10 
1881. 
1881. 
1881. 
1881. 
1882. 
Cincinnati Society of Natural History. 
canus). By J. A. Allen. < Ninth Annual Report of the 
United States Geological and Geographical Survey of the 
Territories, embracing Colorado and parts of adjacent Terr:- 
tories : Being a Report of Progress of the Exploration, for the 
year 1875. By F. V. Hayden, United States Geologist. Con- 
ducted under the authority of the Secretary of the Interior. 
Washington: Government Printing Office. 1877. Part iii., 
Zoology, pp. 441-587. 
The work is substantially a republication of “The American Bisons, 
Living and Extinet,”’ by the same author, which originally appeared in 
Vol. 1, Part ii., of the ‘‘ Memoirs of the Geological Survey of Kentucky,” 
etc., 1876. Also published under title of “‘Memoirs of the Museum of 
Comparative Zoology,” ete., Cambridge, Mass., vol. iv., 1876, ete. In 
the reprint which forms the subject of this notice, the extinet species are 
not treated, illustrations are omitted, and there are numerous minor 
modifications and additions. There are a few editorial explanatory notes 
by Dr. Elliot Coues. The limited number of copies of the original edition 
makes the one here noticed practically the only full history of the 
American buffalo accessible to the general public. References to the 
buffalo in the Ohio valley occur at pp. 458, et seg.; in Ohio, at p. 474 
(southern shore of Lake Erie), p. 499, 505, etc.; in Kentucky, p. 504. 
Epitor [F. W. Lanepon]. Canis lupus, Lutra canadensis, 
Cariacus virginianus, Atalapha cinereus, Sciurus carolinensis 
leucotis, Sciurus niger ludovicianus, Tamias striatus, Lepus 
sylvaticus. 
Notes on above species in Ohio and Indiana. 
Jones, Howarp E. Arctomys monax, Schreber. < Journal 
Cin; Soe! Nat. Hist, vol: iv.;)p: 337: 
Note on arboreal habits of woodchuck. 
Lanepon, F. W. The Mammalia of the vicinity of Cincinnati. 
A list of species, with notes. < Journal Cin. Soc. Nat. Hist., 
vol. ili., pp. 297-313. | . 
Three lists, lettered respectively, ‘‘A,” ‘‘B,” and “@.7  “* A’ Gs a dist 
of 44 identified species; ‘ B,” alist of 10 unidentified species, whose range 
includes this locality; “‘C,” a list of 6 extinct species, whose fossil re- 
mains have been found in Ohio. 
Quick, E. R. Hesperomys leucopus, Leconte. < Journal Cin. 
Soc. Nat. Hist., vol. iv., p. 337. 
Albino specimen taken at Brookville, Ind. 
sRAYTON, A. W. Report on the Mammals of Ohio. By Alem- 
bert W. Brayton, M.D. < Report of the Geological Survey 
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