1895.] Contents. vii 
nus Fauna, 839; Formation of Oolite, 840; The er tee of 
Saurians, 841; The Geology of Cuba, 841 ; e 
Greenland, 842 ; Age of the AEREA of Crow aA S Ridge, 843; 
Faunal Migrations, 922; A New Geomyid from: the Upper 
Eocene, 923; Cenozoic History of the Baltic Sui: a, at ; Fossil 
Elephants of Tilloux, 925 ; The Latest Connection between the 
Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, 926; A Batrachian Armadillo ery 
Cope on the Temporal Part of the Skull, aud on the Svateiatic 
Position of the PRETE a reply, 998 ; EA o Dr. Baur’s 
critique on my paper on the Paroccipital Bone of the Scaled 
Reptiles and the E stoat Position of the Pythonomorpha, 
1003 ; Recent Elevation of New England, 1005 ; On a New Spe- 
cies of Diplacodon, with a Discussion of the Relations of that 
Genus to the Telmatotherium, 1084; Discovery in the Oligocene 
of South Dakota, of Eusmilus, a Genus of Sabre -toothed Cats 
new to North America. .....-.--00.065 + +e: I0QI 
slate -The Wild Flowers d a. 49; Willis’ Practical Flora, 
he age Botany of North America, 164; Botanical 
Ner ws, 165, 748; Some Botanical Collections, 274; Some Recent 
Botan me Papers, 276; Nitrogen Fixation in Algae, 371 ; Rules 
i "Tue 
Different Stock, 485 ; Some Features of the Native Vegetation . 
of Nebraska, 486; The Division of Agrostology, 487; Gray's 
Field, Forest and Garden Botany, 488; Progress of the Botani- 
cal Survey of Nebraska. 580 ; Phani os Botany, 582; A 
Protest against the ‘‘ nea Rules,” 666; The Missouri 
Botanical Garden, 668; A New Astragalus, 670; Decades of 
North American Petts 747; North American Species of Poly- 
gonum, 747; Summer-School Botany in the Mountains, 845; 
Notes on Recent Botanical Publications, 926; Fertilization of 
the Yellow Adder’s Tongue, 928; ‘‘ Aboriginal’’ Botany, 92 
New Species of Physalis, 928; The Mycetozoa, 929; Seane 
1007; Saccardo’s Sylloge Fungorum. 1008; North American 
Fungi, ary Hough’s American Woods, 1008; Seymour’s 
ve a Gre like Plants of North America, 1008; The 
Eroon 1093 
Pea Phe —What becomes of the Flagella?, 583; tre 
of the Apple-Scab Fungus, 583; Poisonous Cactacea, 584; 
re ae on Heliotropism, 585; Austro-German Views on Botai- 
ical Nomenclature, 585; Separation of Enzymes, 586; The 
Action of Light on Bacteria, 671; The Pole of Calciusa and 
Magnesium, 674; Woronin on Sclerotinia, 749; Demonstration 
of Photosyntax by Bacteria, 750; Detection of Glukose by Aux- 
pice oe Methods, 752; Fischer on Bacteria, 847; The Mush- 
m Gardens of South American Ants, $51; Bactericidal Act- 
ion Bp Metals, mi. een on Paraheliotropism, 1100; Chal- 
azogamy in Juglans regia 
Zoology.—The Sensory Ny System of Chondrosteans, 52 ; The Hypo- 
physis, 52; The Species of Bothriocephalus, 53 ; Batrachia of 
Vincennes, Indiana, 53 ; List of Snakes Olek at Raleigh, N. ooo 
C., 56; An Abnormal Pes of Columbia livia (Illustrated ), 57; ao 
1103 
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