276 PLANTS, SEEDS, AND CURRENTS 



Bermudas were in later Tertiary times included in a land-area that 

 extended to Florida and united the Greater Antilles. It indicates 

 that the last word has not been said in this matter (pp. 272-3). 



12. Some conclusions arising from the recent work of American 

 geologists in the western Bahamas with additional remarks on the 

 question of the " ocean-holes " will be found in one of the last notes 

 of the Appendix. 



LIST OF SOME OF THE WORKS QUOTED IN THIS CHAPTER 



Agassiz, A., A Reconnaissance of the Bahamas, Bull. 31 us. Comp. Zool. : Harvard, 

 Vol. XXVI., 1894. 



Agassiz, L., The Bahamas and Salt Key Bank, Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., Vol. I. 

 Quoted at length by Dana in the work below named. 



Dana, J. D., Corals and Coral Islands, 1872. 



Tillinghast, W. H., Notes on the Historical Hydrography of the Handkerchief 

 Shoal (Mouchoir Carre) in the Bahamas, Library of Harvard University, Biblio- 

 graphical Contributions, No. 14, 1881. 



Vaughan, T. W., Geological Investigations in South Florida and the Bahamas, Tear 

 Book of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, Nos. 13 and 14, 1914, 1915. 



W atkins, F. H., Turks and Caicos Islands, Report on the Salt Industry, Colonial 

 Reports — Miscellaneous, No. 56, 1908. 



Old Chart of Turks Islands, from a survey made in 1753 by the sloops UAigle 

 and U Emeraude, by order of the French Governor of Hispaniola, with improve- 

 ments from observations made in 1770 in the Sir Edward Hawke, King's 

 Schooner : Laurie and Whittle, 53, Fleet Street, London, 1794. 



