xxxii 
. 
Geological Society, 109, 205, 289. 
— Railway Guide, Macfar- 
lane, 952. 
Ornithologists Union,Seventh Con- 
s,1 
Society aty for Psychical Research, 284. 
Te rrestial Leech, Forbes, 646. 
Tapir 
eee planorbe, 557. 
557, 
Amphibinn Basins, 539. 
Pe eg EE Rah hoa 
. Am 
Spray 
mac m 
Amygðaloidai Trap from Thunder Bay, 
nada, 
deine communis, 781. 
258. 
= 
logy Affected by 
One-Sided Derabations, J. Mul- 
` ler, 981. 
Anchovies at Torquay, 282. 
— e, 69. 
Andrews, Autotomy in the Crab, 138. 
Andropogon holt, 182, 183, 278. 
s, 182. 
peace ek ig 277. 
scoparius, 181, 
The American Naturalist. 

[January, 1891.] 
Anemone bap ica, 387. 
A New F or | Dog from the ‘pte Fork 
e, E. D. Cope, 106 
An Extensive De; posit of Phosphorite 
a Fone 1185. 
Anglesite TAGI, 1194. 
Anguis fragilis, 1210. 
Animal T fe asic cree Conditions 
vironment, 517. 
PEST Quartzites, 955 
Slat 
Anisolaoxyphenetol, 1194. 
Aul ay rentinus, 571 
Anold 51. 
An nel ‘Descent: The Origin of Meta- 
erism and t igre 
e 
of the Mesoderm, E. Mey 
1 
Annelids , 854. 
Annual Report of Biological Laboratory, 
859. 
Anodonta cygnea, 582. 
An Old Bete sinat Letter, 1196. 
fyn ESY A 698. 
ocroite, 74 
a, 280. 
aie in of the A. A. A. 8:; at 
Indianapolis, 975 
and Prehistoric Archeology, 975. 
‘Antiophias grandiflorum, 184, 
Anthus aquaticus, 270. > 
Apetale, 278. 
