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Mount St. Helens (p. 36) 
Recently revised to include a de- 
scription of the Mount St. Helens 
eruption, S.L. Harris’s Fire and Ice 
(Seattle: Pacific Search Press, 1980) 
is a classic, semipopular account of 
the geology of the seventeen major 
Cascades volcanoes. Meant for the 
general scientific audience, C.L. Ros- 
enfeld’s “Observations on the Mount 
St. Helens Eruption” (American Sci- 
entist, vol. 68, no. 5, pp. 494-509) 
is a clear description of the recent 
eruptions of Mount St. Helens. “The 
Eruptions of Mount St. Helens,” by 
R. Decker and B. Decker ( Scientific 
American, March 1981, pp. 68-80) 
covers the mountain’s history, the ef- 
fects of the recent eruptions, and the 
prospects for future volcanic activity. 
Less technical are R. Findley’s 
“Mountain with a Death Wish,” “In 
the Path of Destruction,” and “The 
Day the Sky Fell” ( National Geo- 
graphic, January 1981, pp. 3-65), 
which cover the eruption and its con- 
sequences for the environment, the 
economy, and the geology of the area. 
Among the many picture books that 
have appeared on the eruption are Vol- 
cano: The Eruption of Mount St. Hel- 
ens (Longview: Longview and Mad- 
rona Publishers, 1980); Mt. St. 
Helens: Holocaust (Lubbock: C.F. 
Boone Publishers, 1980); and Mt. St. 
Helens — The Volcano Explodes! 
(New York: S1NO Publishing Co., 
1980). For background reading, P. 
Francis’s Volcanoes (New York: Pen- 
guin Books, 1976) is a lucid intro- 
duction to the history, structure, and 
formation of volcanoes. 
Anglerfish (p. 50) 
Using high-speed, light cinematog- 
raphy, D.B. Grobecker and T.W. 
Pietsch show that shallow-water 
anglerfish have one of the fastest ver- 
tebrate feeding mechanisms known. 
They describe the fish’s rapid prey 
capture in “High-Speed Cinemato- 
graphic Evidence for Ultrafast Feed- 
ing in Antennariid Anglerfishes” (Sci- 
ence, September 14, 1979, pp. 1161 — 
62). In “The Compleat Angler: Ag- 
gressive Mimicry in an Antennariid 
Anglerfish” (Science, July 28, 1978, 
pp. 369-70), T.W. Pietsch and D.B. 
Grobecker describe how an anglerfish 
of the genus Antennarius conserves 
energy by using a bait that mimics 
a small fish to attract prey. A short 
article describing the anglerfish and 
its behavior, “Strange Animal Lures,” 
by J.W. Atz (Animal Kingdom, July- 
August 1950, pp. 110-13) also dis- 
cusses similar phenomena of mimicry 
in the alligator snapping turtle and 
the copperhead snake. W.G. Eberhard 
explains how a mature female bolas 
spider attracts prey with a volatile 
substance that mimics the female sex- 
attractant pheromone of a fall army- 
worm in “Aggressive Chemical Mimi- 
cry by a Bolas Spider” (Science, De- 
cember 16, 1977, pp. 1 173-75). 
Dugongs (p. 54) 
In 1888, tired of lecturing about 
things he had never seen, zoology pro- 
fessor A.C. Haddon left Dublin to re- 
search coral reefs and marine fauna 
in the Torres Strait, but soon became 
more interested in the people. Ten 
years later, Haddon returned to the 
Torres Strait as head of a Cambridge 
University expedition that conducted 
the first scientific interdisciplinary 
study of a primitive people. The results 
of this classic study, edited by Had- 
don, were published in six volumes, 
Reports of the Cambridge Anthropo- 
logical Expedition to the Torres 
Strait (Cambridge: Cambridge Uni- 
versity Press, 1901-35). Haddon also 
wrote a popular account of his re- 
search, Headhunters: Black, White 
and Brown (London: Methuen and 
Co., 1901). More recent material on 
Torres Strait Islanders can be found 
in Sunda and Sahul , a work on pre- 
historic societies in Southeast Asia, 
Melanesia, and Australia, edited by 
J. Allen, J. Golson, and R. Jones (Lon- 
don: Academic Press, 1977), that in- 
cludes D.R. Harris’s “Subsistence 
Strategies Across Torres Strait.” Har- 
ris also looks at the relationships be- 
86 
