24 



Outline of a Course in Elementary Descriptive and Physical Geography, 

 for Grades IV. and V. in the Cambridge Grammar Schools, 1892-93, 8vo, 

 pp. 45. . 



Four Elementary Essays on the Shore Lines of Lake Bonneville, the 

 Canon of the Colorado, the Folds of the Appalachians, the Mountains of 

 Pennsylvania, in Goldthwaite's Geographical Magazine, January, March, 

 April, and May, 1892. 



By J. E. Wolff: — 



The Geology of the Crazy Mountains, Montana. Bull. Geol. Soc. 

 America, 1892, Vol. III. pp. 445-452. 



By T. W. Harris : — 



Mount Bob, Mount Ida, or Snake Hill. American Journal of Science, 

 March, 1892, Vol. XLIII. pp. 236-238. 



By R. DeC. Ward : — 



Another River Pirate. Science, 1892, XIX. 7-9. 



Artificial Rain ; a Review of the Subject to the Close of 1889. Amer. 

 Meteorol. Journal, 1892, VIII. 484-493. 



Thunderstorms in New England during the Year 1886. Ibid., 1892, 

 IX. 21-28. 



Thunderstorms in New England during the Year 1887. Ibid., 1892, 

 IX. 211-215. 



The first Scientific Balloon Voyage. Ibid., 1892, IX. 58-63. 

 By J. B. Woodworth: — 



Note on the Occurrence of erratic Cambrian Fossils in the Neocene 

 Gravels of the Island of Martha's Vineyard. American Geologist, April, 

 1892, Vol. IX. pp. 243-247. (3 figs.) 



The following theses by students in the advanced course in 

 Physical Geography have been published during the year past : — 



The Drainage of the Bernese Jura, by Aug. F. Foerste, Graduate 

 Student. Proc. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist,, 1892, XXV. 392-418. With two 

 Plates, and a Supplementary Note on the Drainage of the Pennsylvania 

 Appalachians, by W. M. Davis. Ibid., 418-420. (Note. The thesis by 

 Mr. Foerste was prepared in the academic year 1889-90, but its publica- 

 tion was delayed until after its author had studied his subject on the ground 

 in Switzerland in the following year.) 



The Eye of the Storm, by S. M. Ballou, Class of '93, Harvard College. 

 Amer. Meteorol. Journal, 1892, IX. 67-84, 121-127. 



Objections to Faye's Theory of Storms, by W. C. Moore, Special Stu- 

 dent, Lawrence Scientific School. Ibid., 170-177, 197-206. 



