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1 1 The Carnegie Institution of Washington, D. C. 1902. Octavo, 16 pp. 2 The Carnegie Institution of Washington, D. C. Articles of Incorporation, Deed of Trust, etc. 1902. Octavo, 15 pp. 3 The Carnegie Institution of Washington, D. C. Proceedings of the Board of Trustees, January, 1902. 1902. Octavo, 15 pp. 4 CONARD, HENRY S. The Waterlilies: A Monograph of the Genus Nymphaea. 1905. Quarto, [1] + xiii + 279 pp., 30 pls., 82 figs. 5 BURNHAM, S. W. A General Catalogue of Double Stars within 121° of the North Pole. 1906. Quarto. Part I. The Catalogue. pp. [2] + lv + 1–256r. Part II. Notes to the Catalogue. pp. viii + 257–1086. 6 COVILLE, FREDERICK VERNON, and DANIEL TREMBLY MACDOUGAL. Desert Botani- cal Laboratory of the Carnegie Institution. 1903. Octavo, vi + 58 pp., 29 pls., 4 figs. 7 RICHARDS, THEODORE WILLIAM, and WILFRED NEWSOME STULL. New Method for Determining Compressibility. 1903. Octavo, 45 pp., 5 figs. 8 FARLOW, WILLIAM G. Bibliographical Index of North American Fungi. Vol. 1, Part 1. Abrothallus to Badhamia. 1905. Octavo, xxxv + 312 pp. 9 HILL, GEORGE WILLIAM, The Collected Mathematical Works of. Quarto. Vol. I. With introduction by H. POINCARÉ. 1905. xix + 363 pp. +errata, frontispiece. Vol. II. 1906. vii + 339 pp. + errata. Vol. III. 1906. iv + 577 pp. Vol. IV. 1907. vi + 460 pp. 10 NEWCOMB, SIMON. On the Position of the Galactic and Other Principal Planes toward Which the Stars Tend to Crowd. (Contributions to Stellar Statistics, First Paper.) 1904. Quarto, ii + 32 pp. 11 NEWCOMB, SIMON. A Statistical Inquiry into the Probability of Causes of the Production of Sex in Human Offspring. 1904. Octavo, 34 pp., 1 diagram. 12 NOGUCHI, HIDEYO. The Action of Snake Venom upon Cold-Blooded Animals. 1904. Octavo, 16 pp. (Embodied in Publication 111.) 13 ADAMS, EPHRAIM DOUGLASS. The Influence of Grenville on Pitt’s Foreign Policy, 1787- 1798. (Papers of the Bureau of Historical Research.) 1904. Octavo, 79 pp. 14 VAN TYNE, CLAUDE HALSTEAD, and WALDO GIFFORD LELAND. Guide to the Archives of the Government of the United States in Washington. (Papers of the Bureau of Historical Re- search.) 1904. Octavo, xiii + 215 pp. (See Publication 92.) 15 MOTTIER, DAVID M. Fecundation in Plants. 1904. Octavo, viii + 187 pp., 75 figs. 16 JENNINGS, HERBERT S. Contributions to the Study of the Behavior of Lower Organisms. 1904. Octavo, 256 pp., 81 figs. 17 DORSEY, GEORGE A. Traditions of the Arikara. 1904. Octavo, 202 pp. 18 MORSE, ALBERT PITTS. Researches on North American Acridiidae. 1904. Octavo, 56 pp., 8 pls. 19 ENTEMAN, WILHELMINE M. Coloration in Polistes. 1904. Octavo, 88 pp., 6 PIS., 27 figs. Carnegie Institution of Washington Monograph Series BT ILLUMI

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Page 1: BT UMI Carnegie Institution of Washington Monograph Series · 3 The Carnegie Institution of Washington, D. C. Proceedings of the Board of Trustees, January, 1902. 1902. Octavo, 15

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1 The Carnegie Institution of Washington, D. C. 1902. Octavo, 16 pp.

2 The Carnegie Institution of Washington, D. C. Articles of Incorporation, Deed of Trust, etc. 1902.Octavo, 15 pp.

3 The Carnegie Institution of Washington, D. C. Proceedings of the Board of Trustees, January,1902. 1902. Octavo, 15 pp.

4 CONARD, HENRY S. The Waterlilies: A Monograph of the Genus Nymphaea. 1905. Quarto, [1]+ xiii + 279 pp., 30 pls., 82 figs.

5 BURNHAM, S. W. A General Catalogue of Double Stars within 121° of the North Pole. 1906.Quarto.

Part I. The Catalogue. pp. [2] + lv + 1–256r.Part II. Notes to the Catalogue. pp. viii + 257–1086.

6 COVILLE, FREDERICK VERNON, and DANIEL TREMBLY MACDOUGAL. Desert Botani-cal Laboratory of the Carnegie Institution. 1903. Octavo, vi + 58 pp., 29 pls., 4 figs.

7 RICHARDS, THEODORE WILLIAM, and WILFRED NEWSOME STULL. New Method forDetermining Compressibility. 1903. Octavo, 45 pp., 5 figs.

8 FARLOW, WILLIAM G. Bibliographical Index of North American Fungi. Vol. 1, Part 1.Abrothallus to Badhamia. 1905. Octavo, xxxv + 312 pp.

9 HILL, GEORGE WILLIAM, The Collected Mathematical Works of. Quarto.

Vol. I. With introduction by H. POINCARÉ. 1905. xix + 363 pp. +errata, frontispiece.Vol. II. 1906. vii + 339 pp. + errata.Vol. III. 1906. iv + 577 pp.Vol. IV. 1907. vi + 460 pp.

10 NEWCOMB, SIMON. On the Position of the Galactic and Other Principal Planes toward Whichthe Stars Tend to Crowd. (Contributions to Stellar Statistics, First Paper.) 1904. Quarto, ii + 32 pp.

11 NEWCOMB, SIMON. A Statistical Inquiry into the Probability of Causes of the Production of Sexin Human Offspring. 1904. Octavo, 34 pp., 1 diagram.

12 NOGUCHI, HIDEYO. The Action of Snake Venom upon Cold-Blooded Animals. 1904. Octavo,16 pp. (Embodied in Publication 111.)

13 ADAMS, EPHRAIM DOUGLASS. The Influence of Grenville on Pitt’s Foreign Policy, 1787-1798. (Papers of the Bureau of Historical Research.) 1904. Octavo, 79 pp.

14 VAN TYNE, CLAUDE HALSTEAD, and WALDO GIFFORD LELAND. Guide to the Archivesof the Government of the United States in Washington. (Papers of the Bureau of Historical Re-search.) 1904. Octavo, xiii + 215 pp. (See Publication 92.)

15 MOTTIER, DAVID M. Fecundation in Plants. 1904. Octavo, viii + 187 pp., 75 figs.

16 JENNINGS, HERBERT S. Contributions to the Study of the Behavior of Lower Organisms. 1904.Octavo, 256 pp., 81 figs.

17 DORSEY, GEORGE A. Traditions of the Arikara. 1904. Octavo, 202 pp.

18 MORSE, ALBERT PITTS. Researches on North American Acridiidae. 1904. Octavo, 56 pp., 8pls.

19 ENTEMAN, WILHELMINE M. Coloration in Polistes. 1904. Octavo, 88 pp., 6 PIS., 27 figs.

Carnegie Institutionof Washington

Monograph Series

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20 DUERDEN, J. E. The Coral Siderastrea radians and Its Postlarval Development. 1904. Quarto, v +130 pp., 11 pls., 13 figs.

21 DORSEY, GEORGE A. The Mythology of the Wichita. 1904. Octavo, vi + 351 pp.

22 McLAUGHLIN, ANDREW C. Report on the Diplomatic Archives of the Department of State, 1789-1840. (Papers of Bureau of Historical Research, Carnegie Institution of Washington.) 1904. Revisededition, 1906. Octavo, 73 pp.

23 CASTLE, W. E. Heredity of Coat Characters in Guinea-Pigs and Rabbits. (Papers of Station forExperimental Evolution at Cold Spring Harbor, New York, No. 1.) 1905. Octavo, 78 pp., 6 pls., 11figs. .

24 MACDOUGAL, D. T., assisted by A. M. VAIL, G. H. SHULL, and J. K. SMALL. Mutants andHybrids of the Oenotheras. (Papers of Station for Experimental Evolution at Cold Spring Harbor,New York, No. 2.) 1905. Octavo, 57 pp., 22 pls., 13 figs.

25 GULICK, JOHN T. Evolution, Racial and Habitudinal. 1905. Octavo, xii + 269 pp., 15 pls.

26 PUMPELLY, RAPHAEL [WILLIAM M. DAVIS, RAPHAEL W. PUMPELLY, and ELLSWORTHHUNTINGTON]. Explorations in Turkestan; with an Account of the Basin of Eastern Persia andSistan. Expedition of 1903. 1905. Quarto, xii + 324 pp., 7 pls., 174 figs.

27 SMITH, ERWIN F. Bacteria in Relation to Plant Diseases. Quarto.

Vol. I. Methods of Work and General Literature of Bacteriology Exclusive of Plant Dis-eases. 1905. xii + 285 pp., 31 pls., 146 figs.

Vol. II. History, General Considerations, Vascular Diseases.1911. viii + 368 pp., 22 pls.,149 figs

Vol. III. Vascular Diseases (Continued). 1914. viii + 309 pp., 47 pls., 157 figs.

28 RICHARDS, THEODORE WILLIAM and ROGER CLARK WELLS. A Revision of the AtomicWeights of Sodium and Chlorine. 1905. Octavo, 70 pp.

29 BAIRD, JOHN WALLACE. The Color Sensitivity of the Peripheral Retina. 1905. Octavo, 80 pp., 1fig.

30 SHULL, GEORGE HARRISON. Stages in the Development of Sium cicutaefolium. (Papers ofStation for Experimental Evolution at Cold Spring Harbor, New York, No. 3.) 1905. Octavo, 28 pp.,7 pls., 11 figs.

31 DAY, ARTHUR L., E. T. ALLEN, and J. P. IDDINGS. With an introduction by GEORGE F.BECKER. The Isomorphism and Thermal Properties of the Feldspars. 1905. Octavo, 95 pp., 26pls., 25 figs.

32 DEAN, BASHFORD. Chimaeroid Fishes and Their Development. 1906. Quarto, 194 pp., 11 pls.,144 figs.

33 PARKHURST, JOHN A. Researches in Stellar Photometry during the Years 1894 to 1906, MadeChiefly at the Yerkes Observatory. 1906. Quarto, iv + 192 pp., 13 pls., 39 figs.

34 WIELAND, G. R. American Fossil Cycads. Quarto.

Vol. I. Structure. 1906. viii + 296 pp., frontispiece, 50 pls., 142 figs.Vol. II. Taxonomy. 1916. vii + 277 pp., 58 pls., 97 figs.

35 COBLENTZ, WILLIAM W. Investigations of Infra-Red Spectra. 1905. Octavo, vi + 331 pp., 152figs.

Part I. Infra-Red Absorption Spectra. pp. 1-285, figs. 1-132.Part II. Infra-Red Emission Spectra. pp. 287-330, figs. 133-152.

36 STEVENS, N. M. Studies in Spermatogenesis. Octavo.

[Part I.] Studies in Spermatogenesis with Especial Reference to the “Accessory Chromo-some.” 1905. pp. 1-32, pls. i-vii.

Part II. A Comparative Study of the Heterochromosomes in Certain Species of Coleoptera,

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Hemiptera, and Lepidoptera, with Especial Reference to Sex Determination. 1906.pp. ii + 33-74, pls. viii-xv.

37 HARPER, R. A. Sexual Reproduction and the Organization of the Nucleus in Certain Mildews.1905. Octavo, ii + 104 pp., 7 pls.

38 McLAUGHLIN, ANDREW CUNNINGHAM, WILLIAM ADAMS SLADE, and ERNESTDORMAN LEWIS, prepared by. Writings on American History, 1903: A Bibliography of Booksand Articles on United States History Published during the Year 1903, with Some Memoranda onOther Portions of America. (Papers of the Bureau of Historical Research.) 1905. Octavo, xv + 172pp.

39 Handbook of Learned Societies and Institutions: America. [Edited under the supervision of J.David Thompson.] 1908. Octavo, viii + 592 pp.

40 BARUS, CARL. The Nucleation of the Uncontaminated Atmosphere. 1906. Octavo, xii + 152 pp.,1 pl., 104 figs.

41 DORSEY, GEORGE A. Traditions of the Caddo. 1905. Octavo, 136 pp.

42 ATWATER, W. O., and F. G. BENEDICT. A Respiration Calorimeter, with Appliances for theDirect Determination of Oxygen. 1905. Octavo, ix + 193 pp., 49 figs.

43 PETERS, C. H. F. Edited for publication by EDWIN B. FROST. Heliographic Positions of Sun-Spots, Observed at Hamilton College from 1860 to 1870. 1907. Quarto, xiii + 189 pp.

44 SCRIPTURE, E. W. Researches in Experimental Phonetics. The Study of Speech Curves. 1906.Quarto, 204 pp., 13 pls., 106 figs.

45 FURNESS, CAROLINE E. Catalogue of Stars within Two Degrees of the North Pole, Deducedfrom Photographic Measures Made at Vassar College Observatory. 1905. Octavo, 85 pp.

46 ADAMS, FRANK D., and ERNEST G. COKER. An Investigation into the Elastic Constants ofRocks, More Especially with Reference to Cubic Compressibility. 1906. Octavo, ii + 69 pp., 16pls., 26 figs.

47 MAYER, ALFRED G. Rhythmical Pulsation in Scyphomedusae. 1906. Octavo, ii 62 pp., 2 pls., 36figs.

48 TOWER, WILLIAM LAWRENCE. An Investigation of Evolution in Chrysomelid Beetles of theGenus Leptinotarsa. (Papers of the Station for Experimental Evolution at Cold Spring Harbor, NewYork, No. 4.) 1906. Octavo, x + 320 pp. + errata, 30 pls., 31 figs.

49 [Papers of the Station for Experimental Evolution, Nos. 5, 6] 1906. Octavo, 29 pp., 2 figs.

CASTLE, W. E., and ALEXANDER FORBES. Heredity of Hair-Length in Guinea-Pigsand Its Bearing on the Theory of Pure Gametes. (Papers of the Station for Experi-mental Evolution at Cold Spring Harbor, New York, No. 5.) pp. 3-14, 2 figs.

CASTLE, W. E. The Origin of a Polydactylous Race of Guinea-Pigs. (Papers of theStation for Experimental Evolution at Cold Spring Harbor, New York, No. 6.) pp.15-29.

50 LIVINGSTON, BURTON EDWARD. The Relation of Desert Plants to Soil Moisture and toEvaporation. 1906. Octavo, 78 pp., 16 figs.

51 STEVENS, N. M. Studies on the Germ Cells of Aphids. 1906. Octavo, 28 pp., 4 pls.

52 DAVENPORT, C. B. Inheritance in Poultry. (Papers of the Station for Experimental Evolution,No. 7.) 1906. Octavo, v + 136 pp., 17 pls., 4 figs.

53 MÜLLER, W. Max. Egyptological Researches. Quarto

Vol. I. Results of a journey in 1904. 1906. ii + 62 pp., 106 pls., 18 figs.Vol. II. Results of a journey in 1906. 1910. v + 188 pp., 47 pls., 68 figs.Vol. III. The Bilingual Decrees of Philae. 1920. ii + 88 pp., frontispiece, 40 pls.

54 WILLIS, BAILEY, and others. Research in China.

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[Atlas.] WILLIS, BAILEY, geologist in charge. Geographical and Geological Maps. 1906.Large folio, ii pp., 42 sheets, map on title page.

Vol. 1. 1907. Quarto.Part I. WILLIS, BAILEY, ELIOT BLACTCWELDIER, and R. H. SARGENT.

Descriptive Topography and Geology. pp. [2] + xiv + 1-353, pls. i-li, 65figs.

Part II. BLACKWELDER, ELIOT, Petrography and Zoology. HIRTH,FRIEDRICH, Syllabary for the TranScription of Chinese Sounds. pp. [2]+ iv + 355-528 + xxiv, pls. lii-lxiii.

Vol. 2. WILLIS, BAILEY. Systematic Geology. 1907. Quarto, v + 133 + v pp., 8 pls.Vol. 3. [Paleontology.] 1913. Quarto, [2] + vi + [11 + 375 pp., 29 pls., 9 figs.

WALCOTT, CHARLES D. The Cambrian Faunas of China. pp. [1] + 1-276,pls. 1-24, 9 figs.

WELLER, STUART. A Report on Ordovician Fossils Collected in EasternAsia in 1903-04. pp. 277-294, pls. 25-26.

GIRTY, GEORGE H. A Report on Upper Paleozoic Fossils Collected in China in 1903-04.pp. 295-334, pls. 27-29.

55 CASE, E. C. Revision of the Pelycosauria of North America. 1907. Quarto, ii + 176 pp., 35 pls., 81figs.

56 RICHARDS, THEODORE WILLIAM, and GEORGE SHANNON FORBES. Energy ChangesInvolved in the Dilution of Zinc and Cadmium Amalgams. 1906. Octavo, iii + 68 pp., 10 figs.

57 WASHINGTON, HENRY S. The Roman Comagmatic Region. 1906. Octavo, vi + 199 pp., 3 figs.

58 PEARL, RAYMOND, with the assistance of OLIVE M. PEppER and FLORENCE J. HAGLE.Variation and Differentiation in Ceratophyllum. 1907. Octavo, 136 pp., 2 pls., 26 figs.

59 DORSEY, GEORGE A. The Pawnee: Mythology (Part I). 1906. Octavo, ii + 546 pp.

60 JONES, HARRY C., with the assistance of F. H. GETMAN, H. P. BASSETT, L. MCMASTER, andH. S. UHLER. Hydrates in Aqueous Solution. Evidence for the Existence of Hydrates in Solution,Their Approximate Composition, and Certain Spectroscopic Investigations Bearing upon theHydrate Problem. 1907. Octavo, [2] + ix + 264 pp., 35 pls., 76 figs.

61 RICHARDS, THEODORE WILLIAM, and GUSTAVUS EDWARD BEHR, JR. The ElectromotiveForce of Iron under Varying Conditions, and the Effect of Occluded Hydrogen. 1906. Octavo, 43pp., 6 figs.

62 BARUS, CARL. Condensation of Vapor As Induced by Nuclei and Lons. 1907. Octavo, ix + 164pp., 66 figs.

63 The Electrical Conductivity of Aqueous Solutions. A report presented by ARTHUR A. NOYESupon a series of experimental investigations executed by A. A. NOYES, W. D. COOLIDGE, A. C.MELCHER, H. C. COOPER, YOGORO KATO, R. B. SOSMAN, G. W. EASTMAN, C. W.KANOLT, and W. BÖTTGER. 1907. Octavo, vi + 352 pp., 20 figs.

64 PEARL, RAYMOND, and A. B. CLAWSON. Variation and Correlation in the Crayfish, withSpecial Reference to the Influence of Differentiation and Homology of Parts. 1907. Octavo, ii + 70pp., 8 figs.

65 COBLENTZ, WILLIAM W. Investigations of Infra-Red Spectra. 1906. Octavo, 128 pp., 93 figs.

Part III. Infra-Red Transmission Spectra. pp. 5-70, figs. 1-58.Part IV. Infra-Red Reflection Spectra. pp. 71-127, figs. 59-93.

66 GOSS, WILLIAM F. M. High Steam-Pressure in Locomotive Service. 1907. Octavo, 6 + 144 pp.,120 figs., 47 diagrams.

67 BANTA, ARTHUR M. The Fauna of Mayfield’s Cave. 1907. Octavo, 114 pp., 2 pls., 13 figs.

68 MORSE, ALBERT PITTS. Further Researches on North American Acridildae. 1907. Octavo, 54

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pp., frontispiece, 9 pls., 1 fig.

69 RICHARDS, THEODORE WILLIAM, in collaboration with ARTHUR STAEHLER, GEORGESHANNON FORBES, EDWARD MUELLER, and GRINNELL JONES. Further ResearchesConcerning the Atomic Weights of Potassium, Silver, Chlorine, Bromine, Nitrogen, and Sulphur.1907. Octavo, 88 pp., 4 figs.

70 MACCURDY, HANSFORD, and W. E. CASTLE. Selection and Cross-Breeding in Relation to theInheritance of Coat-Pigments and Coat-Patterns in Rats and Guinea-Pigs. (Papers of the Stationfor Experimental Evolution, No. 8.) 1907. Octavo, iii + 50 pp., 2 pls., 5 figs.

71 UHLER, H. S., and R. W. WOOD. Atlas of Absorption Spectra. 1907. Quarto, ii + 59 pp., 26 pls.,7 figs.

72 NEWCOMB, SIMON, assisted by FRANK E. ROSS. Investigation of Inequalities in the Motionof the Moon Produced by the Action of the Planets. 1907. Quarto, viii + 160 pp., 2 figs.

73 PUMPELLY, RAPHAEL, edited by. Explorations in Turkestan. Expedition of 1904. PrehistoricCivilizations of Anau: Origins, Growth, and Influence of Environment. 1908. Quarto.

Vol. I. [Reports by] RAPHAEL PUMPELLY and HUBERT SCHMIDT, [with contribu-tions by] HOMER H. KIDDER, ELLSWORTH HUNTINGTON, and F. A.GOOCH. pp. xxxv + 1-240 + vi, pls. 1-60, figs. 1-430.

Vol. II. [Reports by] R. WELLES PUMPELLY and J. ULRICH DUERST, [with contri-butions by] G. SERGI, TH. MOLLISON, H. C. SCHELLENBERG, andLANGDON WARNER. pp. x + 241-494 + x, pls. 61-97, figs. 431-548.

74 SOMMER, H. OSKAR. The Vulgate Version of the Arthurian Romances, Edited from Manuscriptsin the British Museum. Quarto.

Vol. I. Lestoire del Saint Graal. 1909. xxxii + 296 pp., 1 fig.Vol. II. Lestoire de Merlin. 1908. ii + 466 pp.Vol. III. Le Livre de Lancelot del Lac. Part I. 1910. ii + 430 pp.Vol. IV. Le Livre de Lancelot del Lac. Part II. 1911. ii + 399 pp.Vol. V. Le Livre de Lancelot del Lac. Part III. 1912. ii + 474 pp.Vol. VI. Les Aventures on La Queste del Saint Graal. La Mort le Roi Artus. 1913. ii +

391 pp.Vol. VII. Supplement: Le Livre d’Artus [of the MS. No. 337 at the Bibliothèque

Nationale: A Unique Fragment]. With Glossary. 1913. ii + 370 pp.Index of Names and Places to Volumes I-VII. 1916. ii + 85 pp.

75 HAY, OLIVER PERRY. The Fossil Turtles of North America. 1908. Quarto, iv + 568 pp., 113 pls.,704 figs.

76 RICHARDS, THEODORE WILLIAM, in collaboration with W. N. STULL, F. N. BRINK, and F.BONNET, JR. The Compressibilities of the Elements and Their Periodic Relations. 1907. Octavo,67 pp., 8 figs.

77 BENEDICT, FRANCIS GANO. The Influence of Inanition on Metabolism. 1907. Octavo, [2] + v+ 542 pp., 4 figs.

78 SHAW, JAMES BYRNIE. Synopsis of Linear Associative Algebra: A Report on Its NaturalDevelopment and Results Reached up to the Present Time. 1907. Quarto, 145 pp.

79 DURAND, W. F. Researches on the Performance of the Screw Propeller. 1907. Octavo, 61 pp., 85figs.

80 JONES, HARRY C., and C. F. LINDSAY, C. G. CARROLL, H. P. BASSETT, E. C. BINGHAM,C. A. ROUILLER, L. McMASTER, and W. R. VEAZEY. Conductivity and Viscosity in MixedSolvents: A Study of the Conductivity and Viscosity of Solutions of Certain Electrolytes in Water,Methyl Alcohol, Ethyl Alcohol, and Acetone; and in Binary Mixtures of These Solvents. 1907.Octavo, v + 235 pp., 103 figs.

81 MACDOUGAL, D. T., A. M. VAIL, and G. H. SHULL. Mutations, Variations, and Relationships

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of the Oenotheras. (Papers of the Station for Experimental Evolution, No. 9.) 1907. Octavo, ii+ 92 pp., 22 pls., 73 figs.

82 LLOYD, FRANCIS ERNEST. The Physiology of Stomata. 1908. Octavo, 142 pp., 14 pls., 40figs.

83 PEREZ, LUIS MARINO. Guide to the Materials for American History in Cuban Archives. (Papersof the Department of Historical Research.) 1907. Octavo, x + 142 pp.

84 OSBORNE, THOMAS B. The Proteins of the Wheat Kernel. 1907. Octavo, 119 pp.

85 HASSE, ADELAIDE R. Index of Economic Material in Documents of the States of the UnitedStates. Prepared for the Department of Economics and Sociology of the Carnegie Institution ofWashington. Quarto.

California, 1849-1904. 1908. 316 pp.Delaware, 1789-1904. 1910. 137 pp.Illinois, 1809-1904. 1909. 393 pp.Kentucky, 1792-1904. 1910. 452 pp.Maine, 1820-1904. 1907. 95 pp.Massachusetts, 1789-1904. 1908. 310 pp.New Hampshire, 1789-1904. 1907. 66 pp.New Jersey, 1789-1904. 1914. 705 pp.New York, 1789-1904. 1907. 553 pp.Ohio, 1787-1904. 1912.

Part I. A to F. pp. 1-638.Part II. G to Z. pp. [2] + 639-1136.

Pennsylvania, 1790-1904.Part I. A to E. 1919. pp. 1-810.Part II. F to Railroads. 1921. pp. 811-1479.Part III. Rainfall to Z. 1922. pp. 1481-1711.

Rhode Island, 1789-1904. 1908. 95 pp.Vermont, 1789-1904. 1907. 71 pp.

86 PETERS, CHRISTIAN HEINRICH FRIEDRICH, and EDWARD BALL KNOBEL. Ptolemy’sCatalogue of Stars: A Revision of the Almagest. 1915. Quarto, iv + 307 pp., 4 pls., 4 figs.

87 The California Earthquake of April 18, 1906. Report of the State Earthquake Investigation Com-mission. 1908. ANDREW C. LAWSON, Chairman.

Vol. I. LAWSON, ANDREW C., in collaboration with G. K. GILBERT, H. F. REID, J. C.BRANNER, H. W. FAIRBANKS, H. O. WOOD, J.F. HAYFORD and A. L.BALDWIN, F. OMORI, A. O. LEUSCHNER, GEORGE DAVIDSON, F. E.MATTHES, R. ANDERSON, G. D. LOUDERBACK, R. S. HOLWAY, A. S.EAKLE, R. CRANDALL, G. F. HOFFMAN, G. A. WARRING,, E. HUGHES, F. J.ROGERS, A. BAIRD, and many others. 1908. Quarto.

Part I. pp. xviii + 1-254, pls. 1-98, figs. 1-54.Part II. pp. iv + 255-451, pls. 99-146, figs. 55-69.Vol. II. REID, HARRY FIELDING. The Mechanics of the Earthquake. 1910.

Quarto, viii + 200 pp., 2 pls., 62 figs.LAWSON, ANDREW C., G. K. GILBERT, H. F. REID, J. C. BRANNER, A. O.

LEUSCHNER, GEORGE DAVIDSON, CHARLES BURCKHALTER, and W. W.CAMPBELL. Atlas of Maps and Seismograms. 1908. Large folio, iii pp., 25 maps,15 sheets seismograms.

88 BJERKNES, V., and different collaborators. Dynamic Meteorology and Hydrography.

Part I. BJERKNES, V., and J. W. SANDSTRÖM. Statics. 1910. Quarto, iv + 146 pp., figs.1-31. [Hydrographic Tables, pp. 1A-36A; Meteorological Tables, pp. IB-30B;Appendix to Meteorological and Hydrographic Tables, pp. IC-22C.]

Part II. BJERKNES, V., TH. HESSELBERG, and O. DEVIK. Kinematics. 1911. Quarto,vii + 175 pp., figs. 32-113.

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Plates. 1911. Large folio, 60 separate plates in board cover.

89 HODELL, CHARLES W. The Old Yellow Book: Source of Browning’s “The Ring and the Book.”In Complete Photo-Reproduction, with Translation, Essay, and Notes. 1908. Second edition,1916. Octavo, 7 + [4] + cclxii + [2] + 346 pp., 4 pls.

90 ANDREWS, CHARLES M., and FRANCES G. DAVENPORT. Guide to the Manuscript Materialsfor the History of the United States to 1783, in the British Museum, in Minor London Archives,and in the Libraries of Oxford and Cambridge. 1908. Octavo, xiv + 499 pp.

90A ANDREWS, CHARLES M. Guide to the Materials for American History, to 1783, in the PublicRecord Office of Great Britain. (Papers of the Department of Historical Research.) Octavo.

Vol. I. The State Papers. 1912. xi + 346 pp.Vol. II. Departmental and Miscellaneous Papers. 1914. viii + 427 pp.

90B PAULLIN, CHARLES O., and FREDERIC L. PAXSON. Guide to the Materials in LondonArchives for the History of the United States since 1783. (Papers of the Department of HistoricalResearch.) 1914. Octavo, xi + 642 pp.

91 SHEPHERD, WILLIAM R. Guide to the Materials for the History of the United States in SpanishArchives (Simancas, the Archivo Histórico Nacional, and Seville). (Papers of the Department ofHistorical Research.) 1907. Octavo, ii + 107 pp.

92 VAN TYNE, CLAUDE HALSTEAD, and WALDO GIFFORD LELAND. Guide to the Archives ofthe Government of the United States in Washington. Second edition [of Publication 141, revisedand enlarged by W. G. LELAND. (Papers of the Department of Historical Research.) 1907.Octavo, xiii + 327 pp.

93 HALE, GEORGE E., and PHILIP Fox. The Rotation Period of the Sun As Determined from theMotions of the Calcium Flocculi. 1908. Octavo, ii + 54 pp:, 2 pls., 5 figs.

94 CONARD, HENRY SHOEMAKER. The Structure and Life-History of the Hay-Scented Fern.1908. Octavo, 56 pp., 25 pls.

95 DAVENPORT, CHARLES B. Inheritance in Canaries. (Papers of the Station for ExperimentalEvolution, No. 10.) 1908. Octavo, 26 pp., 3 pls.

96 BARUS, CARL. Condensation of Vapor As Induced by Nuclei and Ions. Octavo.

[Part 1.] Third Report. 1908. vi + [2] + 139 pp., 49 figs.Part 2. Fourth Report. 1910. viii + 84 pp., 29 figs.

97 COBLENTZ, WILLIAM W. Supplementary Investigations of Infra-Red Spectra. 1908. Octavo,183 pp., 107 figs.

Part V. Infra-Red Reflection Spectra. pp. 7-38 , figs. 1-24.Part VI. Infra-Red Transmission Spectra. pp. 39-68, figs. 25-46.Part VII. Infra-Red Emission Spectra. pp. 69-182, figs. 47-107.

98 [Studies at the Desert Laboratory.] 1908. Octavo.

CANNON, WILLIAM AUSTIN. The Topography of the Chlorophyll Apparatus inDesert Plants. 42 pp., 5 pls., 15 figs.

KNOX, ALICE ADELAIDE. The Induction, Development, and Heritability of Fascia-tions. 20 pp., 5 pls., 1 fig.

99 MACDOUGAL, DANIEL TREMBLY. Botanical Features of North American Deserts. 1908.Octavo, iii + 111 pp., 62 pls., 6 figs.

100 WARD, WILLIAM HAYES. The Seat Cylinders of Western Asia. 1910. Second printing, 1919.Quarto, xxxi + 428 pp., 1529 figs.

101 LUTZ, FRANK E. The Variation and Correlations of Certain Taxonomic Characters of Gryllus.(Paper No. 11 of Station for Experimental Evolution at Cold Spring Harbor, New York.) 1908.Octavo, 63 pp., 6 figs.

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102 Papers from the Tortugas Laboratory of the Carnegie Institution of Washington. Vol. I. 1908.Octavo, v + 191 pp., 43 pls., 31 figs.

I. JORDAN, H. E. The Germinal Spot in Echinoderm Eggs. pp.1-15, 13 figs.II. JORDAN, H. E. The Spermatogenesis of Aplopus mayeri. pp.13-36, 5 pls.III. JORDAN, H. E. The Relation of the Nucleolus to the Chromosomes in the Primary

Oöcyte of Asterias forbesii. pp. 37-72, 7 pls.IV. The Pelagic Tunicata of the Gulf Stream. [No Part I.] Part II, WILLIAM KEITH

BROOKS, Salpa floridana (Apstein). Part III, WILLIAM KEITH BROOKS, TheSubgenus Cyclosalpa. Part IV, WILLIAM KEITH BROOKS and CARL KELLNER,On Oikopleura tortugensis, n. sp., a New Appendicularian from the Tortugas, withNotes on Its Embryology. pp. 73-94, 8 pls., 3 figs.

V. BROOKS, WILLIAM KEITH, and BARTJIS MCGLONE. The Origin of the Lung ofAmpullaria. pp. 95-104, 7 pls.

VI. MAYER, ALFRED GOLDSBOROUGH. The Annual Breeding-Swarm of the AtlanticPalolo. pp. 105-112, 1 pl.

VII. MAYER, ALFRED GOLDSBOROUGH. Rhythmical Pulsation in Scyphomedusae—II. pp. 113-131, 13 figs.

VIII. PERKINS, H. F. Notes on Medusae of the Western Atlantic. pp. 133-156, 4 pls.IX. LINTON, EDWIN. Helminth Fauna of the Dry Tortugas. I. Cestodes. pp. 157-190, 11

pls.X. EDMONDSON, C. H. A Variety of Anisonema vitrea. P. 191, 2 figs.

103 Papers from the Tortugas Laboratory of the Carnegie Institution of Washington.Vol. II. 1908.Octavo, v + 325 pp., 41 pls., 53 figs. Paper, $1.00; cloth, $1.50

I. COWLES, R. P. Habits, Reactions, and Associations in Ocypoda arenaria. pp. 1-41, 4pls., 10 figs.

II. STOCKARD, CHARLES R. Habits, Reactions, and Mating Instincts of the “WalkingStick,” Aplopus mayeri. pp. 43-59, 3 pls., 1 fig.

III. STOCKARD, CHARLES R. Studies of Tissue Growth. I. An Experimental Study ofthe Rate of Regeneration in Cassiopea xamachana (Bigelow). pp. 61-102, 29 figs.

IV. ZELENY, CHARLES. Some Internal Factors Concerned with the Regeneration of theChelae of the Gulf-Weed Crab (Portunus sayi). pp. 103-138, 2 figs., 18 tables.

V. CHAPMAN, FRANK M. A Contribution to the Life-Histories of the Booby (Suloleucogastra) and Man-o’-War Bird (Fregata aquila). pp. 139-151, 6 pls.

VI. CONKLIN, EDWIN G. The Habits and Early Development of Linerges mercurius.pp. 153-170, 8 pls., 2 figs.

VII. CONKLIN, EDWIN G. Two Peculiar Actinian Larvae from Tortugas, Florida. pp.171-186, 4 pls., 5 figs.

VIII. WATSON, JOHN B. The Behavior of Noddy and Sooty Terns. pp. 187-255, 11 pls.,4 figs.

IX. REIGHARD, JACOB. An Experimental Field-Study of Warning Coloration in Coral-Reef Fishes. pp. 257-325, 5 pls.

104 EIGENMANN, CARL H. Cave Vertebrates of America: A Study in Degenerative Evolution. 1909.Quarto, ix + 241 pp., frontispiece, 30pls., 72 figs.

