BIBLIOGRAPHY OF U. S. NATIONAL MUSEUM. ()79 



A. Howard Clark. History of the Iced-Fish and Frozen-Fish Trade of the United 



States. 



Travis. Am. Fish. Soc, 188(5, p. 68. 



F. W. Clarke. The relatious of the Government to chemistry. 

 Bulletin of the Chemical Society of Washington, No. 1, pp. 9-22. 



Annual address oftlio president of the Chemical Society of Washington, delivered Drcem 

 bor 10, 1885. 

 F. W. Clarke. The minerals of Litchfield, Me. 

 Am. Journ. Sci., April, 1886, pp. 262-272. 



Describes elseolite, caucrinite, and sodalite, with a now ppecios, hydronophelite, and dis- 

 cusses formula). Two hundred separates printed. 



F. W. Clarke. Report of Chief Chemist. 



Fifth Annual Report of the United States Geological Survey, 1883-'84 (1885), pp. 59-62. 

 J. M. Clarke. On a higher Devonian Fauna of Ontario County, N. Y. 



Bull. 16, TJ. S. Geological Survey, pp. 1-86 ; 3 plates. 

 Joseph W. Collins. Unusual abundance of cod on Brown's Banks. 



Bull. TJ. S. Fish Com., v, Aug. 7, 1885, p. 234. 



Joseph W. Collins. Fishing on an edge of the Grand Bank. 



Bull. TJ. S. Fish Com., V, Aug. 12, 1885, p. 256. 

 Joseph W. Collins. Edible qualities of smoked king-fish (Scombcromorns cavalla) 

 Cnv. 



Bull. TJ. S. Fish Com., v, Sept. 15, 1885, p. 359. 



Joseph W. Collins. Proposition to prepare king-fish by smoking. 



Bull. TJ. S. Fish Com.. V, Sept. 15, 1885, p. 360. 

 Joseph W. Collins. Report on the investigation of lishing grounds in the Gulf of 

 Mexico, with notes on the fisheries of that region. 

 Report TJ. S. Fish Com., 1885, pp. 217-311, 10 plates. 

 Charles B. Cory. The birds of the West Indies, including the Bahama Islands, 

 the Greater and the Lesser Antilles, excepting the islauds of Tobago and Trini- 

 dad. 



The Auk, ill, Jan. and Apr., 1886, pp. 1-59 and 187-245. 



To a great extent based on material in the National Museum. 



William Van Zandt Cox. A Glance at Billingsgate. 



Forest and Stream, xxv, 1, July 30, 1885, pp. 9-10. 



Describes the methods of salo, etc., employed in this ancient and important fish -market. 

 William Healey Dall. Notes on some Floridiau land and fresh-water shells, with 

 a revision of the Auric ulacea of the Eastern United States. 



Proc. TJ. S. Nat. Mus.,vm, July 13, 1885, pp. 255-289. Plates xvn-xvni. 



William Healey Dall. On Turblnella pyrum Lamarck, and its dentition. 



Proc. TJ. S. Nat. Mus., vill, Sept. 2, 1888, pp. 345-348. Plate xix. 



Describes the soft parts of a mollusk, of which the shell has beon kuown since Pliny, but 

 of which the anatomy had hitherto remained unknown, and consequently a doubt had rested 

 on the systematic position hitherto assigned to the species. 



William Healey Dall. Memorandum on the mounds of Satsuma and Enterprise, 

 Fla. 



Am. Journ. of Archaeology, I, No. 2, July, 1885, pp. 184-189. 



Contains an account of the structure of the mound and a list of the shells found within. Tho 

 writer takes the position that the mound is in part artificial and intentional, and not the mere 

 relic of innumerable dinners whose refuse was cast away without thought of mouud-making. 



William Healey Dall. The teeth of Invertebrates. 



Cyclopedia of Dentistry, i, 1886, pp. 337-350. 



An illustrated article on the teeth of invertebrates in general, and especially of the Echini 

 and mollusks, for the Cyclopedia of Dentistry, published by Lea Bros. & Co., and edited by Drs. 

 Pierce, Leitch, and others. 



William Healey Dall. The National Government and Science. 

 The Evening Post, New York, Dec. 31, 1885. 



Discusses the relations which should oxist between scientific men and the organization of 

 the executive and legislative departments of tho Government. 



