716 KEPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1890. 



Charles A. White. The Lower Cretaceous of the Southwest and its relations to 

 underlying and overlying formations. 



Amer. Jour. Sci., xxxvin, December, 1889, pp. 440-445. 

 Charles A. White. The North American Mesozoic. Address as Vice-President of 

 Section E of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, at Toronto, 

 August, 1889. 



Proc. Amer. Assn. Adv. Sci., xxxvm, pp. 1-24. 

 Charles A. White. Report on the Department of Invertebrate Fossils (Mesozoic) 

 in the U. S. National Museum, 1886. 



Report of the Smithsonian Institution, II, 1886 (1889), pp. 229-230. 

 Charles A. White. Report on the Department of Iuvertebrate Fossils (Mesozoic) 

 in the U. S. National Museum, 1887. 



Report of the Smithsonian Institution (U. S. National Museum), 1887 (1889), p. 143. 

 Henry S. Williams. The Cuboides Zone and its fauna ; a discussion of methods of 

 correlation. 



Bull. Geol. Soc. Amer., I, 1890, pp. 481-500. PI. 11-13. 



A description of the Cuboides Zone of the New York section and correlation of it with the 

 Cuboides Zone of the Devonian system of Europe. The discussion of the methods of cor- 

 relation includes the application of paleontologic and stratigraphic evidence as a basis of 

 correlation. 

 Scott Wilson. On some of the birds of the Sandwich Islands. 

 The Ibis, Sixth Series, II, No. G, April, 1890, pp. 170-196. PI. i (colored;. 

 Hemignathus stejnegeri, pi. vi, fig. 2, (H. obscurus Stejn. Proc. IT. S. Nat. Mus , 1887, p. 93). 

 Thomas Wilson. [Anthropological Notes in the "American Naturalist."] 



Mound Explorations by W. K. Moorehead in Ross County, Ohio, xxm, No. 273, September, 



1889, pp. 834-839. 

 Congresses, National and International, held in Paris during the French Exposition of 1889, 



XXIV, No. 278, February, 1890, pp. 197-200. 

 Prehistoric Occupation in Cambodia— shell-heaps in Asia— Polished stone implements in the 



National Museum, xxiv, No. 279, March, 1890, pp. 286-289. 

 Fort Ancient, Ohio (illustrated), xxiv, No. 280, April, 1890, pp. 383, 384. 



Classification of arrow and spearheads or knives in the National Musoum — Archaeological 

 discoveries— Archseologic or Archaeological ?— Human and animal remains, xxiv, No. 282, 

 May, 1890, pp. 589-594. 

 Thomas Wilson. The paleolithic period in the District of Columbia. 

 Proc. IT. S. Nat. Mus., xii, No. 777, Mar. 7, 1890, pp. 371-376. PL xvii-xxi. 

 Also printed in the 'American Anthropologist," II, July, 18S9, pp. 235-241. 

 Thomas Wilson. The civilization of the Indians of North America. 

 Association Francaise pour V Avancement des Science (Paris), August, 1889. 

 Thomas Wilson. The Falls of Niagara, its value as a chronometer of antiquity. 



Association Francaise pour I' Avancement des Sciences (Paris), August, 1889. 

 Thomas Wilson. Prehistoric implements and objects in hard or semi-precious 

 stone in America. 



Association Francaise pour V Avancement des Sciences (Paris), August, 1889. 

 Thomas Wilson. The Smithsonian Institution and its Anthropologic Work. 



Journal of Anthropological Institute of Qreat Britain and Ireland, xix, No. 4, May, 1890, pp. 

 509-515. 

 H. C. Yarrow. Report on the Department of Reptiles and Batrachians in the U. S. 

 National Museum, 1886. 



Report of the Smithsonian Institution, II, 1886 (1889), pp. 165, 166. 

 H. C. Yarrow. Report on the Department of Reptiles and Batrachians in the U. S. 

 National Museum, 1887. 



Report of the Smithsonian Institution (U. S. National Museum), 1887 (1889), pp. 103, 104. 

 W. S. Yeates. Pseudomorphs of native copper after azurite from Grant County, 

 New Mexico. 



Amer. Jour. Sci., November, 1889. 

 W. S. Yeates. New localities for phenakite. 

 Amer. Jour. Sci., April 1890. 