105 LEHMER, DERRICK NORMAN. Factor Table for the First Ten Millions, Containing the SmallestFactor of Every Number Not Divisible by 2, 3, 5, or 7 between the Limits 0 and 10017000. 1909.Folio, [1] + xiv + [4] + 0-476 pp.

106 CHAMBERLIN, ROLLIN THOMAS. The Gases in Rocks. (Contributions to Cosmogony and theFundamental Problems of Geology.) 1908. Octavo, 80 pp., 2 figs.

107 CHAMBERLIN, T. C., F. R. MOULTON, C. S. SLICHTER, W. D. MACMILLAN, ARTHUR C.LUNN, and JULIUS STIEGLITZ. The Tidal and Other Problems. (Contributions to Cosmogony andthe Fundamental Problems of Geology.) 1909. Octavo, iv + 264 pp., 19 figs.

I. The Tidal Problem:CHAMBERLIN, THOMAS CHROWDER. The Former Rates of the Earth’s

Rotation and Their Bearings on Its Deformation. pp. 3-59, figs. 1-6.

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SLICHTER, CHARLES S. The Rotation-Period of a Heterogeneous Spher-oid. pp. 61-67, figs. 7.

MACMILLAN, WILLIAM D. On the Loss of Energy by Friction of theTides. pp. 69-75, figs. 8.

MOULTON, FOREST RAY. On Certain Relations among the PossibleChanges in the Motions of Mutually Attracting Spheres When Disturbedby Tidal Interactions. pp. 77-133, figs. 9-16.

MOULTON, FOREST RAY. Notes on the Possibility of Fission of a Con-tracting Rotating Fluid Mass. pp. 135-160, figs. 17-19.

CHAMBERLIN, THOMAS CHROWDER. The Bearing of MolecularActivity on Spontaneous Fission in Gaseous Spheroids. pp. 161-167.

II. LUNN, ARTHUR C. Geophysical Theory under the Planetesimal Hypothesis. pp. 169-231.

III. STIEGLITZ, JULIUS. The Relations of Equilibrium between the Carbon Dioxide ofthe Atmosphere and the Calcium Sulphate, Calcium Carbonate, and CalciumBicarbonate of Water Solutions in Contact with It. pp. 233-264.

108 VAN DEMAN, ESTHER BOISE. The Atrium Vestae. 1909.Octavo, xi + 47 pp., frontispiece, 10pls., 6 plans.

109 MAYER, ALFRED GOLDSBOROUGH. The Medusae of the World. 1910. Quarto.

Vol. I. The Hydromedusae. pp. iii + 1-230 + xv, pls. 1-29, figs. 1-119.Vol. II. The Hydromedusae. pp. iii + 231-498 + xv, pls. 30-55, figs. 120-327.Vol. III. The Scyphomedusae. pp-iii+499-735, pls. 56-76, figs. 328-428.

110 JONES, HARRY C., and JOHN A. ANDERSON. The Absorption Spectra of Solutions of CertainSalts of Cobalt, Nickel, Copper, Iron, Chromium, Neodymium, Praseodymium, and Erbium inWater, Methyl Alcohol, Ethyl Alcohol, and Acetone, and in Mixtures of Water with the OtherSolvents. 1909. Octavo, vii + 110 pp., 81 pls.

111 NOGUCHI, HIDEYO. Snake Venoms: An Investigation of Venomous Snakes with Special Refer-ence to the Phenomena of Their Venoms. 1909. Octavo, xix + 315 pp., frontispiece, 33 pls., 16figs.

112 SHULL, GEORGE HARRISON. Bursa bursa-pastoris and Bursa heegeri: Biotypes and Hybrids.(Papers of the Station for Experimental Evolution No. 12.) 1909. Octavo, 57 pp., 4 pls., 23 figs.

113 SPALDING, VOLNEY M. Distribution and Movements of Desert Plants. 1909. Octavo, v + 144pp., 31 pls., 3 figs.

114 CASTLE, W. E., in collaboration with H. E. WALTER, R. C. MULLENIX, and S. COBB. Studiesof Inheritance in Rabbits. (Papers of the Station for Experimental Evolution, No. 13.) 1909.Octavo, 70 pp., 4 pls., 4 figs.

115 BOSS, LEWIS. Preliminary General Catalogue of 6188 Stars for the Epoch 1900, IncludingThose Visible to the Naked Eye and Other Well-Determined Stars. Prepared at the Dudley Obser-vatory, Albany, New York. 1910. Second printing, 1915, with sheet of corrections to first edition.Quarto, [2] + iii + xxxvii + 345 pp. .

116 REICHERT, EDWARD TYSON, and AMOS PEASLEE BROWN. The Differentiation andSpecificity of Corresponding Proteins and Other Vital Substances in Relation to BiologicalClassification and Organic Evolution: The Crystallography of Hemoglobins. 1909. Quarto, xix +338 pp., 100 pls., 411 figs.

117 CANNON, WILLIAM AUSTIN. Studies in Heredity As Illustrated by the Trichomes of Speciesand Hybrids of Juglans, Oenothera, Papaver, and Solanum. 1909. Octavo, iii + 67 pp., 10 pls., 21figs.

118 RICHARDS, THEODORE WILLIAM, with the collaboration of J. HUNT WILSON and R. N.GARROD-THOMAS. Electrochemical Investigation of Liquid Amalgams of Thallium, Indium,Tin, Zinc, Cadmium, Lead, Copper, and Lithium. 1909. Octavo, iii + 72 pp., 12 figs.

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119 PERRINE, CHARLES D., with the assistance of HAROLD K. PALMER, FREDRICA C. MOORE,and ADELAIDE M. HOBE. Determination of the Solar Parallax from Photographs of Eros Madewith the Crossley Reflector of the Lick Observatory, University of California. 1910. Quarto, v + 98pp., 1 pl., 2 figs.

120 DECKER, FLOYD FISKE. The Symmetric Function Tables of the Fifteenthic. Including anHistorical Summary of Symmetric Functions As Relating to Symmetric Function Tables. 1910.Folio, 21 pp.

121 DAVENPORT, CHARLES B. Inheritance of Characteristics in Domestic Fowl. (Papers of theStation for Experimental Evolution, No. 14.) 1909. Quarto, iii + 100 pp., 12 pls., 2 figs.

122 JOHNSON, ROSWELL H. Determinate Evolution in the Color-Pattern of the Lady-Beetles. (Papersof the Station for Experimental Evolution No. 15.) 1910. Octavo, iv + 104 pp., 92 figs.

123 BENEDICT, FRANCIS G., and THORNE M. CARPENTER. Respiration Calorimeters for Study-ing the Respiratory Exchange and Energy Transformations of Man. 1910. Octavo, vii + 102 pp.,32 figs.

124 ROBERTSON, JAMES ALEXANDER. List of Documents in Spanish Archives Relating to theHistory of the United States, Which Have Been Printed or of Which Transcripts Are Preserved inAmerican Libraries. (Papers of the Department of Historical Research.) 1910. Octavo, xv + 368 pp.

125 RICHARDS, THEODORE W., and HOBART HURD WILLARD. Determinations of AtomicWeights. 1910. Octavo, iv + 113 pp., 4 figs.

RICHARDS, THEODORE W., and HOBART HURD WILLARD. Further InvestigationConcerning the Atomic Weights of Silver, Lithium, and Chlorine. pp. 1-49, 4 figs.

RICHARDS, THEODORE W. The Harvard Determinations of Atomic Weights, between1870 and 1910. pp. 51-94.

RICHARDS, THEODORE W. Methods Used in Precise Chemical Investigation. pp. 95-113.

126 BENEDICT, FRANCIS G., and THORNE M. CARPENTER. The Metabolism and Energy Trans-formations of Healthy Man during Rest. 1910. Octavo, ix + 255 pp.

127 GOSS, WILLIAM F. M. Superheated Steam in Locomotive Service. 1910. Octavo, v + 144 pp., 88figs., 2l diagrams.

128 FISH, CARL RUSSELL. Guide to the Materials for American History in Roman and Other ItalianArchives. (Papers of the Department of Historical Research.) 1911. Octavo, ix + 289 pp.

129 MACDOUGAL, D. T., and W. A. CANNON. The Conditions of Parasitism in Plants. 1910.Octavo, iii + 60 pp., 10 pls., 2 figs.

130 JONES, HARRY C., and W. W. STRONG. A Study of the Absorption Spectra of Solutions ofCertain Salts of Potassium, Cobalt, Nickel, Copper, Chromium, Erbium, Praseodymium, Neody-mium, and Uranium As Affected by Chemical Agents and by Temperature. 1910. Octavo, ix + 159pp., 98 pls., 1 diagram.

131 CANNON, WILLIAM AUSTIN. The Root Habits of Desert Plants. 1911. Octavo, 96 pp., 23 pls.,17 figs.

132 Papers from the Tortugas Laboratory of the Carnegie Institution of Washington. Vol. III. 1911.Octavo, v + 151 pp., 17 pls., 38 figs.

I. MAYER, ALFRED GOLDSBOROUGH. The Converse Relation between Ciliary andNeuro-Muscular Movements. pp. 1-25, 8 figs.

II. HARVEY, E. NEWTON. Effect of Different Temperatures on the Medusa Cassiopea,with Special Reference to the Rate of Conduction of the Nerve Impulse. pp. 27-39, 5figs.

III. STOCKARD, CHARLES R. The Influence of Regenerating Tissue on the AnimalBody. pp. 41-48, 3 figs.

IV. HARGITT, CHARLES W. Cradactis variabilis: An Apparently New Tortugan Actin-

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ian. pp. 49-53, 1 pl.V. MCCLENDON, J. F. On Adaptations in Structure and Habits of Some Marine Animals

of Tortugas, Florida. pp. 55-62, 2 pls., 1 fig.VI. MAST, S. O. Behavior of the Loggerhead Turtle in Depositing Its Eggs. pp. 63-67.VII. HOOKER, DAVENPORT. Certain Reactions to Color in the Young Loggerhead

Turtle. pp. 69-76, 2 pls., 1 fig.VIII. STROMSTEN, FRANK A. A Contribution to the Anatomy and Development of the

Posterior Lymph Hearts of the Turtles. pp. 77-87, 2 pls., 5 figs.IX. HARTMEYER, R. Polycitor (Eudistoma) mayeri nov. sp., from the Tortugas. pp. 89-

93, 1 pl.X. COWLES, R. P. Reaction to Light and Other Points in the Behavior of the Starfish. pp.

95-110, 6 figs.XI. TENNENT, DAVID HILT, and V. H. KEILLER. The Anatomy of Pentaceros

reticulatas. pp. 111-116, 3 pls., 2 figs.XII. TENNENT, DAVID HILT. Echinoderm Hybridization. pp. 117-151, 6 pls., 7 figs.

133 Papers from the Tortugas Laboratory of the Carnegie Institution of Washington. Vol. IV. 1910.Octavo, v + 185 pp., 43 pls., 17 figs.

PRATT, HENRY S. Monocotyle floridana, a New Monogenetic Trematode. pp. 1-9, 11figs.

LINTON, EDWIN. Helminth Fauna of the Dry Tortugas. II. Trematodes. pp. 11-98, 28pls.

VAUGHAN, THOMAS WAYLAND. A Contribution to the Geologic History of theFloridian Plateau. pp. 99-185, 15 pls., 6 figs.

134 CHURCHILL, WILLIAM. The Polynesian Wanderings: Tracks of the Migration Deduced from anExamination of the ProtoSamoan Content of Efaté and Other Languages of Melanesia. 1911.Octavo, ix + 516 pp., 2 pls.

135 BAXTER, GREGORY PAUL, in collaboration with M. A. HINES, H. L. FREVERT, J. HUNTWILSON, F. B. COFFIN, G. S. TILLEY, EDWARD MUELLER, R. H. JESSE, JR., andGRINNELL JONES. Researches upon the Atomic Weights of Cadmium, Manganese, Bromine,Lead, Arsenic, Iodine, Silver, Chromium, and Phosphorus. 1910. Octavo, vii + 185 pp., 5 figs.

136 BENEDICT, FRANCIS CT., and ELLIOTT P. JOSLIN. Metabolism in Diabetes Mellitus. 1910.Octavo, vi + 234 pp., frontispiece, 2 figs.

137 ALLISON, WILLIAM HENRY. Inventory of Unpublished Material for American ReligiousHistory in Protestant Church Archives and Other Repositories. (Papers of the Department ofHistorical Research.) 1910. Octavo, vii + 254 pp.

138 ADAMS, WALTER S., assisted by JENNIE B. LASBY. An Investigation of the Rotation Period ofthe Sun by Spectroscopic Methods. (Papers of the Mount Wilson Solar Observatory, Vol. I, Part I.)1911. Quarto, iii + 132 pp., 2 pls., 5 figs.

139 LLOYD, FRANCIS ERNEST. Guayule (Parthenium argentatum Gray): A Rubber-Plant of theChihuahuan Desert. 1911. Second printing, 1942. Octavo, viii + 213 pp., 46 pls., 20 figs. Withreprint of “Mode of Occurrence of Caoutchouc in the Guayule, Parthenium argentatum Gray, andIts Function” (Plant Physiology, vol. 7, pp. 132-138, 1932)

140 CAMPBELL, DOUGLAS HOUGHTON. The Eusporangiatae: The Comparative Morphology ofthe Ophioglossaceae and Marattiaceae. 1911. Quarto, vi + 229 pp., 13 pls., 192 figs.

141 MACDOUGAL, D. T., and E. S. SPALDING. The Water Balance of Succulent Plants. 1910.Octavo, iii + 77 pp., 8 pls., 16 figs.

142 LONG, J. A., and E. L. MARK. The Maturation of the Egg of the Mouse. 1911. Octavo, iv + 72pp., 7 pls., 7 figs.

143 LUTZ, FRANK E. Experiments with Drosophila ampelophila Concerning Evolution. (Paper No.16 of the Station for Experimental Evolution at Cold Spring Harbor, New York.) 1911. Octavo, iii+ 40 pp., 53 figs.

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144 CASTLE, W. E., and JOHN C. PHILLIPS. On Germinal Transplantation in Vertebrates. (Paper No.17 of the Station for Experimental Evolution at Cold Spring Harbor, New York.) 1911. Octavo, ii +26 pp., 2 pls.

145 CASE, E. C. A Revision of the Cotylosauria of North America. 1911. Quarto, v + 122 pp., 14 pls.,52 figs.

146 CASE, E. C. Revision of the Amphibia and Pisces of the Permian of North America. With adescription of Permian insects, by E. H. SELLARDS; and a discussion of the fossil fishes, by LouisHUSSAKOF. 1911. Quarto, vii + 179 pp., 32 pls., 56 figs.

147 RUSSELL, HENRY NORRIS. Determinations of Stellar Parallax. Based upon photographs takenat the Cambridge Observatory by ARTHUR R. HINKS and the writer; with magnitudes and spectradetermined at the Harvard College Observatory under direction of Professor E. C. PICKERING.1911. Quarto, v + 142 pp.

148 PARKER, DAVID W. Calendar of Papers in Washington Archives Relating to the Territories of theUnited States to 1873). (Papers of the Department of Historical Research.) 1911. Octavo, 476 pp.

149 BARUS, CARL. The Production of Elliptic Interferences in Relation to Interferometry. Octavo

Part I. 1911. pp. vi + 1-77, figs. 1-33.Part II. 1912. pp. vi + 79-168, figs. 34-64.Part III. 1914. pp. vi + 169-273, figs. 65-119.

150 LEARNED, MARION DEXTER. Guide to the Manuscript Materials Relating to American Historyin the German State Archives. (Papers of the Department of Historical Research.) 1912. Octavo, vii+ 352 pp.

151 STAGER, HENRY WALTER. A Sylow Factor Table of the First Twelve Thousand Numbers, Givingthe Possible Number of Sylow Sub-groups of a Group of Given Order between the Limits of 0 and12000. 1916. Quarto, x + 120 pp., 1 pl.

152 NICHOLS, EDWARD L., and ERNEST MERRITT. Studies in Luminescence. 1912. Octavo, vii +225 pp., 190 figs.

153 KING, ARTHUR S. The Influence of a Magnetic Field upon the Spark Spectra of Iron and Tita-nium. (Papers of the Mount Wilson Solar Observatory, Vol. 11, Part 1) 1912. Quarto, iii + 66 pp., 6pls., 3 figs.

154 CHURCHILL, WILLIAM. Beach-la-mar: The Jargon or Trade Speech of the Western Pacific.1911. Octavo, iii + 54 pp.

155 BENEDICT, FRANCIS G., and EDGAR P. SLACK. A Comparative Study of Temperature Fluctua-tions in Different Parts of the Human Body. 1911. Octavo, v + 73 pp., 38 figs.

156 OSBORNE, THOMAS B., and LAFAYETTE B. MENDEL, with the co-operation of EDNA L.FERRY. Feeding Experiments with Isolated Food-Substances. 1911. Octavo.

Part I. pp. ii + 1-53, 1 fig., charts i-xxi.Part II. pp. iii + 55-138, 2 pls., charts xxii-cxxix.

157 DAY, ARTHUR L., and ROBERT B. SOSMAN. High Temperature Gas Thermometry. With aninvestigation of the metals, by E. T. ALLEN. 1911. Octavo, vi + 129 pp., frontispiece, 18 figs.

158 WRIGHT, FRED. EUGENE. The Methods of Petrographic Microscopic Research: Their RelativeAccuracy and Range of Application. 1911. Octavo, 204 pp., 11 pls., 118 figs.

159 HOWARD, LELAND O., HARRISON G. DYAR, and FREDERICK KNAB. The Mosquitoes ofNorth and Central America and the West Indies. Octavo.

Vol. 1. A General Consideration of Mosquitoes, Their Habits, and Their Relations to theHuman Species. 1912. vii + 520 pp., 14 pls., 6 figs.

Vol. 2. Plates. 1912. x pp., 150 pls.Vol. 3. Systematic Description, Part I. 1915. pp. vi + 1-523, 1 fig.Vol. 4. Systematic Description, Part II. 1917. pp. iv + 525-1064.

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160 JONES, HARRY C., and W. W. STRONG. The Absorption Spectra of Solutions of ComparativelyRare Salts, Including Those of Gadolinium, Dysprosium, and Samarium; the Spectrophotographyof Certain Chemical Reactions; and the Effect of High Temperature on the Absorption Spectra ofNon-aqueous Solutions. 1911. Octavo, viii + 112 pp., 67 pls., 4 figs.

161 MOULTON, F. R., in collaboration with DANIEL BUCHANAN, THOMAS BUCK, FRANK L.GRIFFIN, WILLIAM R. LONGLEY, and WILLIAM D. MACMILLAN. Periodic Orbits. 1920.Quarto, xv + 524 pp., 50 figs.

162 MAYER, ALFRED GOLDSBOROUGH. Ctenophores of the Atlantic Coast of North America.1912. Octavo, ii + 58 pp., 17 pls., 12 figs.

163 BOLTON, HERBERT E. Guide to Materials for the History of the United States in the PrincipalArchives of Mexico. (Papers of the Department of Historical Research.) 1913. Octavo, xv + 553pp.

164 COBLENTZ, WILLIAM W. A Physical Study of the Firefly. 1912. Octavo, 47 pp., 1 pl., 14 figs.

165 LEHMER, DERRICK NORMAN. List of Prime Numbers from 1 to 10,006,721. 1914. Folio, [1]+ xvi + 133 pp.

166 BENEDICT, FRANCIS G. The Composition of the Atmosphere, with Special Reference to ItsOxygen Content. 1912. Octavo, iii + 115 pp., frontispiece, 1 fig.

167 BENEDICT, FRANCIS G., and WALTER G. CADY. A Bicycle Ergometer with an Electric Brake.1912. Octavo, iii + 44 pp., 16 figs.

168 BURNHAM, S. W. Measures of Proper Motion Stars Made with the 40-Inch Refractor of theYerkes Observatory in the Years 1907 to 1912. 1913. Quarto, iv + 311 pp.

169 CALLAWAY, MORGAN, JR. The Infinitive in Anglo-Saxon. 1913. Octavo, xiii + 339 pp., foldedtable.

170 JONES, HARRY C.; the experimental work by A. M. CLOVER, H. H. HOSFORD, S. F.HOWARD, C. A. JACOBSON, H. R. KREIDER, E. J. SHAEFFER, L. D. SMITH, A.SPRINGER, JR., A. P. WEST, G. F. WHITE, E. P. WIGHTMAN, and L. G. WINSTON. TheElectrical Conductivity, Dissociation, and Temperature Coefficients of Conductivity from Zero toSixty-five Degrees of Aqueous Solutions of a Number of Salts and Organic Acids. 1912. Octavo, iv+ 148 pp., 5 figs.

171 LANCASTER, HENRY CARRINGTON. Pierre Du Ryer, Dramatist. 1912. Octavo, vii + 182 pp.,frontispiece, 3 vignettes.

172 PARKER, DAVID W. Guide to the Materials for United States History in Canadian Archives.(Papers of the Department of Historical Research.) 1913. Octavo, x + 339 pp.

173 REICHERT, EDWARD TYSON. The Differentiation and Specificity of Starches in Relation toGenera, Species, etc.: Stereochemistry Applied to Protoplasmic Processes and Products, and as aStrictly Scientific Basis for the Classification of Plants and Animals. 1913. Quarto. . (Supple-mentary to Publication 116.)

Part I. The Starch-Substance and Starch-Grain: Their Forms, Structure, Mechanisms ofFormation, Classification, Properties, Composition, Decomposition Products,Synthesis, Related Bodies, Methods of Differentiation, and Differentiation andSpecificity in Relation to Genera, Species, etc. General Applications of the Resultsof This Research. pp. xvii + 1-342 + 21, 102 pls., 10 charts.

Part II. The Differentiation and Specificity of Starches, in Relation to Certain Classes,Orders, Families, Genera, Species, Varieties, and Horticultural Forms. pp. xvii +343-900 + 18, 400 charts.

174 CHURCHILL, WILLIAM. Easter Island: The Rapanui Speech and the Peopling of SoutheastPolynesia. 1912. Octavo, v + 340 pp.

175 Researches of the Department of Terrestrial Magnetism.

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Vol. I. BAUER, L. A. Land Magnetic Observations, 19051910. 1912. Quarto, iv + 185pp., 10 pls.

Vol. II. BAUER, L. A., and J. A. FLEMING. Land Magnetic Observations, 1911-1913,and Reports on Special Researches. 1915. Quarto, v + 278 pp.) 13 pls., 9 figs.

Vol. III. BAUER, L. A., with the collaboration of W. J. PETERS, J. A. FLEMING, J. P.AULT, and W. F. G. SWANN. Ocean Magnetic Observations, 1905-1916, andReports on Special Researches. 1917. Quarto, vii + 447 pp., frontispiece, 25 pls., 35figs., tailpiece.

Vol. IV. BAUER, L. A., J. A. FLEMING, H. W. FISK, and W. J. PETERS. Land MagneticObservations, 1914–1920; and Special Reports, by J. A. FLEMING, H. W. FISK,and S. J. BARNETT. 1921. Quarto, vi + 475 pp., 9 pls., 17 figs.

Vol. V. Ocean Magnetic and Electric Observations, 1915–1921. 1926. Quarto, vii + 430pp., 15 pls., 31 figs.

AULT, J. P. Magnetic Results Obtained Aboard the Carnegie, 1915-1921. pp.3-193, pls. 1-11, figs. 1-3.

AULT, J. P., and S. J. MAUCHLY. Atmospheric-Electric Results ObtainedAboard the Carnegie, 1915-1921. pp. 195-286, pls. 12-13, figs. 4-6.

PETERS, W. J., J. P. AULT, Louis A. BAUER, J. A. FLEMING, andS. J. MAUCHLY. Special Reports. pp. 287-424, pls. 14-15, figs 7-31.

Vol. VI. Land Magnetic and Electric Observations, 1918-1926. 1927. Quarto, iv + 524pp., 13 pls., 41 figs.

FISK, H. W. Land Magnetic Observations, 1921-1926. pp-5-307, pls. 1-2, figs.1-2.

SVERDRUP, H. U. Magnetic, Atmospheric-Electric, and Auroral Results,Maud Expedition, 1918-1925. pp. 309-524, pls. 3-13, figs. 3-41.

Vol. VII-A. FLEMING, J. A., H. F. JOHNSTON, S. E. FORBUSH, A. G. MCNISH, andW. E. SCOTT. Magnetic Results from Watheroo Observatory, Western Australia,19191935. 1947. Quarto, vi + 1122 pp., 285 figs., 778 tables.

Vol. VII-B. FLEMING, J. A., H. F. JOHNSTON, A. G. MCNISH, W. C. PARKINSON, S.E. FORBUSH, J. W. GREEN, and W. E. SCOTT. Magnetic Results from WatherooObservatory, Western Australia, 1936-1944. 1947. Quarto, vii + 520 pp., 1 map, 417tables.

Vol. VII-C. PARKINSON, W. C., F. W. WOOD, W. E. SCOTT, and ELLA BALSAM.Magnetic Results from Watheroo Observatory, Western Australia. (Department ofTerrestrial Magnetism, Carnegie Institution of Washington, January 1945-June 1947;Australian Commonwealth, Bureau of Geology, Geophysics, and Mineral Resources,July-December 1947.) 1951. Quarto, v + 127 pp., frontispiece, 121 tables.

Vol. VIII. WALLIS, W. F., and J. W. GREEN. Land and Ocean Magnetic Observations,1927-1944. 1947. Quarto, vii + 243 pp., frontispiece, 5 figs.

Vol. IX. ROONEY, W. J. Earth-Current Results at Tucson Magnetic Observatory, 1932-1942. 1949. Quarto, v + 309 pp., frontispiece, 10 figs., 318 tables.

Vol. X-A. JOHNSTON, H. F., A. G. MCNISH, S. E. FORBUSH, W. E. SCOTT, ELLABALSAM, and P. G. LEDIG. Magnetic Results from Huancayo Observatory, Peru,19221935. 1948. Quarto, vi + 609 pp., 33 figs., 537 tables.

Vol. X-B. JOHNSTON, H. F., A. G. MCNISH, S. E. FORBUSH, W. E. SCOTT, ELLABALSAM, and P. G. LEDIG. Magnetic Results from Huancayo Observatory, Peru,1936-1944. 1948. Quarto, v + 385 pp., frontispiece, 352 tables. Paper, $2.00; cloth,$2.50

Vol. X-C. LEDIG, P. G., A. A. GIESECKE, JR., W. C. PARKINSON, W. E. SCOTT, andELLA BALSAM. Magnetic Results from Huancayo Observatory, Peru. (Departmentof Terrestrial Magnetism, Carnegie Institution of Washington, January 1945-June1947; Instituto Geofísico de Huancayo, July-December 1947.) 1951. Quarto, v + 127pp., frontispiece, 120 tables.

Vol. XI. WELLS, H. W., and L. V. BERKNER. Ionospheric Research at HuancayoObservatory, Peru, January, 1938-June, 1946. 1947. Quarto, v + 449 pp., 29 figs.,418 tables.

Vol. XII. I. SEATON, S. L., H. W. WELLS, and L. V. BERKNER. Ionospheric Research

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at College, Alaska, July, 1941- June, 1946. II. SEATON, S. L., and C. W.MALICH. Auroral Research at College, Alaska, 1941-1944. 1947. Quarto, v +397 pp., 24 figs., 340 tables.

Vol. XIII. BERKNER, L. V., and H. W. WELLS. Ionospheric Research at WatherooObservatory, Western Australia, June, 1938-June, 1946. 1948. Quarto, v + 425 pp.,29 figs., 390 tables.

Vol. XIV. LANGE, ISABELLE, and S. E. FORBUSH. Cosmic-Ray Results fromHuancayo Observatory, Peru, June, 1936-December, 1946; Including Summariesfrom Observatories at Cheltenham, Christchurch, and Godhavn through 1946.1948. Quarto, v + 182 pp., 12 figs., 207 tables.

Vol. XV. ROONEY, W. J. Earth-Current Results from Huancayo Observatory, Peru,1932-1942. 1949. v + 339 pp., 24 figs., 300 tables. This volume not in print.

Vol. XVI. ROONEY, W. J., and O. H. GISH. Earth-Current Results from WatherooObservatory, Western Australia, 1932-1942. 1949. v + 305 pp., 16 figs., 293 tables.

Vol. XVII. WAIT, G. R., and O. W. TORRESON. Atmospheric-Electric Results fromWatheroo Observatory, Western Australia, 1924-1934. 1948. v + 569 pp., 24 figs.,532 tables.

Vol. XVIII. WAIT, G. R. Atmospheric-Electric Results at Tucson Magnetic Observatory,1931-1934. 1948. v + 169 pp., 15 figs., 149 tables. .

Vol. XIX. TORRESON, O. W., and G. R. WAIT. Atmospheric-Electric Results fromHuancayo Observatory, Peru, 1924-1934. 1948. v + 547 pp., 14 figs., 512 tables.

176 BENEDICT, FRANCIS G., and ELLIOTT P. JOSLIN. A Study of Metabolism in Severe Diabetes.1912. Octavo, vi + 135 pp. + errata, 1 fig. (Supplementary to Publication 136.)

177 LOEB, LEO, with the collaboration of CARL L. ALSBERG, ELIZABETH COOKE, ELLEN P.CORSON-WHITE, MOYER S. FLEISHER, HENRY FOX, T. S. GITHENS, SAMUELLEOPOLD, M. K. MEYERS, M. E. REHFUSS, D. RIVAS, and LUCIUS TUTTLE. The Venom ofHeloderma. 1913. Octavo, vi + 244 pp., 38 figs.

178 CANNON, WILLIAM AUSTIN. Botanical Features of the Algerian Sahara. 1913. Octavo, vi +81 pp., 37 pls.

179 [Papers of the Station for Experimental Evolution, Nos. 18, 19.] 1913. Octavo, ii + 102 pp., 5 pls.

CASTLE, W. E. Reversion in Guinea-Pigs and Its Explanation. (Paper No. 18 of theStation for Experimental Evolution at Cold Spring Harbor, New York.) pp. 1-10.

LITTLE, C. C. Experimental Studies of the Inheritance of Color in Mice (Paper No. 19of the Station for Experimental Evolution at Cold Spring Harbor, New York.) pp.11-102, 5 pls.

180 JONES, HARRY C., and collaborators [C. M. STINE, J. N. PEARCE, H. R. KREIDER, E. G.MAHIN, M. R. SCHMIDT, J. SAM GUY, and P. B. DAVIS]. The Freezing-Point Lowering,Conductivity, and Viscosity of Solutions of Certain Electrolytes in Water, Methyl Alcohol, EthylAlcohol, Acetone, and Glycerol, and in Mixtures of These Solvents with One Another. 1913.Octavo, vii + 214 pp., 85 figs.

181 CASE, E. C., S. W. WILLISTON, and M. G. MEHL. Permo-Carboniferous Vertebrates from NewMexico. 1913. Quarto, v + 81 pp., 1 pl., 51 figs.

182 Papers from the Tortugas Laboratory of the Carnegie Institution of Washington. Vol. V. 1914.Octavo, iii + 222 pp., 8 pls., 3 maps, 66 figs.

I. MAYER, ALFRED GOLDSBOROUGH. In Memoriam: George Harold Drew, 1881-1913. pp. 1-6, 1 pl.

II. DREW, G. HAROLD. On the Precipitation of Calcium Carbonate in the Sea byMarine Bacteria, and on the Action of Denitrifying Bacteria in Tropical andTemperate Seas. pp. 7-45, 2 maps, 4 figs.

III. VAUGHAN, THOMAS WAYLAND. Preliminary Remarks on the Geology of theBahamas, with Special Reference to the Origin of the Bahaman and FloridianOolites. pp. 47-54.

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IV. VAUGHAN, THOMAS WAYLAND. The Building of the Marquesas and TortugasAtolls and a Sketch of the Geologic History of the Florida Reef Tract. pp. 55-67.

V. DOLE, R. B. Some Chemical Characteristics of Sea-Water at Tortugas and aroundBiscayne Bay, Florida. pp. 69-78, 1 map.

VI. CARY, LEWIS R. Observations upon the Growth-Rate and Oecology of Gorgonians.pp. 79-90, 2 pls.

VII. CLARK, HUBERT LYMAN. Growth-Changes in Brittle-Stars. pp. 91-126, 3 pls.VIII. TENNENT, DAVID H. The Early Influence of the Spermatozoan upon the Charac-

ters of Echinoid Larvae. pp. 127-138, 11 figs.IX. JACKSON, ROBERT TRACY. Studies of Jamaica Echini. pp. 139-162, 1 pl., 19 figs.X. JORDAN, H. E. The Spermatogenesis of the Mongoose; and a Further Comparative

Study of Mammalian Spermatogenesis, with Special Reference to Sex Chromosomes.pp. 163-180, 1pl., 9 figs.

XI. OSBURN, RAYMOND C. The Bryozoa of the Tortugas Islands, Florida. pp. 181-222,23 figs.

183 Papers from the Tortugas Laboratory of the Carnegie Institution of Washington. Vol. VI. 1914.Octavo, iii + 323 pp., 27 pls., 97 figs.

I. MAYER, ALFRED GOLDSBOROUGH. The Effects of Temperature upon TropicalMarine Animals. pp. 1-24, 12 figs.

II. MAYER, ALFRED GOLDSBOROUGH. The Relation between the Degree of Concen-tration of Electrolytes of Sea-Water and the Rate of Nerve-Conduction in Cassiopea.pp. 25-54, 13 figs.

III. MAYER, ALFRED GOLDSBOROUGH. The Law Governing the Loss of Weight inStarving Cassiopea. pp. 55-82, 1 pl., 21 figs.

IV. GOLDFARB, A. J. Changes in Salinity and Their Effects upon the Regeneration ofCassiopea xamachana. pp. 83-94, 4 figs.

V. GOLDFARB, A. J. Regeneration in the Annelid Worm Amphinoma pacifica, afterRemoval of the Central Nervous System. pp. 95-102.

VI. GOLDFARB, A. J. Experimentally Fused Larvae of Echinoderms with Special Refer-ence to Their Skeletons. pp. 103-121, 15 figs.

VII. MCCLENDON, J. F. Experiments on the Permeability of Cells. pp. 123-130, 3 figs.VIII. HARVEY, E. NEWTON. The Relation between the Rate of Penetration of Marine

Tissues by Alkali and the Change in Functional Activity Induced by the Alkali. pp.131-146, 1 fig.

IX. JACOBS, MERKEL H. Physiological Studies on Certain Protozoan Parasites ofDiadema setosum. pp. 147-157.

X. DAHLGREN, ULRIC. Origin of the Electric Tissues of Gymnarchus niloticus. pp. 159-194, 9 pls., 9 figs.

XI. REINKE, EDWIN E. The Development of the Apyrene Spermatozoa of Strombusbituberculatus. pp. 195-239, 7 pls.

XII. GUDGER, E. W. History of the Spotted Eagle Ray, Aëtobatus narinari, Together witha Study of Its External Structures. pp. 241-323, 10 pls., 19 figs.

184 FINLEY, JOHN PARK, and WILLIAM CHURCHILL. The Subanu: Studies of a Sub-VisayanMountain Folk of Mindanao. 1913. Octavo, v + 236 pp., 2 pls.

185 HASSE, ADELAIDE R. Index to United States Documents Relating to Foreign Affairs, 1828-1861.Quarto.

Part I. A to H. 1914. pp. 1-793.Part II. I to Q. 1919. pp. ii + 795-1331.Part III. R to Z. 1921. pp. ii + 1333-1980.

186 BARUS, CARL. The Diffusion of Gases through Liquids and Allied Experiments. 1913. Octavo, [2]+ vii + 88 pp., 38 figs.

187 BENEDICT, FRANCIS G., and EDWARD P. CATHCART. Muscular Work: A Metabolic Study withSpecial Reference to the Efficiency of the Human Body as a Machine. 1913. Octavo, vii + 176 pp.,

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frontispiece, 10 figs.

