96 Tlie Aiiieri(:((n Gcoloiiist. Aufjust, 1897 
Artificial minerals from an ii-on furnace in Easton, Pa., pp. ;^84-385. 
Gives analysis. 
Zircon, sodalite, cancrinite, etc., from Litchfield, Me., pp. .385-386. 
By title only. 
Report on the Albert coal mine, containing an account of the situa- 
tion and geological relations of the rocks, including and accompanying 
the coal. New York, 1851, pp. 58. (With reports by Percivaland Aug. 
H. Hayes.) Maps and plates referred to but not accompanying copy in 
Library museum, Comp. Zool., Cambridge, Mass. Reviewed in .\mer. 
Jour. Sci., XIII, 1852. pp. 276-277. Darton lists a Boston edition; not 
seen. 
Anniversary address before the American Institute, 16th Oct.. 1851. 
New York, 1851, pp. 23. 
1852. 
Proc. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist., liv, 1854. 
Remarks on raindrop imprints and allied phenomena, pp. 1311.32. 
"Has sought carefully for impressions of rain drops (in the lake Super- 
ior sandstones) for the purpose of identifying the age with that of the 
Connecticut river sandstone, but in vain." 
Description of five new species of fossil fish and notices of fossil pl^ts 
from the shales of the coal formation at Hillsboro. N. B., pp. 1.38-143. 
Palfeoniscus alberti, P. brownii, P. cairnsii, P. sp. 
Remarks on a daguerreotype of a fossil fish, pp. 151-152. 
Remarks on the characters of coprolites, p. 169. 
Observations on a wavy sandstone in the shales at Hillsboro, N. B., p. 
170. 
Remarks on the "sienite" of Nahant, loc. cit. 
Remarks on tracing the source of sediments, p. 179. Case on Petico- 
diac riv^r in N. B. Fineness increasing in proportion to the distance 
from probable source indicates the action of water rather than ice in 
their distribution. 
Observations on the relation of Stigmaria to Sigillaria, pp. 179-180. 
Doubtful as to their identity. 
On an extensive deposit of marine shells near Portland, pp, 181-182, 
Remarks on relative amount of oxygen in moist and dry air, p, 186. 
Observations on the effect of sugar and raisins upon explorers, p. 187. 
"When suffering greatly from cold. .. .eating a few raisins was suffi- 
cient to impart a glow to the whole system," 
Observations upon a vein of anthracite at Vinal Haven, Me., and upon 
frictional electricity in cannel coal, p. 188. 
Account of the process of etherization as performed on a puma for 
the purjjose of cutting off its claws, p. 232. By title only. 
Analysis of the body and scales of a species of Paheoniscus from the 
Albert coalmine in Hillsborough, N, B., p. 239. 
Observations upon the Bream (Pomotis vulgaris), in a pond near Ply- 
mouth, Mass., p. 241. 
