BIBLIOGRAPHY OF U. S. NATIONAL MUSEUM. 685 



Otis T. Mason. Anthropological notes — Continued. 



United States, p. 198. Physical education of children, p. 199. Annual Report of the Bureau 

 of Ethnology, p. 309. The crania of the negroes, p. 312. Maori Pharmacopia, p. 401. Tho 

 Laplanders, p. 402. Relationships botween the Eskimo tribes, p. 403. Archaeological maps, p. 

 404. Tho races of man, p. 404. Tho so-called deformed crania, pp. 481-487. Corea, p. 569. The 

 relation of anthropology to the science of mind, p. 570. Jewish ability, p. 572. Aboriginal 

 baking-pans, p. 473. War-clubs and digging-sticks, p. 574. 



Fred Mather. A new native trout. 



Forest and Stream, xxv, 25, Jan. 14, 188(3, p. 481. 

 Salvelinus oquassa from Sunapee Lake, New Hampshire. 



Fred Mather (editor). Sunapee trout. 



Forest and Stream, XXVI, 9, Mar. 25, 1880, p. 109. 



Setii E. Meek and Barton W. Evermann. A review of the American species of the 

 genus Gerres. 



Proc. Ac. Nat. Sei. Phila., 1886, pp. 233-252. 



C. Hart Merriam. Description of a new subspecies of the common eastern chip- 

 munk. 



Amer. Nat., XX, No. 3, March, 1886, pp. 236-242 (also as a separate). 



C. Hart Merriam. Description of a new species of Aplodoutia, from California. 

 Annals of the New York Acad. Sci., in, No. 10, May, 1886, pp. 312-328, plates xix-XX. 

 Read March 15, 1886. 

 (Also as a separate, May, 1886. ) 

 George P. Merrill. Notes on the mineralogy and lithology of the District of Co- 

 lumbia. 



Proc. JJ. S. Nat. Mas., vm, Sept. 2, 1885, pp. 351-353. 



A brief description of the minerals found in the water-works tunnel of this city, and which 

 had not before been recognized from this locality. Nine species are described. 



George P. Merrill. Building and ornamental stones of the United States. 

 The Popular Science Monthly, xxviii, 160, Aug., 1885, pp. 520-532. 



A brief notice of the various kinds and amounts of stone quarries lor building and orna- 

 montal purposes in the United States. 



John Murdoch. (Part iv, Natural History.) 



Report of the Expedition to Point Barrow, Alaska, 1882-'83, pp. 89-200. Fivo plates. 

 This report on tho natural history of the Point Barrow Expedition (1882-'83) gives tno re- 

 sults of the work of the author as naturalist of the expedition and of others associated with 

 him, and consists of the following divisions : 

 I. Mammals, pp. 92-103. 

 II. Birds, pp. 104-128. Plates, 2. 



III. Fishes, pp. 129-132. 



IV. Insects, pp. 133-135. 



V. Marine invertebrates, exclusive of mollusks, pp. 136-176. Plates, 2. 

 VI. Mollusks, pp. 177-184. One plate. 



VII. Collecting localities and dred ging stations, pp. 185-190. 

 VIII. Plants, pp. 191-192. 



Appendix, pp. 193-200. 

 Parts I, n, hi, vn, the introduction and the appendix, the introduction to iv (p. 133), and 

 all of v except pp. 163-165, were written by Mr. Murdoch ; the remainder of Part iv (pp. 134- 

 135) was written by Prof. C.V.Riley; the remainder of Part v, list of medusa) from near 

 Point Barrow (pp. 163-165), by Mr. J. Walter Fewkes; Part vi, by Mr. W. H. Dall, and Part 

 vn, by Prof. Asa Gray. 



John Murdoch. Insect-collecting at Point Barrow, Arctic Alaska. (Abstract.) 



Proc. Ent. Soc, of Washington, February 29, 1884, to December 3, 1885, I, No. 1, 1886, pp. 

 9-10. 

 Abstract of paper read before the Ent. Soc. of Washington, April 3, 1884. 

 Willard Nye, jr. Notes on octopus, flying-fish, etc., taken during the Albatross 

 cruise in January, 1884. 



Bull, IT. S.Fish Com., v, pp. 189-190. 



