164 



ANNUAL REPORTS, SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION 



Scholarship 



Oriental scholarship during the present 

 century, by Frederick Max Miiller. 

 1893: 681-700 



Schoolcraft, Henry R., Plan for Ameri- 

 can ethnological investigation. 

 1885: 907-914 



Schott, Arthur, The "cara gigantesca" of 

 Yzamal in Yucatan. 1869: 389-393 

 Remarks on an ancient relic of Maya 

 sculpture. 1871: 423-425 



Schott, Charles A., Underground temper- 

 atures. 1874: 249-253 



Schrodinger, E., What is an elementary 

 particle? 1950: 183-196 



Schubert, Hermann, Squaring of the 

 circle. 1890: 97-120 



Schuchert, Charles, Climates of geologic 

 time. 1914: 277-311 

 George Perkins Merrill, 1 854-1929. 



1930: 617-634 

 Hypothesis of continental displace- 

 ment. 1928: 249-282 

 Karl Alfred Von Zittel. 1904: 779- 

 786 



Schulman, Edmund, Tree rings and his- 

 tory in the western United States. 



1955: 459-473 

 Schultz, Leonard P., Biology of the 

 Bikini Atoll, with special reference 

 to the fishes. 1947: 301-316 

 Breeding habits of salmon and trout. 



i937 : 3 6 5"37 6 

 Schumacher, Paul, Ancient graves and 

 shell-heaps of California. 1 874 : 335- 



35° 

 Kjokken-moddings on the northwest 



coast of America. 1873: 354-362 



Schuster, Arthur, Atmospheric electricity. 



1895: 91-106 



International science. 1906: 493-514 

 Schwartz, Benjamin, Evolution of 

 knowledge concerning the round- 

 worm Ascaris lumbricoides. 1959: 

 465-481 



Parasites common to animals and man. 

 1955: 419-431 



Trichinosis in swine and its relation 

 to public health. 1939: 4 X 3 _ 435 



Science 



Advance of science in the last half 

 century, by T. H. Huxley. 1887: 

 57-98 



Battle of the alchemists, by Karl T. 

 Compton. 1933: 269-282 



Debt of the world to pure science, by 

 John J. Stevenson. 1897: 325-336 



Engineering and pure science, by W. 

 F. G. Swann. 1952: 201-215 



Evolution of modern scientific labora- 

 tories, by William H. Welch. 1895: 



493"5°4 



Growth of science in the nineteenth 

 century, by Michael Foster. 1899: 

 163-183 



Industrial science looks ahead, by 

 David Sarnoff. 1944: 183-192 



International science, by Arthur 

 Schuster. 1906: 493-514 



Latest achievements of science, by Wil- 

 liam Crookes. 1899: 143-153 



Lingering dryad, by Paul R. Heyl. 

 1929: 205-214 



Mathematics and the sciences, by J. W. 

 Lasley, Jr. 1941:183-197 



Recent advances in science and their 

 bearing on medicine and surgery, by 

 Michael Foster. 1896: 339-364; by 

 R. Virchow. 1898: 571-578 



Relation of pure science to industrial 

 research, by J. J. Carty. 1916: 523- 



531 



Relation of science to human life, by 

 Adam Sedgwick. 1909: 669-682 



Relations between the United States 

 of America and Germany, especi- 

 ally in the field of science, by Wil- 

 helm Waldeyer. 1905: 533-547 



Role of science in the electrical indus- 

 try, by M. W. Smith. 1941: 199- 

 209 



Science, art, and education, by R. E. 

 Gibson. 1953: 169-203 



Science, technology, and society, by 

 L. R. Hafstad. 1957: 207-220 



Science and human prospects, by Eliot 

 Blackwelder. 194 1: 267-283 



