A Bibliography of John Muir 



45 



Letters to Professor J. D. Butler (in Butleriana. Miscella- 

 nies. V. 2). 



Contents : John Muir home from a year of world-circling, July 20, 

 1904 — His telepathic search for Professor J. D. Butler, Aug., 1869. 



Linnaeus (in Warner, C. D., Library of the World's Best Lit- 

 erature. 1897. V. 16, p. 9077-9083). 



The life and writings of the Swedish naturalist, with special refer- 

 ence to his contributions to the science of botany. 



Notes on the Pacific Coast Glaciers (in Harriman Alaska 

 Expedition. 1901. v. i, p. 119-135. Doubleday, $7.50 

 each volume). 



[On the Effects of the Earthquake of 26th March, 1872, in the 

 Yosemite Valley. Host. Soc. Nat. Hist. Proc, 1873, v. 

 I5/P- 185-186. 



Extract from a letter of Mr. John Muir, read by Dr. S. Kneeland.] 



On the Glaciation of the Arctic and Sub-Arctic Regions vis- 

 ited by the United States steamer "Corwin" in the 

 year 1881 (in U. S. Senate documents, 48th Congress, 

 1st session, v. 8, No. 204, p. 135-147). 



On the Post-Glacial History of Sequoia Gigantea (in Ameri- 

 can Association for the Advancement of Science. Pro- 

 ceedings. Aug. 1876. V. 25, p. 242-253). 



Clear and compact accoimt of his explorations in the "Sequoia belt 

 of the Sierra Nevada." 



[Read by Professor Asa Gray at the meeting of the Association.] 



Picturesque California and the Region West of the Rocky 

 Mountains from Alaska to Mexico; ed. by John Muir. 

 San Francisco, Dewing, 1888. 2 v. 



The following chapters were written by Muir : Peaks and Glaciers 

 of the High Sierra, The Passes of the Pligh Sierra, The Yosemite 

 Valley, Mount Shasta, Alaska, Washington and Puget Sound, The 

 Basin of the Columbia River. 



Scenery of California (In California the Land of Promise, p. 

 16-21. State Board of Trade, San Francisco, i8g7- 

 1898). 



Selections (in In American Fields and Forests, 1909, 

 Houghton. $1.50). 



[The selections by Mr. Muir are both from Our National Parks, 

 viz: Among the Birds of the Yosemite, p. 191-214; and The Sequoia, 

 p. 215-267.] 



Studies in the Formation of Mountains in the Sierra Nevada, 

 California (in American Association for the Advance- 

 ment of Science. Proceedings. Aug. 1874, v. 23, pt. 2, 

 p. 49-64)- 



