeport of 



the Trustees, for the year 1888-89. 1889. 



. . Bulletin. Vol. i. No. 4. 1883. 



Vol. ii. No. 2. 1889. 



E. P. Whitfield. Observations on some imperfectly known Fossils from 

 the Calciferous Sand-rock of Lake Champlain, and descriptions of several 

 new forms, 41. — E. P. Whitfield. Additional notes on Asaphus ccmalis, 

 Conrad, 64. — E. P. Whitfield. Description of a new form of fossil Bala- 



