HEREDITY, EVOLUTION. 
Gen. Sub. 63 
b. Heredity. 
Heredity and variation ; Mark Baldwin (35).—Heredity, discussion 
of; Bard (39).—Problems of Heredity; Brooks (89).—A measure of the 
intensity of hereditary transmission ; Galton (261).—Inheritance and 
development; Kassowitz (388).—The biochemical theory of heredity ; Le 
Dantec (438).—Discussion of heredity; Sedgwick (712), Thomson (765).— 
Criticism of the theory of the importance of the chromosomes ; Delage 
( 165).—Facts of inheritance.—Immunity as regards vaccine may be 
acquired before birth; Beclere and others (49).—Inheritance of longevity 
in male line in man demonstrated ; Beeton & Pearson (54).—Inheritance 
of organic deterioration ; Charrin (117), Charrin & Nattan-Larrier 
( 119).—Heredity and fertility; Howard Collins (132).—Experimental 
contributions to the theory of heredity; Ewart (214, 215).—Facts of 
inheritance in connection with marriages of the deaf; Fay (221).—Inheri¬ 
tance of tendency to lay double-yolked eggs ; FfiRfi (227).—Fertility of 
pure breeds may become a racial characteristic ; Heape (315).—Summary 
as to heredity ; Mehnert (524).—Inheritance in disease ; Morpurgo 
( 556).—Facts and laws of Inheritance ; Orchansky (585).—Inheritance of 
fertility and fecundity ; Pearson (598).—Inheritance of Immunity; 
Reibmayr (648).—Heredity and disease ; Thorburn (767).—Inheritance 
in parthenogenesis ; Warren (812). 
Particular problems :— 
Telegony and Xenia ; Bulman (94).—Some notes on telegony; Bumpus 
( 96).—Telegony; Ewart (213).—Facts of reversion; Ewart (213).— 
Experiments bearing on telegony; Ewart (214).—Heredity and imitation ; 
Le Dantec (437).—Sex and heredity; Le Dantec (440).—Passage of 
alcohol from, mother to foetus and into milk; Nicloux (572, 573).— 
Structural modifications in the supra-renals of newly born, associated 
with illness of mother; Pettit (608).—Telegony; Thomson (763).—In¬ 
heritance illustrated in reference to markings of fish embryos; Loeb (467). 
Transmission of acquired characters :— 
Experiments on transmission of acquired characters ; Bond (70).— 
Alleged case of use-inheritance in fusion of femur and trochanter in 
Phasmidie; Bordage (78).—Transmission of acquired characters tested in 
relation to cave animals; Eigenmann (201).—Alleged case of the trans¬ 
mission of an acquired character ; Errera (211).—Inheritance of acquired 
characters and neo-Darwinism ; Le Dantec (436).—Are acquired charac¬ 
ters transmitted?; Thomson (765).—Functional aspect of bone architec¬ 
ture ; in the transformation of bones the structure is mechanically 
correlated to the needs of the case ; Wolff (845).—Modifications in newly 
born young due to maternal illness; Charrin & Langlois (118).— 
‘ Environmental polymorphism ’ in Crepidula —not heritable ; Conklin 
(134). 
9. Evolution. 
a. General. 
General evolution doctrine, recent researches; Mehnert (522).—Selected 
bibliography of evolution; King (396).—Inorganic and organic evolution; 
Lockyer (461).—Popular essays on evolution (1898); Jordan (380).— 
Philosophical criticism of evolution; Lloyd (458).—Present state of 
evolution ; Packard (590).—An introduction to the study of organic 
evolution ; Shute (724).—Zoology and the philosophy of evolution ; 
Brooks (89).—The Theory of Descent at the close of the Century; 
Steinmann (743). — Darwinism and teleology; Sully Prudhomme (623- 
627).—Factors in Evolution; Zehnder (854).—General sketch of evolution 
