SUBJECT INDEX — SYSTEMATIC SECTION 



617 



ORDER ACANTHODEI 

 Range, Upper Silurian to Lower Permian 



Skeleton. Dean, B. 1907.2; Reis, 0. M. 

 1890.1, 1894.3. 



Taxonomy and relationships. Dames, 

 W. B. 1892.1; •Dean, B. 1907.2; DoUo, 

 L. 1906.1; Eastman, C. R. 1902.7; Reis, 

 O. M. 1892.2; Woodward, A. S. 1SS9.2. 



Family Acanthodidgs 



Morphology and classification. Davis, 

 J. W. 1894.1; Emery, C. 1897.2. —In 

 Permian of Bohemia. •Fritscli, A. J. 

 1883.1. 



Acanthodes. Morphology and taxon- 

 omy. Jaekel, O. 1S99.3, 1899.4; •Reis, 

 O. M. 1894.1, 1S95.1, 1896.1. 



ORDER PLAQIOSTOMI 

 Includins fossil and recent forms 



For sharks and rays in fresh-water, see 

 under Physiology. 



Relationship to Ganoids. Baird, S. F. 

 1871.36. 



Fossil forms. ■ — Italian specimens. Lioy, 

 P. 1865.2. — General popular account. 

 Woodward, A. S. 1884.1. — Plagiostome 

 teeth from English Eocene. Woodward, 

 A. S. 1900.5. 



Taxonomy. — General treatises. •Gar- 

 man, S. 1913.1; •Milller, J. & Henle, 

 F. G. 1837.1-1841.1. — Synoptic table. 

 Gracianov, V. I. 1907.2. — Value in 

 classification of number and position of 

 gill slits. Jaekel, O. 1890.1. 



Taxonomy, forms from — Indian 

 Archipelago. Bleeker, P. 1852.11. — 

 Pacific Ocean. Miklukho-Maklai, N. N. 

 & Macleay, W. 1879.1. — Japan. Pietsch- 

 mann, V. 1908.3, .5. — Beaufort, North 

 Carolina. Radcliffe, L. 1916.1. 



SUB-ORDER SELACHII 



Sharks 



General article. Encyclopedia Britannica. 

 Giinther, A. C. 1911.1; Kerr, J. G. 1911.1. 



Geographical distribution. Engelhardt, 

 R. 1913.1; Simroth, H. R. 1907.2. 



Natural history notes, descriptions, etc. 

 Clarke, S.'C. 1877.2, 1880.1; Eichwald, 

 C. E. 1819.1; Gudger, E. W. 1913.1; 

 H., L. 1876.1; •Hill, R. 1851.1; Moseley, 

 H.N. 1879.1; •Nichols, J. T. & Murphy, 

 R. C. (Long Island, N. Y.) 1916.1; South- 

 wick, J. M. 1885.1; Tatham, W. 1803.1; 

 Anon. 278, 475; Colnett, J. Add. 1798.1. 

 — Abundance in tropical seas. Distant, 

 W. L. 1897.1. — Unusual abundance of 

 dogfish in Scottish waters. Harvie-Brown, 

 J. A. 1883.1. — Tenacity of life. Kemp- 

 Welch, E. B. 1875.1. 



Phytogeny and relationships. Dean, B. 

 1895.5, 1896.11; Woodward, A. S. 1895.8. 



Taxonomy. — General accounts. Bona- 

 parte, C. L. 1838.2; Fowler, H. W. 1908.2; 

 Gill, T. N. 1858.1; Pavesi, P. 1874.1, 

 1878.1; •Regan, C. T. 1906.1. — 

 Selachii admitted as a class. Agassiz, 

 J. L. R. 1856.7; Gill, T. N. 1909.4; 

 Poche, F. 1902.1, 1911.1. 



Taxonomy of sharks from — Portugal. 



Bocage, J. V. & Capello, F. 1866.1. — 

 Eastern. North America. Gill, T. N. 1865.12. 



— California. Gill, T. N. 1863.15. — Chili. 

