44 Moll. 
VII. MOLLUSCA. 
Bibliographies :—Review of Russian literature for 1897 with list of new 
generic and specific names ; [Comite geol. St. Petersburg 1901].—Review 
of Italian geological literature ; Anon., Boll. Com. geol. Ital. xxxii, pp. 94_ 
124, 179-189, 227-285.—North American eocene geology; Clark & 
Martin (98).—Review of biological literature, 1899-1900 ; Delage and 
others, Annee biol. v. —Bibliography of the geological literature of Baden, 
Wurttemburg and Hohenzollern ; Eck, Mt. Badisch. Geol. Landesanst. i. 
Suppl. iii, 142 pp.—General review of Molluscan literature for 1900 ; 
Hescheler, Zool. Jahresber. 1900,42 pp.—Index-digest of American Journal 
of Conchology ; Sykes (579).— Eritish post-pliocene non-marine Mollusca ; 
Kennard & Woodward (286).—Geology of Allegany County, Maryland ; 
O’Harra, Maryland geol. Surv., Allegany County, pp. 69-85.—Bavarian 
Literature, 1542-1899; Pfaff (425).—Swiss palaeontology for 1900; 
Sarasin, Eclog. geol. Helvet. vii, pp. 53-98.—Dates of publication of 
Kiener’s ‘Coquilles vivantes, etc. 5 ; Sherborn & Woodward (511).— 
Dates of Ferussac’s ‘Moll. terr. et fluv. 5 ; Sherborn & Woodward (513).— 
Dates of publication of zoological portions of French Voyages ; Sherborn 
& Woodward (512, 514).—Notes, bibliographical and biographical, on the 
work of Austrian Malacologists : Sturany, Bot. und Zool. in Oesterr. 
1850-1900. Vienna, 1901.—North American pakeontology for 1899; 
Weekes (635).— Geology of London ; Whitaker, P. Geol. Ass. xvii, 
pp. 81-109.—Dates of publication of Forbes & Hanley’s ‘British Mollusca 5 ; 
Woodward (664). 
Nomenclature :—On the rules of zoological nomenclature ; Bonarelli 
(59).—Zoological nomenclature ; Hervera, Bull. Soc. zool. France xxvi, 
pp. 155 & 156: Pavlow (413): Vevey, Bull. Soc. zool. France xxvi, 
pp. 93-95. 
8. Economics. 
Oyster-culture in Cornwall; Anon., Rep. Cornwall Soc. 1900, pp. 103-107, 
figg.—On the pearl-producing Unionidce of France ; Bonnem^re (61).— 
Pearl oysters and fisheries; Collett (106).—Oj'ster-reefs of North Carolina; 
Grave (211).—Oyster-culture in Norway; Henking (243).—On the clam 
fishery {My a arenaria ) and clam culture of the United States; Kellogg 
(281).—Manual of oyster and mussel culture ; LarbalIctrier (314).— 
Mussel culture on the Coquet; Meek (352 & 353).—Note on pearl-shell 
fishery oft'Queensland ; McIntosh, Nature lxiv, p. 376.—Spawning of Mytilus 
edulis ; Scott (507).—On the culture and fisheries of the pearl oyster, and 
on the formation of pearls ; Seurat (509 & 510).—Statistics of oyster, 
mussel, cockle and winkle fisheries of Ireland ; Spotswood, Rep. Fisheries 
Ireland 1900, Dept. Agric. Ireland.—Foreign oysters acquiring characters 
of ‘Natives 5 ; Tabor, Nature lxiv, p. 126 : Headley, t. c. p. 108.—Oyster 
and mussel culture ; Tanneguy de Vogan (587). 
9. Stray Notes. 
Erosion of shells ; Boycott, Sci. Gossip vii, p. 255.— Helicella cantiana 
as food for thrushes ; Bullen (78).— Helix arbustorum at over 7000 feet; 
Horsley, J. Conch, x, p. 42.—Remarks on the beauty of the form, colour, 
etc. displayed by the Mollusca ; Mobius (370).—Introduction of Physa 
acuta ; Schmidt (502).—Number of recent known Mollusca ; Sykes (579). 
—Physiological action of decoction made from mussels ; Thibert (591).— 
On Mollusca introduced into California ; Varigny (613). — Fresli-water 
shells as marl-forming agents, with notes on shell-erosion ; Wesenberg- 
Lund (640). — Molluscs broken on ‘thrush-stones 5 ; Woodruffe-Peacock, 
Naturalist 1901, p. 163. 
