554 



NORTH AMERICAN FAUNA. 



[no. 27. 



1899. Stone, A. J. Field Notes on the lar^^er MaiinuaJia of the Stickiue, Deas -. 



and Liard Rivers, N. W. British Columbia. <Third Ann. Rept. Xpa\- 

 York Zool. Soc., pp. 53-61. May 1, 1899. 



Account dated at Fort Simpson, May 30, 1898. Notes made on his 

 journey from the Pacific during previous year. 



1900. Allen, J. A. Note on the Wood Bison. <Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist.. 



XIII, pp. 63-67. 



A summary of the principal recent evidence regarding the abundance 



and distribution of Bison Mson athahascw Rhoads. 

 1900. Bell, Robert. [Preliminary Report of Explorations about Great Slave 



Lake in 1899.] < Summary Report of the Geological Survey [Canada] 



for the year 1899. Pp. 103 to 110. Ottawa. 



A preliminary account, geological and topographical, of portions of 



the eastern part of Great Slave Lake. 

 1900. Hanbuey, David T. A Journey from Chesterfield Inlet to Great Slave 



Lake, 1898-9. <The Geographical .Journal, XVI, No. 1, pp. 63-77. 



July, 1900. 



Narrative of a journey between Chesterfield Inlet and Great Slave 

 Lake by way of the Thelon or Ark-i-linik River, Hanbury River, and 

 Artillery Lake. Some mention made of the fauna. 

 1900. McEvoY, James, Report on the Geology and Natural Resources of the 

 Country traversed by the Yellow Head Pass Route from Edmonton to 

 Tete Jaune Cache, comprising portions of Alberta and British Colum- 

 bia. < Annual Report Geological Survey of Canada, XI (new series), 

 pp. 1D-44D. 



Report of an exploration made in the summer of 1898. It com- 

 prises a general and geological description of the country traversed, 

 and many notes on the fauna and flora. 

 1900. Merriam, C. Hart. Description of Twenty-six new Mammals from 

 Alaska and British North America. <Proc. Washington Acad. Sci., 

 II, pp. 13-30. March 14, 1900. 



Microtus macfarJani and Lepus americanus macfarlani described 

 from Fort Anderson, Mackenzie. 



1900. Stone, A. J. Some Results of a Natural History Journey to Northern 



British Columbia, Alaska, and the Northwest Territory, in the interest 

 of the American Museum of Natural History. <Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. 

 Hist., XIII, pp. 31-62. 



Mr. Stone crossed British Columbia by way of the Stikine River 

 and Dease Lake and descended the Liard and Mackenzie rivers to 

 Fort McPherson on the Peel, making several side trips for purposes 

 of collecting. Thence he explored the Arctic Coast west to Herschel 

 Island and east to the region about Cape Lyon. His valuable notes on 

 natural history relate chiefly to the distribution ot the larger mammals. 



1901. Allen, J. A. The Musk-Oxen of Arctic America and Greenland. <BulL 



Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., XIV, pp. 69-86, Author's edition issued March 

 30, 1901. 



Notes on the distribution of Ovihos moscliatus in Mackenzie. 

 1901. Bell, J. Macintosh. [Preliminary Report of an exploration of the 

 region of Great Bear Lake in 1900.] < Summary Report of the Geo- 

 logical Survey [Canada] for the year 1900, XIII, pp. 95 to 103. 

 Ottawa. 



A preliminary account of a journey of exploration to the Great 

 Bear Lake region. A few notes on the fauna and flora are given. 



