CONTENTS OF VOL. I. ¥ 
Meigs, M. D., 152. A Treatise on some of the Insects injurious to 
Vegetation. By 7. W. Harris, M. D., 153. Prodrome of a Work on 
the Ornithology of Arizona Territory. By Elliott Coues, M. D., 209. 
The first discovered traces of fossil neuropterous Insects in North 
On the 
70. American Educational Monthly, 271 rnithology and Odlogy 
of New England. By Edward A. Samuels, 318. Jretaceous form- 
ation ns of Sioux City, etc. By Jules Marcou, 320 
Lepidopterological Notes and Descriptions, I, II, ete. R 
Grote and C. T. Robinson, 320. The Taxidermist’s Manual. By 8. 
H. Sylvester, 321. The American Agriculturist. ee ap feast è 
n E 
o a of Chlöeon ataata dimidiatum. By Sir a PERET 
428. tsi of the Fossorial NSA a of North Am By 
A. S. Packard, jr., M. D., 431. Manual of the Botany of the termes 
United sepa including the pistes a of the Mississippi and North 
of North Carolina and Tennessee. By Prof. Asa Gray, 491,548. Enu- 
meration of Hawaiian Plants. By Horace Mann, 547. The Glacial 
Phenomena of Labrador and New England. By A. S. Packard, jr., 
-D., 610. The Quarterly Journal of Science, 611. The Naturalist’s 
Note Book, 613. Quarterly Journal of Psycholog gical Medicine and 
Medical Jurisprudence, 672. 
NATURAL HISTORY MISCELLANY. 
Botany.— Theory of the Origin of the Anther of Flowers PoE 
Physiological effects of the Calabar Bean, 51. Skeleton Saavik: 51. 
T Flora of Brognon, France, 103. Drying Plants by Heat, 
— two methods, 103. The May-flower, 154. Parthenogenesis in the 
Weeping Willow, 154. The Agency of Insects in Fertilizing Plants, 
155. The annual increase in the circumference of Trees, 155. Curious 
F Aa 
R in a brick taken from the Pyramidś of Egypt, 322. A supposed 
w Columbine, and a new Ox-eye Daisy, 388. Change of Color in 
Pees placed under ot of different colors, 390. Herbarium for 
sale, 432. A Fern new to our Flora, 432. Thornless form of the 
Honey egal nea 433. Monstrous Roses, 433. Identification of 
a Chemical Test, 434. Botanical Notes and Queries, 493. 
