44 
LIST OF NEW STATIONS AND OBSERVERS FOR THE YEAR 1885—continued. 
Name of observer. Station. State. Latitude. 
°° ‘ 
paiecieetin spislede sis cep bes eewbneernecareweey River Falls .....-- Misagnain. wielsinie eis 
Robert’s.....--.--|- 
ngeoae z Aer Richmond...|. 
nu Inghram.........-- 
. Green... 
Lynds Jones..... 
Prof. H. W. Parker . 
Harry E. Peck .. 
Morton Peck...... 
Alexander Scougale 
H.S. Williams.-.. 
Rev. C. E. Cline. 
John A. Mosher. . 
Pres. R. B. Abbott 
W. D. Hurlbut. . 
Mrs. L. F. Tinsley 
F, L. Washburn. 
Prof. G. Jermy . 
Rev. G. Birkman. 
N. P. Ball..... 
V.L. Kellogg - 
B. L. SouNUEh eeteseie 
Fred Twamley 
Will Dean.. 
W. C. Benn 
Miss Lottie Yeomans...... 
E. Caleutt 
-| Burlington... 
-| Iowa City... 
me Minneapolis 
“| White Earth 
San Antonio...... 
‘| Shell River 
Des Moines. . 
i “Sioux City......- 
.| State Centre 
Emmetsburg...--. 
Spirit Lake....-..|..- 
-| Albert Lea......-- 
Rochester ...-...-- : 
-| Lake City........ 
Red Aiden ‘i 
Excelsior - . 
Saint Paul....... 
-| Valley City.-..... ‘ 
Steele 
Minto 
Ossowo ..... ceaincie 
{Note.—All of the stations enumerated in the above lists for 1884 and 1885 will be found on the ac- 
companying map of the Mississippi Valley. The exact position of each station is indicated by a black 
triangle. 
This map is particularly valuable to the student of the migration and distribution of species, 
because it shows at a glance the altitudes of the several areas embraced in the region of which the 
report treats. Altitude, itis well known, is the principal factor governing the distribution of species 
in places of the same latitude.—C. H. M.] 