188 DAVENPORT, CHARLES B. Heredity of Skin Color in Negro-White Crosses. With appendix,being abridgement of field notes, chiefly of FLORENCE H. DANIELSON. (Paper No. 20 of theStation for Experimental Evolution at Cold Spring Harbor, New York.) 1913. Octavo, iii + 106pp., 4 pls.

189 OSGOOD, CHARLES GROSVENOR, compiled and edited by. A Concordance to the Poems ofEdmund Spenser. 1915. Quarto, xiii + 997 pp., frontispiece.

190 JONES, HARRY C. and J. SAM GUY . The Absorption Spectra of Solutions As Affected byTemperature and by Dilution: A Quantitative Study of Absorption Spectra by Means of theRadiomicrometer. 1913. Octavo, vii + 93 pp., 22 pls., 44 figs.

191 WEED, LEWIS H. A Reconstruction of the Nuclear Masses in the Lower Portion of the HumanBrain-Stem. 1914. Quarto, 78 pp., 6 pls.

192 HUNTINGTON, ELLSWORTH, with contributions by CHARLES SCHUCHERT, ANDREW E.DOUGLASS, and CHARLES J. KULLMER. The Climatic Factor, As Illustrated in Arid America.1914. Quarto, vii + 341 pp., 12 pls., 2 maps, 90 figs.

193 MACDOUGAL, D. T., and collaborators [WILLIAM PHIppS BLAKE, GODFREY SYKES, E. E.FREE, W. H. ROSS, A. E. VINSON, GEORGE JAMES PEIRCE, MELVIN A. BRANNON, J.CLAUDE JONES, and S. B. PARISH]. The Salton Sea: A Study of the Geography, the Geology,the Floristics, and the Ecology of a Desert Basin. 1914. Quarto, xi + 182 pp., 32 pls., 4 figs.

194 SHREVE, EDITH BELLAMY. The Daily March of Transpiration in a Desert Perennial. 1914.Octavo, 64 pp., 1 pl., 27 figs.

195 CASTLE, W. E., and.101-IN C. PHILLIPS. Piebald Rats and Selection: An Experimental Test ofthe Effectiveness of Selection and of the Theory of Gametic Purity in Mendelian Crosses. (PaperNo. 21 of the Station for Experimental Evolution at Cold Spring Harbor, New York.) 1914.Octavo, 56 pp., 3 pls.

196 MACDOWELL, E. C. Size Inheritance in Rabbits. With a prefatory note and appendix by W. E.CASTLE. (Paper No. 22 of the Station for Experimental Evolution at Cold Spring Harbor, NewYork.) 1914. Octavo, 55 pp., 9 figs.

197 WRIGHT, ALBERT HAZEN. North American Anura: Life-Histories of the Anura of Ithaca, NewYork. 1914. Octavo, vii + 98 pp., 21 pls., 1 fig.

198 MORSE, H. N. The Osmotic Pressure of Aqueous Solutions: Report on Investigations Made in theChemical Laboratory of the Johns Hopkins University during the Years 1899-1913. 1914. Octavo,v + 222 pp., 5 pls., 49 figs.

199 SHREVE, FORREST. A Montane Rain-Forest: A Contribution to the Physiological Plant Geogra-phy of Jamaica. 1914. Octavo, 110 pp., 29 pls., 18 figs.

200 RIVERS, W. H. R., ALBERT ERNEST JENKS, and SYLVANUS G. MORLEY. Reports upon thePresent Condition and Future Needs of the Science of Anthropology. 1913. Quarto, 91 pp., 14 pls.,1 fig.

RIVERS, W. H. R. Report on Anthropological Research Outside America. pp. 3-28.JENKS, ALBERT ERNEST. Report on the Science of Anthropology in the Western

Hemisphere and the Pacific Islands. pp. 29-59.MORLEY, SYLVANUS G. Archaeological Research at the Ruins of Chichen Itza,

Yucatan. pp. 61-91, 14 pls., 1 fig.

201 BENEDICT, FRANCIS G., and FRITZ B. TALBOT. The Gaseous Metabolism of Infants, withSpecial Reference to Its Relation to Pulse-Rate and Muscular Activity. 1914. Octavo, 168 pp., 65figs.

202 COOPER, LANE, compiled and edited by. A Concordance of the Works of Horace. 1916. Octavo,x + 593 pp.

203 BENEDICT, FRANCIS GANO. A Study of Prolonged Fasting. 1915. Octavo, 416 pp., 5 pls., 47

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figs.

204 [Studies at the Desert Laboratory.] 1915. Octavo, 84 pp., 5 figs.

LIVINGSTON, BURTON E., and LON A. HAWKINS. The Water Relation between Plantand Soil. pp. 3-48, 3 figs.

PULLING, HOWARD E., and BURTON E. LIVINGSTON. The Water Supplying Powerof the Soil As Indicated by Osmometers. pp. 49-84, 2 figs.

205 DETLEFSEN, J. A. Genetic Studies on a Cavy Species Cross. With a prefatory note by W. E.CASTLE. (Paper No. 23 of the Station for Experimental Evolution at Cold Spring Harbor, NewYork.) 1914. Octavo, 134 pp., 10 pls., 2 figs.

206 JOHNSON, DUNCAN S., and HARLAN H. YORK. The Relation of Plants to Tide-Levels: A Studyof Factors Affecting the Distribution of Marine Plants. 1915. Octavo, 162 pp., 24 pls., 5 figs.

207 CASE, E. C. The Permo-Carboniferous Red Beds of North America and Their Vertebrate Fauna.1915. Quarto, iii + 176 pp., 24 pls., 50 figs.

208 BALDWIN, DANE LEWIS, LESLIE NATHAN BROUGHTON, LAURA COOPER EVANS,JOHN WILLIAM HEBEL, BENJAMIN F. STELTER, and MARY REBECCA THAYER, compiledand edited by. A Concordance to the Poems of Jobn Keats. 1917. Quarto, xxi + 437 pp., frontis-piece.

209 RICHARDS, HERBERT M. Acidity and Gas Interchange in Cacti. 1915. Octavo, ii + 107 pp., 6figs.

210 JONES, HARRY C., and collaborators [E. J. SHAEFFER, M. G. PAULUS, LESLIE D. SMITH, E.P. WIGHTMAN, J. B. WIESEL, P. B. DAVIS, A. HOLMES, H. HUGHES, and W. S. PUTNAM].The Absorption Spectra of Solutions As Studied by Means of the Radiomicrometer: The Conductivi-ties, Dissociations, and Viscosities of Solutions of Electrolytes in Aqueous, Non-aqueous, and MixedSolvents. 1915. Octavo, 202 pp., 1 pl., 58 figs.

211 Papers from the Department of Marine Biology of the Carnegie Institution of Washington. [For-merly Papers from the Tortugas Laboratory.] Vol. VII. 1915. Octavo, 128 pp., 9 pls, 19 figs.

WATSON, J. B., and K. S. LASHLEY. Homing and Related Activities of Birds. pp. 1-104,pls. 1-7, figs. 1-10.

LASHLEY, K. S. The Acquisition of Skill in Archery. pp. 105-128, pls. 8-9, figs. 11-19.

212 Papers from the Department of Marine Biology of the Carnegie Institution of Washington. Vol. VIII.1915. Octavo, v + 256 pp., 23 pls., 73 figs.

I. POTTS, F. A. On the Rhizocephalan Genus Thompsonia and Its Relation to the Evolutionof the Group. pp. 1-32, 2 pls., 12 figs.

II. POTTS, F. A. Hapalocarcinus, the Gall-Forming Crab, with Some Notes on the RelatedGenus Cryptochirus. pp. 33-69, 3 pls., 19 figs.

III. POTTS, F. A. The Fauna Associated with the Crinoids of a Tropical Coral Reef: withEspecial Reference to Its Colour Variations. pp. 71-96, 1 pl., 7 figs.

IV. CLARIC, HUBERT LYMAN. The Comatulids of Torres Strait: with Special Referenceto Their Habits and Reactions. pp. 97-125.

V. MEDES, GRACE. The Pluteus of Laganum sp. pp. 127-142, 22 figs.VI. HARVEY, E. NEWTON. The Permeability of Cells for Acids. pp. 143-156.VII. MAYER, ALFRED GOLDSBOROUGH. Medusae of the Philippines and of Torres

Straits. pp. 157-202, 3 pls., 7 figs.VIII. BARTSCH, PAUL. Report on the Bahama Cerions Planted on the Florida Keys. pp.

203-212, 8 pls.IX. DAHLGREN, ULRIC. Structure and Polarity of the Electric Motor Nerve-Cell in

Torpedoes. pp. 213-256, 6 pls., 6 figs.

213 Papers from the Department of Marine Biology of the Carnegie Institution of Washington. Vol.IX. 1918. Quarto, iii + 362 pp., 105 pls., 18 figs.

MAYER, ALFRED GOLDSBOROUGH. Ecology of the Murray Island Coral Reef. pp. 1-

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48, pls. 1-19, 9 figs.VAUGHAN, THOMAS WAYLAND. Some Shoal-Water Corals from Murray Island

(Australia), Cocos-Keeling Islands, and Fanning Island. pp. 49-234, pls. 20-93,figs. 1-2.

VAUGHAN, THOMAS WAYLAND, in collaboration with MARCUS ISAACGOLDMAN, JOSEPH A. CUSHMAN, MARSHALL A. HOWE, [ALBERTMANN], and others. Some Shoal-Water Bottom Samples from Murray Island,Australia, and Comparisons of Them with Samples from Florida and the Bahamas.pp. 235-297, pls. 94-98, figs. 3-4.

DOLE, RICHARD B., and ALFRED A. CHAMBERS. Salinity of Ocean Water at FoweyRocks, Florida. pp. 299-315, pl. 99, figs. 5-6.

WELLS, ROGER C. The Solubility of Calcitein Sea-Water in Contact with the Atmo-sphere, and Its Variation with Temperature. pp. 316-318.

VAUGHAN, THOMAS WAYLAND. The Temperature of the Florida Coral-Reef Tract.pp. 319-339, figs. 7-9.

CARY, L. R. The Gorgonaceae as a Factor in the Formation of Coral Reefs. pp. 341-362,pls. 100-105.

214 CLARK, HUBERT LYMAN. The Echinoderm Fauna of Torres Strait: Its Composition and ItsOrigin. ([Papers from the] Department of Marine Biology of the Carnegie Institution of Washing-ton, Vol. X.) 1921. Quarto, viii + 223 pp., frontispiece, 39 pls., 1 fig.

215A JOHNSON, EMORY R., T. W. VAN METRE, G. G. HUEBNER, and D. S. HANCHETT. With anintroductory note by HENRY W. FARNAM. History of Domestic and Foreign Commerce of theUnited States. (Contributions to American Economic History from the Department of Economicsand Sociology of the Carnegie Institution of Washington.) Two-volume edition, 1915. One volumeedition, 1922. Octavo.

Vol. I. xv + 363 pp., maps 1-5.Vol. II. ix + 398 pp., maps 6-110.

215B CLARK, VICTOR S. History of Manufactures in the United States. With an introductory note byHENRY W. FARNAM. ([Vol. I] Contributions to American Economic History from the Depart-ment of Economics and Sociology of the Carnegie Institution of Washington; [Vol. II] Contribu-tions to American Economic History, Board of Research Associates in American EconomicHistory.) Octavo.

[Vol. I.] 1607-1860. 1916. xii + 675 pp., 7 pls., 7 figs.Vol. II. 1860-1914. 1928. xvi + 949 pp., 10 pls.

215C MEYER, BALTHASAR H., prepared under the direction of, by CAROLINE E. MACGILL and astaff of collaborators. History of Transportation in the United States before 1860. (Contributions toAmerican Economic History from the Department of Economics and Sociology of the CarnegieInstitution of Washington.) 1917. Octavo, x + 678 pp., 5 pls.

216 CARPENTER, THORNE M. A Comparison of Methods for Determining the Respiratory Ex-change of Man. 1915. Octavo, 265 pp., 74 figs.

217 SHREVE, FORREST. The Vegetation of a Desert Mountain Range As Conditioned by ClimaticFactors. 1915. Octavo, 112 pp., 37 pls., 18 figs.

218 STOUT, A. B. The Establishment of Varieties in Coleus by the Selection of Somatic Variations.1915. Octavo, ii + 80 pp., 4 pls., 1 fig., 3 diagrams.

219 MORLEY, SYLVANUS GRISWOLD. The Inscriptions at Copan. [With appendixes by FRED. E.WRIGHT and WILLIAM GATES.] 1920. Quarto, xiv + 644 pp., frontispiece, 33 pls., 91 figs., 2vignettes.

220 FAUST, ALBERT B. Guide to the Materials for American History in Swiss and Austrian Archives.(Papers of the Department of Historical Research.) 1916. Octavo, x + 299 pp. and supplementarynote.

221 MALL, FRANKLIN P. On the Fate of the Human Embryo in Tubal Pregnancy. (Contributions to

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Embryology, Vol. I, No. I.) 1915. Quarto, 104 pp., 11 pls., 24 figs.

222 Contributions to Embryology. Vol. II, Nos. 2-6. 1915. Quarto, 108 pp., 10 pls., 23 figs.

WATT, JAMES CRAWFORD. Description of Two Young Twin Human Embryos with 17-19 Paired Somites. pp. 5-44, 4 pls., 7 figs. (Contr. 2.)

CLARK, ELIOT R. An Anomaly of the Thoracic Duct with a Bearing on the Embryologyof the Lymphatic System. pp. 45-54, 1 pl. 1 fig. (Contr. 3.)

MEYER, ARTHUR WILLIAM. Fields, Graphs, and Other Data on Fetal Growth. pp. 55-68, 12 figs. (Contr. 4.)

CORNER, GEORGE W. The Corpus Luteum of Pregnancy, As It Is in Swine. pp. 69-94, 2pls. (Contr. 5.)

ESSICK, CHARLES R. Transitory Cavities in the Corpus Striatum of the Human Embryo.pp. 95-108, 3 pls. (Contr. 6.)

223 Contributions to Embryology. Vol. III, Nos. 7-9. 1915. Quarto, 90 pp., 12 pls., 12 figs.

SABIN, FLORENCE, R. On the Fate of the Posterior Cardinal Veins and Their Relation tothe Development of the Vena Cava and Azygos in the Embryo Pig. pp. 5-32, 7 pls.(Contr. 7.)

DUESBERG, J. Recherches cytologiques sur la fécondation des ascidiens et sur leurdéveloppement. pp. 33-70, 3 pls., 12 figs. (Contr. 8.)

SHIPLEY, P. G., and G. B. WISLOCKI. The Histology of the Poison-Glands of Bufo aguaand Its Bearing upon the Formation of Epinephrin within the Glands. pp. 71-90, 2 pls.(Contr. 9.)

224 Contributions to Embryology. Vol. IV, Nos. 10-13. 1916. Quarto, 106 pp., 13 pls.

MALL, FRANKLIN P. The Human Magma Reticule in Normal and in PathologicalDevelopment. pp. 5-26, 3 pls. (Contr. 10.)

COWDRY, E. V. The Structure of Chromophile Cells of the Nervous System. pp.27-43, lpl. (Contr.11.)

CUNNINGHAM, R. S. On the Development of the Lymphatics of the Lungs in the EmbryoPig. pp. 45-68, 5 pls. (Contr. 12.)

MACKLIN, CHARLES C. Binucleate Cells in Tissue Cultures. pp. 69-106, 4 pls. (Contr.13.)

225 WEED, LEWIS H. The Development of the Cerebro-Spinal Spaces in Pig and in Man. (Contribu-tions to Embry ology, Vol. V, No. 14.) 1917. Quarto, 116 pp., 17 pls.

226 Contributions to Embryology. Vol. VI, Nos. 15-19. 1917. Quarto, 168 pp., 21 pls., 24 figs.

MALL, FRANKLIN P. Cyclopia in the Human Embryo. pp. 5-33, 3 pls., 7 figs. (Contr. 15.)THURLOW, MADGE DEG. Quantitative Studies on Mitochondria in Nerve-Cells. pp. 35-

44, 1 pl. (Contr. 16.)LEWIS, MARGARET REED. Development of Connective-Tissue Fibers in Tissue

Cultures of Chick Embryos. pp. 45-60, 2 pls. (Contr. 17.)SABIN, FLORENCE R. Origin and Development of the Primitive Vessels of the Chick and

of the Pig. pp. 61-124, 7 pls., 8 figs. (Contr. 18.)JOHNSON, FRANKLIN PARADISE. A Human Embryo of Twenty-Four Pairs of Somites.

pp. 125-168, 8 pls., 9 figs. (Contr. 19.)

227 Contributions to Embryology. Vol. VII, Nos. 20-23. 1918. Quarto, 134 pp., 16 pls., 9 figs.

STREETER, GEORGE L. The Histogenesis and Growth of the Otic Capsule and ItsContained Periotic Tissue-Spaces in the Human Embryo. pp. 5-54, 4 pls., 4 figs.(Contr. 20.)

VAN DER STRICHT, O. The Genesis and Structure of the Membrana Tectoria and theCrista Spiralis of the Cochlea. pp. 55-86, 4 pls. (Contr. 21.)

WHEELER, THEODORA. Study of a Human Spina Bifida Monster with Encephalocelesand Other Abnormalities. pp. 87-110, 4 pls. (Contr. 22.)

INGALLS, N. WILLIAM. A Human Embryo before the Appearance of the Myotomes.

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pp. 111-134, 4 pls., 5 figs. (Contr. 23.)

228 CRAMPTON, HENRY EDWARD. Studies on the Variation, Distribution, and Evolution of theGenus Partula: The Species Inhabiting Tahiti. 1916. Quarto, 313 pp., 34 pls., 7 figs.

228A CRAMPTON, HENRY EDWARD. Studies on the Variation, Distribution, and Evolution of theGenus Partula: The Species of the Mariana Islands, Guam and Saipan. 1925. Quarto, vii + 116pp., 14 pls., 3 figs.

229 BARUS, CARL. Experiments with the Displacement Interferometer. 1915. Octavo, vi + 113 pp.,66 figs.

230 JONES, HARRY C., and collaborators [P. B. DAVIS, W. S. PUTNAM, E. J. SHAEFFER, M. G.PAULUS, J. F. HUTCHINSON, J. E. L. HOLMES, GERALD C. CONNOLLY, H. H. LLOYD,JOHN B. WIESEL, CHARLES WATKINS, G. FRED. ORDEMAN, A. G. MCCALL, F. M.HILDEBRANDT, F. S. HOLMES, E. S. JOHNSTON, and S. F. TRELEASE]. Conductivities andViscosities in Pure and in Mixed Solvents Radiometric Measurements of the Ionization Constantsof Indicators, etc. 1915. Octavo, vii + 175 pp., 3 pls., 21 figs.

231 BENEDICT, FRANCIS G., and HANS MURSCHHAUSER. Energy Transformations duringHorizontal Walking. 1915. Octavo, 100 pp., 7 figs.

232 DODGE, RAYMOND, and FRANCIS G. BENEDICT. Psychological Effects of Alcohol: AnExperimental Investigation of the Effects of Moderate Doses of Ethyl Alcohol on a Related Groupof Neuro-Muscular Processes in Man. With a chapter on free association in collaboration with F.LYMAN WELLS. 1915. Octavo, 281 pp., frontispiece, 32 figs.

233 BENEDICT, FRANCIS G., and FRITZ B. TALBOT. The Physiology of the New-Born Infant:Character and Amount of the Katabolism. 1915. Octavo, 126 pp., 10 figs.

234 HILL, ROSCOE R. Descriptive Catalogue of the Documents Relating to the History of the UnitedStates in the Papeles Procedentes de Cuba, Deposited in the Archivo General de Indias at Seville.(Papers of the Department of Historical Research.) 1916. Octavo, xliii + 594 pp.

235 HALE, GEORGE ELLERY. Ten Years’ Work of a Mountain Observatory: A Brief Account of theMount Wilson Solar Observatory of the Carnegie Institution of Washington. 1915. 12mo, 99 pp.,frontispiece, 65 figs. .

236 DAVENPORT, CHARLES B. The Feebly Inhibited: Nomadism, or the Wandering Impulse, withSpecial Reference to Heredity; Inheritance of Temperament. (Paper No. 24 of the Station forExperimental Evolution at Cold Spring Harbor, New York.) Octavo, ii + 158 pp., 89 figs.

237 MORGAN, T. H., and C. B. BRIDGES. Sex-Linked Inheritance in Drosophila. 1916. Octavo, 87pp., 2 pls., 8 figs., 2 diagrams.

238 MOODIE, ROY LEE. The Coal Measures Amphibia of North America. 1916. Quarto, x + 222pp., 26 pls., 43 figs.

239 GOLDER, FRANK A. Guide to Materials for American History in Russian Archives. ([Vol. I]Papers of the Department of Historical Research; [Vol. II] Papers of the Division of HistoricalResearch.) Octavo

Vol. I. 1917. viii + 177 pp.Vol. II. 1937. v + 55 pp.

240 ESTABROOK, ARTHUR H. The Jukes in 1915. (Paper No. 25 of the Station for ExperimentalEvolution at Cold Spring Harbor, New York.) 1916. Quarto, vii + 85 pp., 28 charts.

241 CASTLE, W. E., and SEWALL WRIGHT. Studies of Inheritance in Guinea-Pigs and Rats. (PaperNo. 26 of the Station for Experimental Evolution at Cold Spring Harbor, New York.) 1916.Octavo, iv + 192 pp., 7 pls., 7 figs.

242 CLEMENTS, FREDERIC E. Plant Succession: An Analysis of the Development of Vegetation.1916. Octavo, xiii + 512 pp., 61 pls., 51 figs.

243 GOODALE, H. D. Gonadectomy in Relation to the Secondary Sexual Characters of SomeDomestic Birds. (Paper No. 27 of the Station for Experimental Evolution at Cold Spring Harbor,

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New York.) 1916. Octavo, 52 pp., 7 pls., 1 fig.

244 CHURCHILL, WILLIAM. Sissano: Movements of Migration within and through Melanesia. 1916.Octavo, v + 181 pp., 3 figs., 17 charts.

245 HEDRICK, HENRY B. Interpolation Tables or Multiplication Tables of Decimal Fractions, Givingthe Products to the Nearest Unit of All Numbers from 1 to 100 by 0.01 to 0.99 and from 1 to 1000 by0.001 to 0.999. 1918. Folio, ix + 139 pp.

246 BOSS, LEWIS, and ARTHUR J. ROY. Albany Zone Catalogues for the Epoch 1900. Prepared atthe Dudley Observatory, Albany, New York. 1918. Quarto, xxviii + 249 pp.

247 BARNARD, EDWARD EMERSON. Edited by EDWIN B. FROST and MARY R. CALVERT. APhotographic Atlas of Selected Regions of the Milky Way. 1927. Quarto.

Part I. Photographs and Descriptions. vi + 32 pp.,frontispiece, 51 pls., 2 figs.Part II. Charts and Tables. viii + 202 pp.

248 BRITTON, N. L., and J. N. ROSE. The Cactaceae: Descriptions and Illustrations of Plants of theCactus Family. Quarto.

Vol. I. 1919. vii + 236 pp., 36 pls. (28 colored), 302 figs.Vol. II. 1920. ix + 239 pp., 40 pls. (32 colored), 305 figs.Vol. III. 1922. vii + 255 pp., 24 pls. (19 colored), 250 figs.Vol. IV. 1923. vii + 318 pp., 37 pls. (28 colored), 264 figs.

249 BARUS, CARL. [Studies on Interferometry.] Octavo. Cloth, $1.00 per part

Part I. The Interferometry of Reversed and Non-reversed Spectra. 1916. 158 pp., 99 figs.Part II. The Interferometry of Reversed and Non-reversed Spectra. 1917. 146 pp., 97 figs.Part III. Displacement Interferometry by the Aid of the Achromatic Fringes. 1919. 100 pp.,

71 figs.Part IV. Displacement Interferometry by the Aid of the Achromatic Fringes. 1919. 122 pp.,

119 figs.

250 KNOBEL, EDWARD BALL. Ulugh Beg’s Catalogue of Stars Revised from All Persian ManuscriptsExisting in Great Britain, with a Vocabulary of Persian and Arabic Words. 1917. Quarto, 109 pp., 1fig.

251 Papers from the Department of Marine Biology of the Carnegie Institution of Washington. Vol. XI.1917. Octavo, v + 360 pp., 21 pls., 56 figs.

I. MAYER, ALFRED GOLDSBOROUGH. Nerve-Conduction in Cassiopea xamachana.pp. 1-20, 1 pl., 12 figs.

II. MCCLENDON, J. F., C. C. GAULT, and S. MULHOLLAND. The Hydrogen-IonConcentration, CO

2 Tension, and CO

2 Content of Sea-Water. pp. 21-69, 24 figs.

III. GOLDFARB, A. J. Variability of Eggs and Sperm of Sea Urchins. pp. 71-87.IV. PHILLIPS, ALEXANDER H. Analytical Search for Metals in Tortugas Marine

Organisms. pp. 89-93.V. HATAI, S. On the Composition of Cassiopea xamacbana and the Changes in It after

Starvation. pp. 95-109, 1 fig.VI. CLARK, HUBERT LYMAN. The Habits and Reactions of a Comatulid, Tropiometra

carinata. pp. 111-119.VII. CARY, LEwis R. Studies on the Physiology of the Nervous System of Cassiopea

xamachana. pp. 121-170, 18 figs.VIII. HARVEY, E. NEWTON. The Chemistry of Light-Production in Luminous Organ-

isms. pp. 171-234, 1 fig.IX. HARVEY, ETHEL BROWNE. A Physiological Study of Specific Gravity and of

Luminescence in Noctiluca, with Special Reference to Anesthesia. pp. 235-253.X. TREADWELL, AARON L. Polychaetous Annelids from Florida, Porto Rico, Bermuda,

and the Bahamas. pp. 255-268, 3 pls.XI. JORDAN, H. E. The Microscopic Structure of Striped Muscle of Limulus. pp. 273-

290, 3 pls.

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XII. JORDAN, H. E. Hemopoiesis in the Mongoose Embryo, with Special Reference tothe Activity of the Endothelium, Including That of the Yolk-Sac. pp. 291-312, 4 pls.

XIII. JORDAN, H. E. Embryonic History of the Germ-Cells of the Loggerhead Turtle(Caretta caretta). pp. 313-344, 6 pls.

XIV. JORDAN, H. E. Artesia of the Esophagus in the Embryo of the Loggerhead Turtle(Caretta caretta): A Normal Developmental Condition. pp. 345-360, 4 pls.

252 Papers from the Department of Marine Biology of the Carnegie Institution of Washington. Vol.XII. 1918. Octavo, v + 258 pp., 29 pls., 28 figs.

I. FOWLER, HENRY W. Some Amphibians and Reptiles from Porto Rico and the VirginIslands. pp. 1-15, 1 pl., 6 figs.

II. SILVESTER, CHARLES F. Fishes New to the Fauna of Porto Rico, with Descriptionsof Eight New Species. pp. 17-24, 4 pls.

III. GUDGER, E. W. Oral Gestation in the Gaff-Topsail Catfish, Felichthys felis. pp. 25-52, 4 pls.

IV. GUDGER, E. W. Sphyraena barracuda; lts Morphology, Habits, and History. pp. 53-108, 7 pls., 5 figs.

V. BOWMAN, H. H. M. Botanical Ecology of the Dry Tortugas. pp. 109-138, 6 pls., 7figs.

VI. WHITE, E. GRACE,. The Origin of the Electric Organs in Astroscopus guttatus. pp.139-172, 7 pls., I fig.

VII. MAYER, ALFRED GOLDSBOROUGH. Toxic Effects Due to High Temperature.pp. 173-178.

VIII. MAYER, ALFRED GOLDSBOROUGH. Nerve-Conduction in Diluted and inConcentrated Sea-Water. pp. 179-183, 1 fig.

IX. CARY, LEWIS R. A Study of Respiration in Alcyonaria. pp. 185-191.X. BALL, S. C. Migration of Insects to Rebecca Shoal Light Station and the Tortugas

Islands, with Special Reference to Mosquitoes and Flies. pp. 193-212.XI. MCCLENDON, J. F. On Changes in the Sea and Their Relation to Organisms. pp.

213-258, 8 figs.

253 IVENS, WALTER G. Dictionary and Grammar of the Language of Sa’a and Ulawa, SolomonIslands. With appendices. 1918. Octavo, vii + 249 pp., frontispiece, 11 pls., 1 fig.

254 DAVENPORT, FRANCES GARDINER, edited by. European Treaties Bearing on the History ofthe United States and Its Dependencies. ([Vols. 1, 11] Papers of the Department of HistoricalResearch; [Vols. III, IV] Papers the Division of Historical Research.) Octavo.

Vol. I. To 1648. 1917. vi + 387 pp.Vol. II. 1650-1697. 1929. vi + 386 pp.Vol. III. 1698-1715. 1934. vi + 269 pp.Vol. IV. 1716-1815. Edited ... by CHARLES OSCAR PAULLIN. 1937. viii + 222 pp.

255 CHURCHILL, WILLIAM. Club Types of Nuclear Polynesia. 1917. Octavo, v + 173 pp., 17 pls., 3figs.

256 DICKSON, LEONARD EUGENE. History of the Theory of Numbers. Octavo.

Vol. I. Divisibility and Primality. 1919. xii + 486 pp.Vol. II. Diophantine Analysis. 1920. xxv + 803 pp., 12 figs.Vol. III. Quadratic and Higher Forms. With a chapter on the class number, by G. H.

CRESSE. 1923. v + 313 pp.

257 WHITMAN, CHARLES OTIS, Posthumous Works of. (Paper No. 28 of the Station for Experimen-tal Evolution at Cold Spring Harbor, New York.) 1919. Quarto

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Vol. III. The Behavior of Pigeons. Edited by HARVEY A. CARR. With a preface by

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OSCAR RIDDLE. xi + 161 pp., 2 figs.

258 ROWE, L. S. The Federal System of the Argentine Republic 1921. Octavo, vii + 161 pp.

259 DAVENPORT, CHARLES BENEDICT, assisted by MARY THERESA SCUDDER. Naval Officers:Their Heredity and Development. (Paper No. 29 of the Station for Experimental Evolution at ColdSpring Harbor, New York.) 1919. Octavo, v + 236 pp., 60 charts.

260 DAVIS, PAUL B., compiled by. Studies on Solution in Its Relation to Light Absorption, Conductiv-ity, Viscosity, and Hydrolysis: A Report upon a Number of Experimental Investigations Carried Outin the Laboratory of the Late Professor Harry C. Jones. 1918. Octavo, ii + 144 pp., 26 figs.

261 BENEDICT, FRANCIS G., and THORNE M. CARPENTER. Food Ingestion and Energv Transfor-mations, with Special Reference to the Stimulating Effect of Nutrients. 1918. Octavo, ii + 355 pp., 2figs.

262 BERGEN, HENRY, edited by. Lydgate’s Fall of Princes. Octavo.

Part I. Books I and II. 1923. pp. lxvii + 1-328, frontispiece.Part II. Books III-V. 1923. pp. vii + 329-673.Part III. Books VI-IX. [The Daunce of Machabree.] 1923. pp. vii + 675-1044, 2 figs.Part IV. Bibliographical Introduction, Notes and Glossary. 1927. viii + 529 pp., 2 pls., 4

figs. Additions and corrections to The Fall of Princes, 7 pp.

263 TOWER, WILLIAM LAWRENCE. The Mechanism of Evolution in Leptinotarsa. [With appendix,The Relation of Water to the Behavior of the Potato Beetle in a Desert, by J. K.BREITENBECHER.] 1918. Octavo, viii + 384 pp., 19 pls., 161 figs.

264 STURTEVANT, A. H. An Analysis of the Effects of Selection. 1918. Octavo, 68 pp., 1 pl., 14 figs.

265 LAUGHLIN, HARRY HAMILTON. Duration of the Several Mitotic Stages in the Dividing Root-Tip Cells of the Common Onion. (Paper No. 30 of the Station for Experimental Evolution at ColdSpring Harbor, New York.) 1919. Octavo, 48 pp., 19 charts.

266 MILES, WALTER R. Effect of Alcohol on Psycho-Physiological Functions. 1918. Octavo, 144 pp.,15 figs.

267 SMITH, EDGAR F., and W. K. VAN HAAGEN. The Atomic Weights of Boron and Fluorine. 1918.Octavo, v + 65 pp., 5 figs.

268 HYDE, WALTER WOODBURN. Olympic Victor Monuments and Greek Athletic Art. 1921.Octavo, xix + 406 pp., frontispiece, 30 pls., 2 plans, 80 figs.

269 JOHNSON, DUNCAN S. The Fruit of Opuntia fulgida: A Study of Perennation and Proliferationin the Fruits of Certain Cactaceae. 1918. Octavo, 62 pp., frontispiece, 12 pls.

270 REICHERT, EDWARD TYSON. A Biochemic Basis for the Study of Problems of Taxonomy,Heredity, Evolution, etc., with Especial Reference to the Starches and Tissues of Parent Stocks andHybrid-Stocks and the Starches and Hemoglobins of Varieties, Species, and Genera. 1919. Quarto.. (Supplementary to Publications 116 and 173.)

Part I. Summaries and Comparisons of the Properties of the Starches and of the Tissues ofParent-Stocks and Hybrid-Stocks. Applications of the Results of the Researches tothe Germ-Plasm, Variations, Fluctuations, Sports, Mutants, Species, Taxonomy,Heredity, etc. Notes and Conclusions. pp. xi + 1-376, 34 pls., 820 charts.

Part II. Special, General, and Comparative Laboratory Data of the Properties of theStarches and of the Tissues of Parent-Stocks and Hybrid-Stocks. pp. vii + 377-834.

271 Contributions to Embryology. Vol. VIII, Nos. 24-26. 1918. Quarto, 198 pp., 10 pls., 30 figs.

STREETER, GEORGE L. The Developmental Alterations in the Vascular System of theBrain of the Human Embryo. pp. 5-38, 5 pls., 12 figs. (Contr. 24.)

COWDRY, E. V. The Mitochondrial Constituents of Protoplasm. pp. 39-160, 1 pl., 16 figs.(Contr. 25.)

KUNITOMO, KANAE. The Development and Reduction of the Tail and of the Caudal

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End of the Spinal Cord. pp. 161-198, 4 pls., 2 figs. (Contr. 26.)

272 Contributions to Embryology. Vol. IX, Nos. 27-46. A Memorial to Franklin Paine Mall. 1920.Quarto, vi + 554 pp., frontispiece, 54 pls., 69 figs., 22 charts.

MACKLIN, CHARLES CLIFFORD. The Development and Function of Macrophages inthe Repair of Experimental Bone-Wounds in Rats Vitally Stained with Trypan-Blue.pp. 1-46, 4 pls. (Contr. 27.)

DUESBERG, J. Cytoplasmic Structures in the Seminal Epithelium of the Opossum. pp.47-84, 2 pls., 5 figs. (Contr. 28.)

CORNER, GEORGE W. On the Widespread Occurrence of Reticular Fibrils Produced byCapillary Endothelium. pp. 85-93, 2 pls. (Contr. 29.)

WHEELER, THEODORA. Variability in the Spinal Column As Regards DefectiveNeural Arches (Rudimentary Spina Bifida). pp. 95-107, 11 figs. (Contr. 30.)

VAN DER STRICHT, O. The Arrangement and Structure of Sustentacular Cells and Hair-Cells in the Developing Organ of Corti. pp. 109-142, 4 pls. (Contr. 31.)

RETZER, ROBERT. The Sino-Ventricular Bundle: A Functional Interpretation ofMorphological Findings. pp. 143-156, 1 pl. (Contr. 32.)

