ALASKA AS IT WAS AND IS. 
149 
connected with the Telegraph expedition, has produced a re¬ 
spectable body of literature which finds no place in the pres¬ 
ent list as above limited. 
The members of the Scientific corps in 1865 were Robert 
Kennicott, H. M. Bannister, F. Bischoff, W. H. Dali, H. W. 
Elliott, Charles Pease, and J. T. Rothrock. In the scientific 
work done under the auspices of the Coast Survey (1871-’85) 
I was joined by Mark W. Harrington and Marcus Baker, of 
the Survey, and in 1880 by T. H. Bean, of the United States 
National Museum. 
Publications by Bush, Dali, Elliott, Kennan, and others 
on material not connected with the explorations previously 
enumerated or relating wholly to Siberia are not included in 
the list. 
GEOGRAPHY AND EXPLORATION. 
(See also under Meteorology and Geology.) 
Baker (Marcus). Boundary line between Alaska and Siberia. 
Bull. Phil. Soc. of Wash., iv, pp. 123-133,1881, with maps. 
Dali (William Healey). Report on the operations of the Scientific Corps of 
the Western Union Telegraph Expedition during the season 
of 1865. 
Proc. Chicago Academy of Sciences, i, pp. 31, 32. 1866. 
- Explorations in Russian America. 
American Journal of Science, xlv, pp. 96-99. Jan., 1868. 
- Exploration of the interior of Russian America. 
Mining and Scientific Press, San Francisco, Oct. 3 and 10,1868. 
- Remarks on Alaska. 
Proc. Cal. Acad. Sci., iv, pp. 30-37, 268, 293, 294. 1868. 
- Die telegraphen expedition auf dem Jukon in Alaska. 
Petermann’s Geogr. Mittheil., xv, pp. 361-365, with map. 
Oct., 1869. 
- Alaska and its resources. 
Lee & Shepard, Boston, 8°, xii, 628 pp., 15 pi., 1 map. 1870. 
- Survey of Alaska. 
House Reps. Exec. Doc. No. 255, 41st Congr., 2d sess., 8°, 
Washington, Gov’t Printing Office, May 11, 1870. 
