40 THE AMERICAN MUSEUM JOURNAL 



BIBLIOGRAPHY. 



This Guide is based principally upon the various scientific studies 

 of specimens in this collection, carried on mostly by members of the 

 staff of this department, which have been published in the Bulletin 

 and Memoirs of the Museum. Upon request, copies of these publica- 

 tions will be loaned to students and others interested in the subject 

 of fossil mammals. 



The following books are recommended for collateral reading: 



1. Popular descriptions of living animals. 



Stone and Cram. American Animals. Doubleday, Page & Co. 



New York, 1902. 

 Homaday. American Natural History. Chas. Scribner's Sons. 



New York, 1904. 

 Flower and Lydekker. ^Mammals Living and Extinct. A. & C. 



Black. London, 1891. 

 Lydekker. The New Natural History. Merrill and Baker. New 



York, 1902. 

 Lydekker. Mostly Mammals. Dodd, Mead & Co., New York, 



1903- 

 Beddard. Mammalia. Cambridge Nat. Hist. Series, Vol. X. 

 The Macmillan Co. 



2. Anatomy and classification. 



Flower. Introduction to the Osteology of the Mammalia. l\Iac- 



millan & Co. London, 1885. 

 Mivart. The Cat, an Introduction to Mammalian Anatomy. 



Chas. Scribner's Sons. New York, 1892. 

 Ja3me. Mammalian Anatomy — The Skeleton of the Cat. J. B. 



Lippincott Co. Philadelphia, 1898. 

 Weber. Die Saugethiere. Gustav Fischer. Jena, 1904. 

 Elliott. Synopsis of the Mammals of North America. Field 



Columbian Museum Publications. Chicago, 1901. 



J. Popular descriptions of extinct animals. 



Lucas. Animals of the Past. ]\IcClure, Phillips & Co. New 



York, 1 90 1. 

 Lucas. Animals before Man in North America. D. Appleton 



& Co. New York, 1902. 

 Hutchinson. Extinct Monsters. D. Appleton & Co. New 



York, 1892. 



