HllJl.lOiJKAIMIY. I,")!) 
1872. KiLKY, ( . v.— Fourih Kcpi. his. Mo.. April, pp. aO-:'.l. 
Givos the data colleettMl on (lit- six l>roo(ls which had appcartMl simr ih.- pulilicit ion of 
article in first report. 
1S7L'. DiMMoiK. (i."ln.^i'(ts iiilc'.-lini,' apple Ircc,^. No. I. New i:ii<,dan<l lloiuc- 
sii'acl, Juno 1, vol. 5, No. 4, j). '2b. 
I'rcats of Cicada sepleiidccim, etc. 
1S7L'. Di.MMocK. (r. — Insoc-ts iiilVsting aj)i)lo 1r(vs. No. 1. <N('\v iMiL'land IIoiim-- 
sicad, .liuic 22, vol. 5, No. 7, p. 4!>. 
i'lcats of Cuada (= Tibiccn) scptcndccim, etc. 
1S72. llowAiu), .1. W. — Phillips' SoiUhorn Farmer, Oclohcr. 
Uci)orts tilt' occurrence of the Cicada at. Flat Hayoii. La., in l,s72. 
1S72. I,K H.\iu)N, W.— Second Ropt. Ins. Ills., i)p. 12t-i:};i. 
Cfcncral account from Harris, Fitch, and Riley. 
lS7;i. Huowx, J. J. — Coleman's Rural World, January 1. 
Kccords the appciiranco. of the Cicada in northwestern Arkansas alonj,' the While Uiver 
and its tributaries; traces them back in 13-year jjcriods to 1S():5. 
1S7;>. (Jlover, T. — Report of the entomologist and curator of I he luuscuin. Kept. 
(U. S.) Comm. Agric. for 1872, pp. 112-138, 2G figs. 
Appearance and ravages of Cicada septendecim. 
1S7:5. Phares. Dr. D. L. — Southern Field and Factory, Jac;kson, Miss., April. 
Refers to his previous publications in the Republican on the 13-year broods. 
lS7:i. Phares, Dr. D. L. — Southern Field and Factory, Jackson, Miss., August. 
Records of Brood XXII since ISOG; its extent in Louisiana and Mississippi. 
1873. Packard. A. S. — Third annual report of the injurious and beneficial effects of 
insects in Massachusetts. 20th Ann. Rept. Sec. Mass. Bd. Agric, pp. 10-20, 
figs. 142, 143. 
Includes general account of periodical Cicada. 
1873. Packard, A. S.— Am. Naturalist, vol. 7, p. 536, September. 
Reprint with corrections of article in Third Annual Report. 
1S75. Hethune, C. J. S. — Grasshoppers or locusts. - Ann. Kept. Ent. Soc Ont. for 
1874, p. 29, fig. 30. 
In article on grasshopper ravages, etc.; discusses confusion in use of name Locusi. 
187(i. Riley, C. V.— Periodical Cicada, "17-year locust. " <New York Semi-Weekly 
Tribune, June 23, 3 figs. 
Occurrence at Lexington, Va., in 1876; list of localities at which these insects will appear 
this j'ear; chronological history of a brood; figures of larva, pup*, and imago. 
1877. Riley, C. V. — Entomological notes. <'Trans. Acad. Sci. St. Louis, December, 
vol. 3. pp. 217, 218; see Am. Nat., October, 1876, vol. 10, p. 635. 
Includes correction of vernacular name of Cicada septendecim; occurrence of the same in 
Virginia in 1876; yearly development. 
1877. Leidv. Jos. — Remarks on the 17-year locust, etc. -^Proc .\cad. Nal. Sci. 
Phila.. pp. 260, 261. 
1877. RiLEV.C. V. — The periodical Cicada. <Western Farmer's Almanac lor IS7S. p. 
48; Colman's Rural World, Noveml)er 28, 1877. 
Popular description and natural history; chronology of twenty-two dilTerent broods. 
1878. OsBORX, H. — The 17-year locusi. Western Farm Journal. .Inly. 
General account of natural history. 
1878. Bessey, C. E. — Iowa Weather Bulletin, November. 
Gives an account of the distribution of the Cicada in Iowa, illustrated by a State map. 
1879. OsBORN, H. — Report of noxious insects. -^Trans. Iowa State Hortic. Soc. for 
1878, vol. 13, pp. 368-402. 
Includes habits and natural history of Cicada srptcndcriin. 
1870. Peck, C. H.— Thirty-first Rept. N. Y. State Mns. Nat. Hist., pp. \U. 20, and 44. 
Description of Cicada fungous parasites as Massospora cicadina. 
