ANNUAL REPORT—BIBLIOGRAPHY. 
81 
48. Dali, W. H.— 
Diagnoses of New Tertiary Fossils from the 
Southern United States. 
Nat. Mus. Proc. XVIII, 21-46, 1895. 
Many species of invertebrates described, but not illus¬ 
trated, from Florida and other States. 
49. Dali, W. H.— 
(Account of the manner of occurrence of fossil 
vertebrates in the Alachua Clays.) (Contained in 
introduction to •‘Fossil Vertebrates from the 
Alachua Clays,” by Joseph Leidy.) 
Wag. Free Inst. Sci. Trans. IV, 1896. 
50. Dali, W. H.— 
(Introduction to) Descriptions of Tertiary Fos¬ 
sils from the Antillean Region, by Guppy, R. J. L. y 
and Dali, W. H. 
Nat. Mus. Proc. XIX, 303-305, 1897. 
The reference to Florida occurs on p. 303, where Dali 
stated with reference to the “Old Miocene” (of Florida and 
elsewhere) that all these beds are referable to the “Oligo- 
cene or Uppermost Eocene”. 
51. Dali, W. H.— 
A Table of the North American Tertiary Hori¬ 
zons, correlated with one another and with those of 
western Europe, with annotations. 
U. S. Geol. Sur. 18th Ann. Rept., pt. II, 323-348, 
1898. 
This paper although not published until 1898, was pre¬ 
pared as stated by the author in 1395. 
52. Dali, W. H., Bartsch, Paul— 
Synopsis of the Genera, Sub-genera, and sections 
of the family Pyramidellidse.* 
Wash. Biol. Soc. Proc. XVII, 1-6, 1904. 
6GeoRep-l 
