Wilder.] 



414 [December 20, 



75. *Coues: On the myology of the Ornithorhynchus ; communications to 

 the Essex Institute, Vol. vi, pp. 127-173, March, 1871; (published May, 1871). 



76. *Coues: The osteology and myology of Didelphys Virginiana. Memoirs 

 Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist., Vol. n, pt. 1. 1871. (Published 1872.) 



LIST OF GENERAL WORKS OR PAPERS EST WHICH HOMOLOGIES 

 * ARE DISCUSSED; ARRANGED IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER. 



200. Agassiz: Contributions to the Natural History of the United States. 

 4 Vols. 1857 to 1860. 



201. *Agassiz: Essay on Classification. London, 1858. 



202. *Agassiz, L.: Methods of Study in Natural History. Boston, 1863. 

 Chap. iii. 



203. *Agassiz: The Catagories of Analogy. (Essay on Classification. Ch. 

 ii. Sect, ix.) London, 1859. (This subject is not directly discussed in 200.) 



204. * Argyll, Duke of: Reign of Law. Chap. iv. 1869. 



205. * Barclay: Anatomical nomenclature; cited by Owen. 63, 2, 68, note. 



206. *Bichat: Recherches physiologicales sur la vie etla mort. 



207. *Bichat: Anatomie Descriptive, v. 167. (On symmetry and distorted 

 symmetry). 



208. Braun: Sur les transformations de P ovule vegetale. Ann. des Sc. Nat. 

 1860. 



209. Clarke, B. : On relative position and its value as a differential charac- 

 ter (with plants). Ann. and Mag. of Nat. Hist. 1853. p. 81, p. 189. 



210. Carus, V.: System der thierisch^n Morphologie. Leipzig, 1853. 



211. Clark, Henry J.: Mind in Nature; or The origin of life and the 

 mode of development of animals. N. Y., 1865. 



212 *Cleland : On the Vomer in man and the Mammalia, and on the sphe- 

 noidal spongy bones. Edinburgh New Phil. Journal, January, 1861. 



213. *Clelaxd: On the serial homologies of the articular surfaces of the 

 mammalian axis, atlas, and occipital bone. Natural History Review, April, 

 1861. 



214. *Cleland: On ribs and transverse processes, with special relation to 

 the theory of the vertebrate skeleton. Read at the Meeting of the British 

 Association at Cambridge. Natural History Review, October, 1862. 



215. *On the relations of the vomer, ethnoid, and intermaxillary bones. 

 Read by Professor Huxley before the Royal Society of London, March, 1861. 

 Philosophical Transactions, 1862. (2 plates.) 



216. Canestrixi, G. : Caratteri rudimentali in ordine all' origine del uomo, 

 Annuario della Soc. d. Nat., Modena, 1867. 



217. *Dana, J. D.: On Cephalization. From the "New Englander" for 

 July, 1863. 



218. *Dana, J. D.: The classification of animals, based on the principles 

 of cephalization. Am. Journ. Science, etc., Vols, xxxvi, Nov., 1863, and 

 xxxvn, Jan. and March, 1864. 



