38 Moll 
VI L MOLLUSC A. 
[1905] 
Study on the suture lines in Pseudoaageceraa ; Noetling (423). — Phylogeny 
of Cephalopods ; Simroth (532). -Senility amongst Gastropods ; Smith 
(537). — Phylogeny of Mollusca; Sods (551). — Classification of Helicinidce ; 
Wagner (617, 618). — Origin of North American non-marine fauna ; 
Walker (622). — Ancestry of North American Unionidce ; White (632). — 
Phylogeny of Helicella and Buliminus ; Wiegmann (641). 
7. Bibliographies, Museums, &c. 
Bibliographies : — Palaeontology of North-East France ; Davy (173). — 
Bibliography of Pontic fauna of Hungary Halavats (258). — Record of 
Molluscan literature from 1896-1900 ; Kobelt (341). — Works of Thomas 
Brown ; Sherborn (519). — Dates of publication of several of D’Orbigny’s 
works ; Sherborn (521). — The ‘ Museum Humfredianum ’ has no scientific 
value ; Sherborn (520). — Literature of Palaeontology from 1861-1880 ; 
Taschenberg (589). 
Museums : — Cephalopods of Defrance collection at Caen ; Bigot (44). 
— Additions to Nantes Museum ; Borgogno, Bull. Soc. Ouest France v, 
p. xxvii. — Collection of E. A. Bielz is in Hungarian Geological Museum ; 
Horusitzsky, Foldtani Kozl. xxxv, p. 147. — Cretaceous types at Phil- 
adelphia ; Johnson (308). — Locard collection has been presented to Paris 
Museum ; Joubin (314). — List of Tenison-Woods’ types in Tasmanian 
Museum ; May (391).— Types of Cephalopods, described by Hyatt and 
Cragin, in Museum of Univ. of Texas ; Pritchett (478). — List of Wardle 
Collection of Carboniferous Fossils ; Wardle (623). 
8. Economics. 
Abstract of paper by Smith (Bull. U. S. Fish. Comm, xviii) ; Adams 
(2). — Economic uses of shells ; Comber (132). — Oysters and typhoid ; 
Giard (235). — Oyster culture in North Carolina ; Grave (245). — Culture 
of edible Molluscs in France; GuIsrin (253).— Pearl Fishery of Ceylon; 
Herdman (276). — History of Ceylon Pearl Banks ; Herdman (274). — 
On the Pearl Fishery of 1904 in Ceylon ; Hornell (290). — Shell-fish 
pollution by sewage matter ; Johnstone (310). — An account of the 
clam fishery ( Mya arenaria) ; Kellogg (323). —Oyster • culture in 
Japan ; Muriel (403). — Cultivation of oysters, the pearl oyster, Area, 
and Solecurtua in Japan ; Mitsukuri (406). — Artificial reariug of Oyster 
fry ; Nelson (413a). — Asaphis dejiorata a favourite food in the Marshall 
Islands; Schnee (507). — Notes on the “soft-shell clam” fishery ( Mya 
arenaria) on the New England coast ; Smith (549).— Notes on injurious 
and beneficial slugs and snails ; Theobald (592). — On Helix pomatia ; 
Streich (570).— Infection through Oysters ; Vivaldi & Rubella (614). 
9. Stray Notes. 
Swans and ducks do not eat Anodonta cygnea ; Adams, J. Conch, xi, 
p. 192. — -Helix aspersa in shell of Limncea ; Bulow (82). — Local Lapp 
names for shells ; Qvigstad, Nyt Mag. Naturv. xlii, p. 386. 
, Collecting and preservation ; Bolau (59). — Some nomenclatural ques- 
tions ; Dollfus (187). — Packing living snails ; Hesse (282). — Nomen- 
clature of ‘types’ ; Schuchert & Buckman (509). 