JENKINS, GEORGE B. A Study of the Superior Olive. pp. 157-172, 2 pls., 1 fig. (Contr.33.)

SCHULTZ, ADOLPH H. The Development of the External Nose in Whites and Negroes.pp. 173-190, 1 pl., 7 figs. (Contr. 34.)

LEWIS, MARGARET REED. Muscular Contraction in Tissue-Cultures. pp. 191-212, 2pls., 6 figs. (Contr. 35.)

SABIN, FLORENCE R. Studies on the Origin of Blood-Vessels and of Red Blood-corpuscles As Seen in the Living Blastoderm of Chicks during the Second Day ofIncubation. pp. 213-262, 6 pls., 1 fig. (Contr. 36.)

BEAN, ROBERT BENNETT. Notes on the Postnatal Growth of the Heart, Kidneys,Liver, and Spleen in Man. pp. 263-284, 8 charts. (Contr. 37.)

MILLER, WILLIAM SNOW. A Morphological Study of the Tracheal and BronchialCartilages. pp. 285-298, 2 pls., 11 figs. (Contr. 38.)

LEWIS, WARREN H. The Cartilaginous Skull of a Human Embryo Twenty-One Millime-ters in Length. pp. 299-324, 5 pls. (Contr. 39.)

MEYER, ARTHUR WILLIAM. Hydatiform Degeneration in Tubal and Uterine Preg-nancy. pp. 325-364, 6 pls. (Contr. 40.)

MYERS, BURTON D. A Study of the Development of Certain Features of the Cerebel-lum. pp. 365-375, 6 figs. (Contr. 41.)

ESSICK, CHARLES R. Formation of Macrophages by the Cells Lining the SubarachnoidCavity in Response to the Stimulus of Particulate Matter. pp. 377-388, 1 pl. (Contr.42.)

STREETER, GEORGE L. A Human Embryo (Mateer) of the Presomite Period. pp-389-424, 7 pls.,4 figs., 3 charts. (Contr.43.)

WEED, LEWIS H. The Experimental Production of an Internal Hydrocephalus. pp. 425-446, 2 pls. (Contr. 44.)

CLARK, ELIOT R., and ELEANOR LINTON CLARK. On the Origin and EarlyDevelopment of the Lymphatic System of the Chick. pp. 447-482, 7 pls., 15 figs.(Contr. 45.)

BARDEEN, C. R. The Height-Weight Index of Build in Relation to Linear and VolumetricProportions and Surface-Area of the Body during Post-natal Development. pp. 483-554, 2 figs., 11 charts. (Contr. 46.)

273 Contributions to Embryologv. Vol. X, Nos. 47-48. 1921. Quarto, iii + 103 pp., 16 pls.

EVANS, HERBERT MCLEAN, and KATHARINE J. SCOTT. On the DifferentialReaction to Vital Dyes Exhibited by the Two Great Groups of Connective-TissueCells. pp. 1-55, 11 pls. (Contr. 47.)

MACKLIN, CHARLES C. The Skull of a Human Fetus of 43 Millimeters GreatestLength. pp. 57-103, 5 pls. (Contr. 48.)

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274 Contributions to Embryology. Vol. XI, Nos . 49-55. 1920. Quarto, iii + 170 pp., 15 pls., 12 figs., 6charts.

DANCHAKOFF, VERA. Myeloid Metaplasia of the Embryonic Mesenchyme in Relationto Cell Potentialities and Differential Factors. pp. 1-32, 5 pls. (Contr. 49.)

LINEBACK, PAUL E. Studies on the Longitudinal Muscle of the Human Colon, withSpecial Reference to the Development of the Taeniae. pp. 33-44, 8 figs. (Contr. 50.)

WISLOCKI, GEORGE B. Experimental Studies on Fetal Absorption. I, The VitallyStained Fetus; II, Behavior of the Fetal Membranes and Placenta of the Cat towardColloidal Dyes Injected into Maternal Blood-Stream. pp. 45-60, 4 pls., I fig. (Contr.51.)

INGALLS, N. WILLIAM. A Human Embryo at the Beginning of Segmentation, withSpecial Reference to the Vascular System. pp. 61-90, 5 pls., 1 fig. (Contr. 52.)

BARRY, LEE WILLIS. The Effects of Inanition in the Pregnant Albino Rat, with SpecialReference to the Changes in the Relative Weights of the Various Parts, Systems, andOrgans of the Offspring. pp. 91-136. (Contr. 53.)

CORNER, GEORGE, W. A Case of True Lateral Hermaphroditism in Pig with FunctionalOvary. pp. 137-142, 1 pl. (Contr. 54.)

STREETER, GEORGE L. Weight, Sitting Height, Head Size, Foot Length, and MenstrualAge of the Human Embryo. pp. 143-170, 2 figs., 6 charts. (Contr. 55.)

275 MALL, FRANKLIN PAINE, and ARTHUR WILLIAM MEYER. Studies on Abortuses: A Survey ofPathologic Ova in the Carnegie Embryological Collection. (Contributions to Embryology, Vol. XII,No. 56.) 1921. Quarto, 364 pp., 24 pls., 5 figs., 1 chart.

276 Contributions to Embryology. Vol. XIII, Nos. 57-64. 1921. Quarto, iii + 146 pp., 15 pls., 25 figs., 1chart.

CASH, JAMES R. On the Development of the Lymphatics in the Stomach of the EmbryoPig. pp. 1-15, 3 pls., 3 figs: (Contr. 57)

REICHERT, F. L. On the Fate of the Primary Lymph-Sacs in the Abdominal Region of thePig, and the Development of Lymph-Channels in the Abdominal and Pelvic Regions.pp. 17-39, 5 figs. (Contr. 58)

JENKINS, GEORGE B. Relative Weight and Volume of the Component Parts of the Brainof the Human Embryo at Different Stages of Development. pp. 41-60, 12 figs., 1chart. (Contr. 59)

CORNER, GEORGE W. Abnormalities of the Mammalian Embryo Occurring beforeImplantation. pp. 61-66, 2 pls., 1 fig. (Contr. 60)

SPAULDING, MILO HERRICK. The Development of the External Genitalia in theHuman Embryo. pp. 67-88, 4 pls., 2 figs. (Contr. 61)

WISLOCKI, GEORGE B. Further Experimental Studies on Fetal Absorption. III, TheBehavior the Fetal Membranes and Placenta of the Guinea-Pig toward Trypan BlueInjected into the Maternal Blood-Stream; IV, Behavior of the Placenta and FetalMembranes of the Rabbit toward Trypan Blue Injected into the Maternal Blood-Stream. pp. 89-101, 1 pl. (Contr. 62)

WISLOCKI, G.B.,and J. A. KEY. The Distribution of Mitochondria in the placenta. pp.103-115, l pl. (Contr.63)

CORNER, GEORGE W. Cyclic Changes in the Ovaries and Uterus of the Sow, and TheirRelation to the Mechanism of Implantation. pp. 117-146, 4 pls., 2 figs. (Contr. 64)

277 Contributions to Embryology. Vol. XIV, Nos. 65-71. 1922. Quarto, iii + 162 pp., 17 pls., 40 figs.

SABIN, FLORENCE R. Direct Growth of Veins by Sprouting. pp. 1-10, 1 pl. (Contr. 65.)BUELL, CHARLES ELBERT, JR. Origin of the Pulmonary Vessels in the Chick. pp. 11-

26, 2 pls. (Contr. 66.)DOAN, CHARLES A. The Circulation of the Bone-Marrow. pp. 27-46, 1 pl., 3 figs.

(Contr. 67.)CONGDON, E. D. Transformation of the Aortic-Arch System during the Development of

the Human Embryo. pp. 47-110, 3 pls., 28 figs. (Contr. 68.)STREETER, GEORGE L. Development of the Auricle in the Human Embryo. pp. 111-

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138, 6 pls., 8 figs. (Contr. 69.)WOOLLARD, H. H. The Development of the Princi Arterial Stems in the Forelimb of the

Pig. pp. 139-154, 2 pls. (Contr. 70.)FINLEY, ELLEN B. The Development of the Subcutaneous Vascular Plexus in the Head

of the Human Embryo. pp. 155-162, 2 pls., 1 fig. (Contr. 71.)

278 MORGAN, T. H., C. B. BRIDGES, and A. H. STURTEVANT. Contributions to the Genetics ofDrosophila melanogaster. 1919. Octavo, v + 388 pp., 12 pls., 103 figs.

I. MORGAN, T. H., and C. B. BRIDGES. The Origin of Gynandromorphs. pp. 1-122,pls. 1-4, figs. 1-70.

II. BRIDGES, C. B., and T. H. MORGAN. The Second-Chromosome Group of MutantCharacters. pp. 123-304, pls. 5-11, figs. 72-88.

III. STURTEVANT, A. H. Inherited Linkage Variations in the Second Chromosome. pp.305-341, fig. 1.

IV. MORRAN, T. H. A Demonstration of Genes Modifying the Character “Notch.” pp.343-388, pl. 12, figs. 91-105.

279 HARRIS, J. ARTHUR, and FRANCIS G. BENEDICT. A Biometric Study of Basal Metabolism inMan. 1919. Octavo, vi + 266 pp., 30 diagrams.

280 BENEDICT, FRANCIS G., WALTER R. MILES, PAUL ROTH, and H. MONMOUTH SMITH.Human Vitality and Efficiency under Prolonged Restricted Diet. 1919. Octavo, xi + 701 pp.,frontispiece, 124 figs.

281 Papers from the Department of Marine Biology of the Carnegie Institution of Washington. Vol.XIII. 1919. Octavo, iv + 128 pp., 19 pls., 4 figs.

I. SPELDEL, CARL CASKEY. Gland-Cells of Internal Secretion in the Spinal Cord ofthe Skates. pp. 1-31, 9 pls., 3 figs.

II. DREW, GILMAN A. The Structure and Ejaculation of the Spermatophores of Octopusamericans. pp. 33-47, 3 pls.

III. CLARIC, HUBERT LYMAN. The Distribution of the Littoral Echinoderms of theWest Indies. pp. 49-74, 3 pls.

IV. HARVEY, E. NEWTON. Further Studies on the Chemistry of Light Production inLuminous Organisms. pp. 75-110.

V. GUDGER, E. W. The Ovary of Felichthys felis, the Gaff-Topsail Catfish: Its Structureand Function. pp. 111-128, 4 pls., 1 fig.

282 BARTSCH, PAUL. Experiments in the Breeding of Cerions. ([Papers from the] Department ofMarine Biology of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, Vol. XIV.) 1920. Octavo, 55 pp., 59pls.

283 CASE, E. C. The Environment of Vertebrate Life in the Late Paleozoic in North America: APaleogeographic Study. 1919. Quarto, vii + 273 pp., 8 figs.

284 LIVINGSTON, BURTON E., and FORREST SHREVE. The Distribution of Vegetation in theUnited States, As Related to Climatic Conditions. 1921. Octavo, xvi + 590 pp., 72 pls., 74 figs.

285 MORGAN, T. H. The Genetic and the Operative Evidence Relating to Secondary Sexual Charac-ters. 1919. Octavo, 108 pp., 10 pls.

286 WEAVER, JOHN E. The Ecological Relations of Roots. 1919. Octavo, vii + 128 pp., 33 pls., 58figs.

287 SPOEHR, HERMAN AUGUSTUS. The Carbohydrate Economy of Cacti. 1919. Octavo, 79 pp., 2figs.

288 CASTLE, W. E. Studies of Heredity in Rabbits, Rats, and Mice. 1919. Octavo, iii + 56 pp., 3 pls.,5 figs.

289 DOUGLASS, A. E. Climatic Cycles and Tree-Growth. Octavo

Vol. I. A Study of the Annual Rings of Trees in Relation to Climate and Solar Activity.1919. 127 pp.,12 pls.,40 figs.

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Vol. II. A Study of the Annual Rings of Trees in Relation to Climate and Solar Activity.1928. vii + 166 pp., 9 pls., 19 figs.

Vol. III. A Study of Cycles. 1936. x + 171 pp. 124 pls., 57 figs., 15 graphs.

290 CLEMENTS, FREDERIC E. Plant Indicators.- The Relation of Plant Communities to Process andPractice. 1920. Octavo, xvi + 388 pp., 93 pls., 25 figs.

291 VAUGHAN, THOMAS WAYLAND, prepared under the direction of. Contributions to the Geologyand Paleontology of the West Indies. 1919. Octavo, 184 pp., 53 pls., 8 figs.

VAUGHAN, THOMAS WAYLAND. Introduction. pp. 5-8.I. HOWE, MARSHALL A. Tertiary Calcareous Algae from the Islands of St. Bartholomew,

Antigua, and Anguilla. pp. 9-19, 6 pls.II. CUSHMAN, JOSEPH AUGUSTINE. Fossil Foraminifera from the West Indies. pp.

21-71, 15 pls., 8 figs.III. CANU, FERDINAND, and RAY S. BASSLER. Fossil Bryozoa from the West Indies.

pp. 73-102, 7 pls.IV. COOKE, CHARLES WYTHE. Tertiary Mollusks from the Leeward Islands and Cuba.

pp. 103-156, 16 pls.V. RATHBUN, MARY J. West Indian Tertiary Decapod Crustaceans. pp. 157-l84, 9 pls.

292 WEAVER, JOHN E. Root Development in the Grassland Formation: A Correlation of the RootSystems of Native Vegetation and Crop Plants. 1920. Octavo, 151 pp., 25 pls., 39 figs. (Companionvolume to Publication 286.)

293 TREADWELL, AARON LEWIS. Leodicidae of the West Indian Region. ([Papers from the]Department of Marine Biology of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, Vol. XV.) 1921. Quarto,iv + 131 pp., 9 pls., 469 figs.

294 MORTENSEN, TH. Studies in the Development of Crinoids. (Papers from the Department ofMarine Biology of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, Vol. XVI.) 1920. Quarto, v + 94 pp., 28pls., 10 figs.

295 MOHR, OTTO L., and CHR. WRIEIDT. A New Type of Hereditary Brachyphalangy in Man.(Paper No. 31 of the Station for Experimental Evolution at Cold Spring Harbor, New York.) 1919.Octavo, 64 pp., 7 pls., 4 figs.

296 KEY, WILHELMINE E. Heredity and Social Fitness: A Study of Differential Mating in a Pennsyl-vania Family. (Paper No. 32 of the Station for Experimental Evolution at Cold Spring Harbor, NewYork.) 1920. Octavo, 102 pp., 2 figs., 2 charts.

297 MACDOUGAL, D. T. Hydration and Growth. 1920. Octavo, vi + 176 pp., 52 figs.

298 NICHOLS, EDWARD L., and HORACE L. HOWES, in collaboration with ERNEST MERRITT, D.T. WILBER, and FRANCES G. WICK. Fluorescence of the Uranyl Salts. 1919. Octavo, 241 pp., Ipl., 118 figs.

299 BURNETT, EDMUND C., edited by. Letters of Members of the Continental Congress. ([Vols. I-IV] Papers of the Department of Historical Research; [Vols. V-VIII] Papers of the Division ofHistorical Research.) Octavo

Vol. I. August 29, 1774, to July 4, 1776. 1921. lxvi + 572 pp.Vol. II. July 5, 1776, to December 31, 1777. 1923. lxxiii + 638 pp.Vol. III. January 1 to December 31, 1778. 1926. lxii + 582 pp.Vol. IV. January I to December 31, 1779. 1928. lxvi + 581 pp.Vol. V. January 1, 1780, to February 28, 1781. 1931. lxiv + 611 pp.Vol. VI. March 1, 1781, to December 31, 1782. 1933. liii + 599 pp.Vol. VII. January 1, 1783, to December 31, 1784. 1934. lxxvii + 670 pp.Vol. VIII. January 1, 1785, to July 25, 1789, with supplement, 1783-1784. 1936. c + 899

pp.

300 IVENS, WALTER G. Grammar and Vocabulary of the Lau Language, Solomon Islands. 1921. 12mo, 64 pp., 3 pls.

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301 STURTEVANT, A. H. The North American Species of Drosophila. 1921. Octavo, iv + 150 pp., 3pls. 49 figs.

302 BENEDICT, FRANCIS G., and FRITZ B. TALBOT. Metabolism and Growth from Birth toPuberty. 1921. Octavo, [2] + vi + 213 pp., 55 figs.

303 CARPENTER, THORNE M. Tables, Factors, and Formulas for Computing Respiratory Exchangeand Biological Transformations of Energy. 1921, Octavo, 123 pp. (See Publication 303c.)

303A CARPENTER, THORNE M. Tables, Factors, and Formulas for Computing Respiratory Exchangeand Biological Transformations of Energy. Second edition, 1924. Octavo, 126 pp. . (SeePublication 303c.)

303B CARPENTER, THORNE M. Tables, Factors, and Formulas for Computing Respiratory Exchangeand Biological Transformations of Energy. Third edition (revised), 1939. Octavo, 142 pp. (SeePublication 303C.)

303c CARPENTER, THORNE M. Tables, Factors, and Formulas for Computing Respiratory Exchangeand Biological Transformations of Energy. Fourth edition (revised), 1948. Octavo, 147 pp.

304 LOWE E. A., and E. K. RAND. A Sixth-Century Fragment of the Letters of Pliny the Younger: AStudy of Six Leaves of an Uncial Manuscript Preserved in the Pierpont Morgan Library, New York.1902. Quarto, vi + 67 pp., 20 pls.

305 BANTA, ARTHUR M. Selection in Cladocera on the Basis of a Physiological Character. (PaperNo. 33 of the Department of Genetics.) 1921. Octavo, ii + 170 pp., 19 figs.

306 Contributions to the Geology and Palaeontology of the West Indies. 1922. Octavo, iv + 122 pp.,18 pls., 6 figs.

JACKSON, ROBERT TRACY. Fossil Echini of the West Indies. pp. 1-103, 18 pls., 6figs.

VAUGHAN, THOMAS WAYLAND. Stratigraphic Significance of the Species of WestIndian Fossil Echini. pp. 105-122.

307 MACDOUGAL, D. T. Growth in Trees. 1921. Octavo, 41 pp., 16 figs.

308 CANNON, WILLIAM AUSTIN. Plant Habits and Habitats in the Arid Portions of South Austra-lia. 1921. Octavo, viii + 139 pp., 32 pls., 37 figs.

309 SMITH, HENRY MONMOUTH. Gaseous Exchange and Physiological Requirements for Leveland Grade Walking. 1922. Octavo, viii + 310 pp., frontispiece, 42 figs.

310 BARUS, CARL. [Studies on Interferometry.] Octavo.

Part I. Displacement Interferometry Applied to Acoustics and to Gravitation. 1921. 149pp., 184 figs.

Part II. Interferometer Experiments in Acoustics and Gravitation. 1923. viii + 113 pp.,169 figs.

Part III. Interferometer Experiments in Acoustics and Gravitation. 1925. ix + 165 pp.,221 figs.

311 CUSHMAN, JOSEPH AUGUSTINE. Shallow-Water Foraminifera of the Tortugas Region.([Papers from the] Department of Marine Biology of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, Vol.XVII.) 1922. Octavo, 85 pp., 15 pls., 8 figs.

312 Papers from the Department of Marine Biology of the Carnegie Institution of Washington. Vol.XVIII. 1922. Octavo, vi + 181 pp., 11 pls., 139 figs., 3 charts, 1 map.

I. TENNENT, DAVID H. Studies on the Hybridization of Echinoids, Cidaris tribuloides.pp. 1-42, 3 pls., 28 figs.

II. HARVEY, E. NEWTON. The Production of Light by the Fishes Photoblepharon andAnomalops. pp. 43-60.

III. MAYOR, ALFRED GOLDSBOROUGH. Hydrogen-Ion Concentration and Electri-cal Conductivity of the Surface Water of the Atlantic and Pacific. pp. 61-85, 3charts.

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IV. WELLS, ROGER C. Carbon-Dioxide Content of Sea-Water at Tortugas. pp. 87-93, 1fig.

V. PHILLIPS, ALEXANDER H. Analytical Search for Metals in Tortugas Marine Organ-isms. pp. 95-99.

VI. MAYOR, ALFRED GOLDSBOROUGH. The Tracking Instinct in a Tortugas Ant. pp.101-107, 3 figs.

VII. FOWLER, HENRY W., and CHARLES F. SILVESTER. A Collection of Fishes fromSamoa. pp. 109-126, 2 figs.

VIII. TREADWELL, A. L. Leodicidae from Fiji and Samoa. pp. 127-170, 8 pls., 68 figs.,1 map.

IX. TREADWELL, A. L. Polychaetous Annelids Collected at Friday Harbor, State ofWashington, in February and March 1920. pp. 171-181, 37 figs.

313 HALL, HARVEY M., and FRANCES L. LONG. Rubber Content of North American Plants. 1921.Octavo, 65 pp., 3 pls.

314 LOFTFIELD, J. V. G. The Behavior of Stomata. 1921. Octavo, 104 pp., 16 pls., 54 figs.

315 CLEMENTS, FREDERIC E. Aeration and Air-Content: The Role of Oxygen in Root Activity. 1921.Octavo, 183 pp.

316 WEAVER, JOHN E., FRANK C. JEAN, and JOHN W. CRIST. Development and Activities of Rootsof Crop Plants: A Study in Crop Ecology. 1922. Octavo, vi + 117 pp., 14 pls., 42 figs.

317 HAYFORD, JOHN F. Effects of Winds and of Barometric Pressures on the Great Lakes. 1922.Octavo, v + 133 pp., 16 pls.

318 WYCKOFF, RALPH W. G. The Analytical Expression of the Results of the Theory of Space-Groups. 1922. Second edition (revised), 1930. Octavo, 239 pp., 222 figs.

319 COOPER, WILLIAM S. The Broad-Sclerophyll Vegetation of California: An Ecological Study ofthe Chaparral and Its Related Communities. 1922. Octavo, 124 pp., 21 pls., 43 figs.

320 CASTLE, W. E. Genetic Studies of Rabbits and Rats. 1922. Octavo, 55 pp., 2 pls., 7 figs.

321 CASE, E. C. New Reptiles and Stegocephalians from the Upper Triassic of Western Texas. 1922.Quarto, 84 pp., 14 pls., 33 figs.

322 HAY, OLIVER P. The Pleistocene of North America and Its Vertebrated Animals from the StatesEast of the Mississippi River and from the Canadian Provinces East of Longitude 95°. 1923.Octavo, viii + 499 pp., 25 figs., 41 maps.

322A HAY, OLIVER P. The Pleistocene of the Middle Region of North America and Its VertebratedAnimals. 1924. Octavo, vii + 385 pp., 5 figs., 29 maps.

322B HAY, OLIVER P. The Pleistocene of the Western Region of North America and Its VertebratedAnimals. 1927. Octavo, v + 346 pp., 12 pls., 19 figs., 21 maps.

323 JOSLIN, ELLIOTT P. Diabetic Metabolism with High and Low Diets. 1923. Octavo, ix + 334 pp.(Supplementary to Publications 136 and 176.)

324 BENEDICT, FRANCIS G., and ERNEST G. RITZMAN. Undernutrition in Steers: Its Relation toMetabolism, Digestion, and Subsequent Realimentation. 1923. Octavo, viii + 333 pp., 42 figs.

325 SPOEHR, H. A., and J. M. McGEE. Studies in Plant Respiration and Photosynthesis. 1923.Octavo, iv + 98 pp., 27 figs.

326 HALL, HARVEY M., and FREDERIC E. CLEMENTS. The Phylogenetic Method in Taxonomy:The North American Species of Artemisia, Chrysothamnus, and Atriplex. 1923. Quarto, [2] + iv +355 pp., 58 pls., 47 figs.

327 BRIDGES, C. B., and T. H. MORGAN. The Third-Chromosome Group of Mutant Characters ofDrosophila melanogaster. 1923. Octavo, x + 251 pp., 3 pls., 37 figs.

328 METZ, CHARLES W., MILDRED S. MOSES, and ELEANOR D. MASON. Genetic Studies onDrosophila virilis; with Considerations on the Genetics of Other Species of Drosophila. [Paper No.

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34 of the Department of Genetics.] 1923. Octavo, 94 pp., 5 pls., 17 figs.

329 DAVENPORT, CHARLES BENEDICT. Body-Build and Its Inheritance. (Paper No. 35 of theDepartment of Genetics.) 1923. Octavo, vi + 176 pp., 9 pls., 53 figs.

330 BANDELIER, ADOLPH F. A., and FANNY R. BANDELIER, collected by. Edited with introduc-tions and annotations by CHARLES W. HACKETT. Historical Documents Relating to NewMexico, Nueva Vizcaya, and Approaches Thereto, to 1773. Octavo

Vol. I. Spanish Texts and English Translations. 1923. xx + 502 pp.Vol. II. Spanish Texts and English Translations. 1926. xi + 497 pp., frontispiece, 5 pls.Vol. III. English Translations. 1937. xii + 532 pp.

331 STOCK, CHESTER. Cenozoic Gravigrade Edentates of Western North America; with SpecialReference to the Pleistocene Megalonychinae and Mylodontidae of Rancho La Brea. 1925.Quarto, xiii + 206 pp., frontispiece, 47 pls., 120 figs.

332 Contributions to Embryology. Vol. XV, Contributions 72-77. 1923. Quarto, iii + 139 pp., 19 pls.,33 figs.

DAVIS, CARL L. Description of a Human Embryo Having Twenty Paired Somites. pp.1-51, 4 pls., 20 figs. (Contr. 72.)

SHIELDS, RANDOLPH T. On the Development of Tendon Sheaths. pp. 53-61, 1 pl., 2figs. (Contr. 73.)

LEE, FERDINAND C. On the Lymph-Vessels of the Liver. pp. 63-72, 1 pl. (Contr. 74.)CORNER, GEORGE W. Ovulation and Menstruation in Macacus rhesus. pp. 73-101, 6

pls., 2 figs. (Contr. 75.)TRAUT, HERBERT F. The Structural Unit of the Human Kidney. pp. 103-120, 3 pls., 1

fig. (Contr. 76.)HEUSER, CHESTER H. The Branchial Vessels and Their Derivatives in the Pig. pp.

121-139, 4 pls., 8 figs. (Contr. 77.)

333 MILES, WALTER R. Alcohol and Human Efficiency: Experiments with Moderate Quantities andDilute Solutions of Ethyl Alcohol on Human Subjects. 1924. Octavo, x + 298 pp., 51 figs.

334 JAMES, HERMAN G. The Constitutional System of Brazil. 1923. Octavo, vi + 270 pp.

335 LOTHROP, S. K. Tulum: An Archaeological Study of the East Coast of Yucatan. 1924. Quarto, vii+ 179 pp., frontispiece, 27 pls., 182 figs.

336 CLEMENTS, FREDERIC E., and FRANCES L. LONG. Experimental Pollination: An Outline ofthe Ecology of Flowers and Insects. 1923. Octavo, vii + 274 pp., 17 pls.

337 CASTLE, W. E., HORACE W. FELDMAN, and WILLIAM HAZEN GATES. Contributions to aKnowledge of Inheritance in Mammals. 1926. Octavo, ii + 138 pp., 14 pls., 5 figs.

Part I. CASTLE, W. E. Studies of Color Inheritance and of Linkage inn Rabbits. pp. 1-47,8 pls.

Part II. FELDMAN, HORACE W. Fertility and Sterility in the Norway Rat, Musnorvegicus. pp. 49-82, 5 figs.

Part III. GATES, WILLIAM HAZEN. The Japanese Waltzing Mouse: Its Origin, Heredityand Relation to the Genetic Characters of Other Varieties of Mice. pp. 83-138, 6 pls.

338 STOCK, LEO FRANCIS, edited by. Proceedings and Debates of the British Parliaments Respect-ing North America. ([Vols. I, 11] Papers of the Department of Historical Research; [Vols: III-V]Papers of the Division of Historical Research.) Octavo

Vol. I. 1542-1688. 1924. xx + 515 pp.Vol. II. 1689-1702. 1927. xv + 564 pp.Vol. III. 1702-1727. 1930. xxvi + 571 pp.Vol. IV. 1728-1739. 1937. xxvii + 888 pp.Vol. V. 1739-1754. 1941. xxv + 658 pp.

339 PERRET, FRANK A. The Vesuvius Eruption of 1906: Study of a Volcanic Cycle. [With petro-

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graphical description by H. S. WASHINGTON.] 1924. Quarto, 151 pp., frontispiece, 24 pls., 98figs., 3 diagrams.

340 A Memorial to Alfred Goldsborough Mayor. (Papers from the Department of Marine Biology of theCarnegie Institution of Washington, Vol. XIX.) 1924. Quarto, ix + 217 pp., frontispiece, 56 pls., 11figs.

[MAYOR, ALFRED GOLDSBOROUGH.] Some Posthumous Papers of A. G. MayorRelating to His Work at Tutuila and Aajacent Regions. pp. ix, 1-92, 38 pls., 5 figs.

1. Structure and Ecology of Samoan Reefs. pp. 1-25, pls. 1-8, 3 figs.2. Causes Which Produce Stable Conditions in the Depth of the Floors of Pacific Fringing

Reef-Flats. pp. 27-36, pls. 9-10, 1 fig.3. Inability of Stream-Water to Dissolve Submarine Limestones. pp. 37-49, 1 fig.4. Growth-Rate of Samoan Corals. pp. 51-72, pls. 1-26.5. Rose Atoll, American Samoa. pp. 73-79, pls. 27-28.GREY, IRVING, M., prepared by. Bibliography of Scientific Writings Emanating from the

Department of Marine Biology of the Carnegie Institution of Washington andRelating to Work Done or Inaugurated during the Incumbency of Alfred G. Mayor asDirector of the Department. pp. 80-90. List of Illustrations. pp. 91-92.

6. DALY, REGINALD A. The Geology of American Samoa. pp. 93-143, 11 pls., 1 fig.7. CHAMBERLIN, ROLLIN T. The Geological Interpretation of the Coral Reefs of

Tutuila, American Samoa. pp. 145-178, 7 pls., 5 figs.8. LIPMAN, CHARLES B. A Critical and Experimental Study of Drew’s Bacterial Hypoth-

esis on CaCO3 Precipitation in the Sea. pp. 179-191.

9. LIPMAN, CHARLES B., and P. E. SHELLEY. The Chemical Composition ofLithothamnium from Various Sources. pp. 193-199.

10. LIPMAN, CHARLES B., and P. E. SHELLEY. Studies on the Origin and Compositionof the Soil of Rose Islet. pp. 201-208.

11. LIPMAN, CHARLES B., and J. K. TAYLOR. Bacteriological Studies on Rose InletSoils. pp. 209-217.

341 SETCHELL, WILLIAM ALBERT. American Samoa. ([Papers from the] Department of MarineBiology of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, Vol. XX.) 1924. Octavo, vi + 275 pp., 37 pls., 57figs.

342 CUSHMAN, JOSEPH AUGUSTINE. Samoan Foraminifera. ([Papers from the] Department ofMarine Biology of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, Vol. XXI.) 1924. Octavo, 75 pp., 25 pls.

343 HOFFMEISTER, J. EDWARD. Some Corals from American Samoa and the Fiji Islands. (Papersfrom the Department of Marine Biology of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, Vol. XXII.)1925. Quarto, v + 90 pp., 24 pls.

344 Papers from the Department of Marine Biology of the Carnegie Institution of Washington. Vol.XXIII. 1926. Octavo, ii + 134 pp., 15 pls., 1 map, 10 figs. .

BRAMLETTE, M. N. Some Marine Bottom Samples from Pago Pago Harbor, Samoa. pp.1-35, 1 map, 8 figs.

GOLDMAN, MARCUS I. Proportions of Detrital Organic Calcareous Constituents andTheir Chemical Alteration in a Reef Sand from the Bahamas. pp. 37-66, 1 fig.

SMITH, N. R. Report on a Bacteriological Examination of “Chalky Mud” and Sea-Waterfrom the Bahama Banks. pp. 67-72.

CUSHMAN, JOSEPH A. Recent Foraminifera from Porto Rico. pp. 73-84, 1 pl.MANSFIELD, WENDELL C. Fossils from Quarries near Suva, Viti Levu, Fiji Islands, and

from Vavao, Tonga Islands, with Annotated Bibliography of the Geology of the FijiIslands. pp. 85-104, 7 pls.

VAUGHAN, THOMAS WAYLAND, and JOHN EDWARD HOFFMEISTER. MioceneCorals from Trinidad. pp. 105-134, 7 pls., 1 fig.

345 SCHAEFFER, ASA ARTHUR. Taxonomy of the Amebas; with Descriptions of Thirty-Nine NewMarine and Freshwater Species. (Papers from the Department of Marine Biology of the CarnegieInstitution of Washington, Vol. XXIV.) 1926. Quarto, iii + 116 pp., 12 pls., 36 figs.

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346 Additions to the Palaeontology of the Pacific Coast and Great Basin Regions of North America.(Contributions to Palaeontology from the Carnegie Institution of Washington.) 1927. Octavo, iv +159 + [31 pp., 36 pls., 12 figs.

I. KELLOGG, REMINGTON. Study of the Skull of a Fossil Sperm Whale from theTemblor Miocene of Southern California. pp. 1-24, 9 pls.

II. KELLOGG, REMINGTON. Fossil Pinnipeds from California. pp. 25-37, 8 figs.III. MERRIAM, JOHN C., and CHESTER STOCK. A Hyaenarctid Bear from the Later

Tertiary of the John Day Basin of Oregon. Pp. 39-44, 1 pl.IV. CHANEY, RALPH W. Geology and Palaeontology of the Crooked River Basin, with

Special Reference to the Bridge Creek Flora. With a section on Tertiary FossilInsects from Eastern Oregon, by T. D. A. COCKERELL. Pp. 45-138 + [3], 20 pls.,4 figs.

V. MASON, HERBERT L. Fossil Records of Some West American Conifers. Pp. 139-159, 6 pls.

347 Papers Concerning the Palaeontology of the Pleistocene of California and the Tertiary of Oregon.(Contributions to Palaeontology from the Carnegie Institution of Washington.) 1925. Octavo, iii +92 pp., 10 pls., 56 figs.

I. MERRIAM, JOHN C., and CHESTER STOCK. Relationships and Structure of theShort-Faced Bear, Arctotherium, from the Pleistocene of California. Pp. 1-35, 10pls., 7 figs.

II. MERRIAM, JOHN C., and CHESTER STOCK. A Llama from the Pleistocene ofMcKittrick, California. Pp. 37-42, 4 figs.

III. MERRIAM, JOHN C., CHESTER STOCK, and C. L. MOODY. The PlioceneRattlesnake Formation and Fauna of Eastern Oregon, with Notes on the Geology ofthe Rattlesnake and Mascall Deposits. Pp.43-92, 45 figs.

348 KELLOGG, REMINGTON. Additions to the Tertiary History of the Pelagic Mammals on thePacific Coast of North America. (Contributions to Palaeontology from the Carnegie Institution ofWashington.) 1925. Octavo, iii + 120 pp., 13 pls., 53 figs.

349 Studies on the Fossil Flora and Fauna of the Western United States. (Contributions toPalaeontology from the Carnegie Institution of Washington.) 1925. Octavo, iii + 130 pp., 25 pls.,39 figs.

I. CHANEY, RALPH W. A Comparative Study of the Bridge Creek Flora and the ModernRedwood Forest. Pp. 1-22, 7 pls.

II. CHANEY, RALPH W. The Mascall Flora-Its Distribution and Climatic Relation. Pp.23-48, 1 pl., 1 fig.

III. CHANEY, RALPH W. Notes on Two Fossil Hackberries from the Tertiary of theWestern United States. Pp. 49-56, 1 pl.

IV. CHANEY, RALPH W. A Record of the Presence of Umbellularia in the Tertiary ofthe Western United States. Pp. 57-62, 1 pl.

