CHRONOLOGICAL ACCOUNT OP DIFFERENT BROOl 17 
Prom the foregoing, the importance of knowing beforehand when to 
expect them becomes apparent, and the following chronological 8t 
ment will not only prove of scientific interest but of practical value 
CHRONOLOGICAL HISTORY OF THE PERIODICAL CICADA, WITH DA 
OF THE FUTURE APPEARANCE OF ALL WELL- ASCERTAIN ED BRO 
THROUGHOUT THE COUNTRY. 
As the faets in reference to the existence of a 13-year brood, re- 
corded by Dr. D. L. Phares, in the Woodville (Miss.) Republican, and 
already referred to, were unknown to naturalists generally, and had 
remained unnoticed and unrecorded in natural history publications 
is only since the year 1808 that a number of these 13-year broods have 
been fully established. In that year I published the account of twenty- 
two distinct broods, including all the information that I could obtain at 
the time both as to 17-year and 13-year broods. The mass of material 
from which the generalizations were made would have been tedious and 
voluminous, if given in detail, and was necessarily omitted. The fol- 
lowing chronology includes such additional data as I have been able to 
obtain in the intervening seventeen years. 
But little increase in our knowledge as to the distribution of the dif- 
ferent broods has been made, so that the chronology remains essentially 
the same. I have collected during that time, from correspondents and 
otherwise, numerous additional facts, but most of them, and among them 
the most trustworthy, relate to broods that were already well known; 
while of the smaller broods, and especially of those which are in need 
of confirmation, the additional data are extremely scanty. It should 
not be inferred, however, that those broods which have not been con- 
firmed, are necessarily invalid; because the additional data have been 
obtained chiefly when I have made some effort in that direction, while 
some years, owing to absence from the country or other causes, 1 have 
neglected to make inquiry. 
I shall therefore be very glad to receive from correspondents as full 
information, and from as many localities as possible, not only anent the 
two broods occurring this year, but any of the other broods mentioned 
in this chronology. 
The passages in small type are in each case quoted from the work of 
1868, with the exception of the headings, in which the two dates given 
are made to include the last and the next future appearance of the dif- 
ferent broods. 
While the discovery of the 1.3-year broods dispelled much of th« 
in which this chronology had hitherto been wrapped, it at the same 
time rendered a complete and lucid exposition of that chronology ex- 
tremely difficult. The northern boundary line of the Li-year broods is 
16&— Bui. 8 2 
