698 REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1890. 



Leland O. Howard. Note on the mouth-parts of the American cockroach. 

 Proc. Entom. Soc. Washington, I, No. 4, May 15, 1890, pp. 21C-2 1 8. 



Describes in detail the mouth-parts of Peripla/neta americana and particularly a sclerite in the 

 form of a dentate digitus at the base of the tooth of the lacinia, heretofore unnoticed and 

 not found in P. oricntalis. 

 Leland O. Howard. Authorship of the family Mymaridce. 

 Proc. Entom. Soc. Washington, I, No. 4, May 15, 1890, p. 221. 



Puts forth proof to show that Haliday (not Ashmead) is the original proposer of Mymaridce as 

 a family name. 

 Leland O. Howard. A few additions and corrections lo Scndder's Nomenclafcor 

 Zoologicus. 



Proc. Entom. Soc. Washington, I, No. 4, May 15, 1890, pp. 258, 259. 

 Leland 0. Howard. Bibliography of American Economic Entomology. 

 Insect Life. II, May and June, 1890, p. 335. 



Editorial notice, of the publication and announcement of the scope of parts I, II, III, and index 

 of the Bibliography of American Economic Entomology. 

 Leland O. Howard. Additional note on spider-egg parasites. 

 Insect Life, n, May and June, 1890, p. 359. 



Records the fact, communicated by Mr. W. H. Harrington, that Trichasius clavatus. is a Bceus, 

 and gives additional localities for B. americanus and Acoloides saitidis. 

 Leland O. Howard. A North American Axima and its habits. 

 Insect Life, n, May and June, 1890, pp. 365-367, 3 figure*. 



Discusses the relationships of Axima Walker and the validity of the subfamily Aximince 

 Cameron and describes Axima zabriskie from North America, reared hy Rev. J. L. Zabris- 

 kie from uests of Oeratina dupla. (See under Charles V. Riley.) 

 W. H. Hudson. (See under P. L, Sclater.) 



Joseph F. James. On the Maquoketa shales and their correlation with the Cincin- 

 nati group of southwestern Ohio. 



Amer. Oeol., v, 1890, pp. 335-356; postscript on p. 394. 



This paper presents a review of the references to the shales of Iowa and the adjoining States. 

 It also presents the results of a visit made to the typical locality in Iowa, discusses the 

 extension of the Cinciuuati series westward, as shown by the records of deep wells, and 

 notes the resemblances in paleontological features. The conclusion is reached that the 

 Maquoketa shales are the direct continuation of the Cincinnati series of rocks. 

 David Starr Jordan and Charles Harvky Bollman. Scientific results of the 

 explorations by the steamer Albatross, No. IX. Catalogue of fishes collected at 

 Port Castries, St. Lucia, by steamer Albatross, November, 1688. 

 Proc. TT. S. Nat. Mas., XII, July 17, 1890, pp. 645-652. 

 Goroula sanctce-lucice, new species. 

 David Starr Jordan and Barton W. Evermann. Description of the yellow-finned 

 trout of Twin Lakes, Colorado. 



Proc. TT. 8. Nat. Mus., xu, December 10, 1889, pp. 453, 454. 

 Salmo mykiss macdonaldi, new species. (See under Charles Harvey Bollman.) 

 Philip H. Kirsch. Notes on a collection of fishes obtained in the Gila river at Fort 

 Thomas, Arizona, by Lieut. W. L. Carpenter, U. S. Army. 

 Proc. TT. S. Nat. Mus., xi, September 20, 1888 (1889), pp. 555-558. 

 F. H. Knowlton. A revision of the genus Araucarioxylon of Kraus, with compiled 

 descriptions and partial synonymy of the species. 

 I'roc. U. S. Nat. Mus., xil, No. 784, 1889, pp. 601-617. 

 S. R. Kokhler. A stroll through the Peabody Museum, Cambridge, Massachusetts. 

 The Magazine of Art (Loudon and New York), xu, pp. 393-396, 404-4U ; xm, pp. 47-51. 

 A popular account of the Peabody Museum of American archaeology and ethnology, Harvard 

 University, Camhridge, Massachusetts. Written several years ago, but only now published. 

 S. R. Kokhler. Schrotblatter. 



Chronik fur vervielfdltigende Kunst. II, No. 9, September, 1889, pp. 65-68. 



An attempt to show that the prints known as "Schrotblatter" (dotted prints, gravures en 

 maniere criblee) are early white-line work, executed, as a rule, with the graver upon metal. 

 S. R. Koehlkr. Zu einem Holzschnitt nach Primaticcio. 



Chronik fur veruiclftiltigende Kunst, II, No. 9, September, 1889. 



Suggesting the seventeenth century and French origin for a wood cut after one of Theodor van 

 Thulden's etchings, forming part of " Les travaux d'Ulysse, desseignez par le sieur de 

 Saint Martin," which is attributed to an anonymous Italian wood-cuttor of the sixteenth 

 century, in Hirt.li and Mather's " Meister-H dzschuitte, " Part v, pi. 157. 