V. MILLER, LOYE. The Birds of Rancho La Brea. Pp. 63-106, 6 pls., 20 figs.VI. MILLER, LOYE. Avian Remains from the Miocene of Lompoc, California. Pp. 107-

117, 9 pls., 1 fig.VII. DICE, LEE RAYMOND. Rodents and Lagomorphs of the Rancho La Brea Deposits.

Pp. 119-130, 17 figs.

350 MACDOUGAL, D. T., and FORREST SHREVE. Growth in Trees and Massive Organs of Plants.1924. Octavo, ii + 116 pp., 29 figs.

MACDOUGAL, D. T. Dendrographic Measurements. Pp. 1-88, figs. 1-19.SHREVE, FORREST. The Growth Record in Trees. Pp. 89-116, figs. 20-29.

351 HOWARD, WILLIAM TRAVIS, JR. Public Health Administration and the Natural History ofDisease in Baltimore, Maryland, 1797-1920. 1924. Octavo, vi + 565 pp., 2 maps, 41 graphs.

352 JONES, J. CLAUDE, ERNST ANTEVS, and ELLSWORTH HUNTINGTON. QuaternaryClimates. 1925. Octavo, v + 212 pp., 10 pls., 38 figs.

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JONES, J. CLAUDE. The Geologic History of Lake Lahontan. Pp. 1-50, 6 pls., 9 figs.ANTEVS, ERNST. On the Pleistocene History of the Great Basin. Pp. 51-114, 3 pls., 19

figs.ANTEVS, ERNST. The Big Tree as a Climatic Measure. Pp. 115-153, 1 pl., 7 figs.HUNTINGTON, ELLSWORTH. Tree Growth and Climatic Interpretations. Pp. 155-204,

3 figs.

353 TATLOCK, JOHN S. P., and ARTHUR G. KENNEDY. A Concordance to the Complete Works ofGeoffrey Chaucer and to the Romaunt of the Rose. 1927. Quarto, xiii + 1111 pp.

354 CANNON, WILLIAM AUSTIN. General and Physiological Features of the Vegetation of the MoreArid Portions of Southern Africa, with Notes on the Climatic Environment. 1924. Octavo, viii + 159pp., 31 pls., 13 figs.

355 CLEMENTS, FREDERIC E., and JOHN E. WEAVER. Experimental Vegetation: The Relation ofClimaxes to Climates. 1924. Octavo, vii + 172 pp., 15 pls., 41 figs.

356 CLEMENTS, FREDERIC E., and GLENN W. GOLDSMITH. The Phytometer Method in Ecology:The Plant and Community as Instruments. 1924. Octavo, vi + 106 pp., 11 pls., 45 figs.

357 JEAN, FRANK C., and JOHN E. WEAVER. Root Behavior and Crop Yield under Irrigation. 1924.Octavo, v + 66 pp., 6 pls., 24 figs.

358 BIDWELL, PERCY WELLS, and JOHN I. FALCONER. History of Agriculture in the NorthernUnited States, 1620-1860. (Contributions to American Economic History, Board of ResearchAssociates in American Economic History.) 1925. Octavo, xii + 512 pp., 114 figs.

359 MATTESON, DAVID M. List of Manuscripts Concerning American History Preserved in EuropeanLibraries and Noted in Their Published Catalogues and Similar Printed Lists. (Papers of theDepartment of Historical Research.) 1925. Octavo, viii + 203 pp.

360 DAY, ARTHUR L., and E. T. ALLEN. The Volcanic Activity and Hot Springs of Lassen Peak. 1925.Quarto, ix + 190 pp., frontispiece, 12 pls., 81 figs.

361 Contributions to Embryology. Vol. XVI, Nos. 78-84. 1925. Quarto, 276 pp., 32 pls., 17 figs., 5graphs, 7 diagrams.

WISLOCKI, GEORGE B. On the Placentation of the Sloth (Bradypus griseus). Pp. 5-21,2 pls. (Contr. 78.)

WEST, CECIL M. The Development of the Gums and Their Relationship to the DeciduousTeeth in the Human Fetus. Pp. 23-45, 4 pls., 15 figs. (Contr. 79.)

MAXIMOW, ALEXANDER. Tissue-Cultures of Young Mammalian Embryos. Pp. 47-113, 13 pls. (Contr. 80.)

PAYNE, FERNANDUS. General Description of a 7-Somite Human Embryo. Pp. 115-124,3 pls., 1 fig. (Contr. 81.)

SABIN, F. R., C. A. DOAN, and R. S. CUNNINGHAM. Discrimination of Two Types ofPhagocytic Cells in the Connective Tissues by the Supravital Technique. Pp.125-162,2 pls., 4 graphs. (Contr.82.)

DOAN, C. A., R. S. CUNNINGHAM, and F. R. SABIN. Experimental Studies on theOrigin and Maturation of Avian and Mammalian Red Blood-Cells. Pp. 163-226, 5pls., 1 graph. (Contr. 83.)

CUNNINGHAM, R. S., F. R. SABIN, and C. A. DOAN. The Development of Leucocytes,Lymphocytes, and Monocytes from a Specific Stem-Cell in Adult Tissues. Pp. 227-276, 3 pls., 1 fig., 7 diagrams. (Contr. 84.)

362 Contributions to Embryology. Vol. XVII, Nos. 85-89. 1926. Quarto, iii + 140 pp., 27 pls., 2 figs., 1chart.

BARTELMEZ, GEORGE W., and HERBERT M. EVANS. Development of the HumanEmbryo during the Period of Somite Formation, Including Embryos with 2 to l6 Pairsof Somites. Pp. 1-67, 19 pls., 1 chart. (Contr. 85.)

WILSON, KARL M. Origin and Development of the Rete Ovarii and the Rete Testis in theHuman Embryo. Pp. 69-88, 3 pls. (Contr. 86.)

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WEED, LEWIS H., and ORTHELLO R. LANGWORTHY. Physiological Study ofCortical Motor Areas in Young Kittens and in Adult Cats. Pp. 89-106, 2 figs.(Contr. 87.)

ANDERSEN, DOROTHY H. Lymphatics and Blood-Vessels of the Ovary of the Sow.Pp. 107-123, 4 pls. (Contr. 88.)

LANGWORTHY, ORTHELLO R. Relation of Onset of Decerebrate Rigidity to the Timeof Myelinization of Tracts in the Brain-Stem and Spinal Cord of Young Animals.Pp. 125-140, 1 pl. (Contr. 89.)

363 Contributions to Embryology. Vol. XVIII, Nos. 90-97. 1926. Quarto, iii + 147 Pp., 37 pls., 8 figs.

LEWIS, WARREN H. Cultivation of Embryonic Heart-Muscle. Pp. 1-21, 4 pls. (Contr.90.)

WILSON, KARL M. Correlation of External Genitalia and Sex Glands in the HumanEmbryo. Pp. 23-30, 2 pls. (Contr. 91.)

STREETER, GEORGE L. The “Miller” Ovum-The Youngest Normal Human EmbryoThus Far Known. PP-31-48, 8 pls., 3 figs. (Contr. 92.)

SHIKINAMI, JUJIRO. Detailed Form of the Wolffian Body in Human Embryos of theFirst Eight Weeks. Pp. 49-61, 7 pls. (Contr. 93.)

DANCHAKOFF, VERA. Lens Ectoderm and Optic Vesicles in Allantois Grafts. Pp. 63-78, 2 pls. (Contr. 94.)

KING, JESSIE L. Menstrual Records and Vaginal Smears in a Selected Group of NormalWomen. Pp. 79-94, 4 figs. (Contr.95.)

LEWIS, MARGARET R., and WARREN H. LEWIS. Transformation of MononuclearBlood-Cells into Macrophages, Epithelioid Cells, and Giant Cells in Hanging-DropBlood-Cultures from Lower Vertebrates. Pp. 95-120, 13 pls. (Contr. 96.)

SUGIYAMA, S. Origin of Thrombocytes and of the Different Types of Blood-Cells AsSeen in the Living Chick Blastoderm. Pp. 121-147, 1 pl., 1 fig. (Contr. 97.)

364 CORNER, GEORGE W. Anatomical Texts of the Earlier Middle Ages: A Study in the Transmis-sion of Culture. With a Revised Latin Text of Anatomia Cophonis and Translations of Four Texts.1927. Octavo, 112 Pp., 3 pls., 1 fig.

365 MACDOUGAL, D. T. Reversible Variations in Volume, Pressure, and Movements of Sap in Trees.[With a section by L. H. DAUGHERTY.] 1925. Octavo, iii + go pp., 5 pls., 13 figs.

366 WOODRING, WENDELL P. Miocene Mollusks from Bowden, Jamaica. [Part I.] Pelecypods andScaphopods. (Contributions to the Geology and Palaeontology of the West Indies.) 1925. Octavo,vii + 222 pp., 28 pls. (For Part II see Publication 385.)

367 JOCHELSON, WALDEMAR. Archaeological Investigations in the Aleutian Islands. 1925.Quarto, ix + 145 pp., 28 pls., 110 figs., ethnographic map.

368 CANNON, WILLIAM AUSTIN. Physiological Features of Roots, with Especial Reference to theRelation of Roots to Aeration of the Soil. With a chapter on Differences between Nitrogen andHelium as Inert Gases in Anaerobic Experiments on Plants, by EDWARD ELWAY FREE. 1925.Octavo, iii + 168 pp., 21 figs. .

369 CARPENTER, THORNE M. Human Metabolism with Enemata of Alcohol, Dextrose, andLevulose. 1925. Octavo, ix + 197 pp., 91 figs.

370 STUART, GRAHAM H. The Governmental System of Peru. 1925. Octavo, vi + 156 pp.

371 BASSETT, JOHN SPENCER, edited by. Correspondence of Andrew Jackson. ([Vols. I-IV]Papers of the Department of Historical Research; [Vols. V-VII] Papers of the Division of Histori-cal Research.) Octavo

Vol. I. To April 30, 1814. 1926. xl + 508 pp.Vol. II. May 1, 1814, to December 31, 1819. 1927. xxx + 449 pp.Vol. III. 1820-1828. 1928. xxiv + 464 pp.Vol. IV. 1829-1832. 1929. xxii + 508 pp.

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Vol. V. 1833-1838. 1931. xxiv + 576 pp.Vol. VI. 1839-1845. 1933. xxi + 524 pp.Vol. VII. General Index, by DAVID MAYDOLE MATTESON. 1935. vii + 128 pp.

372 BELL, HERBERT C., DAVID W. PARKER, and others. Guide to British West Indian ArchiveMaterials, in London and in the Islands, for the History of the United States. (Papers of the Depart-ment of Historical Research.) 1926. Octavo, ix + 435 pp.

373 MACDOUGAL, D. T. The Hydrostatic System of Trees. 1926. Octavo, iii + 125 pp., 21 figs.

374 CATTERALL, HELEN TUNNICLIFF (Mrs. Ralph C. H. Catterall), edited by. Judicial CasesConcerning American Slavery and the Negro. ([Vols. I, II] Papers of the Department of HistoricalResearch.) [Vols. III-V] Papers of the Division of Historical Research.) Octavo

Vol. I. Cases from the Courts of England, Virginia, West Virginia, and Kentucky. 1926. xiv+ 508 pp.

Vol. II. Cases from the Courts of North Carolina, South Carolina, and Tennessee. 1929. x +661 pp.

Vol. III. Cases from the Courts of Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, and Louisiana.1932. vii + 758 pp.

Vol. IV. Cases from the Courts of New England, the Middle States, and the District ofColumbia. With additions by JAMES J. HAYDEN. 1936. xi + 586 pp.

Vol. V. Cases from the Courts of States North of the Ohio and West of the MississippiRivers, Canada and Jamaica. With additions by JAMES J. HAYDEN. 1937. viii +386 pp.

375 CASE, E. C. Environment of Tetrapod Life in the Late Paleozoic of Regions Other Than NorthAmerica. 1926. Quarto, iii + 211 pp., 23 figs.

376 SARTON, GEORGE. Introduction to the History of Science. Octavo

Vol. I. From Homer to Omar Khayyam. 1927. Reprinted 1953. xi + 839 pp.Vol. II. From Rabbi Ben Ezra to Roger Bacon. 1931. Reprinted 1953.

Part I. From Rabbi Ben Ezra to Ibn Rushd. Pp. xxxviii +1-480.Part II. From Robert Grosseteste to Roger Bacon. Pp. xvi + 481-1251.

Vol. III. Science and Learning in the Fourteenth Century. Reprinted 1953.Part I. First Half of the Fourteenth Century. 1947. Pp. xxxv + 1-1018, figs. 1-

22.Part II. Second Half of the Fourteenth Century. 1948. Pp. xiii + 1019-2155, figs. 23-40.

377 BENEDICT, FRANCIS G., and ERNEST G. RITZMAN. The Metabolism of the Fasting Steer.1927. Octavo, viii + 246 pp., 8 figs. (Supplementary to Publication 324.)

378 ALLEN, E. T., and ARTHUR L. DAY. Steam Wells and Other Thermal Activity at “TheGeysers,”California. 1927.Octavo, 106 pp., 34 figs.

379 TAYLOR, WM. RANDOLPH. The Marine Algae of Florida,with Special Reference to the DryTortugas. (Papers from the Tortugas Laboratory of the Carnegie Institution of Washington,Vol. XXV.) 1928. Quarto, v + 219 pp., 37 pls., 3 figs.

380 Contributions to Embryology. Vol. XIX, Nos. 98-108. 1927. Quarto, iii + 300 pp., 60 pls., 29 figs.

ALLEN, EDGAR. The Menstrual Cycle of the Monkey, Macacus rhesus: Observations onNormal Animals, the Effects of Removal of the Ovaries and the Effects of Injectionsof Ovarian and Placental Extracts into the Spayed Animals. Pp. 1-44, 13 pls., 1 fig.(Contr. 98.)

CUAJUNCO, FIDEL. Embryology of the Neuromuscular Spindle. Pp. 45-72, 5 pls.(Contr. 99.)

STREETER, GEORGE L. Development of the Mesoblast and Notochord in Pig Embryos.Pp. 73-92, 9 pls., 1 fig. (Contr. 100.)

STRAUS, WILLIAM L., JR. Growth of the Human Foot and Its Evolutionary Signifi-cance. Pp. 93-134, 1 pl., 6 figs. (Contr. 101.)

ANDERSEN, DOROTHY H. Lymphatics of the Fallopian Tube of the Sow. Pp. 135-147,2 pls. (Contr. 102.)

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LANGWORTHY, ORTHELLO R. Correlated Physiological and Morphological Studies ofthe Development of Electrically Responsive Areas in the Cerebral Cortex of theOpossum. Pp. 149-175, 2 pls., 3 figs. (Contr. 103.)

LANGWORTHY, ORTHELLO R. Histological Development of Cerebral Motor Areas inYoung Kittens Correlated with Their Physiological Reaction to Electrical Stimula-tion. Pp. 177-207, 3 pls., 2 figs. (Contr. 104.)

WISLOCKI, GEORGE B. On the Placentation of the Tridactyl Sloth (Bradypus griseus)with a Description of Some Characters of the Fetus. Pp. 209-227, 6 pls. (Contr.105.)

HEUSER, CHESTER H. A Study of the Implantation of the Ovum of the Pig from theStage of the Bilaminar Blastocyst to the Completion of the Fetal Membranes. Pp.229-243, 5 pls., 6 figs. (Contr. 106.)

DAVIS, CARL L. Development of the Human Heart from Its First Appearance to theStage Found in Embryos of Twenty Paired Somites. Pp. 245-284, 8 pls., 10 figs.(Contr. 107.)

HARTMAN, CARL G. Observations on the Ovary of the Opossum (Didelphisvirginiana). Pp. 285-300, 6 pls. (Contr. 108.)

381 DU TOIT, ALEX. L. A Geological Comparison of South America with South Africa. With apalaeontological contribution by F. R. COWPER REED. 1927. Octavo, vii + 158 pp., 16 pls., 1map, 7 figs.

382 WILLIS, BAILEY. Earthquake Conditions in Chile. (Studies in Comparative Seismology.) Withcontributions by J. B. MACELWANE, S.J., PERRY BYERLY, [LUIS SIERRA VERA],JOHANNES FELSCH, and H.S. WASHINGTON. 1929. Quarto, xi + 178 pp., 75 pls., 19 figs.

383 BARUS, CARL. Acoustic Experiments with the Pin-Hole Probe and the Interferometer U-Gage.1927. Octavo, x +158 pp., 286 figs.

3384 NICHOLS, E. L., H. L. HOWES, and D. T. WILBER. Cathodo-Luminescence and the Lumines-cence of Incandescent Solids. 1928. Octavo, vii + 350 pp., 176 figs.

385 WOODRING, WENDELL P. Miocene Mollusks from Bowden, Jamaica. Part II. Gastropods andDiscussion of Results. (Contributions to the Geology and Palaeontology of the West Indies.) 1928.Octavo, vii + 564 pp., 40 pls., 3 figs. (For Part I see Publication 366.)

386 BOSS, LEWIS, and BENJAMIN BOSS, under the direction of; RICHARD H. TUCKER,ARTHUR J. Roy, and WILLIAM B. VARNUM. San Luis Catalogue of 15333 Stars for the Epoch1910. Prepared at the Dudley Observatory, Albany, New York. 1928 Quarto, lvii + 307 pp. +errata.

387 DYAR, HARRISON G. The Mosquitoes of the Americas. 1928. Octavo, v + 616 pp. + errata, 123pls.

388 JOCHELSON, WALDEMAR. Archaeological Investigations in Kamchatka. 1928. Quarto, viii +88 pp., 19 pls., 83 figs., 1 Map.

389 HALL, HARVEY M. The Genus Haplopappus: A Phylogenetic Study in the Compositae. 1928.Octavo, viii + 391 pp., 16 pls., 114 figs.

390 HAY, OLIVER PERRY. Second Bibliography and Catalogue of the Fossil Vertebrata of NorthAmerica. Octavo.

Vol. I. 1929. viii + 916 pp.Vol. II. 1930. xiv + 1074 pp.

391 Papers from the Tortugas Laboratory of Carnegie Institution of Washington. [Formerly Papersfrom the Department of Marine Biology.] Vol. XXVI. 1929. Octavo, iii + 257 pp., 4 pls., 93 figs.

I. TENNENT, D. H., C. V. TAYLOR, and D. M. WHITAYER. An Investigation onOrganization in a Sea-Urchin Egg. Pp. 1-104, 59 figs.

II. TENNENT, DAVID H. Activation of the Eggs of Echinometra mathaoi by Sperms ofthe Crinoids Comatula pectinate and Comatula purpurea. Pp. 105-114, 5 figs.

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III. TENNENT, DAVID H. Early Development and Larval Forms of Three Echinoids ofthe Torres Strait Region. Pp. 115-128, 15 figs.

IV. BOSCHMA, H. On the Postlarval Development of the Coral Maeandra areolata (L.).Pp. 129-147, 9 figs.

V. GUDGER, E. W. On the Morphology, Coloration and Behavior of Seventy TeleosteanFishes of Tortugas, Florida. Pp.149-204, 4 pls.

VI. PEARSE, A. S. Observations on Certain Littoral and Terrestrial Animals at Tortugas,Florida, with Special Reference to Migrations from Marine to Terrestrial Habitats.Pp. 205-223, 3 figs.

VII. PEARSE, A. S. Two New Mites from the Gills of Land Crabs. Pp. 225-230, 2 figs.VIII. LIPMAN, C. B. Further Studies on Marine Bacteria with Special Reference to the

Drew Hypothesis on CaCO3 Precipitation in the Sea. Pp. 231-248.

IX. LIPMAN, C. B. The Chemical Composition of Sea-Water. Pp. 249-257.

392 LELAND, WALDO G., general editor. Guide to Materials for American History in the Librariesand Archives of Paris. (Papers of the Division of Historical Research.) Octavo

Vol. I. LELAND, WALDO G. Libraries. 1932. xiii + 343 pp.Vol. II. LELAND, WALDO G., JOHN J. MENG, and ABEL DOYSIÉ. Archives of the

Ministry of Foreign Affairs. 1943. xii + 1078 + [1] pp.

393 Papers Concerning the Palaeontology of the Cretaceous and Later Tertiary of Oregon, of thePliocene of Northwestern Nevada, and of the Late Miocene and Pleistocene of California. (Contri-butions to Palaeontology from Carnegie Institution of Washington.) 1928. Octavo, v + 58 pp., 13pls., 25 figs.

I. MERRIAM, JOHN C., and CHARLES W. GILMORE. An Ichthyosaurian Reptile fromMarine Cretaceous of Oregon. Pp. 1-4, 1 fig.

II. MERRIAM, JOHN C., and CHESTER STOCK. A Further Contribution to the Mam-malian Fauna of the Thousand Creek Pliocene, Northwestern Nevada. Pp. 5-21, 3pls., 14 figs.

III. STOCK, CHESTER. A Peccary from the McKittrick Pleistocene California. Pp. 23-27, 7 figs.

IV. STOCK, CHESTER. Tanupolama, a New Genus of Llama from the Pleistocene ofCalifornia. Pp. 29-37, 6 pls.

V. STOCK, CHESTER. Canid and Proboscidean Remains from the Ricardo Deposits,Mohave Desert, California. Pp. 39-47, 4 pls., 1 fig.

VI. STOCK, CHESTER. A Tooth of Hipparion mohavense from the Puente Formation,California. Pp. 49-53, 1 fig.

VII. MAXSON, JOHN H. Merychippus isonesus (Cope) from the Later Tertiary of theCrooked River Basin, Oregon. Pp. 55-58, 1 fig.

394 Contributions to Embryology. Vol. XX, Nos. 109-117. 1929. Quarto, iv + 257 pp., 52 pls., 32 figs.

HEUSER, C. H., and G. L. STREETER. Early Stages in the Development of Pig Embryos,from the Period of Initial Cleavage to the Time of the Appearance of Limb-Buds. Pp.1-29, 12 pls., 8 figs. (Contr. 109.)

FLEXNER, Louis B. The Development of the Meninges in Amphibia: A Study of Normaland Experimental Animals. Pp. 31-49, 3 pls. (Contr. 110.)

WISLOCKI, G. B. On the Placentation of Primates, with a Consideration of the Phylogenyof the Placenta. Pp. 51-80, 7 pls., 1 fig. (Contr. 111.)

CORNER, GEORGE W. A Well-Preserved Human Embryo of 10 Somites. Pp. 81-101, 7pls., 9 figs. (Contr. 112.)

CUMMINS, HAROLD. The Topographic History of the Volar Pads (Walking Pads;Tastballen) in the Human Embryo. Pp. 103-126, 8 pls., 2 figs. (Contr. 113.)

LANGWORTHY, ORTHELLO R. A Correlated Study of the Development of ReflexActivity in Fetal and Young Kittens and the Myelinization of Tracts in the NervousSystem. Pp. 127-171, 8 pls. (Contr. 114.)

LEWIS, WARREN H. The Effect of Various Solutions and Salts on the Pulsation Rate ofIsolated Hearts from Young Chick Embryos. Pp. 173-192. (Contr. 115.)

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LEWIS, WARREN H. Macrophages and Other Cells of the Deep Fascia of the Thigh ofthe Rat. Pp. 193-212, 7 pls. (Contr. 116.)

SCHULTZ, ADOLPH H. The Technique of Measuring the Outer Body of Human Fetusesand of Primates in General. Pp. 213-257, 12 figs. (Contr. 117.)

395 DAVENPORT, C. B., and MORRIS STEGGERDA, in collaboration with F. G. BENEDICT,LAWRENCE H. SNYDER, ARNOLD GESELL, and INEZ DUNKELBERGER STEGGERDA.Race Crossing. in Jamaica. (Paper No . 36 of Department of Genetics.) 1929. Octavo, ix + 516pp., 29 pls., 168 figs.

396 ST. JOHN, CHARLES E., CHARLOTTE E. MOORE, LOUISE M. WARE, EDWARD F.ADAMS, and HAROLD D. BABCOCK. Revision of Rowland’s Preliminary Table of SolarSpectrum Wave-Lengths, with an Extension to the Present Limit of the Infra-Red. (Papers of theMount Wilson Observatory, Vol. III.) 1929. Quarto, [2] + xxi + 238 pp.

397 MACDOUGAL, D. T., J. B. OVERTON, and GILBERT M. SMITH. The Hydrostatic-PneumaticSystem of Certain Trees: Movements of Liquids and Gases. 1929. Octavo, 99 pp., 22 figs.

398 CLEMENTS, FREDERIC E., JOHN E. WEAVER, and HERBERT C. HANSON. Plant Competi-tion: An Analysis of Community Functions. 1929. Octavo, xvi + 340 pp., 32 pls., 30 figs.

399 STURTEVANT, A. H., C. B. BRIDGES, T. H. MORGAN, L. V. MORGAN, and JU CHI LI.Contributions to the Genetics of Drosophila simulans and Drosophila melanogaster. 1929.Octavo, v + 296 pp., 18 figs., 7 diagrams.

I. STURTEVANT, A. H. The Genetics of Drosophila simulans. pp. 1-62, 1 fig.II. BRIDGES, CALVIN B. Variations in Crossing Over in Relation to Age of Female in

Drosophila molanogaster. pp. 63-89, 5 figs.III. LI, JU CHI, and CALVIN B. BRIDGES. Deficient Regions of Notches in Droso-

phila melanogaster. pp. 91-99.IV. MORGAN, T. H. Exceptional Sex-Ratios in Certain Mutant Stocks with Attached

X’s. pp. 101-138, 4 diagrams.V. MORGAN, T. H. Variability of Eyeless. pp. 139-168.VI. MORGAN, T. H. Data Relating to Six Mutants of Drosophila. pp. 169-199, 3 figs.VII. MORGAN, T. H. Experiments with Drosophila. pp. 201-222, 4 figs., 3 diagrams.VIII. MORGAN, L. V. Composites of Drosophila melanogaster. pp. 223-296, 5 figs.

400 FOLSE, J. A. A New Method of Estimating Stream-Flow Based upon a New Evaporation Formula.1929. Quarto, xi + 237 pp., 22 pls., 2 figs.

401 PAULLIN, CHARLES O. Edited by JOHN K. WRIGHT. Atlas of the Historical Geography of theUnited States.1932. Folio, xvii + 162 pp., 166 pls. (maps).

402 SEARES, F. H., J. C. KAPTEYN, and P. J. VAN RHIJN, assisted by MARY C. JOYNER andMYRTLE L. RICHMOND. Mount Wilson Catalogue of Photographic Magnitudes in SelectedAreas 1-139. (Papers of the Mount Wilson Observatory, Vol IV.) 1930. Quarto, 1 + 276 pp., 2 figs.

403 Contributions to American Archaeology. Vol. 1, Nos. 1-4. 1931. Quarto, iv + 157 pp., 49 pls., 35figs.

RICKETSON, OLIVER. JR. Excavations at Baking Pot, British Honduras. Pp. 1-27, 25pls., 3 figs. (Contr. 1, issued Sept. 1929.)

TEEPLE, JOHN E. Maya Astronomy. Pp.29-115, 19 figs. (Contr. 2, issued Aug. 1930.)RUPPERT, KARL. Temple of the Wall Panels, Chichen Itzá. Pp. 117-140, 18 pls., 2 figs.

(Contr. 3.)STRÓMSVIK, GUSTAV. Notes on the Metates of Chichen Itzá, Yucatan. Pp. 141-157, 6

pls., 11 figs. (Contr. 4.)

404 Contributions to Palaeontology from Carnegie Institution of Washington. 1930. Octavo, iii + 112pp., 8 pls., 31 figs.

I. BUWALDA, JOHN P. A Neocene Erosion Surface in Central Oregon. Pp. 1-10, 1 pl., 1

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fig. [Issued 1929.]II. BUWALDA, JOHN P., and BERNARD N. MOORE. The Dalles and Hood River

Formations, and the Columbia River Gorge. Pp. 11-26, 1 fig. [Issued 1929.]III. STOCK, CHESTER. Oreodonts from the Sespe Deposits of South Mountain, Ventura

County, California. pp. 27-42, 2 pls., 2 figs.IV. STOCK, CHESTER. Carnivora New to the Mascall Miocene Fauna of Eastern Oregon.

pp. 43-48, 1 pl., 2 figs.V. FURLONG, EUSTACE L. Capromeryx minor Taylor from the McKittrick Pleistocene,

California. pp. 49-53, 2 figs.VI. GAZIN, C. LEWIS. A Tertiary Vertebrate Fauna from the Upper Cuyama Drainage

Basin, California. pp. 55-76, 4 pls., 5 figs.VII. MAXSON, JOHN H. A Tertiary Mammalian Fauna from the mint Canyon Formation

of Southern California. pp. 77-112, 18 figs.

405 WHITE, DAVID. Flora of the Hermit Shale, Grand Canyon, Arizona. 1929. Octavo, v + 221 pp.,55 pls., 1 fig.

406 MORRIS, EARL H., JEAN CHARLOT, and ANN AXTELL MORRIS. The Temple of the Warriorsat Chichen Itzá, Yucatan. 1931. Quarto.

Vol. I. ix + 485 pp., frontispiece with key, 323 figs.Vol. II. Plates. ix pp., 170 pls.

407 Contributions to Embryology. Vol. XXI, Nos. 118-125. 1930. Quarto, iii + 168 pp., 29 pls., 23 figs.

ATWELL, WAYNE J. A Human Embryo with Seventeen Pairs of Somites. pp. 1-24, 4 pls.,5 figs. (Contr. 118.)

WEST,CECIL M. Description of a Human Embryo of Eight Somites. pp. 25-35, 3 pls., 6figs. (Contr. 119.)

LANGWORTHY, ORTHELLO R. Medullated Tracts in the Brain Stem of a Seventh-Month Human Fetus. pp. 37-52, 4 pls., 3 figs.(Contr. 120)

BAST, T. H. Ossification of the Otic Capsule in Human Fetuses. pp. 53-82, 6 pls., 6 figs.(Contr. 121)

WISLOCKI, GEORGE B. On an Unusual Placental Form in the Hyracoidea: Its Bearing onthe Theory of the Phylogeny of the Placenta. pp. 83-95, 5 pls. (Contr. 122)

RIENHOFF, W. F., JR. Gross and Microscopic Structure of Thyroid Gland in Man. pp. 97-123, 3 pls. (Contr. 123)

DANCHAKOFF, VERA, and V. E. DANCHAKOFF. The Age Factor in Grafts. pp. 125-140, 2 pls. (Contr. 124)

GREGORY, P. W. The Early Embryology of the Rabbit. pp. 141-168, 2 pls., 3 figs. (Contr.125)

408 GORANSON, Roy W. Thermodynamic Relations in Multi-Component Systems. 1930. Octavo, xix +329 pp., 5 diagrams.

409 DONNAN, ELIZABETH. Documents Illustrative of the History of the Slave Trade to America.([Papers of the]Division of Historical Research.) Octavo

Vol. I. 1441-1700. 1930. x + 495 pp., 1 map.Vol. II. The Eighteenth Century. 1931. lxii + 731 pp., 1 pl.Vol. III. New England and the Middle Colonies. 1932. xiii +553 pp.Vol. IV. The Border Colonies and the Southern Colonies. 1935. xv + 719 pp.

410 CRAMPTON, HENRY EDWARD. Studies on the Variation, Distribution, and Evolution of theGenus Partula: The Species Inhabiting Moorea. 1932. Quarto, vi + 335 pp., 24 pls., 10 figs.

411 MCMURRICH, J. PLAYFAIR. Leonardo da Vinci the Anatomist (1452-1519). 1930. Octavo, xx +265 pp., frontispiece, 89 figs.

412 Studies of the Pliocene Palaeobotany of California. (Contributions to Palaeontology from CarnegieInstitution of Washington.) 1933. Octavo, iii + 134 pp., 18 pls., 1 fig.

I. DORF, ERLING. Pliocene Floras of California. pp. 1-112, 13 pls., 1 fig. [Issued 1930.]

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II. WEBBER, IRMA E. Woods from the Ricardo Pliocene of Last Chance Gulch, Califor-nia. pp. 113-134, 5 pls. [Issued 1932.]

413 Papers from Tortugas Laboratory of Carnegie Institution of Washington. Vol. XXVII. 1931.Quarto, iii + 105 pp., 23 pls., 14 figs.

I. TENNENT, D. H., M. S. GARDINER, and D. E. SMITH. A Cytological and Bio-chemical Study of the Ovaries of the Sea-Urchin Echinometra lucunter. pp. 1-46, 7pls.

II. MILLER, RUTH A., and HELEN B. SMITH. Observations on the Formation of theEgg of Echinometra lucunter. pp. 47-52, 6 pls.

III. CARY, LEWIS R. Studies on the Coral Reefs of Tutuila, American Samoa, withSpecial Reference to the Alcyonaria. pp. 53-98, frontispiece, 7 pls., 14 figs.

IV. HENDEE, ESTHER C. Formed Components and Fertilization in Egg of the Sea-Urchin Lytechinus variegatus. pp. 99-105, 2 pls.

414 Contributions to Embryology. Vol. XXII, Nos. 126-133. 1930. Quarto, iii + 192 pp., 40 pls., 49figs., 2 charts.

STREETER, GEORGE L. Focal Deficiencies in Fetal Tissues and Their Relation toIntra-uterine Amputation. pp. 1-44, 12 pls., 11 figs., 2 charts. (Contr. 126.)

ALLEN, EDGAR, J. P. PRATT, Q. U. NEWELL, and L. J. BLAND. Human Tubal Ova;Related Early Corpora Lutea and Uterine Tubes. pp. 45-75, 8 pls., 10 figs. (Contr.127.)

ROPES, MARIAN W. Phagocytic Activity and Morphological Variations of the CiliatedEpithelial Cells of the Trachea and Bronchi in Rabbits. pp. 77-90, 1 pl. (Contr.128.)

HUNTER, RICHARD H. Observations on the Development of the Human Female GenitalTract. pp. 91-107, 5 pls., 5 figs. (Contr. 129.)

WEN, I. CHUAN. Ontogeny and Phylogeny of the Nasal Cartilages in Primates. pp.109-134, 1 pl., 12 figs. (Contr. 130.)

HEUSER, CHESTER H. A Human Embryo with 14 Pairs of Somites. pp. 135-153, 4pls., 8 figs. (Contr. 131.)

GRODZINSKI, Z. Area Vitellina of Chick Blastoderm in Tissue Cultures. pp. 155-171, 4pls., 3 figs. (Contr. 132.)

WISLOCKI, GEORGE B. On a Series of Placental Stages of a Platyrrhine Monkey(Ateles geoffroyi) with Some Remarks upon Age, Sex and Breeding Period inPlatyrrhines. pp. 173-192, 5 pls. (Contr. 133.)

415 Studies of the Pleistocene Palaeobotany of California. (Contributions to Palaeontology.) 1934.Octavo, ill + 179 pp., 31 pls., 4 figs.

I. CHANEY, RALPH W., and HERBERT L. MASON. A Pleistocene Flora from SantaCruz Island, California. pp. 1-24, 7 pls., 1 fig. (Issued 1930.)

II. POTBURY, SUSAN S. A Pleistocene Flora from San Bruno, San Mateo County,California. pp. 25-44, 4 pls., 2 figs. (Issued Nov. 1932.)

III. CHANEY, RALPH W., and HERBERT L. MASON. A Pleistocene Flora from theAsphalt Deposits at Carpinteria, California. pp. 45-79, 9 pls. (Issued Mar. 1933.)

IV. MASON, HERBERT L. Pleistocene Flora of the Tomales Formation. pp. 81-179, 11pls., 1 fig. (Issued Oct. 25, 1934.)

416 Fossil Floras of Yellowstone National Park and Southeastern Oregon (Contributions toPalaeontology.) 1933. Octavo, iii + 68 pp., 22 pls.

