NOTICES OF SERIALS. 
(Whitney) On Algerite and Apatite—p. 206-210. (Willet) Meteoric Iron from 
Putnam, Co. Georgia—p. 331, 332. Review.—M arcon’s Geological Map of the 
United States and the British Provinces of North America—p. 199-206. Mis¬ 
cellaneous.—(C otta) Eulogy on Yon Buch, translated from the German—p. 
1-11. (Rose) Biography of Berzelius concluded—p. 103-113. Correspondence. 
—p. 113-120, 262-271, 407-420. (Burnett) Physical Features of Florida—p. 
407-412. Intelligence.— p. 121-152, 271-296, 421-456. (Gray) On the age 
of the large tree lately felled in California—p. 440-443. 
Vol. XVIII. June to November, 1S54. Zoology. —(Burnett) Reviews and 
Records in Anatomy and Physiology—p. 104-114. (Dana) On the Geographical 
Distribution of Crustacea—p. 316-326 ; an extract from the author’s Report on 
Crustacea—a volume which Ave purpose noticing more fully elsewhere. Botany. — 
(Dewey) Cartography—p. 102-104. (Gray) Note on the genus Buckleya —p. 98- 
100. Geology, Paleontology, Etc. —(Brant) On Fuchs’s Method for the Deter¬ 
mination of Iron—p. 227-229. (Brush) Chemical Composition of Clintonite— 
p. 407-409. (Coan) Present condition of the Crater of Kilauea, Hawaii—p. 96- 
98. (Connell) On Columbite and Tantalite ; extract from Phil. Mag.—p. 392- 
394. (Same) Homoeomorphism of Mineral species of the Trimetric System— 
p. 35-54. (Dana) Mineralogical Contributions—p. 249-254. (Genth) Contri¬ 
butions to Mineralogy—p. 410, 411. (Hayes) On Borocalcite from Iquique, 
5. Peru—p. 95. (Hunt) On some Crystallized Limestones of North America— 
p 193-200. (Mallet) On the Phosphate of Iron and Manganese, from Norwich, 
Massachusets—p. 33, 34. (Shepard) On Meteoric iron from Sonora—p. 362-372. 
(Laurence Smith) Re-examination of American Minerals—p. 372-381. (Tylor) 
On Changes of the Sea Level, produced by existing Phj^sical Causes, during 
stated periods of time—p. 216-227. Review of Murchison’s Siluria—p. 394-406. 
Miscellaneous. — (Baily) Mode of giving permanent flexibility to brittle speci¬ 
mens in Botany and Zoology—p. 100-102. (Forbes) On the Educational Uses of 
Museums; Extract—p. 340-352. (Wyman) Biographical Notice of Dr. Waldo 
Burnett—p. 255-264. Correspondence —p. 114-124,381-392, 431-439. Intel¬ 
ligence— p. 124-157, 265-304, 412-451. American Association of Science — p. 
143-146. (Gray) Botany of the United States Exploring Expedition, under 
Captain Wilkes, Phanerogamia, Yol. I. Exogenge Polypetalos—p. 132. Mammoth 
trees of California—p. 286. Allen’s Victoria Regia, with 6 plates, folio, Boston, 
1854—p. 428. Crytopodia occidental's , Dana, n. sp.—p. 430. 
Volume XIX. .January to May, 1854. Zoology.— (Agassiz) Synopsis 
of the Ichthyological Fauna of the Pacific Slope of North America; chiefly 
from the collections made by the United States Exploring Expedition, under 
the command of Captain Wilkes, with recent additions and comparisons 
with Eastern types.—p. 71-99, 215-231. (Bacon) On Oil contained 
in the Crustaceans found in the Cochituate water—p. 261-263. (Dana) 
On the Geographical Distribution of Crustacea—p. 6-15. (Valenciennes 
and Fremy) On the Composition of Eggs in the Series of Animals—p. 
38-48, 238-243. Botany.— (Braun) The Vegetable Individual in relation 
to Species—p. 297-318. Translation from Trans. Berlin Acad., 1853. (Dewey) 
Caricograpliy—p. 252-256. (Neister) On the Fructification of Aracliis hypogcea 
—p. 212, 213. (Dana) Supplement to his Mineralogy—p. 353-371. (Genth) 
Contributions to Mineralogy—p. 15-23. (Hitchcock) Impressions, chiefly tracks 
on Alluvial Clay in Hadley, Massachusets—p. 391-396. (Le Conte) Account of 
some Volcanic Springs in the Desert of Colorado, in Southern California—p. 1- 
6. (Schoolcraft) Discovery of a Coal basin on the Western borders of the Lake 
of the Woods—p. 232-234. (Warren) Supernumerary Tooth in Mastodon Gi- 
ganteus —p. 349-353. Review.—E mmons on American Geology—p. 397. Re¬ 
view of Murchison’s Siluria—p. 371-385. (Morfit) On Gum Mezquite—p. 
263, 264. Correspondence.— p. 103-109, 407-417. Intelligence.—110-152, 
264-296, 418-454. 
Vol. XX., Part 1, July, 1855. (Hitchcock) Description of a new Clathropteris, 
discovered in the Connecticut Valley Sandstone—p. 22-25. (Whitney) On the 
Change in the Structure and Composition of Mineral Veins near the surface, with 
particular reference to the East Tennessee Copper Mines—p. 53-57. (Blake) 