 Philippi, R. A. 1887.2, 1902.1. —Japan. 

 Pietschmann, V. 1908.3, .6. — Collection 

 of Music Ocianographique, Monaco. Roule, 

 L. 1912. 2-. — Greenland. Jensen, A. S. 

 Add. 1914.1. 



Fossil forms. Braus, H. 1902.1; Wood- 

 ward, A. S. 1888.16. — France. Joleaud, 

 L. 1905.2. — Silurian of Oesel I., Russia. 

 Rohon, J. V. 1893.1. — Carboniferous of 

 Great Britain. •Davis, J. W. 1883.1; 

 Traquair, R. H. 1888.3. —Triassic of 

 Lorraine. Jaekel, O. 1889.1. — Jurassic 

 of Normandy. Bigot, A. 1897.1; Bigot, 

 A. & BrasU, L. 1904.1. — Jurassic of 

 Wilrttemberg. Fraas, E. 1896.1. — Cre- 

 taceous. Kiprijanoff, V. A. (Russia) 

 1852.1; Woodward, A. S. (British) 



1894.4. — Tertiary. Chapman, F. R. & 

 Pritchard, G. B. (Australia and New 

 Zealand) 1904.1; Koch, A. (Hungary) 

 1903.1, 1904.2, 1904.3; Pasquale, M. 

 (Italy) 1903.1, 1905.2; Winkler, T. C. 

 (Belgium) 1874.1, 1878.2. —Eocene. 

 Jaekel, O. (MonteBolca) 1894.1; Stromer, 

 E. (Egypt) 1905.1. — Oligocene of Germany. 

 Jaekel, 0. 1898.4. — Miocene of California. 

 Jordan, D. S. & Real, C. H. 1913.1. 



Family Notldanidae 



Six and seven-gilled Sharks 

 Taxonomy, — in relation to embryology. 

 Braus, H. 1906.4. — of Australian species. 

 Ogilby, J. D. 1889.2. 



Notidanus (Hexanchus, Heptan- 

 chus, Heptranchias, syns.). Natural 

 history notes, descriptions, etc. Bellotti, 

 C. 1878.1; Delfortrie, E. 1878.1; Diaz 

 y Martinez, E. 1910.1; Garman, S. 

 1884.2, .6; Laboissifere, V. 1910.1; Mac- 

 leay, W. 1880.2; Regan, C. T. 1905.10. 



Occurrence — on Scottish coast. Ander- 

 son, W. 1894.1; Traquair, R. H. 1896.3. 



— on English coast. Couch, J. 1S46.1, 

 1851.1; Gray, J. E. 1868.2. —in Cal- 

 ifornia waters. Jordan, D. S. & Gilbert, 

 C. H. 1880.16. — Hexanchus in Argentina. 

 Lahille, F. 1913.1. — m Irish waters. 

 Scharff, R. F. 1915.2. — in Gulf of Gas- 

 cony. Vaillant, L. L. 1901.1. 



Fossil forms, Notidanus, —from Italy. 

 Bassani, F. 1901.1; Sismonda, E. 1861.1; 

 Lawley, R. (Pliocene of Tuscany) 1878.3, 

 1880.1. — /rom Miocene, United States. 

 Cope, E. D. 1867.1. —from Aptian Cre- 

 taceous of France. Pictet, F. J. 1865.1. — 

 in British Jurassic. Woodward, A. S. 

 1893.6. — General account. Woodward, 

 A. S. 1886.2. 



Family Chlamydoselachidse 

 Chlamydoselachus (Frilled Shark). 

 Natural history. — Oldest living type of 

 vertebrate. Cope, E. D. 1883.7, 1884.8; 

 •Garman, S. 1884.1,.2, 1884.3,.4,.5; 

 Owston, A. 1903.1; Palmfen, J. A. 1900.2. 

 Occurrence ■ — at Funchal, Madeira. 

 CoUett, R. 1890.1. —in Norway. •Col- 

 lett, R. 1897.4, 1903.2 ; Grieg, J. A. 1897.3. 