I. READ, CHARLES B. Fossil Floras of Yellowstone National Park. Part 1. ConiferousWoods of Lamar River Flora. pp. 1-19, 6 pls. [Issued 1931.]

II. MACGINITIE, HARRY D. The Trout Creek Flora of Southeastern Oregon. pp. 21-68,16 pls. (Issued Oct. 26, 1933.)

417 AITKEN, ROBERT GRANT, in succession to the late ERIC DOOLITTLE. New General Cata-logue of Double Stars within 120° of the North Pole. 1932. Quarto.

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Vol. I. pp. lxxix + 1-707, 1 fig.Vol. II. pp. iii + 708-1488.List of Corrections. 1934. 7 pp.

418 Papers Concerning the Palaeontology of California, Oregon and the Northern Great Basin Prov-ince. (Contributions to Palaeontology from Carnegie Institution of Washington.) 1932. Octavo, iii +113 pp., 14 pls., 22 figs.

I. WOODRING, W. P. Distribution and Age of the Marine Tertiary Deposits of the Colo-rado Desert. pp.1-25, l fig. [Issued 1931.]

II. FURLONG, EUSTACE L. Distribution and Description of Skull Remains of thePliocene Antelope Sphenophalos from the Northern Great Basin Province. pp. 27-36, 5 pls., 1 fig. [Issued 1931.]

III. GAZIN, C. LEWIS. A Miocene Mammalian Fauna from Southeastern Oregon. pp. 37-86, 6 pls., 20 figs.

IV. STOCK, CHESTER. Additions to the Mammalian Fauna from the Tecuya Beds,California. pp. 87-92, 1 pl.

V. FURLONG, EUSTACE L. A New Genus of Otter from the Pliocene of the NorthernGreat Basin Province. pp. 93-103, 2 pls.

VI. PACKARD, E. L. A Contribution to the Paleozoic Geology of Central Oregon. pp.105-113.

419 BOSS, BENJAMIN, under the direction of; ARTHUR J. ROY and WILLIAM B. VARNUM.Albany Catalogue of 20811 Stars for the Epoch 1910. Prepared at the Dudley Observatory, Albany,New York. 1931. Quarto, liii + 430 pp.

420 GOLDSMITH, G. W., and A. L. HAFENRICHTER. Anthokinetics: The Physiology and Ecology ofFloral Movements. 1932. Octavo, vi + 198 pp., 29 pls., 34 figs.

421 STURTEVANT, A. H., and T. DOBZHANSKY. Contributions to the Genetics of Certain Chromo-some Anomalies in Drosophila melanogaster. 1931. Octavo, v + 81 pp., 1 pl., 4 diagrams, 4 figs.

I. STURTEVANT, A. H. Known and Probable Inverted Sections of the Autosomes ofDrosophila melanogaster. pp. 1-27, 3 figs.

II. DOBZHANSKY, T., and A. H. STURTEVANT. Translocations between the Second andThird Chromosomes of Drosophila and Their Bearing on Oenothera Problems. pp.29-59, 1 pl., 4 diagrams.

III. STURTEVANT, A. H. Two New Attached-X Lines of Drosophila melanogaster, andFurther Data on the Behavior of Heterozygous Attached-X’s. pp. 61-81, 1 fig.

422 MERRIAM, JOHN C., and CHESTER STOCK. The Felidae of Rancho La Brea. 1932. Quarto, xvi+ 231 pp., frontispiece, 42 pls., 154 figs.

423 VAN DEMAN, ESTHER BOISE. The Building of the Roman Aqueducts. 1934. Quarto, xi + 440pp., frontispiece, 59 pls., 49 figs., 8 tailpieces.

424 THOMPSON, J. ERIC, HARRY E. D. POLLOCK, and JEAN CHARLOT. A Preliminary Study ofthe Ruins of Cobd, Quintana Roo, Mexico. 1932. Quarto, vii + 213 pp., map, 18 pls., 70 figs.

425 BENEDICT, FRANCIS G. The Physiology of Large Reptiles, with Special Reference to the HeatProduction of Snakes, Tortoises, Lizards and Alligators. 1932. Octavo, x + 539 pp., 106 figs.

426 BINGHAM, HAROLD C. Gorillas in a Native Habitat. Report of the Joint Expedition of 1929-30of Yale University and Carnegie Institution of Washington for Psychobiological Study of MountainGorillas (Gorilla beringei) in Parc National Albert, Belgian Congo, Africa. 1932. Octavo, iv + 66pp., 22 pls., 5 figs.

427 CASTLE, W. E., and PAUL B. SAWIN. Contributions to the Genetics of the Domestic Rabbit.1932. Octavo, iii + 50 pp., 12 pls.

I. CASTLE, W. E. English and Dutch Spotting and the Genetics of the Hotot Rabbit. pp.1-13, 6 pls.

II. SAWIN, PAUL B. Albino Allelomorphs of the Rabbit with Special Reference to Blue-

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Eyed Chinchilla and Its Variations. pp. 15-50, 6 pls.

428 DAVENPORT, CHARLES B. The Genetical Factor in Endemic Goiter. (Paper No. 37 of Depart-ment of Genetics.) 1932. Octavo, iv + 56 pp., 9 charts, 6 figs.

429 HOWARD, HILDEGARDE. Eagles and Eagle-Like Vultures of the Pleistocene of Rancho LaBrea. (Contributions to Palaeontology from Carnegie Institution of Washington.) 1932. Octavo, iii+ 82 pp., 29 pls., 3 figs.

430 GRAY, LEWIS CECIL, assisted by ESTHER KATHERINE THOMPSON. History of Agriculturein the Southern United States to 1860. With an introductory note by HENRY CHARLES TAY-LOR. (Contributions to American Economic History from the Board of Research Associates inAmerican Economic History.) 1933. Octavo.

Vol. I. pp. xxi + 1-567, fig. 1.Vol. II. pp. ix + 569-1086, figs. 2-12.

431 SHATTUCK, GEORGE CHEEVER, in collaboration with the following authors: JOSEPH C.BEQUAERT, FRANCIS G. BENEDICT, WILLIAM J. CLENCH, FRANK H. CONNELL,KENNETH GOODNER, MARGARET M. HILFERTY, HELEN C. MAHER, KATHERYNMACKAY, JOHN L. PAGE, ROBERT REDFIELD, OLIVER RICKETSON, JR., JACK H.SANDGROUND, and GEORGE M. SAUNDERS. The Peninsula of Yucatan: Medical, Biological,Meteorological and Sociological Studies. 1933. Quarto, xvii + 576 pp., frontispiece, 68 pls., 30figs.

432 JOCHELSON, WALDEMAR. History, Ethnology and Anthropology of the Aleut. 1933. Quarto,vii + 91 pp., 29 figs.

433 Contributions to Embryology. Vol. XXIII, Nos. 134-138. 1932. Quarto, iii + 267 pp., 27 pls., 58figs.

HARTMAN, CARL G. Studies in the Reproduction of the Monkey Macacus (Pithecus)rhesus, with Special Reference to Menstruation and Pregnancy. pp. 1-161, 6 pls.,39 figs. (Contr. 134.)

WISLOCKI, GEORGE B. On the Female Reproductive Tract of the Gorilla, with aComparison of That of Other Primates. pp. 163204, 12 pls., 4 figs. (Contr. 135.)

LIMSON, MARCIANO. Observations on the Bones of the Skull in White and NegroFetuses and Infants. pp. 205-222, 13 figs. (Contr. 136.)

SQUIER, RAYMOND R. The Living Egg and Early Stages of Its Development in theGuinea-Pig. pp. 223-250, 2 pls., 2 figs. (Contr. 137.)

HEUSER, CHESTER H. A Presomite Human Embryo with a Definite Chorda Canal. pp.251-267, 7 pls. (Contr. 138.)

434 STEGGERDA, MORRIS. Anthropometry of Adult Maya Indians: A Study of Their Physical andPhysiological Characteristics. (Paper No. 38 of Department of Genetics.) 1932. Octavo, iv + 113pp., 11 pls.

435 Papers from Tortugas Laboratory of Carnegie Institution of Washington. Vol. XXVIII. 1934.Octavo, iii + 361pp., 51 pls., 36 figs., 1 diagram.

I. BREDER, C. M., JR. On the Habits and Development of Certain AtlanticSynentognathi. pp. 1-35, 12 pls., 10 figs. (Issued Dec. 1932.)

II. DE LAUBENFELS, M. W. Physiology and Morphology of Porifera, Exemplified byIotrochota birotulata Higgin. pp. 37-66, 2 pls., 6 figs. (Issued Dec. 1932.)

III. GEE, HALDANE. Lime Deposition and the Bacteria. I. Estimate of BacterialActivity at the Florida Keys. pp. 67-82. (Issued Dec. 1932.)

IV. GEE, HALDANE, and CATHARINE B. FELTHAM. Lime Deposition and theBacteria. II. Characteristics of Aerobic Bacteria from the Florida Keys. pp. 83-91.(Issued Dec. 1932.)

V. PEARSE, A. S. Freezing Points of Bloods of Certain Littoral and Estuarine Animals.pp. 93-102. (Issued Dec. 1932.)

VI. PEARSE, A. S. Observations on the Parasites and Commensals Found Associated

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with Crustaceans and Fishes at Dry Tortugas, Florida. pp. 103-115. (Issued Dec.1932.)

VII. PEARSE, A. S. Inhabitants of Certain Sponges at Dry Tortugas. pp. 117-124, 2 pls., 1fig. (Issued Dec. 1932.)

VIII. PEARSE, A. S. Animals in Brackish Water Ponds and Pools at Dry Tortugas. pp.125-142, 3 pls., 3 figs. (Issued Dec. 1932.)

IX. GRAVE, CASWELL. The Botryllus Type of Ascidian Larva. pp.143-156, 4 pls. (IssuedDec. 1932.)

X. STONE, RAYMOND G. Radium Radiation Effects on Regeneration in Euratellachamberlin. pp. 157-166, 3 pls., 1 diagram. (Issued Jan. 1933.)

XI. MANTER, H. W. The Genus Helicometra and Related Trernatodes from Tortugas,Florida. pp. 167-180, 3 pls. (Issued Mar. 1933.)

XII. HAYES, FREDERICK RONALD. Variation in Size and in Nitrogen Requirementsduring Early Development of the Sea-Urchin, Echinometra lucunter. pp. 181-193, 6figs. (Issued Mar. 1933.)

XIII. CARY, L. R. Growth of Some Tissues of Ptychodera bahamensis in Vitro. pp.195-213, 4 pls., 1 fig. (Issued Mar. 1933.)

XIV. KUNKEL, B. W. The Selective Action of Certain Adverse Environmental Conditionson the Hermit Crab (Clibanarius tricolor Gibbes). pp. 215-244. (Issued Aug. 1933.)

XV. SHOEMAKER, CLARENCE R. Two New Genera and Six New Species ofAmphipoda from Tortugas. pp. 245-256, 8 figs. (Issued Nov. 1933.)

XVI. MANTER, H. W. Some Digenetic Trematodes from Deep-Water Fish of Tortugas,Florida. pp. 257-345, 15 pls. (Issued Jan. 16, 1934.)

XVII. DARBY, HUGH H. The Mechanism of Asymmetry in the Alpheidae. pp. 347-361, 3pls., 1 fig. (Issued Feb. 1934.)

436 Contributions to American Archaeology. Vol-11, Nos. 5-12. 1934. Quarto, iii + 355 pp., 37 pls., 1map, 89 figs.

SMITH, A. LEDYARD. Two Recent Ceramic Finds at Uaxactun. With notes bySYLVANUS G. MORLEY. pp. 1-25, 5 pls., 9 figs. (Contr. 5, issued 1932.)

ROYS, LAWRENCE. The Engineering Knowledge of the Maya. pp. 27-105, 1 map, 32figs. (Contr. 6, issued 1934.)WAUCHOPE, ROBERT. House Mounds of Uaxactun,Guatemala. With notes on the pottery by EDITH B. RICKETSON. pp. 107-171, 9pls., 33 figs. (Contr. 7, issued Mar. 1934.)

LUNDELL, CYRUS LONGWORTH. Ruins of Polol and Other Archaeological Discover-ies in the Department of Peten, Guatemala. pp. 173-186, 9 pls., 4 figs. (Contr. 8,issued Mar. 1934.)

VILLA R., ALFONSO. The Yaxuna-Cobá Causeway. pp. 187-208, 9 pls. (Contr. 9, issuedApr. 1934.)

THOMPSON, J. ERIC. Sky Bearers, Colors and Directions in Maya and Mexican Reli-gion. pp. 209-242, 5 pls. (Contr. 10, issued Aug. 30, 1934.)

THOMPSON, J. ERIC. Maya Chronology: The Fifteen Tun Glyph. pp. 243-254, 3 figs.(Contr. 11, issued Aug. 30, 1934.)

LUNDELL, CYRUS LONGWORTH. Preliminary Sketch of the Phytogeography of theYucatan Peninsula. With appendix, The Grasses of the Yucatan Peninsula, by JASONR. SWALLEN. pp. 255-355, 8 figs. (Contr. 12, issued Oct. 1934.)

437 MORLEY, SYLVANUS GRISWOLD. The Inscriptions of Peten. Quarto.

Vol. I. 1938. xxviii + 466 pp., frontispiece, tailpiece, figs. 1-24.Vol. II. 1938. xi + 608 pp., frontispiece, tailpiece, figs. 25-88.Vol. III. 1938. ix + 494 pp., frontispiece, tailpiece, figs. 89-137.Vol. IV. [With appendixes by HAKON WADDELL, JOHN L. PAGE, and J. O.

KILMARTIN.] 1938. xii + 497 pp., frontispiece, tailpiece, figs. 138-161.Vol. V. Plates. 1937.

Part 1. xxv pp., pls. 1-178H.Part 2. x pp., pls. 179-219 (maps).

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438 ROYS, RALPH L. The Book of Chilam Balam of Chumayel. 1933. Quarto, viii + 229 pp., 2 pls.,48 figs.

439 CHANEY, RALPH W., and ETHEL I. SANBORN. The Goshen Flora of West Central Oregon.(Contributions to Paleontology.) 1933. Quarto, iii + 103 pp., 40 pls.

440 Papers Concerning the Palaeontology of California, Arizona, and Idaho. (Contributions toPalaeontology.) 1934. Octavo, iii + 135 pp., 28 pls., 15 figs.

I. MERRIAM, JOHN C., and CHESTER STOCK. Tertiary Mammals from the Aurifer-ous Gravels near Columbia, California. pp. 1-6, 2 figs. (Issued Nov. 1933.)

II. LOUDERBACK, GEORGE D. Notes on the Geologic Section near Columbia,California, with Special Reference to the Occurrence of Fossils in the AuriferousGravels. pp. 7-13. (Issued Nov. 1933.)

III. STOCK, CHESTER. Perissodactyla from the Sespe of the Las Posas Hills, Califor-nia. pp. 15-27, 4 pls. (Issued Nov. 1933.)

IV. STOCK, CHESTER. Carnivora from the Sespe of the Las Posas Hills, California.pp. 29-41, 3 pls. (Issued Nov. 1933.)

V. BODE, FRANCIS D. Anchitheriine Horses from the Merychippus Zone of the NorthCoalinga District, California. pp. 4358, 5 pls. (Issued Nov. 1933.)

VI. WILSON, ROBERT W. The Pleistocene Mammalian Fauna from the CarpinteriaAsphalt. pp. 59-76. (Issued Nov. 1933.)

VII. MCKEE, EDWIN D. The Coconino Sandstone-Its History and Origin. pp. 77-115,14 pls., 5 figs. (Issued Nov. 1933.)

VIII. WILSON, ROBERT W. A Rodent Fauna from Later Cenozoic Beds of Southwest-ern Idaho. pp. 117-135, 2 pls., 8 figs. (Issued Dec. 1933.)

441 MACDOUGAL, D. T., and EARL B. WORKING. The Pneumatic System of Plants, EspeciallyTrees. 1933. Octavo, 87 pp., 5 figs.

442 HEIDEL, WILLIAM ARTHUR. The Heroic Age of Science: The Conception, Ideals, and Methodsof Science among the Ancient Greeks. 1933. Octavo, vii + 203 pp.

443 Contributions to Embryology. Vol. XXIV, Nos. 139-143. 1933. Quarto, iii + 201 pp., 31 pls., 26figs.

LANGWORTHY, ORTHELLO R. Development of Behavior Patterns and Myelinizationof the Nervous System in the Human Fetus and Infant. pp. 1-57, 4 pls. (Contr. 139.)

KOFF, ARTHUR K. Development of the Vagina in the Human Fetus. pp. 59-90, 5 pls.(Contr. 140.)

WELLER, G. LOUIS, JR. Development of the Thyroid, Parathyroid and Thymus Glandsin Man. pp. 93-139, 4 pls., 20 figs. (Contr. 141.)

BARTELMEZ, G. W. Histological Studies on the Menstruating Mucous Membrane of theHuman Uterus. pp. 141-186, 16 pls. (Contr. 142.)

LEWIS, WARREN H., and CARL G. HARTMAN. Early Cleavage Stages of the Egg ofthe Monkey (Macacus rhesus). pp. 187-201, 2 pls., 6 figs. (Contr. 143.)

444 LOTHROP, SAMUEL KIRKLAND. Atitlan: An Archaeological Study of Ancient Remains on theBorders of Lake Atitlan, Guatemala. 1933. Quarto, viii + 122 pp., 75 figs.

445 VICKERY, HUBERT BRADFORD, GEORGE W. PUCHER, ALFRED J. WAKEMAN, andCHARLES S. LEAVENWORTH, with technical assistance of LAURENCE S. NOLAN. ChemicalInvestigations of the Tobacco Plant.1933. Octavo, v + 77 pp., 12 figs.

446 BENEDICT, FRANCIS G., and CORNELIA GOLAY BENEDICT. Mental Effort in Relation toGaseous Exchange, Heart Rate, and Mechanics of Respiration. 1933. Octavo, 83 pp., 2 pls., 3figs. Cloth, $1.50

447 Marine Mammals. (Contributions to Palaeontology.) 1934. Octavo, iii + 136 pp., 8 pls., 41 figs.

I. PACKARD, EARL L., and REMINGTON KELLOGG. A New Cetothere from theMiocene Astoria Formation of Newport, Oregon. pp. 1-62, 3 pls., 24 figs.

II. KELLOGG, REMINGTON. The Patagonian Fossil Whalebone Whale, Cetotherium

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moreni (Lydekker). pp. 63-81, 4 pls., 2 figs.III. KELLOGG, REMINGTON. A New Cetothere from the Modelo Formation at Los

Angeles, California. pp. 83-104, 1 pl., 3 figs.IV. HUBER, ERNST. Anatomical Notes on Pinnipedia and Cetacea. pp. 105-136, 12 figs.

448 REDFIELD, ROBERT, and ALFONSO VILLA R. Chan Kom— Maya Village. 1934. Quarto, viii +387 pp., 16 pls., 15 figs.

449 WIELAND, G. R. The Cerro Cuadrado Petrified Forest. 1935. Quarto, ix +180 pp., frontispiece,33 pls., 49 figs.

450 HAASIS, FERDINAND W. Diametral Changes in Tree Trunks. 1934. Octavo, iii + 103 pp., 4 pls.,31 figs.

451 SINNOTT, EDMUND W., HELEN HOUGHTALING, and ALBERT F. BLAKESLEE. The Com-parative Anatomy of Extra-Chromosomal Types in Datura stramonium. (Paper No. 39, Departmentof Genetics.) 1934. Octavo, iii + 50 pp., 19 pls., 28 figs.

452 Papers from Tortugas Laboratory of Carnegie Institution of Washington.Vol. XXIX. 1936. Octavo,iii + 386 pp., 26 pls., 49 figs., 11 graphs.

I. STONE,- RAYMOND G. Regeneration in the Cirratulid Cirrineris. pp. 1-12, 3 pls.(Issued Nov. 30, 1935.)

II. DOYLE, WM. L. Cytology of Valonia. pp. 13-21, 1 pl., 7 figs. (Issued Nov. 30, 1935.)III. BREDER, C. M., JR., and J. E. HARRIS. Effect of Light on Orientation and Stability

of Young Plectognath Fish. pp. 23-36, 3 figs. (Issued Nov. 30, 1935.)IV. THORP, ELDON MARION. Calcareous Shallow-Water Marine Deposits of Florida

and the Bahamas. With appendices: 1, Diatoms in Bottom Deposits from the Baha-mas and the Florida Keys, by ALBERT MANN; 2, Current Measurements along theFlorida Coral Reef Tract, by THOMAS WAYLAND VAUGHAN, [with] Notes onCurrent Observations, Florida Keys, June, October, November, 1914, by FRANK J.HAIGHT. pp. 37-143, 5 pls., 14 figs. (Issued Dec. 9, 1935.)

V. DARBY, HUGH H. Intersexuality in the Criistacea. pp. 145149, 1 pl. (Issued Dec. 9,1935.)

VI. DARBY, HUGH H. The Mechanism of Chela Differentiation in the Crustacea. pp.151-170. (Issued Dec. 9, 1935.)

VII. RICHARDS, OSCAR W. Analysis of the Constant Differential Growth Ratio. pp.171-183, 5 figs. (Issued Dec. 9, 1935.)

VIII. YONGE, C. M. Studies on the Biology of Tortugas Corals. 1.Observations onMaeandra areolata Linn. pp. 185-198, 3 pls.,1 fig. (Issued Dec. 9, 1935.)

IX. YONGE, C. M. Studies on the Biology of Tortugas Corals. II.Variation in the GenusSiderastrea. pp. 199-208, 1 pl. (Issued Dec. 9, 1935.)

X. GRAVE, CASWELL. Metamorphosis of Ascidian Larvae. pp. 209-291, 2 pls., 1 fig., 10graphs. (Issued Dec. 9, 1935.)

XI. POWERS, PHILIP B. A. Studies on the Ciliates of Sea-Urchins: A General Survey ofthe Infestations Occurring in Tortugas Echinoids. pp. 293-326, 2 pls., 14 figs. (IssuedDec. 9, 1935.)

XII. WILSON, CHARLES BRANCH. Parasitic Copepods from the Dry Tortugas. pp.327-347, 6 pls. (Issued Dec. 9, 1935.)

XIII. LEITCH, JAMES L. The Water Exchanges of Living Cells. III. The Application of aPhotographic Method to the Determination of the Non-solvent Volume of the Eggs ofEchinometra lucunter. pp. 349-358, 1 pl., 1 graph. (Issued Mar. 10, 1936.)

XIV. KOPAC, M. J. Electrical Resistance of Valonia. I. Changes in Resistance with Time inImpaled Coenocytes. pp. 359-386, 1 pl., 4 figs. (Issued Mar. 10, 1936.)

453 Papers Concerning the Palaeontology of California, Nevada and Oregon. (Contributions toPalaeontology from Carnegie Institution of Washington.) 1935. Octavo, iii + 125 pp., 25 pls., 29figs.

I. FURLONG, EUSTACE L. New Merycodonts from the Upper Miocene of Nevada. pp.1-10, 5 pls. (Issued May 25, 1934.)

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II. WILSON, ROBERT W. Two Rodents and a Lagomorph from the Sespe of the LasPosas Hills, California. pp. 11-17, 1 pl., 1 fig. (Issued 7 July 1934.)

III. WILSON, ROBERT W. A New Species of Dipoides from the Pliocene of EasternOregon. pp. 19-28, 1 pl., 1 fig. (Issued Dec. 20, 1934.)

IV. LAUDERMILK, J. D., and PHILIP A. MUNZ. Plants in the Dung of Nothrotheriumfrom Gypsum Cave, Nevada. pp. 29-37, 11 pls. (Issued Dec. 20, 1934.)

V. BODE, FRANCIS D. Tooth Characters of Protohippine Horses with Special Referenceto Species from the Merycliippus Zone, California. pp. 39-63, 2 pls., 6 figs. (IssuedDec. 20, 1934.)

VI. BODE, FRANCIS D. The Fauna of the Merychippus Zone, North Coalinga District,California. pp. 65-96, 2 pls., 10 figs. (Issued July 26, 1935.)

VII. SCHARF, DAVID W. A Miocene Mammalian Fauna from Sucker Creek, Southeast-ern Oregon. pp. 97-118, 2 pls., 11 figs. (Issued July 20, 1935.)

VIII. STOCK, CHESTER. Artiodactyla from the Sespe of the Las Posas Hills, California.pp.119-125, l pl. (Issued July 20, 1935.)

454 RUPPERT, KARL. The Caracol at Chichen Itza, Yucatan, Mexico. 1935. Quarto, xii + 294 pp.,frontispiece, 350 figs.

455 Middle Cenozoic Floras of Western North America. (Contributions to Palaeontology.) 1936.Octavo, iii + [1] + 152 pp., 26 pls., 5 figs.

I. OLIVER, ELIZABETH. A Miocene Flora from the Blue Mountains, Oregon. pp.[I] +1-27, 5 pls. (Issued Nov.22,1934.)

II. LAMOTTE, ROBERT SMITH. Climatic Implications of Sapindus oregonianus.pp.29-38, 3 pls., 2 figs. (Issued Jan. 30,1935.)

III. LAMOTTE, ROBERT SMITH. The Miocene Tilias of Western America. pp. 39-48,3 pls. (Issued July 10,1935.)

IV. LAMOTTE, ROBERT SMITH. An Upper Oligocene Florule from Vancouver Island.pp. 49-56, 1 pl. (Issued July 10, 1935.)

V. LAMOTTE, ROBERT SMITH. The Upper Cedarville Flora of Northwestern Nevadaand Adjacent California. pp. 57-142, 14 pls., 3 figs. (Issued Aug. 12, 1936.)

Supplement. LAMOTTE, ROBERT SMITH. Some Systematic Revisions in MiocenePalaeobotany, 1934-36. pp. 143-148. (Issued Oct. 24, 1936.)

456 Contributions to American Archaeology. Vol. III, Nos. 13-19. 1937. Quarto, iii + 231 pp., 24 pls.,38 figs.

REDFIELD, MARGARET PARK. The Folk Literature of a Yucatecan Town. pp. 1-50.(Contr. 13, issued June 1935.)

THOMPSON, J. ERIC. Maya Chronology: The Correlation Question. With appendices:I, The Astronomical Approach, by J. ERIC THOMPSON; II, Maya PlanetaryObservations, by LAWRENCE ROYS; III, Remarks on the Correlation Question, byR. C. E. LONG; IV, The Maya Year Bearers, by J. ERIC THOMPSON. pp. 51-104.(Contr. 14)

KIDDER, A. V. Notes on the Ruins of San Agustin Acasaguastlan, Guatemala. pp. 105-120, 3 pls., 8 figs. (Contr. 15)

STROMSVIK, GUSTAV. Notes on Metates from Calakmul, Campeche, and from theMercado, Chichen Itza, Yucatan. pp. 121-127, 2 pls., 4 figs. (Contr. 16)

POLLOCK, H. E. D. The Casa Redonda at Chichen Itza, Yucatan. pp. 129-154, 8 pls., 7figs. (Contr. 17)

BENEDICT, FRANCIS G., and MORRIS STEGGERDA. The Food of the Present-DayMaya Indians of Yucatan. pp. 155-188. (Contr. 18)

SMITH, ROBERT E. A Study of Structure A-I Complex at Uaxactun, Peten, Guatemala.pp. 189-231, 11 pls., 19 figs. (Contr. 19)

457 PEARSE, A. S., EDWIN P. CREASER, F. G. HALL, and ... collaborators. The Cenotes ofYucatan: A Zoological and Hydrographic Survey. 1936. Quarto, iii + 304 pp., 19 pls., 246 figs.

PEARSE, A. S. Introduction. Pp. 1-4.

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I. HALL, F. G. Physical and Chemical Survey of Cenotes of Yucatan. pp. 5-16, 4 figs.II. PEARSE, A. S. Results of Survey of the Cenotes in Yucatan. pp. 17-28, 2 pls., 7 figs.III. OLD, MARCUS C. Yucatan Fresh-Water Sponges. pp. 29-31, 2 figs.IV. MANTER, H. W. Some Trematodes of Cenote Fish from Yucatan. pp. 33-38, 2 figs.V. BROWN, CLAUDEOUS J. D. Polyzoa. Pp. 39, 1 fig.VI. MOORE, J. PERCY. Hirudinea from Yucatan. pp. 41-43.VII. PEARSE, A. S. Parasites from Yucatan. pp. 45-59, 21 figs.VIII. BEQUAERT, J., and W. J. CLENCH. A Second Contribution to the Molluscan Fauna

of Yucatan. pp. 61-75, 2 pls.IX. WILSON, C. B. Copepods from the Cenotes and Caves of the Yucatan Peninsula, with

Notes on Cladocerans. pp. 77-88, 20 figs.X. FURTOS, NORMA C. On the Ostracoda from the Cenotes of Yucatan and Vicinity. pp.

89-115, 127 figs.XI. CREASER, EDWIN P. Crustaceans from Yucatan. pp. 117-132, 43 figs.XII. MARSHALL, RUTH. Hydracarina from Yucatan. pp. 133-137, 17 figs.XIII. WILLIAMSON, E. B. Odonata from Yucatan. pp. 139-143.XIV. HUNGERFORD, H. B. Aquatic and Semiaquatic Hemiptera Collected in Yucatan and

Campeche. pp. 145-150, 1 fig.XV. PEARSE, A. S. Chironomid Larvae from Yucatan. p. 151.XVI. DARLINGTON, P. J., JR. Aquatic Coleoptera from Yucatan. pp. 153-155.XVII. HUBBS, CARL L. Fishes of the Yucatan Peninsula. pp. 157-287, 15 pls., 1 fig.VIII. GAIGE, HELEN T. Some Reptiles and Amphibians from Yucatan and Campeche,

Mexico. pp. 289-304.

458 PERRET, FRANK A. The Eruption of Mt. Pelée 1929-1932. [With water analysis by E.G. ZIESS.]1935. Second printing, 1937. Quarto, vi + 126 pp., frontispiece, 72 figs., I diagram, 1 chart.

459 Contributions to Embryology. Vol. XXV, Nos. 144-151. 1935. Quarto, iii + 181 pp., 24 pls., 6 figs.

HEUSER, CHESTER H., and GEORGE B. WISLOCKI. Early Development of the Sloth(Bradypus griseus) and Its Similarity to That of Man. pp. 1-13, 4 pls., I fig. (Contr.144.)

BAXTER, JAMES S. Development of the Female Genital Tract in the American Opossum.pp. 15-35, 3 pls., 2 figs. (Contr. 145.)

HERTIG, ARTHUR T. Angiogenesis in the Early Human Chorion and in the PrimaryPlacenta of the Macaque Monkey. pp. 37-81, 5 pls., 3 figs. (Contr. 146.)

BREMER , JOHN L. Postnatal Development of Alveoli in the Mammalian Lung inRelation to the Problem of the Alveolar Phagocyte. pp. 83-110, 4 pls. (Contr. 147.)

LEWIS, WARREN H., and ELSIE STARR WRIGHT. On the Early Development of theMouse Egg. pp. 113-143, 6 pls. (Contr.148.)

MENCKE, JOHN F. Photodynamic Action on Normal and Malignant Cells in Vitro. pp.145-160. (Contr. 149.)

LEWIS, WARREN H. Rat Malignant Cells in Roller Tube Cultures and Some Results. pp.161-172, 1 pl. (Contr. 150.)

SCHOPPER, WERNER. The Walker Rat Carcinoma No. 72 in Tissue Culture. pp. 173-181, 1 pl. (Contr. 151.)

460 SYKES, GODFREY. The Colorado Delta. 1937. Octavo, vii + 193 pp., 74 figs., map

461 Botany of the Maya Area: Miscellaneous Papers I-Xiii. 1936. Octavo, iii + 328 pp., 56 pls., 19 figs.(Continued in Publication 5221)

I. BARTLETT, HARLEY HARRIS. A Method of Procedure for Field Work in TropicalAmerican Phytogeography Based upon a Botanical Reconnaissance in Parts of BritishHonduras and the Peten Forest of Guatemala. pp. 1-25, 14 pls.

II. BARTLETT, HARLEY HARRIS. Various Palmae Corypheae of Central America andMexico. pp. 27-41, 12 pls.

III. BARTLETT, HARLEY HARRIS. Scheelea Lundellii, a New “Corozo” Palm from theDepartment of Peten, Guatemala. pp. 43-47, 5 pls.

IV. STANDLEY, PAUL C. New Plants from the Yucatan Peninsula. pp. 49-91.

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V. MAINS, E. B. Rusts and Smuts from the Yucatan Peninsula. pp. 93-106, 4 pls.VI. HEDRICK, JOYCE. Lichens from the Yucatan Peninsula. pp. 107-114, 4 pls.VII. TAYLOR, WM. RANDOLPH. Marine Algae from the Yucatan Peninsula. pp. 115-

124.VIII. MORTON, C. V. Enumeration of the Malpighiaceae of the Yucatan Peninsula. pp.

125-140.IX. SWALLEN, JASON R. The Grasses of British Honduras and the Peten, Guatemala.

pp-141-189, 4 pls.X. LEONARD, E. C. The Acanthaceae of the Yucatan Peninsula. pp. 191-238, 19 figs.XI. MORTON, C. V. Notes on Dioscorea, with Special Reference to the Species of the

Yucatan Peninsula. pp. 239-253.XII. KILLIP, E. P., and C. V. MORTON. A Revision of the Mexican and Central Ameri-

can Species of Smilax. pp. 255-297, 11 pls.XIII. KILLIP, E. P. Passifloraceae of the Mayan Region. pp. 299-328, 2 pls.

462 MACDOUGAL, D. T. Studies in Tree-Growth by the Dendrographic Method. 1936. Octavo, iii +256 pp., 9 pls., 56 figs.

463 HINDS, NORMAN E. A. Contributions to Pre-Cambrian Geology of Western North America.1936. Octavo, iii +136 pp., 29 pls., 12 figs.

I. Ep-Archean and Ep-Algonkian Intervals in Western North America. pp. 1-52, 11 pls., 7figs.

II. Uncompahgran and Beltian Deposits in Western North America. pp. 53-136, 18 pls., 5figs.

464 DICKSON, L. E. Researches on Waring’s Problem. 1935. Octavo, v + 257 pp.

465 Eocene Flora of Western America. (Contributions to Palaeontology.) 1937. Quarto, iii + 156 pp.,44 pls., 6 figs.

I. SANBORN, ETHEL I. The Comstock Flora of West Central Oregon. pp. 1-28, 10 pls.II. POTBURY, SUSAN S. The La Porte Flora of Plumas County, California. pp. 29-81,

19 pls., 1 fig.III. MACGINITIE, HARRY D. The Flora of the Weaverville Beds of Trinity County,

California; with Descriptions of the Plant-Bearing Beds. pp. 83-151, 15 pls., 5 figs.

466 ALLEN, E. T., and ARTHUR L. DAY. Hot Springs of the Yellowstone National Park. Withmicroscopic examinations by H. E. MERWIN. 1935. Quarto, xviii + 525 pp., frontispiece, 227figs., map.

467 DE LAUBENFELS, M. W. A Discussion of the Sponge Fauna of the Dry Tortugas in Particularand the West Indies in General, with Material for a Revision of the Families and Orders of thePorifera. (Papers from Tortugas Laboratory, Vol. XXX.) 1936. Quarto, iii + 225 pp., 22 pls., 1fig.

468 BOSS, BENJAMIN, With the collaboration Of SEBASTIAN ALBRECHT, HEROY JENKINS,HARRY RAYMOND, ARTHUR J. ROY, WILLIAM B. VARNUM, and RALPH E. WILSON.General Catalogue of 33342 Stars for the Epoch 1950. Prepared at the Dudley Observatory,Albany, New York. Quarto.

