332 Miscellaneous Intelligence. 
The ea of Adhesion to Horizontal Pressure in Mountain Dynamics, H. F. 
Wa ~ pry me indications of Recent Sensitiveness to Pressure in the Karth’s 
Cru 
Geclogca Sars of the Colorado River and Plateaus, ae K. Duron. 
~ Fae nsus in Animal and Vegetal Life, L. F. W 
on ne acteristics of the Vegetation of Towa, J. wen 
On port difficultie ca with in using the Cat’s Brain as a ia of the brains 
of Mammals, B. 
The All eged Voleand a ab ‘al Mt., net Carolina, F. W. CLARKE. 
On the Compass Plants, i hereon 
Discovery of ‘A iaiicsioerc and other Dinosaurs in the Rocky Mountains of 
Colorado, A. LAKES. 
ao nega of Fossils showing the effects of the Geodizing process, A. H. 
IV. Anthropology. 
Ancient Mounds in the vicinity of Naples, Scott County, Illinois, J. G. Hen 
DERSON. —An cient Names, Geographical, Tribal and Personal, in the Mis aintnd 
Valley, i 
Description of two Stone Cists acy lot near cme Illinois, A. ORHLE 
Description of a House in the of Mancos River, Colorado, with a 
Ground Plan of the sehen ge W. F. Mor 
Remarks on the of a Stone Pots, on the Animas River, New Mexico, 
with a Ground Plan —% TL Morean.—Observations on the San Juan River Dis- 
trict, as an important ancient seat of Village Indian Life, id. 
e Sources for Aboriginal History of Spanish America, A. F. BANDELIER. 
Houtirkable Burial Custom from a Mound in Florida: The Cranium 7 abiieed as 
a Cinerary wok H. Grutman.—Description of a Glazed Karthen Vessel, taken 
from a Tumulus in Florida, id. 
Evidences of Cannibalism i in a Nation before the — in Japan, E. S. MORSE. 
Remarks upon the Archeology of Vermont, G. H. PERKI 
An Atlas of asin fear nds Antiquities, 0. ae Mason.—North American 
Indian Synonym 
Ancient Pettary Stone Chiriqui, Central America, O. C. MARS 
On the anatomical peculiarities by which Moundbuilders’ Crania may be distin- 
guished from those of the Modern Indian, J. McGue. 
Exhibition be Problauities relics from Missouri, A. J. Con 
ex laa = of a Walled Town of the a aroundendilieea of the 
perme ope Valley, F 
n the Discovery of a I Hiden Skull i in the Drift near Denver, Colorado, T. BELT. 
Pe ennsylvania eo Survey.—Two new volumes of 
cuts ; and Two peer Tables of Elevation above Tide Level of 
mits a 
~ ete., in and nin Pamipieania, by Cuartes ALLEN. 250 
pp. 8vo. 
Professor Stevenson, in his volume, besides describing with 
detail the stratification and coal beds ni the region, gives in chap- 
ter 18, a partial statement of the facts on which were based th 
‘Is 
chapter 19, he discusses the relations of the axes west from and in- 
cluding the Alleghenies of Pennsyly vania ; Sra the axes to their 
final disappearance in West Virginia; shows that they are suc- 
