Publications of the Sierra Club— Continued. 



No. 30.— Vol. v., No. I, pp. I to 85.— The Ascent of the North Palisades; Variations of 

 Sierra Glaciers; How Private Burns Climbed Mt. Pinatubo; The Hillside Farmer and 

 the Forest ; The Notable Mountaineering of the Sierra Club in 1903 ; On the Trail with 

 the Sierra Club; The Completed Le Conte Memorial Lodge; Reports; Notes and Cor- 

 respondence; Forestry Notes. 



No. 31.— Vol. v., No. 2, pp. 87 to 152.— Mt. Whitney as a Site for a Meteorological Ob- 

 servatory; The Water-Ouzel at Home; The San Francisco Peaks in April; Over 

 Harrisons Pass with Animals; The Ascent of San Antonio; Secretary's Report; Treas- 

 urer's Report; Notes and Correspondence; Forestry Notes. 



No. 32.— Vol. v., No. 3, pp. 153 to 270.— First Ascent: Mt. Humphreys; Address at Me- 

 morial Exercises; Mt. Lyell and Mt. Ritter Ascents by Sierra Club Outing of 1904; 

 A Deer's Bill of Fare; Domes and Dome Structure of the High Sierra; Some Aspects 

 of a Sierra Club Outing; The Evolution Groups of Peaks; Reports; Notes and Cor- 

 respondence ; Book Reviews ; Forestry Notes. 



No. 33.— Vol. v., No. 4, pp. 271 to 328.— The Grade Profile in Alpine Glacial Erosion; 

 Systematic Asymmetry of Crest-Lines in the High Sierra of California; The Tuolumne 

 Canon ; Inscription for the Le Conte Memorial ; Over Harrisons Pass from the North 

 with a Pack-Train; California Forestry Law; Reports; Notes and Correspondence; 

 Book Reviews; Forestry Notes. 



No. 34. — Vol. VI., No. I, pp. I to 74. — The Sierra Club's Ascent of Mt. Rainier; Mt. Rainier, 

 Mt. Shasta, and Mt. Whitney as Sites for Meteorological Observatories ; The Sky-Line of 

 the Tatoosh Range, Mt. Rainier National Park; The Effect of the Partial Suppression 

 of Annual Forest Fires in the Sierra Nevada Mountains; In Memoriam; Joseph 

 Le Conte ; Wild Animals of Mt. Rainier National Park ; The Sierran Puff ball ; Reports ; 

 Notes and Correspondence; Book Reviews; Forestry Notes. 

 All of above are out of print, having been destroyed in the fire of April 18, 1906. 



No. 35— Vol. VI., No. 2, pp. 75 to 152.— An Ascent of the Matterhorn; The Name "Mt. 

 Rainier"; The Second Kings River Outing; The Motion of the Nisqually Glacier, 

 Mt. Rainier; Report on the Kings River Cation and Vicinity; Reports; Notes and 

 Correspondence; Book Reviews; Forestry Notes; Revised By-Laws of the Sierra Club. 



No. 36.— Vol. VL, No. 3, pp. 153 to 210.— The Aftermath of a Club Outing; Along the 

 Foothills to Lake Chabot; Mt. Rose Weather Observatory; The Ascent of Asama- 

 Yama; Reports; Secretary's Report; Treasurer's Report; Notes and Correspondence; 

 Book Reviews; Forestry Notes. 



No. 37.— Vol. VI., No. 4, pp. 211 to 284.— The Hetch Hetchy Valley; To Joseph Le Conte, 

 a Poem; Lake Ramparts; The Grand Canons of the Tuolumne and the Merced; The 

 Water-Ouzel, a Poem; Photograph of the Water-Ouzel; Bird Life of Yosemite 

 Park; An Easterner's Impressions of a Sierra Club Outing; Indian Pictographs in 

 Pate Valley; Reports; Notes and Correspondence; Book Reviews; Forestry Notes. 



No. 38.— Vol. VL, No. 5, pp. 285 to 336.— William Kent's Gift; Redwoods; The Mt. Ritter 

 Knapsack Trip ; A Knapsack Trip to Mt. Ritter ; The Yosemite Waters ; Snowfall in the 

 Sierra Nevada; Reports; Notes and Correspondence; Book Reviews; Forestry Notes. 



No. 39. — ^Vol. VII-, No. I, pp. I to 84. — The High Mountain Route Between Yosemite 

 and the Kings River Canon ; With the Sierra Club in the Kern Canon ; Down the Kern- 

 Kaweah ; An August Outing in the Upper Merced Cafion ; Organization of Sierra Club ; 

 Reports; Notes and Correspondence; Book Reviews; Forestry Notes. 



No. 40.— Vol. VIL, No. 2, pp. 85 to 140. — Camping Above the Yosemite — A Summer Outing 

 With the Sierra Club ; From Kern Canon to Giant Forest — The Chronicle of a Knapsack 

 Trip ; Up From "The Land of Little Rain" to the Land of Snow, Being the Journal of a 

 Sledging Trip Up Mt. Whitney in Winter ; Reports ; Notes and Correspondence ; Forestry 

 Notes ; Book Reviews. 



No. 41. — ^Vol. VIL, No. 3, pp. 141 to 214. — The Observatory on Mt. Whitney; The Grand 

 Circuit of the Yosemite National Park— Down Tenaya Canon ; On Mt. St. Helens^ With 

 the Mazamas; A High Sierra Circuit on Headwaters of Kings River; Organization of 

 the Sierra Club; Reports; Notes and Correspondence; Forestry Notes; Book Reviews. 



No. 42.— Vol. VIL, No. 4, pp. 215 to 274.— Galen Clark; The Grand Cation of the Tuolumne; 

 Little Studies in the Yosemite Valley; The New Glacier National Park; The Ascent of 

 Fujiyama; The Proposed Estes National Park; Winter in the High Sierra; Reports; 

 Notes and Correspondence; Forestry Notes; Book Reviews. 



No. 43 —Vol. VIIL, No. i, pp. i to 86.— Cathedral Peak and the Tuolumne Meadows ; Little 

 Studies in Yosemite Valley ; The Kings River Outing of 1910 ; A Vacation Trip to Mount 

 Kinabalu in British North ^orneo; Ascent of Red Peak; The Discovery of the Nest and 

 Eggs of the Gray-Crowned Leucosticte; The Passing of Our Mountain Meadows; 

 Fire and the Forest— The Theory of "Light Burning"; Organization of the Sierra Club; 

 Reports; Notes and Correspondence; National Parks; Trout Planting; Forestry Notes; 

 Book Reviews. 



No. 44.— Vol. VIIL, No. 2, pp. 89 to 149.— Little Studies in the Yosemite Valley; Four Mex- 

 ican Volcanoes; Stevenson and California; Early Summer Birds in the Yosemite Valley; 

 Reports ; Notes and Correspondence ; Forestry Notes ; Book Reviews. 

 No. 45.— Vol. VIIL, No. 3, pp. 150 to 248.— With the Sierra Club in 191 1; Some Birds of 

 the High Sierra ; Knapsacking Across the Kings-Kern Divide ; The Devil's Postpile ; The 

 Mazama Club Outing to Glacier Peak; Sherbrooke Lake Outing of the Alpine Club of 

 Canada ; The Golden Trout of Cottonwood Lakes ; A Plea for the Conservation of Wild 