Vol. I. Introduction and Explanatory Tables. 1937. v + 339 pp.Vol. II. Catalogue. Right Ascension 0h–6h. 1936. vi + 313 pp.Vol. III. Catalogue. Right Ascension 6h–12h. 1937. vi + 360 pp.Vol. IV. Catalogue. Right Ascension 12h–18h. 1937. vi + 331 pp.Vol. V. Catalogue. Right Ascension 18h– 24h. 1937. vi + 357 pp.

469 ANTEVS, ERNST. Edited by J. K. WRIGHT. Rainfall and Tree Growth in the Great Basin. 1938.Octavo, vii + 97 pp., 2 pls., 7 figs

470 WILLIS, BAILEY. East African Plateaus and Rift Valleys. (Studies in Comparative Seismology.)1936. Quarto, x + 358 pp., frontispiece, 72 pls., 16 figs.

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471 POLLOCK, H. E. D. Round Structures of Aboriginal Middle America. 1936. Quart viii + 182 pp.,44 figs., 1map.

472 LOTHROP, SAMUEL KIRKLAND. Zacualpa: A Study of Ancient Quiché Artifacts. 1936. Quarto,vi + 103 pp., 7 pls., 107 figs.

473 Studies of Tertiary and Quaternary Mammals of North America. (Contributions to Palaeontology.)1936. Octavo, iii + 119 pp., 11 pls., 9 figs.

I. SCHULTZ, JOHN R. Plesippus francescana (Frick) from the Late Pliocene, CosoMountains, California; with a Review of the Genus Plesippus. pp. 1-13, 3 pls., 3 figs.

II. WILSON, ROBFRT W. A Pliocene Rodent Fauna from Smiths Valley, Nevada. pp. 15-34, 2 pls.

III. STOCK, CHFSTER. A Pliomastodon Skull from the Thousand Creek Beds, North-western Nevada. pp. 35-39, 1 pl.

IV. HALL, E. RAYMOND. Mustelid Mammals from the Pleistocene of North America;with Systematic Notes on Some Recent Members of the Genera Mustela, Vaxidea andMephitis. pp. 41-119, 5 pls., 6 figs.

474 BENEDICT, FRANCIS G. The Physiology of the Elephant. 1936. Octavo, vii + 302 pp., 8 pls., 13figs.

475 Papers from Tortugas Laboratory of Carnegie Institution of Washin,gton. Vol. XXXI. 1937.Octavo, iii + 214 pp., 6 pls., 40 figs., 5 graphs. Cloth, $3.25

I. MARSH, GORDON. Effect of Temperature upon the Inherent Potential of Valonia. pp.1-16, 3 figs.

II. SMITH, H. G. Contribution to the Anatomy and Physiology of Cassiopea frondosa. pp.17-52, 1 pl., 20 figs.

III. LEITCH, JAMES L. The Water Exchanges of Living Cells. IV. Further Studies on theWater Relations of the Eggs of the Sea Urchin, Echinometra lucunter. pp. 53-70, 5graphs.

IV. PAYNE, FERNANDUS. Early Development of Ptychodera bahamensis. pp. 71-76, 2pls.

V. HESS, WALTER N. Reactions to Light in Ptychodera bahamensis, Spengel. pp. 77-86.VI. STEWARD, F. C., and J. C. MARTIN. The Distribution and Physiology of Valonia at

the Dry Tortugas, with Special Reference to the Problem of Salt Accumulation inPlants. pp. 87-170, 2 pls., 4 figs.

VII. HARRIS, JOHN E. The Mechanical Significance of the Position and Movements ofthe Paired Fins in the Teleostei. pp. 171-189, 8 figs.

VIII. DARBY, HUGH H., E. R. FENIMORE JOHNSON, and GEORGE W. BARNES.Studies on the Absorption and Scattering of Solar Radiation by the Sea: Spectro-graphic and Photoelectric Measurements. pp. 191-205, 1 pl., 5 figs.

IX. YONGE, C. M. Studies on the Biology of Tortugas Corals. III. The Effect of Mucus onOxygen Consumption. pp. 207-214.

476 Miocene and Pliocene Floras o f Western North America. (Contributions to Palaeontology.) 1938.Octavo, iii + 270 pp., 30 pls., 15 figs.

I. CHANEY, RALPH W., and MAXIM K. ELIAS. Late Tertiary Floras from the HighPlains. With a chapter on the Lower Pliocene Vertebrate fossils from the OgallalaFormation (Lavern Zone) of Beaver County, Oklahoma, by CURTIS J. HESSE,. pp.1-72, 7 pls., 11 figs.

II. DORF, ERLING. A Late Tertiary Flora from Southwestern Idaho. pp. 73-124, 3 pls., 2figs.

III. AXELROD, DANIEL I. A Pliocene Flora from the Mount Eden Beds, SouthernCalifornia. pp. 125-183, 6 pls., 1 fig.

IV. CHANEY, RALPH W. The Deschutes Flora of Eastern Oregon. pp. 185-216, 7 pls.V. CONDIT, CARLTON. The San Pablo Flora of West Central California. pp. 217-268, 7

pls., 1 fig.

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477 RICKETSON, OLIVER G., JR., and EDITH BAYLES RICKETSON. Uaxactun, Guatemala.Group E-1926-1931. Appendices by MONROE AMSDEN, A. LEDYARD SMITH, and H. E. D.POLLOCK. 1937. Quarto, xv + 314 pp., 88 pls., 198 figs.

478 LUNDELL, CYRUS LONGWORTH. The Vegetation of Peten. With an appendix, Studies ofMexican and Central American Plants-1. 1937. Quarto, ix + 244 pp., 39 pls., 3 figs.

479 Contributions to Embryology. Vol. XXVI, Nos. 152-159. 1937. Quarto, iii + 294 pp., 42 pls., 32figs.

BOYD, JAMES DIXON. The Development of the Human Carotid Body. pp. 1-31, 6pls., 1 fig. (Contr. 152.)

GERSH, I. The Correlation of Structure and Function in the Developing Mesonephros andMetanephros. pp. 33-58. (Contr. 153.)

MURATORI, GIULIO. Embryonal Germ-Cells of the Chick in Hanging-Drop Cultures.pp. 59-69, 3 pls. (Contr. 154.)

SCHULTZ, ADOLPH H. Fetal Growth and Development of the Rhesus Monkey. pp. 71-97, 2 pls., 5 figs. (Contr. 155.)

RAMSEY, ELIZABETH MAPELSDEN. The Lockyer Embryo: An Ear Human Embryoin Situ. pp. 99-119, 1 pl., 1 fig. (Contr. 156.)

FLEXNER, LOUIS B., and I. GERSH. The Correlation of Oxygen Consumption,Function and Structure in the Developing Metanephros of the Pig. pp. 121-127.(Contr. 157.)

MOSSMAN, HARLAND W. Comparative Morphogenesis of the Fetal Membranes andAccessory Uterine Structures. pp. 129-246, 24 pls., 14 figs. (Contr. 158.)

NORRIS, EDGAR H. The Parathyroid Glands and the Lateral Thyroid in Man: TheirMorphogenesis, Histogenesis, Topographic Anatomy and Prenatal Growth. pp.247-294, 6 pls., 11 figs. (Contr. 159.)

480 SYKES, GODFREY. Delta, Estuary, and Lower Portion of the Channel of the Colorado River1933 to 1935. 1937. Octavo, vi + 70 pp., 6 pls., 5 figs.

481 GRINNELL, JOSEPH, and JEAN M. LINSDALE. Vertebrate Animals of Point Lobos Reserve,1934-35. 1936. Octavo, vi + 159 pp., 39 pls., 1 fig.

482 KELLOGG, REMINGTON. A Review of the Archaeoceti. 1936. Quarto, xv + 366 pp., 37 pls., 88figs.

483 Contributions to American Archaeology. Vol. IV, Nos. 20-23. 1937. Quarto, iii + 217 pp., 1frontispiece, 41 pls.

SMITH, A. LEDYARD. Structure A-XVIII, Uaxactun. pp. 1-27, 24 pls., 3 figs. (Contr.20)

BEYER, HERMANN. Studies on the Inscriptions of Chichen Itza. pp. 29-175, 14 pls.,772 figs. (Contr. 21)

THOMPSON, J. ERIC. A New Method of Deciphering Yucatecan Dates with SpecialReference to Chichen Itza. pp. 177-197. (Contr. 22)

KEMPTON, J. H., and WILSON POPENOE. Teosinte in Guatemala: Report of anExpedition to Guatemala, El Salvador, and Chiapas, Mexico. pp. 199-217, frontis-piece (map), 3 pls. (Contr. 23)

484 BABCOCK, ERNEST B., and G. LEDYARD STEBBINS, JR. The Genus Youngia. 1937. Octavo,iii + 106 pp., 5 pls., 31 figs.

485 DICE, LEE R., and PHILIP M. BLOSSOM. Studies of Mammalian Ecology in SouthwesternNorth America, with Special Attention to the Colors of Desert Mammals. 1937. Octavo, iv + 129pp., 8 pls., 8 figs.

486 GLOCK, WALDO S. Principles and Methods of Tree-Ring Analysis. With a foreword by A. E.DOUGLASS, and a contribution by G. A. PEARSON. 1937. Octavo, viii + 100 pp., 14 pls., 44figs.

487 Studies On Cenozoic Vertebrates of Western North America: (Contributions to Palaeontology.)

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1938. Octavo, iii + 281 pp., 48 pls., 24 figs., 1 chart.

I. WILSON, ROBERT W. New Middle Pliocene Rodent and Lagomorph Faunas fromOregon and California. pp. 1-19, 3 pls.

II. WILSON, ROBERT W. Pliocene Rodents of Western North America. pp. 21-73, 2 figs.III. SCHULTZ, JOHN R. A Late Cenozoic Vertebrate Fauna from the Coso Mountains,

Inyo County, California. pp. 75-109, 8 pls., 5 figs.IV. SCHULTZ, JOHN R. A Late Quaternary Mammal Fauna from the Tar Seeps of

McKittrick, California. pp. 111-215, 17 pls., 12 figs.V. HOWARD, HILDEGARDE. The Rancho La Brea Caracara: A New Species. pp. 217-

240, 3 pls., 1 chart.VI. COLBERT, EDWIN H. Pliocene Peccaries from the Pacific Coast Region of North

America. pp. 241-269, 6 pls., 4 figs.VII. LAUDERMILK, J. D., and P. A. MUNZ. Plants in the Dung of Nothrotherium from

Rampart and Muav Caves, Arizona. pp.271-2 81, 11 pls., 1 fig.

488 FARNAM, HENRY W. Edited by CLIVE DAY. With an introductory note by VICTOR S. CLARK.Chapters in the History of Social Legislation in the United States to 1860. (Contributions toAmerican Economic History from the Board of Research Associates in American Economic His-tory.) 1938. Octavo, xx + 496 pp.

489 BENEDICT, FRANCIS G., and ROBERT C. LEE. Lipogenesis in the Animal Body, with SpecialReference to the Physiology of the Goose. 1937. Octavo, ix + 232 pp., 30 figs.

490 STRAIN, HAROLD H. Leaf Xanthophylls. With a foreword by H. A. SPOEHR. 1938. Octavo, xi +147 pp., frontispiece, 23 figs.

491 PEARSE, A. S., with [collaborators]. Fauna of the Caves of Yucatan. 1938. Quarto, iii + 304 pp., 8pls., 328 figs., 2 graphs.

PEARSE, A. S. Introduction. pp. 1-17, 8 figs.I. WOLF, FREDERICK A. Fungal Flora of Yucatan Caves. pp. 19-21, 1 pl.II. HYMAN, LIBBIE, H. Land Planarians from Yucatan. pp. 23-32, 9 figs.III. STUNKARD, HORACE W. Parasitic Flatworms from Yucatan. pp. 33-50, 8 figs.IV. CHITWOOD, B. G. Some Nematodes from the Caves of Yucatan. pp. 51-66, 45 figs.V. MOORE, J. PERCY. Leeches (Hirudinea) from Yucatan Caves. pp. 67-70, 2 figs.VI. PICKFORD, GRACE E. Earthworms in Yucatan Caves. pp. 71-100, 3 pls., 16 figs.VII. CHAMBERLIN, RALPH V., and WILTON IVIE. Arachnida of the Orders

Pedipalpida, Scorpionida, and Ricinulida. pp. 101-107, 17 figs .VIII. CHAMBERLIN, JOSEPH C. A New Genus and Three New Species of False Scorpi-

ons from Yucatan Caves (Arachnida—Chelonethida). pp. 109-121, 4 figs.IX. CHAMBERLIN, RALPH V., and WILTON IVIE. Araneida from Yucatan. pp. 123-

136, 24 figs.X. WHARTON, G. W. Acarina of Yucatan Caves. pp. 137-152, 28 figs.XI. [PEARSE, A. S., with C. B. WILSON.] Copepoda from Yucatan Caves. pp. 153-154.XII. FURTOS, NORMA C. A New Species of Cypridopsis from Yucatan. pp. 155-157, 1

fig.XIII. CREASER, EDWIN P. Large Cave Crustacea of the Yucatan Peninsula. pp. 159-164,

8 figs.XIV. CHAMBERLIN, RALPH V. Diplopoda from Yucatan. pp. 165-182, 55 figs.XV. MILLS, HARLOW B. Collembola from Yucatan Caves. pp. 183-190, 27 figs.XVI. HUBBELL, THEODORE H. New Cave-Crickets from Yucatan, with a Review of the

Pentacentrinae, and Studies on the Genus Amphiacusta (Orthoptera, Gryllidae). pp.191-233, 78 figs., 2 graphs,

XVII. BANKS, NATHAN. A New Myrmeleonid from Yucatan. P. 235.XVIII. PEARSE, A. S. Insects from Yucatan Caves. pp. 237-249XIX. WHEELER, WILLIAM MORTON. Ants from the Caves of Yucatan. pp. 251-255.XX. BEQUAERT, J., and W. J. CLENCH. A Third Contribution to the Molluscan Fauna of

Yucatan. pp. 257-260.XXI. HUBBS, CARL L. Fishes from the Caves of Yucatan. pp.261-295, 4 pls.

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XXII. GAIGE, HELEN T. Some Reptilian Records from Caves of Yucatan. pp. 297-298.XXIII. [PEARSE, A. S.] Birds in Yucatan Caves. P. 299.XXIV. [PEARSE, A. S., with REMINGTON KELLOGG.] Mammalia from Yucatan

Caves. pp. 301-304,

492 McKEE, EDWIN D. The Environment and History of the Toroweap and Kaibab Formations ofNorthern Arizona and Southern Utah. 1938. Octavo, viii + 268 pp., 48 pls., 35 figs., 1 diagram.

493 DE TERRA, H., and T. T. PATERSON. Studies on the Ice Age in India and Associated HumanCultures. [With a section on petrology by PAUL D. KRYNINE.] 1939. Quarto, xi + 354 pp., 56pls., 195 figs.

494 RITZMAN, ERNEST G., and FRANCIS G. BENEDICT. Nutritional Physiology of the AdultRuminant. 1938. Octavo, vi + 200 pp., 3 pls., 3 figs.

495 GREGORY, WILLIAM K., MILO HELLMAN, and G. EDWARD LEWIS. Fossil Anthropoids ofthe Yale-Cambridge India Expedition of 1935. 1938. Octavo, iii + 27 pp., 8 pls.

496 Contributions to Embryology. Vol. XXVII, Nos. 160-169. 1938. Quarto, iii + 305 pp., 45 pls., 43figs., 13 graphs.

WISLOCKI, GEORGE B., and GEORGE L. STREETER. On the Placentation of theMacaque (Macaca mulatta), from the Time of Implantation until the Formation ofthe Definitive Placenta. pp. 1-66, 13 pls., 1 fig. (Contr. 160.)

RAMSEY, ELIZABETH MAPELSDEN. The Yale Embryo. pp. 67-84, 3 pls., 1 fig.(Contr. 161.)

BREWER, JOHN I. A Human Embryo in the Bilaminar Blastodisc Stage (the Edwards-Jones-Brewer Ovum). pp. 85-93, 9 pls. (Contr. 162.)

SCIPIADES, ELEMÉR, JR. Young Human Ovum Detected in Uterine Scraping. pp. 95-105, 1 pl. (Contr. 163.)

WALMSLEY, ROBERT. Some Observations on the Vascular System of a Female FetalFinback. pp. 107-178, 5 pls., 27 figs. (Contr. 164.)

SAGLIK, SAÏM. Ovaries of Gorilla, Chimpanzee, Orang-Utan and Gibbon. pp. 179-189, 5 pls. (Contr. 165.)

NORRIS, EDGAR H. The Morphogenesis and Histogenesis of the Thymus Gland in Man:In Which the Origin of the Hassall’s Corpuscles of the Human Thymus Is Discov-ered. pp. 191-207, 7 pls., 1 fig. (Contr. 166.)

BERGER, CHARLES A. Multiplication and Reduction of Somatic Chromosome Groupsas a Regular Developmental Process in the Mosquito, Culex pipiens. pp.209-232, lpl., 10 figs. (Contr.167.)

AREY, LESLIE B. The History of the First Somite in Human Embryos. pp.233-269, l pl.,2 figs. (Contr.168.)

DAVENPORT, CHARLES B. Bodily Growth of Babies during the First Postnatal Year.pp. 271-305, 1 fig., 13 graphs. (Contr. 169.)

497 BENEDICT, FRANCIS G., and ROBERT C. LEE. Hibernation and Marmot Physiology. 1938.Octavo, x + 239 pp., 2 pls., 11 figs.

498 HALE, GEORGE E., and SETH B. NICHOLSON. Magnetic Observations of Sunspots 1917-1924. (Papers of the Mount Wilson Observatory, Vol. V, Parts 1, 2.) 1938. Quarto.

Part 1. iii + 91 pp., 8 pls., 24 figs.Part 2. ii + 692 pp. (graphs).

499 SHATTUCK, GEORGE CHEEVER, with the collaboration of JOSEPH C. BEQUAERT, MAR-GARET M. HILFERTY, JACK H. SANDGROUND, and SAMUEL DRURY CLARK. A MedicalSurvey of the Republic of Guatemala. 1938. Quarto, xi + 253 pp., 2 pls., 1 fig., 5 graphs.

500 MERRIAM, JOHN CAMPBELL, Published Papers and Addresses of. 1938. Octavo.

Vol. I. pp. viii + 1-666, frontispiece, 62 pls., 271 figs. Foreword. Reptilia. Mammalia.Vol. II. pp. vi + 667-1288, 47 pls., 498 figs. Mammalia [continued].Vol. III. pp. viii + 1289-1944, 69 pls., 250 figs. Mammalia [concluded]. Palaeontology

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and Human History. Invertebrate Palaeontology. General Palaeontology. Geology.Brief Chapters Concerning Life of Past Ages.

Vol. IV. pp. vii + 1945-2672, 7 pls., 2 figs. History. Biography. General Addresses.Problems Relating to Nature. Research and Publication. Research and Government.Carnegie Institution Addresses and Extracts from Reports.

501 Cooperation in Research. [Papers prepared in honor of JOHN CAMPBELL MERRIAM] by staffmembers and research associates, the Carnegie Institution of Washington. 1938. Octavo, ix + 782pp., frontispiece, 40 pls., 24 figs.

502 WAUCHOPE, ROBERT. Modern Maya Houses: A Study of Their Archaeological Significance.1938. Quarto, [2] + vii + 181 pp., 38 pls., 53 figs.

503 BENEDICT, FRANCIS G. Vital Energetics: A Study in Comparative Basal Metabolism. 1938.Octavo, vii + 215 pp., 46 figs.

504 BABCOCK, E. B., and G. L. STEBBINS, JR. The American Species of Crepis: Their Interrelation-ships and Distribution As Affected by Polyploidy and Apomixis. 1938. Octavo, iii + 199 pp., 3 pls.,34 figs.

505 ROYS, RALPH L. The Titles of Ebtun. 1939. Quarto, xvii + 472 pp. 15 pls., 9 figs.

506 THOMPSON, J. ERIC. Excavations at San Jose, British Honduras. With appendix [TechnologicalNotes on the Pottery of San Jose] by ANNA O. SHEPARD. 1939. Quarto, xii + 292 pp., 3 pls., 100figs.

507 HU, HSEN HSI, and RALPH W. CHANEY. A Miocene Flora from Shantung Province, China.(Contributions to Paleontology.) 1940. Quarto, vi + 147 pp., 57 pls., 1 fig.

Part I. HU, HSEN HSU, and RALPH W. CHANEY. Introduction and Systematic Consider-ations. pp. v-vi, 1-82, pls. 1-50, 1 fig.

Part II. CHANEY, RALPH W., and HSEN HSU HU. Physical Conditions and Correlation.pp. 83-140, pls. 51-57.

508 DORF, ERLING. Upper Cretaceous Floras of the Rocky Mountain Region. (Contributions toPaleontology.) 1942. Quarto, vii + 168 pp., 36 pls., 11 figs.

I. Stratigraphy and Palaeontology of the Fox Hills and Lower Medicine Bow Formations ofSouthern Wyoming and Northwestern Colorado. pp. v-vii, 1-78, 19 pls., 8 figs.

II. Flora of the Lance Formation at Its Type Locality, Niobrara County, Wyoming. pp. 79-159, 17 pls., 3 figs.

509 Contributions to American Anthropology and History. [Formerly Contributions to AmericanArchaeology] Vol. V, Nos. 24-29. 1939. Quarto, iii + 173 pp., 1 frontispiece, 21 pls., 24 figs.

MORLEY, FRANCES R., and SYLVANUS G. MORLEY. The Age and Provenance of theLeyden Plate. pp. 1-17, 4 pls., 5 figs. (Contr. 24)

CHAMBERLAIN, ROBERT S. Castilian Backgrounds of the Repartimiento-Encomienda.pp. 19-66. (Contr. 25)

ANDREWS, E. WYLLYS. A Group of Related Sculptures from Yucatan. pp. 67-79, 2 pls.,3 figs. (Contr. 26)

TRIK, AUBREY S. Temple XXII at Copan. pp. 81-103, frontispiece, 15 pls., 11 figs.(Contr. 27)

REDFIELD, ROBERT, and ALFONSO VILLA R. Notes on the Ethnography of TzeltalCommunities of Chiapas. pp. 105-119. (Contr. 28)

THOMPSON, J. ERIC S. The Moon Goddess in Middle America; with Notes on RelatedDeities. pp. 121-173, 5 figs. (Contr. 29)

510 CLEVEN, N. ANDREW N. The Political Organization of Bolivia. 1940. Octavo, vii + 253 pp., 2maps.

511 CHATELAIN, VERNE E. The Defenses of Spanish Florida, 1565 to 1763. 1941. Quarto, vii + 192pp. 14 pls., 22 maps.

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512 PERRET, FRANK A. The Volcano-Seismic Crisis at Montserrat, 1933-1937. 1939. Quarto, xii +76 pp., 51 figs.

513 BANTA, A. M., with the collaboration of THELMA R. WOOD, L. A. BROWN, and LESTERINGLE. Studies on the Physiology, Genetics, and Evolution of Some Cladocera. (Paper No. 40,Department of Genetics.) 1939. Quarto, x + 285 pp., 170 figs., 16 diagrams.

514 Studies of Cenozoic Vertebrates and Stratigraphy of Western North America. (Contributions toPaleontology.) 1940. Octavo, iii + 194 pp., 24 pls., 20 figs.

I. HENSHAW, PAUL C. A Tertiary Mammalian Fauna from the Avawatz Mountains, SanBernardino County, California. pp. 1-30, 6 pls., 3 figs.

II. WILSON, ROBERT W. Rodents and Lagomorphs of the Late Tertiary Avawatz Fauna,California. pp. 31-38, 1 pl.

III. HOWARD, HILDEGARDE, and ALDEN H. MILLER. The Avi-fauna Associatedwith Human Remains at Rancho La Brea, Califomia. pp. 39-48, 4 figs.

IV. DOUGHERTY, JACK F. Skull and Skeletal Remains of the Camel Paratylopuscameloides (Wortman) from the John Day Deposits, Oregon. pp. 49-58, 1 pl.

V. WILSON, ROBERT W. Californian Paramyid Rodents. pp. 59-83, 2 pls.VI. WILSON, ROBERT W. Two New Eocene Rodents from California. pp. 85-95, 2 pls.VII. WILSON, ROBERT W. Pareumys Remains from the Later Eocene of California. pp.

97-108, 2 pls.VIII. DOUGHERTY, JACK F. A New Miocene Mammalian Fauna from Caliente Moun-

tain, California. pp. 109-143, 7 pls., 4 figs.IX. JAHNS, RICHARD H. Stratigraphy of the Easternmost Ventura Basin, California,

with a Description of a New Lower Miocene Mammalian Fauna from the TickCanyon Formation. pp.145-194, 3 pls., 9 figs.

515 Madison Catalogue of 2786 Stars for the Epoch 1910. From meridian observations by ALBERT S.FLINT. Reductions by ARTHUR J. ROY. 1939. Quarto, xx + 57 pp.

516 AXELROD, DANIEL I. A Miocene Flora from the Western Border of the Mohave Desert. (Contri-butions to Paleontology.) 1939. Octavo, ii + 129 pp., 12 pls., 2 figs.

517 Papers from Tortugas Laboratory . Vol. XXXII. 1940. Octavo, iii + 412 pp., 35 pls., 127 figs.

I. GRAVE, CASWELL, and PAUL A. NICOLL. Studies of Larval Life and Metamorpho-sis in Ascidia nigra and Species of Polyandrocarpa. pp. 1-46, 7 figs.

II. PLOUGH, H. H., and NORRIS JONES. Ecteinascidia tortugensis, Species Nova; witha Review of the Perophoridae (Ascidiacea) of the Tortugas. pp. 47-60, 5 pls., 3 figs.

III. DARBY, HUGH H. Symmetry in Normally Asymmetrical Crustacea. pp. 61-64, 1 pl.IV. MARSH, GORDON. The Effect of Light on the Inherent E.M.F. of Valonia

ventricosa. I. Intensity and Time Relations. pp. 65-84, 5 figs.V. STEWARD, F. C. The Growth of Valonia ventricosa J. Agardh and Valonia ocellata

Howe in Culture; with a Note on the Sap Composition of Valonia ocellata Howe atTortugas. pp. 85-98, 8 pls.

VI. MARSH, GORDON. The Effect of Light on the Inherent E.M.F. of Valoniaventricosa. II. The Relative Energy Absorption Spectrum. pp. 99-120, 3 figs.

VII. COONFIELD, B. R. The Chromatophore System of Larvae of Crangon armillatus.pp. 121-126, 1 pt.

VIII. DOYLE, WILLIAM L., and MARGOT METCALFE DOYLE. The Structure ofZooxanthellae. pp. 127-142, 37 figs.

IX. DOYLE, WILLIAM L. The Structure and Composition of Valonia ventricosa. pp.143-152, 1 fig.

X. HESS, WALTER N. Regional Photosensitivity and Photoreceptors of Crangonarmillatus and the Spiny Lobster, Panulirus argus. pp. 153-161, 1 pl., 2 figs.

XI. SPENCE, JOHN, and OSCAR W. RICHARDS. Native Cellulose in the AscidianPhallusia nigra. pp. 163-167, 1 pl.

XII. COONFIELD, B. R. Chromatophore Reactions of Embryos and Larvae ofPomacentrus leucostictus. pp. 169-178, 4 pls.

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XIII. BULLINGTON, W. E. Some Ciliates from Tortugas. pp. 179-221, 1 pl., 25 figs.XIV. LONGLEY, WILLIAM H., and SAMUEL F. HILDEBRAND. New Genera and

Species of Fishes from Tortugas, Florida. pp. 223-285, 1 pl., 28 figs.XV. YONGE, C. M., and H. M. NICHOLAS. Structure and Function of the Gut and

Symbiosis with Zooxanthellae in Tridachia crispata (Oerst.) Bgh. pp. 287-301, 9 figs.XVI. DAVIS, JOHN H., JR. The Ecology and Geologic Role of Mangroves in Florida. pp.

303-412, 12 pls., 7 figs.

518 Contributions to Embryology. Vol. XXVIII, Nos. 170178. 1940. Quarto, iii + 451 pp., 34 pls., 51figs., 1 graph.

SCHULTZ, ADOLPH H. Growth and Development of the Chimpanzee. pp. 1-63, 3 pls., 11figs. (Contr. 170)

WISLOCKI, G. B., and 0. P. VAN DER WESTHUYSEN. The Placentation of Procaviacapensis, with a Discussion of the Placental Affinities of the Hyracoidea. pp. 65-88, 7pls., 1 graph. (Contr. 171)

LONG, H. HERMAN. Growth in Vitro of Ovarian Germinal Epithelium. pp. 89-93, 2 pls.(Contr. 172)

CUAJUNCO, FIDEL. Development of the Neuromuscular Spindle in Human Fetuses. pp.95-128, 4 pls. (Contr. 173)

FORBES, THOMAS R. Studies on the Reproductive System of the Alligator. IV. Observa-tions on the Development of the Gonad, the Adrenal Cortex, and the Müllerian Duct.pp. 129-155, 4 pls. (Contr. 174)

BOYDEN, EDWARD A. A Volumetric Analysis of Young Human Embryos of the 10- and12-Somite Stage. pp. 157-191, 4 pls., 6 figs. (Contr. 175)

FITZ-GERALD, PATRICK ALEXIS M. F. Defective Development of the Cerebral CortexInvolving Symmetrical Bilateral Areas. pp. 193-217, 3 pls. (Contr. 176)

MARKEE, J. ELDRIDGE. Menstruation in Intraocular Endometrial Transplants in theRhesus Monkey. pp. 219-308, 7 pls., 1 fig. (Contr. 177)

HINES, MARION, and E. P. BOYNTON. The Maturation of “Excitability” in the Precen-tral Gyrus of the Young Monkey (Macaca mulatta). pp. 309-451, 33 figs. (Contr.178)

519 MORRIS, EARL H. Archaeological Studies in the La Plata District, Southwestern Colorado andNorthwestern New Mexico. With appendix, Technology of La Plata Pottery, by ANNA O.SHEPARD. 1939. Quarto, xxiv + 298 pp., 81 (321) pls., 77 figs.

520 CLAUSEN, JENS, DAVID D. KECK, and WILLIAM M. HIESEY. Experimental Studies on theNature of Species. 1. Effect of Varied Environments on Western North American Plants. 1940.Second printing, 1948. Octavo, vii + 452 pp., 155 figs.

521 MARTIN, EMMETT V., and FREDERIC E. CLEMENTS. Adaptation and Origin in the PlantWorld. 1. Factors and Functions in Coastal Dunes. 1939. Octavo, viii + 107 pp., 5 pls., 32 figs., 34tables.

522 Botany of the Maya Area: Miscellaneous Papers XIV-XXI. 1940. Octavo, iii + 474 pp., 7 pls., 30figs. (Continued from Publication 461.)

XIV. LUNDELL, CYRUS LONGWORTH. The 1936 Michigan-Carnegie BotanicalExpedition to British Honduras. pp. 1-57, pls. 1-4, 1 fig.

XV. WOODSON, ROBERT E., JR. The Apocynaccous Flora of the Yucatan Peninsula. pp.59-102, 6 figs.

XVI. SMITH, LYMAN B., and CYRUS LONGWORTH LUNDELL. The Bromeliaceae ofthe Yucatan Peninsula. pp. 103-136, 20 figs.

XVII. MOLDENKE, HAROLD N. The Eriocaulaceae, Verbenaceae, and Avicenniaceae ofthe Yucatan Peninsula. pp. 137-223.

XVIII. EPLING, CARL. The Labiatae of the Yucatan Peninsula. pp. 225-245.XIX. O’NEILL, HUGH T. The Sedges of the Yucatan Peninsula. pp. 247-322, 3 figs.XX. GLEASON, HENRY ALLAN. The Melastomaceae of the Yucatan Peninsula. pp. 323-

373.

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XXI. SEIBERT, RUSSELL J. The Bignoniaceae of the Maya Area, Including Yucatan,Campeche, Quintana Roo, Chiapas, Tabasco, British Honduras, and Guatemala. pp.357-434, pls. 5-7.

Index to Publications 461 and 522. pp. 435-474.

523 Contributions to American Anthropology and History. Vol. VI, Nos. 30-34. 1940. Quarto, iii + 299pp., 1 frontispiece, 8 pls., 4 figs., 1 map.

ROYS, RALPH L., FRANCE V. SCHOLES, and ELEANOR B. ADAMS. Report andCensus of the Indians of Cozumel, 1570. pp. 1-30, frontispiece. (Contr. 30.)

ROYS, RALPH L. Personal Names of the Maya of Yucatan. pp. 31-48. (Contr. 31.)REDFIELD, ROBERT, and MARGARET PARK REDFIELD. Disease and Its Treatment

in Dzitas, Yucatan. pp. 49-81. (Contr. 32.)STADELMAN, RAYMOND, [from data collected by]. Maize Cultivation in Northwestern

Guatemala. pp. 83-263, 8 pls., 1 map, 41 tables. (Contr. 33.)SCHOLES, FRANCE, V., and H. P. MERA. Some Aspects of the Jumano Problem. pp.

265-299, 4 figs. (Contr. 34.)

524 Papers from Tortugas Laboratory. Vol. XXXIII. 1942. Octavo, iii + 195 pp., 7 pls., 73 figs.

I. MANTER, HAROLD W. Gasterostomes (Trematoda) of Tortugas, Florida. pp. 1-19, 26figs.

II. CLARK, LEONARD B., and WALTER N. HESS. Swarming of the Atlantic PaloloWorm, Leodice fucata (Ehlers). pp. 21-70, 8 figs.

III. CLARK, LEONARD B., and WALTER N. HESS. The Reactions of the AtlanticPalolo, Leodice fucata, to Light. pp. 71-81, 2 figs.

IV. WICHTERMAN, RALPH. Cytological Studies on the Structure and Division of ThreeNew Ciliates from the Littoral Earthworm of Tortugas. pp. 83-103, 20 figs.

V. WICHTERMAN, RALPH. A New Ciliate from a Coral of Tortugas and Its SymbioticZooxanthellae. pp. 105-111, 4 figs.

VI. DAVIS, JOHN H., JR. The Ecology of the Vegetation and Topography of the SandKeys of Florida. pp. 113-195, 7 pls., 13 figs.

525 Contributions to Embryology. Vol. XXIX, Nos. 179-186. 1941. Quarto, iii + 193 pp., 57 pls., 2-7figs.

HARTMAN, CARL G., and GEORGE W. CORNER. The First Maturation Division ofthe Macaque Ovum. pp.1-6, 2 pls. (Contr. 179)

LEWIS, WARREN H., and CARL G. HARTMAN. Tubal Ova of the Rhesus Monkey. pp.7-14, 1 pl. (Contr. 180)

HEUSER, CHESTER H., and GEORGE L. STREETER. Development of the MacaqueEmbryo. pp. 15-55, 33 pls., 5 figs. (Contr. 181)

SCHULTZ, ADOLPH H. Growth and Development of the Orang-Utan. pp. 57-110, 1 pl.,14 figs. (Contr. 182.)

GERSH, I., and ARTHUR GROLLMAN. The Vascular Pattern of the Adrenal Gland ofthe Mouse and Rat and Its Physiological Response to Changes in Glandular Activ-ity. pp. 111-125, 3 pls., 1 fig. (Contr. 183.)

HERTIG, ARTHUR T., and JOHN ROCK. Two Human Ova of the Previllous Stage,Having an Ovulation Age of about Eleven and Twelve Days Respectively. pp. 127-156, 8 pls., 4 figs. (Contr. 184.)

