Catalogue of Printed Books, dc. 393 



Osborn, H. F. [On the origin of mammals.] 

 Proc Int. Congr. Zool., Cambridge 1898, 70-71, 413-419. 

 London, Nature, 58, 1898, 426-427. 

 New Haven, Amer. J. Sci., 7, 1899, 92-96. 



Correlation between Tertiary mammal horizons of Europe 



and America 



New York, Am. Acad. Sci., 13, 1900, 1-72. 

 Am. J. Sci. 10, 1900, 400-401. 



Correlation between Tertiary mammal horizons . 



pt. ii. Faunal relations of Europe and America during the Tertiary 

 period, and theory of the successive invasion of an African fauna 

 into Europe. 

 New York, Science, 11, 1900, 561-574, charts i.-iv. 



Am. Acad. Sci., 13, 1900, 45-64. 



Am. J. Sci., 10, 1900, 400-401. 



Origin of the mammalia, iii. Occipital condyles of rep- 



tilian tripartite type. 



Boston, Amer. Nat.,' 34, 1900, 943-947, 3 ffg. 



Stuttgart, N. Jahrb., 1903, 1, 144-145. 



On the primary division of the reptilia into two sub- 



classes, Synapsida and Diapsida. 

 New York, Science, 17, 1903, 275-276. 



The reptilian sub-classes Diapsida and Synapsida, and the 



early history of the Diaptosauria. 



New York, Mem. Amer. Mus., Nat. Hist., 1, 8, 1903, 449-507, pi. xl. 



Osborne, C. F. Gold at Knysna. [Including a report to the Chief 

 Inspector of Public Works, apparently never printed, and a letter to the Editor.] 

 Cape Town, Cape Mon. Mag., (2), 12, 1876, 123-125, and 256. 



South African goldfields, and machinery to work them. 



Pietermaritzburg, 1884, 8vo, 48 pp. 



and Bain, T. Eeport on the recent gold discoveries in 



the Division of Knysna. . . . 



v. C. G. H. Pari. Reports, [G. 46-'86]. 



Owen, Kichard. Eeport on the reptilian fossils of South Africa. 

 Part i. Description of certain fossil crania, discovered by A. G. 

 Bain, Esq., in sandstone rocks at the south-eastern extremity of 

 Africa, referable to different species of an extinct genus of reptilia 

 (Dicynodori), and indicative of a new tribe or sub-order of sauria. 

 London, Trans. Geol. Soc, (2), 7, 1845-56, 59-84, pi. iii.-vi. 



Q. J. Geol. Soc, 1, 1845, 318-322. 



Proc. Geol. Soc, 4, 1846, 500-504. 



Paris. Ann. sci. nat. (Zool.), (3), 5, 1846, 271-272. 



