List of Communications laid before the Society. 
1 3 » 
1895. 
November 4. 
December 14 
1896. 
January 13. 
January 24. 
March 24. 
March 30. 
May 14. 
June 8. 
November 11. 
December 2. 
December 30. 
jSq?. 
January 13. 
January 27. 
The American Indian: his Origin and Distribution. 
By Benjamin Baker. 
The Habits of the Wood-Duck. By Anion Parmenter. 
The Boring Powers of Teredo navalis. By A. O’D. 
Taylor. 
A Fossil Lingula in a Pebble of Conglomerate. By 
H. R. Storer, M. D. 
Notes of a Scientific Trip through parts of Colorado 
in 1871. By Richard Bliss. 
On the Sense of Smell in Animals. By A. O’D.Taylor. 
Notes written in the course of a Journey to South 
America in 1894. By Miss M. T. Taylor. 
On Carnivorous Plants. By Rev. R. W. Wallace. 
Some Reminiscences of Louis Agassiz. By Richard 
Bliss. 
The Moose and the Caribou: Being notes from 
personal observations made in Maine and Canada. 
By William H. Tibbetts. 
Special Jennerian Centennial Meeting. 
Vaccination as Historically Associated with the name 
of Jenner. By Henry E. Turner, M. D., Pres¬ 
ident of the Newport Historical Society. 
Vaccination and its Results. By Francis H. Rankin, 
M. D., President of the Newport Medical So¬ 
ciety. 
Edward Jknner as Naturalist. By Horatio R. 
Storer, M. D , President of the Newport Natu¬ 
ral History Society. 
How Gold Occurs in Nature. By Professor Raphael 
Pumpelly. 
A few Notes upon the Argentine Republic. By A. 
O’D. Taylor, Jr. 
Some of the Rarer Moths obtained about Newport 
By Olaf Anderson. 
A Morning’s Shooting upon the Marshes around Eas¬ 
ton’s Pond at Newport. By Hugh L Taylor. 
Suggestions as to an Aquarium in connection with 
the new Marine Park at Newport. ByJ.M.K. Southwick. 
Existing Engineering Works in Egypt ascribed to 
the Patriarch Joseph. By F. Cope Whitehouse. 
The Effects of Water as a Geological Agent. By Rich¬ 
ard Bliss. 
