162 THE NATURE OF ANIMAL LIGHT 



BIBLIOGEAPHY 



A few of the enormous number of papers on lumines- 

 cence are included in the list below. The attempt is made 

 to list only those dealing with the structure, chemistry or 

 physiology of luminous animals and the physical nature 

 of their light, together with a small number of general 

 interest. More complete works on light and luminescence 

 come first and original articles follow Authors' names 

 are arranged alphabetically, their papers chronologically. 

 A fairly complete list of literature covering the whole 

 field of Bioluminescence is given by Mangold, 1910. The 

 1913 paper of Dubois gives a bibliography of his own 

 contributions up to this date so that only those papers 

 to which special reference is made are included below. 



BOOKS AND GENERAL WORKS 



BECQtTEBEL, E. : 1867, La LumiSre. 



Dahlgben, U.: 1915, The Production of Light by Animals. Jour. Franklin 



Inst., vols. 180 to date. 

 Dttbois, R.: 1914, La Vie et La LumiSre. Alcan, Paris. 

 GrADEAN DE Keeville, H. : 1890, Les Vegetaux et les Animaux Lumineux. 



Paris. 

 Haevey, B. N.: 1917, The Chemistry of Light Production in Luminous 



Organisms. Carnegie Inst., Wash., Pub. No. 251, pages 171-234. 

 Heineioh, pi.: 18U-1820, Die Phosphorescenz der KSrper, etc. Nilrnburg. 

 HousTOUsr, R. A.; 1915, A Treatise on Light. London. 

 Kayseb, H.: 1908, Handbuch der Spectroscopie. Vols, ii and iy. Leipzig. 

 Mangold, E.: 1910, Die Produktion von Lioht. Hans Winterstein's Hand- 

 buch der vergleichende Physiologie, vol. iii, second half, pp. 225-392. 



Jena. 

 MoLiSH, H.: 1904 and 1912, Leuchtende Pflanzen. Eine physiologische 



Studie. Jena. 

 Ndtting, p. G. : 1912, Outlines of Applied Optics. Philadelphia. 

 Phipson, T. L.: 1870, Phosphorescence. L. Reeve and Co. London. 210 



pages. 

 Shepabd, S. B., 1914, Photochemistry. Longmans, Green and Co. 