JONES, H. O., and JOHN I. BREWER. A Human Embryo in the Primitive-Streak Stage(Jones-Brewer Ovum I). pp. 157-165, 5 pls. (Contr. 185.)

KRAFKA, JOSEPH, JR. The Torpin Ovum, a Presomite Human Embryo. pp. 167-193, 4pls., 3 figs. (Contr. 186.)

26 DAUGHERTY, LYMAN H. The Upper Triassic Flora of Arizona. With a discussion of its geologicoccurrence, by HOWARD R. STAGNER. (Contributions to Paleontology.) 1941. Quarto, iii + 108pp., 34 pls., 1 fig.

527 GENTRY, HOWARD SCOTT. Rio Mayo Plants: A Study the Flora and Vegetation of the Valley ofthe Rio Mayo, Sonora. 1942. Octavo, vii + 328 pp., 29 pls., 6 figs.

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528 Contributions to American Anthropology and History. Vol. VII, Nos. 35-39. 1942. Quarto, [3] + vi +262 pp., 6 pls., 120 figs., 1 map.

THOMPSON, J. ERIC S. Late Ceramic Horizons at Benque Viejo, British Honduras. Withnotes, Classification of the Painted Wares, by ANNA O. SHEPARD. pp. vi + 1-35, 6pls., 57 figs. (Contr. 35)

THOMPSON, J. ERIC S. Maya Arithmetic. pp. 37-62, 4 figs. (Contr. 36)STRÓMSVIK, GUSTAV. Substela Caches and Stela Foundations at Copan and Quirigua.

pp. 63-96, 32 figs. (Contr. 37)LINCOLN, J. STEWARD. The Maya Calendar of the Ixil of Guatemala. pp. 97-128, 1

map. (Contr. 38)SHEPARD, ANNA O. Rio Grande Glaze Paint Ware: A Study Illustrating the Place of

Ceramic Technological Analysis in Archaeological Research. pp. 129-262, 27 figs.(Contr. 39)

529 TURNAGE, WILLIAM V., and T. D. MALLERY. An Analysis of Rainfall in the Sonoran Desertand Adjacent Territory. 1941. Octavo, iii + 45 pp., 54 figs.

530 Studies of Cenozoic Vertebrates of Western North America and of Fossil Primates. (Contributions toPaleontology.) 1942. Octavo, iii + 222 pp., 31 pls., 31 figs.

I. DRESCHER, ARTHUR B. Later Tertiary Equidae from the Tejon Hills, California. pp.1-23, 3 pls., 6 figs.

II. FURLONG, E. L. A New Pliocene Antelope from Mexico; with Remarks on SomeKnown Antilocaprids. pp. 25-33, 2 pls., 1 fig.

III. DEMAY, IDA S. Quaternary Bird Life of the McKittrick Asphalt, California. pp. 35-60,4 figs.

IV. DEMAY, IDA S. Pleistocene Bird Life of the Carpinteria Asphalt, California. pp. 61-76,4 figs.

V. HENSHAW, PAUL C. A Tertiary Mammalian Fauna from the San Antonio Mountainsnear Tonopah, Nevada. pp. 77-168, 11 pls., 7 figs.

VI. WILSON, ROBERT W. Preliminary Study of the Fauna of Rampart Cave, Arizona. pp.169-185, 4 pls., 1 fig.

VII. HOWARD, HILDEGARDE. A Review of the American Fossil Storks. pp. 187-203, 1pl., 2 figs.

VIII. KOENIGSWALD, G. H. R. VON. The South African Man-Apes and Pithecanthro-pus. pp. 205-222, 10 pls., 6 figs.

531 STEGGERDA, MORRIS. Maya Indians of Yucatan. 1941. Octavo, xx + 280 pp., frontispiece, 32pls., 35 figs.

532 SEARES, FREDERICK H., FRANK E. ROSS, and MARY C. JOYNER. Magnitudes and Colors ofStars North of +80°. (Papers of the Mount Wilson Observatory, Vol. VI.) 1941. Quarto, iii + 89 pp.,3 figs.

533 MORRIS, EARL H., and ROBERT F. BURGH. Anasazi Basketry, Basket Maker II through PuebloIII: A Study Based on Specimens from the San Juan River Country. 1941. Quarto, viii + 66 pp.,frontispiece, 43 figs.

534 MACGINITIE, HARRY D. A Middle Eocene Flora from the Central Sierra Nevada. [With a sectionon petrography by GALEN STURGEON.] (Contributions to Paleontology.) 1941. Quarto, iii + 178pp., 47 pls., 5 figs.

535 LONGLEY, WILLIAM H., edited and completed by SAMUEL F. HILDEBRAND. SystematicCatalogue of the Fishes of Tortugas, Florida; with Observations on Color, Habits, and LocalDistribution. (Papers from Tortugas Laboratory, Vol. XXXIV.) 1941. Octavo, xiii + 331 pp., 34 pls.

536 WILSON, CHARLES B. The Copepods of the Plankton Gathered during the Last Cruise of theCarnegie. (Scientific Results of Cruise VII of the Carnegie during 1928-1929, under the Commandof Captain J. P. Ault. Biology—I.)1942. Quarto, v + 237 pp., 136 figs., 3 maps, 16 charts.

537 CAMPBELL, ARTHUR SHACKLETON. The Oceanic Tintinnoina of the Plankton Gathered

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during the Last Cruise of the Carnegie. (Scientific Results of Cruise VII of the Carnegie during1928-1929, under Command of Captain J. P. Ault. Biology—II.) 1942. Quarto, v + 163 pp., 1 pl.,128 figs., 1 map.

538 CRESSMAN, L. S., with the collaboration of FRANK C. BAKER, PAUL S. CONGER, HENRY P.HANSEN, and ROBERT F. HEIZER. Archaeological Researches in the Northern Great Basin.1942. Quarto, xvii + 158 pp., frontispiece, 102 figs.

539 TENNENT, DAVID HILT. The Photodynamic Action of Dyes on the Eggs of the Sea Urchin,Lytechinus variegatus. (Papers from Tortugas Laboratory, Vol. XXXV.) 1942. Octavo, v + 153 pp.,8 pls., 40 figs.

540 WILLIAMS, HOWEL. The Geology of Crater Lake National Park, Oregon; with a Reconnais-sance of the Cascade Range Southward to Mount Shasta. 1942. Quarto, vi + 162 pp., 31 pls., 33figs.

541 Contributions to Embryology. Vol. XXX, Nos. 187-197. 1942. Quarto, v + 245 pp., frontispiece,53 pls., 73 figs.

GEORGE, W. C. A Presomite Human Embryo with Chorda Canal and Prochordal Plate.pp. 1-7, 3 pls. (Contr. 187.)

FORBES, THOMAS R. On the Fate of the Medullary Cords of the Human Ovary. pp. 9-15, 1 pl., 1 fig. (Contr. 188.)

MARTÍNEZ-ESTEVE, PEDRO. Observations on the Histology of the Opossum Ovary.pp. 17-26, 7 pls. (Contr. 189)

LYNN, W. GARDNER. The Embryology of Eleutherodactylus nubicola, an AnuranWhich Has No Tadpole Stage. pp. 27-62, 5 pls., 40 figs. (Contr. 190)

BURNS, ROBERT K., JR. The Origin and Differentiation of the Epithelium of theUrinogenital Sinus in the Opossum, with a Study of the Modifications Induced byEstrogens. pp. 63-83, 10 pls., 2 figs. (Contr. 191)

CORNER, GEORGE W. The Fate of the Corpora Lutea and the Nature of the CorporaAberrantia in the Rhesus Monkey. pp. 8596, 7 pls., 5 figs. (Contr. 192)

ROSSMAN, I. On the Lipin and Pigment in the Corpus Luteum of the Rhesus Monkey.pp. 97-109, 3 pls. (Contr. 193)

HARTMAN, CARL G. Further Attempts to Cause Ovulation by Means of Gonadotropesin the Adult Rhesus Monkey. pp. 111-126, 2 pls. (Contr. 194)

CUAJUNCO, FIDEL. Development of the Human Motor End Plate. pp. 127-152, 6 pls.(Contr. 195)

HINES, MARION. The Development and Regression of Reflexes, Postures and Progres-sion in the Young Macaque. pp. 153-209, 4 pls., 9 figs. (Contr. 196)

STREETER, GEORGE L. Developmental Horizons in Human Embryos. Description ofAge Group XI, 13 to 20 Somites, and Age Group XII, 21 to 29 Somites. pp. 211-245, 5 pls., 16 figs. (Contr. 197)

542 GRAHAM, HERBERT W. Studies in the Morphology, Taxonomy, and Ecology of the Peridiniales.(Scientific Results of Cruise VII of the Carnegie during 1928-1929, under Command of Captain J.P. Ault. Biology—III.) 1942. Quarto, vii + 129 pp., 1 pl., 67 figs., 1 map.

543 RUppERT, KARL, and JOHNH. DENISON, JR. Archaeological Reconnaissance in Campeche,Quintana Roo, and Peten. 1943. Quarto, vii + 156 pp., frontispiece, 75 pls., 126 figs.

544 JACOBS, WOODROW C., and KATHERINE B. CLARKE. Meteorological Results of Cruise VIIof the Carnegie, 1928–1929. (Scientific Results of Cruise VII of the Carnegie during 1928-1929,under Command of Captain J. P. Ault. Meteorology—I.) 1943. Quarto, v + 168 pp., 62 figs.

545A SVERDRUP, H. U., F. M. SOULE, J. A. FLEMING, and C. C. ENNIS. Observations and Resultsin Physical Oceanography. (Scientific Results of Cruise VII of the Carnegie during 1928-1929,under Command of Captain J. P. Ault. Oceanography—I-A.) 1944. Quarto, vii + 156 pp., 59 figs.

545B FLEMING, J. A., H. U. SVERDRUP, C. C. ENNIS, S. L. SEATON, and W. C. HENDRIX.Observations and Results in Physical Oceanography: Graphical and Tabular Summaries. (Scien-tific Results of Cruise VII of the Carnegie during 1928-1929, under Command of Captain J. P.

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Ault. Oceanography—I-B.) 1945. Quarto, iv + 315 pp., 254 figs.

546 Contributions to American Anthropology and History. Vol. VIII, Nos. 40-43. 1943. quarto, iii + 260pp., 1 frontispiece, 128 figs., 1 map, 1 diagram.

ANDREWS, E. WYLLYS. The Archaeology of Southwestern Campeche. pp. 1-100,frontispiece, 28 figs., 1 map, I diagram. (Contr. 40)

SMITH, A. L., and A. V. KIDDER. Explorations in the Motagua Valley, Guatemala. pp.101-182, 64 figs. (Contr. 41)

MAKEMSON, MAUD WORCESTER. The Astronomical Tables of the Maya. pp. 183-221, 1 fig. (Contr. 42)

RUppERT, KARL. The Mercado, Chichen Itza, Yucatan. pp. 223-260, 35 figs. (Contr. 43)

547 THOMPSON, ANDREW. Observations and Results Obtained on Cruise VII of the Carnegie.(Scientific Results of Cruise VII of the Carnegie during 1928-1929, under Command of Captain J. P.Ault. Meteorology—II.) 1943. Quarto, vii + 93 pp., 46 figs., 1 map.

548 ROYS, RALPH L. The Indian Background of Colonial Yucatan. 1943. Octavo, viii + 244 pp., 23figs., 6 maps.

549 PERRET, FRANK ALVORD. Volcanological Observations. 1950. Quarto, xi + 162 pp., frontis-piece, map on title page, 117 figs.

550 MARTIN, EMMETT. Studies of Evaporation and Transpiration under Controlled Conditions.1943. Octavo, III + 48 pp., 17 figs.

551 Fossil Vertebrates from Western North America and Mexico: (Contributions to Paleontology.) 1946.Octavo, iii + 195 pp., 31 pls., 33 figs. (

I. FURLONG, E. L. The Pleistocene Antelope, Stockoceros conklingi, from San JosecitoCave, Mexico. pp. 1-7, 5 pls.

II. HALL, E. RAYMOND. A New Genus of American Pliocene Badger, with Remarks onthe Relationships of Badgers of the Northern Hemisphere. pp. 9-23, 2 pls., 2 figs.

III. DAVID, LORE ROSE. Use of Fossil Fish Scales in Micropaleontology. pp. 25-43, 6pls., 9 figs.

IV. DAVID, LORE ROSE. Some Typical Upper Eogene Fish Scales from California. pp.45-79, 4 pls., 10 figs.

V. DAVID, LORE ROSE. Upper Cretaceous Fish Remains from the Western Border of theSari Joaquin Valley, California. pp. 81-112, 3 pls., 11 figs.

VI. WALLACE, ROBERT E. A Miocene Mammalian Fauna from Beatty Buttes, Oregon.pp. 113-134, 6 pls., 1 fig.

VII. FURLONG, E. L. Generic Identification of the Pliocene Antelope from Rancho LaBrea. pp. 135-140, 3 pls.

VIII. HOWARD, HILDEGARDE. A Review of the Pleistocene Birds of Fossil Lake,Oregon. pp.141-195, 2 pls.

552 BRIDGES, CALVIN B., completed and edited by KATHERINE S. BREHME. The Mutants ofDrosophila melanogaster. 1944. Second printing, 1950. Octavo, vii + 257 pp., 3 pls., 128 figs.

553 CHANEY, RALPH W., edited by; contributors, RALPH W. CHANEY, CARLTON CONDIT, andDANIEL I. AXELROD. Pliocene Floras of California and Oregon. (Contributions to Paleontology.)1944. Octavo, vii + 407 pp., 64 pls., 4 figs.

554 DOBZHANSKY, TH., and CARL EPLING. Contributions to the Genetics, Taxonomy, and Ecologyof Drosophila pseudoobscura and Its Relatives. 1944. Octavo, iii + 183 pp., 4 pls., 24 figs.

I. DOBZHANSKY, TH., and CARL EPLING. Taxonomy, Geographic Distribution, andEcology of Drosophila pseudoobscura and Its Relatives. pp. 1-46, 7 figs.

II. DOBZHANSKY, TH. Chromosomal Races in Drosophila pseudoobscura and Droso-phila persimilis. pp. 47-144, 4 pls., 15 figs.

III. EPLING, CARL. The Historical Background. pp. 145-183, 2 figs.

555 Biological Results of the Last Cruise of the Carnegie. (Scientific Results of Cruise VII of the

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Carnegie during 1928-1929, under Command of Captain J. P. Ault. Biology—IV.) 1943. Quarto,vii + 92 pp., 69 figs., 5 maps.

I. GRAHAM, HERBERT W. The Phytoplankton. pp. 1-13, 5 figs.II. SETCHELL, WILLIAM ALBERT. Marine Algae. pp. 15-27, 12 figs.III. TREADWELL, AARON L. Polychaetous Annelids. pp. 29-59, 46 figs., 4 maps.IV. TATTERSALL, W. M. The Mysids. pp. 61-72, 5 figs.V. MALONEY, JAMES O. The Isopods. pp. 73-75.VI. BARBER, HARRY G. The Halobates. pp. 77-84, 1 fig.VII. WETMORE, ALEXANDER. List of Birds. pp. 85-87.VIII. Miscellaneous Determinations. pp. 89-92.

DELAUBENFELS, M. W. The Sponge.CLARK, AUSTIN H. The Echinoderms.CHAPIN, E. A., and others. The Insects and Mites.HOPKINS, HOYT S. The Pyrosomids.COCHRAN, DORIS M. The Lizard.

556 I. REVELLE, ROGER R. Marine Bottom Samples Collected in the Pacific Ocean by the Carnegieon Its Seventh Cruise. II. PIGGOT, CHARLES S. Radium Content of Ocean-Bottom Sediments.(Scientific Results of Cruise VII of the Carnegie during 1928-1929, under Command of Captain J.P. Ault. Oceanography—II.) 1944. Quarto, ix + 196 pp., 14 pls., 47 figs., 1 map, 10 charts.

557 Contributions to Embryology. Vol. XXXI, Nos. 198-206. 1945. Quarto, xi + 175 pp., 45 pls., 28figs.

Index of Authors, Volumes I-XXX, 1915-1942. pp. v-xi.DE ALLENDE, INÉS L. C., EPHRAIM SHORR, and CARL G. HARTMAN. A Com-

parative Study of the Vaginal Smear Cycle of the Rhesus Monkey and the Human.pp. 1-26, 2 pls., 4 figs. (Contr. 198 )

STREETER, GEORGE L. Developmental Horizons in Human Embryos. Description ofAge Group XIII, Embryos about 4 or 5 Millimeters Long, and Age Group XIV,Period of Indentation of the Lens Vesicle. pp. 27-63, 7 pls., 15 figs. (Contr. 199.)

HERTIG, ARTHUR T., and JOHN ROCK. Two Human Ova of the Previllous Stage,Having a Developmental Age of about Seven and Nine Days Respectively. pp. 65-84, 3 pls. (Contr. 200.)

HEUSER, CHESTER H., JOHN ROCK, and ARTHUR T. HERTIG. Two HumanEmbryos Showing Early Stages of the Definitive Yolk Sac. pp. 85-99, 6 pls. (Contr.201.)

WILSON, KARL M. A Normal Human Ovum of Sixteen Days Development (theRochester Ovum). pp.101-106, 3 pls. (Contr. 202.)

MARCHETTI, ANDREW A. A Previllous Human Ovum Accidentally Recovered from aCurettage Specimen. pp. 107-115, 1 pl., 2 figs. (Contr. 203.)

CORNER, GEORGE W., with the collaboration Of CARL G. HARTMAN and GEORGEW. BARTELMEZ. Development, Organization, and Breakdown of the CorpusLuteum in the Rhesus Monkey. pp. 117-146, 10 pls., 3 figs. (Contr. 204.)

BURNS, ROBERT K., JR. The Differentiation of the Phallus in the Opossum and ItsReactions to Sex Hormones. pp. 147-162, 10 pls. (Coiltr. 205.)

BURNS, ROBERT K., JR. The Effects of Male Hormone on the Differentiation of theUrinogenital Sinus in Young Opossums. pp. 163-175, 3 pls., 4 figs. (Contr. 206.)

558 PROSKOURIAKOFF, TATIANA. An Album of Maya Architecture. 1946. Folio, 72 pp., 36 pls.,58 figs., 1 map.

559 VILLA R., ALFONSO. The Maya of East Central Quintana Roo. [With appendix, Remarks on aSelected Bibliography of the Caste War and Allied Topics, by HOWARD F. CLINE.] 1945.Quarto, xii + 182 pp., 6 pls. 9 figs.

560 SCHOLES, FRANCE V., and RALPH L. ROYS, with the assistance of ELEANOR B. ADAMSand ROBERT S. CHAMBERLAIN. The Maya Chontal Indians of Acalan-Tixchel: A Contributionto the History and Ethnography of the Yucatan Peninsula. 1948. Octavo, xi + 565 pp.,17 facsimi-

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les, 4 maps.

561 KIDDER, ALFRED V., JESSE D. JENNINGS, and EDWIN M. SHOOK. Excavations atKaminaljuyu, Guatemala. With Technological Notes, by ANNA O. SHEPARD. 1946. Quarto, ix +284 pp., 207 figs., 2 maps.

562 GRAHAM, HERBERT W., and ERIK G. MOBERG. Chemical Results of the Last Cruise of theCarnegie. (Scientific Results of Cruise VII of the Carnegie during 1928-1929, under Command ofCaptain J. P. Ault. Chemistry—I.) 1944. Quarto, vii + 58 pp., 23 figs. Paper, $1.00; cloth, $1.25.

563 McKEE, EDWIN D., and CHARLES E. RESSER. Cambrian History of the Grand Canyon Region.1945. Octavo, viii + 232 pp., 27 pls., 12 figs. Paper, $2.50; cloth, $3.00

Part I. MCKEE, EDWIN D. Stratigraphy and Ecology of the Grand Canyon Cambrian. pp.3-168, pls. 1-15, figs. 1-12.

Part II. RESSER, CHARLES E. Cambrian Fossils of the Grand Canyon. pp. 169-220, pls.16-27.

564 CLAUSEN, JENS, DAVID D. KECK, and WILLIAM M. HIESEY. Experimental Studies on theNature of Species. II. Plant Evolution through Amphiploidy and Autoploidy, with Examples fromthe Madiinae. 1945. Second printing, 1950. Octavo, vii + 174 pp., 86 figs.

565 GRAHAM, HERBERT W.,and NATALIA BRONIKOVSKY. The Genus Ceratium in the Pacificand North Atlantic Oceans. (Scientific Results of Cruise VII of the Carnegie during 1928-1929,under Command of Captain J. P. Ault. Biology—V.) 1944. Quarto, vii + 209 pp., 27 figs., 1 map,54 charts.

566 CLARK, HUBERT LYMAN. The Echinoderm Fauna of Australia: Its Composition and Its Origin.1946. Octavo, IV + 567 pp.

567 O’NEALE, LILA M. Textiles of Highland Guatemala. Drawings by LUCRETIA NELSON. 1945.Quarto, x + 319 pp., frontispiece, 130 figs.

568 TORRESON, O. W., O. H. GISH, W. C. PARKINSON, and G. R. WAIT. Ocean Atmospheric-Electric Results. (Scientific Results of Cruise VII of the Carnegie during 19281929, under Com-mand of Captain J. P. Ault. Oceanography—III.) 1946. Quarto, vii + 178 pp., 43 figs.

569 RIDDLE, OSCAR, and associates. Studies on Carbohydrate and Fat Metabolism, with EspecialReference to the Pigeon. 1947. Octavo, v + 128 pp., 6 figs.

I. RIDDLE, OSCAR, and LOUIS B. DOTTI. Concerning Pituitary and Other Glycemias inPigeons. pp. 1-16, 3 figs.

II. RIDDLE, OSCAR, DAVID F. OPDYKE, and ROBERT W. BATES. Fractions ofAnterior Pituitary Extract Obtained by Ammonium Sulfate Precipitation; Their Assay,and Some of Their Actions on the Carbohydrate and Fat Metabolism of Pigeons,Rats, and Rabbits. pp. 17-47.

III. RIDDLE, OSCAR, and DAVID F. OPDYKE. The Action of Pituitary and OtherHormones on the Carbohydrate and Fat Metabolism of Young Pigeons. pp. 49-96, 2figs.

IV. VISSCHER, FRANK E., HORACE N. MARVIN, and OSCAR RIDDLE. Actions ofAlkaline Extract of Posterior Pituitary Gland and of Pituitrin on Some Aspects ofCarbohydrate and Fat Metabolism in Pigeons. pp. 97-108.

V. RIDDLE, OSCAR, TELLEF SENUM, and VITA M. RAUCH. The Relation of Hor-mones to the Concentration of Fat in Blood. pp. 109-126, 1 fig.

VI. RIDDLE, OSCAR. Differences in the Carbohydrate and Fat Metabolism of Bird andMammal. pp. 127-128.

570 BLAKE, MARION ELIZABETH. Ancient Roman Construction in Italy from the Prehistoric Periodto Augustus: A Chronological Study Based in Part upon the Material Accumulated by the Late Dr.Esther Boise Van Deman. 1947. Quarto, xxiii +42l pp., 57 pls.

571 The Work of the Carnegie and Suggestions for Future Scientific Cruises. (Scientific Results ofCruise VII of the Carnegie during 1928-1929, under Command of Captain J. P. Ault. Oceanogra-

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phy—IV.) 1946. Quarto, vii + III pp., 61 figs.

I. AULT, JAMES P. The Captain’s Report. pp. 1-28, 34 figs.II. PAUL, J. HARLAND. Narrative of the Cruise. pp. 29-42.III. FLEMING, JOHN A. The Magnetic Work of the Carnegie and the Urgency of New

Ocean Magnetic Surveys. pp. 43-58, 18 figs.IV. MOBERG, ERIK G. The Carnegie: Its Personnel, Equipment, and Work. pp. 59-68,

2 figs.V. FORBUSH, SCOTT E. Gravity Determinations on the Carnegie. pp. 69-81, 5 figs.VI. SHEPHERD, EARNEST S. Note on the Fluorine Content of Rocks and Ocean-

Bottom Samples. pp. 83-86, 1 fig.VII. Future Ocean Magnetic, Electric, and Oceanographic Surveys. pp. 87-104.VIII. CROW, RUTH M. Complete Bibliography of Cruise VII of the Carnegie. pp. 105-

110.

572 RIDDLE, OSCAR. Endocrines and Constitution in Doves and Pigeons. 1947. Octavo, xi + 306pp., frontispiece, 6 pls., 187 figs.

573 SHEPARD, ANNA O. Plumbate: A Mesoamerican Trade Ware. 1948. Quarto, viii + 176 pp., 44figs., 1 map.

574 Contributions to American Anthropology and History. Vol. IX, Nos. 44-47. 1948. Quarto, v + 293pp., 1 frontispiece, 132 figs., 2 maps.

THOMPSON, J. ERIC S. An Archaeological Reconnaissance in the CotzumalhuapaRegion, Escuintla, Guatemala. pp. 1-56 + [57-94], 63 figs. (Contr. 44.)

O’NEALE, LILA M. Textiles of Pre-Columbian Chihuahua. With a foreword by A. V.KIDDER, and Chemical Notes on the Coloring Matter by MICHAEL KASHA. pp.95-161, frontispiece, 33 figs. 1 map. (Contr. 45.)

CHAMBERLAIN, ROBERT S. The Governorship of the Adelantado Francisco deMontejo in Chiapas, 1539-1544. pp. 163-207, 1 map. (Contr. 46.)

SHEPARD, ANNA O. The Symmetry of Abstract Design, with Special Reference toCeramic Decoration. pp. 209-293, 36 figs. (Contr. 47.)

575 Contributions to Embryology. Vol. XXXII, Nos. 207-212. 1948. Quarto, iii + 261 pp., 56 pls., 52figs.

CORNER, GEORGE W. Alkaline Phosphatase in the Ovarian Follicle and in the CorpusLuteum. pp. 1-8, 5 pls. (Contr. 207.)

SPEERT, HAROLD. The Normal and Experimental Development of the Mammary Glandof the Rhesus Monkey, with Some Pathological Correlations. pp. 9-65, 19 pls., 3figs. (Contr. 208.)

WITSCHI, EMIL. Migration of the Germ Cells of Human Embryos from the Yolk Sac tothe Primitive Gonadal Folds. pp. 67-80, 9 pls. (Contr. 209.)

GILLMAN, JOSEPH. The Development of the Gonads in Man, with a Consideration ofthe Role of Fetal Endocrines and the Histogenesis of Ovarian Tumors. pp. 81-131, 6pls. (Contr. 210.)

STREETER, GEORGE L. Developmental Horizons in Human Embryos. Description ofAge Groups XV, XVI, XVII, and XVIII, Being the Third Issue of a Survey of theCarnegie Collection. pp.133-203, 12 pls., 36 figs. (Contr. 211.)

PADGET, DORCAS HAGER. The Development of the Cranial Arteries in the HumanEmbryo. pp.205-261, 5 pls., 13 figs. (Contr.212.)

576 KIDDER, A. V. The Artifacts of Uaxactun, Guatemala.1947. Quarto, v + 76 pp., 87 figs.

577 STROMSVIK, GUSTAV. Guide Book to the Ruins of Copan. 1947. 16mo, 76 pp., 27 figs., 3 maps.

578 VESTINE, E. H., LUCILE LAPORTE, ISABELLE LANGE, CAROLINE COOPER, and W. C.HENDRIX. Description of the Earth’s Main Magnetic Field and Its Secular Change, 1905-1945.1947. Second printing, 1948. Quarto, v + 532 pp., 150 figs., 53 tables.

579 BABCOCK, HAROLD D., and CHARLOTTE E. MOORE. The Solar Spectrum, l6600 to l13495.(Papers of the Mount Wilson Observatory, Vol. VII.) 1947. Quarto, iii + 95 pp.

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580 VESTINE, E. H., ISABELLE LANGE, LUCILE LAPORTE, and W. E. SCOTT. The GeomagneticField, Its Description and Analysis. 1947. Quarto, vi + 390 pp., 257 figs., 129 tables.

581 CLAUSEN, JENS, DAVID D. KECK, and WILLIAM M. HIESEY. Experimental Studies on theNature of Species. III. Environmental Responses of Climatic Races of Achillea. 1948. Octavo, iii +129 pp., 30 figs.

582 CHAMBERLAIN, ROBERT S. The Conquest and Colonization of Yucatan, 1517-1550. 1948.Octavo, [2] + vii + 365 pp., frontispiece, 10 figs. (20 photographs), 2 maps.

583 Contributions to Embryology. Vol. XXXIII, Nos. 213221. 1949. Quarto, iii + 186 pp., 34 pls., 28figs.

REYNOLDS, S. R. M. Adaptation of Uterine Blood Vessels and Accommodation of theProducts of Conception. pp. 1-19, 3 pls., 4 figs. (Contr. 213.)

SENSENIG, E. CARL. The Early Development of the Human Vertebral Column. pp. 21-41, 5 pls., 1 fig. (Contr. 214.)

SCHULTZ, ADOLPH H. The Palatine Ridges of Primates. pp. 43-66, 7 figs. (Contr. 215.)STURGIS, SOMERS H. Rate and Significance of Artesia of the Ovarian Follicle of the

Rhesus Monkey. pp. 67-80, 3 pls. (Contr. 216.)HAMILTON, CLARA EDDY. Observations on the Cervical Mucosa of the Rhesus

Monkey. pp. 81-101, 4 pls., 5 figs. (Contr. 217.)WHARTON, LAWRENCE R., JR. Double Ureters and Associated Renal Anomalies in

Early Human Embryos. pp. 103-112, 2 pls., 2 figs. (Contr. 218.)RAMSEY, ELIZABETH MAPERSDEN. The Vascular Pattern of the Endometrium of the

Pregnant Rhesus Monkey (Macaca mulatta). pp. 113-147, 9 pls., 2 figs. (Contr.219.)

STREETER, GEORGE L. Developmental Horizons in Human Embryos (Fourth Issue). AReview of the Histogenesis of Cartilage and Bone. pp. 149-167, 4 pls., 7 figs. (Contr.220.)

HERTIG, ARTHUR T., and JOHN ROCK. Two Human Ova of the Pre-villous StageHaving a Developmental Age of About Eight and Nine Days, Respectively. pp. 169-186, 4 pls. (Contr. 221.)

584 Some Tertiary Mammals and Birds from North America. (Contributions to Paleontology.) 1949.Octavo, iii + 244 pp., 19 pls., 21 figs.

I. WILSON, ROBERT W. Additional Eocene Rodent Material from Southern California.pp. 1-25, 2 pls.

II. WILSON, ROBERT W. On Some White River Fossil Rodents. pp. 27-50, 2 pls., 2 figs.III. WILSON, ROBERT W. Rodents and Lagomorphs of the Upper Sespe. pp. 51-65, 1

pl., 1 fig.IV. WILSON, ROBERT W. Early Tertiary Rodents of North America. pp. 67-164, 13 figs.V. WILSON, ROBERT W. Rodents of the Rincon Fauna, Western Chihuahua, Mexico. pp.

165-176, 2 pls.VI. HOWARD, HILDEGARDE. New Avian Records for the Pliocene of California. pp.

177-199, 3 pls.VII. MILLER, LOYE, and HILDEGARDE HOWARD. The Flightless Pliocene Bird

Mancalla. pp. 201-228, 6 pls., 1 fig.VIII. STOCK, CHESTER. Mammalian Fauna from the Titus Canyon Formation, Califor-

nia. pp. 229-244, 3 pls., 4 figs.585 Contributions to American Anthropology and History. Vol. X, Nos . 48-51. 1949. Quarto, v + 186

pp., 1 frontispiece, 30 figs.

BARRERA VASQUEZ, ALFREDO, and SYLVANUS GRISWOLD MORLEY. The MayaChronicles. pp. 1-85, frontispiece, 2 figs. (Contr. 48)

ROYS, RALPH L. Guide to the Codex Perez. pp. 87-106. (Contr. 49)KIDDER, A. V., H. S. and C. B. COSGROVE. The Pendleton Ruin, Hidalgo County, New

Mexico. pp.107-152, 27 figs. (Contr. 50)ROYS, RALPH L. The Prophecies for the Maya Tuns or Years in theBooks of Chilam

Balam of Tizimin and Mani. pp. 153-186, 1 fig. (Contr. 51)

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586 SPOEHR, H. A., J. H. C. SMITH, H. H. STRAIN, H. W. MILNER, and G. J. HARDIN. Fatty AcidAntibacterials from Plants. 1949. Octavo, iii + 67 pp., 16 figs.

587 BARTH, TOM. F. W. Volcanic Geology, Hot Springs, and Geysers of Iceland. 1950. Quarto, xi +174 pp., 31 pls., 68 figs.

588 SMITH, A. LEDYARD. With introduction by A. V. KIDDER. Uaxactun, Guatemala: Excavationsof 1931-1937. 1950. Quarto, xii + 108 pp., frontispiece, 143 figs.

589 THOMPSON, J. ERIC S. Maya Hieroglyphic Writing: Introduction. 1950. Quarto, xviii + 347 pp.,frontispiece, 64 figs.

590 AXELROD, DANIEL I . Studies in Late Tertiary Paleobotany. (Contributions to Paleontology.)1950. Octavo, iii +323 pp.,19 pls., 4 figs.

I. Classification of the Madro-Tertiary Flora. pp.1-22.II. A Sonoma Florule from Napa, California. pp.23-71, 4 pls.III. Further Studies of the Mount Eden Flora, Southern California. pp. 73-117, 3 pls.IV. The Anaverde Flora of Southern California. pp. 119-158, 3 pls.V. The Piru Gorge Flora of Southern California. pp. 159-214, 6 pls.VI. Evolution of Desert Vegetation in Western North America. pp. 215-306, 3 pls., 4 figs.Appendix: Systematic Revisions of Fossil Plants. pp. 307-311.

591 SHREVE, FORREST, and IRA L. WIGGINS. Vegetation and Flora of the Sonoran Desert.Octavo

Vol. I. SHREVE, FORREST. Vegetation of the Sonoran Desert. 1951. xii + 192 pp., 27maps, 37 pls.

592 Contributions to Embryology. Vol. XXXIV, Nos. 222230. 1951. Quarto, iii + 196 pp., 58 pls., 49figs.

HINES, MARION, and BETTINA M. EMERSON. Development of the Spinal Cord inthe Fetal and Infant Macaque. I. Growth, as Increase in Size. pp. 1-18, 9 figs.(Contr. 222)

LAVELLE, FAITH WILSON. A Study of Hormonal Factors in the Early Sex Develop-ment of the Golden Hamster. pp. 19-53, 12 pls., 9 figs. (Contr. 223)

WHITE, R. F., A. T. HERTIG, J. ROCK, and E. ADAMS. Histological and Histochemi-cal Observations on the Corpus Luteum of Human Pregnancy, with Special Refer-ence to Corpora Lutea Associated with Early Normal and Abnormal Ova. pp. 55-74, 7 pls. (Contr. 224)

REYNOLDS, S. R. M., and J. TYLER BAKER. Effect of Parity in Women on the Patternof Uterine Enlargement during the Latter Half of Gestation. pp. 75-86, 11 figs.(Contr. 225)

BENSLEY, C. M. Cyclic Fluctuations in the Rate of Epithelial Mitosis in the En-dometrium of the Rhesus Monkey. pp. 87-98, 5 figs. (Contr. 226)

BARTELMEZ, G. W., with the collaboration of GEORGE W. CORNER and CARL G.HARTMAN. Cyclic Changes in the Endometrium of the Rhesus Monkey (Macacamulatta). pp. 99-144, 25 pls. (Contr. 227)

SENSENIG, E. CARL. The Early Development of the Meninges of the Spinal Cord inHuman Embryos. pp. 145-157, 4 pls. (Contr. 228)

FAULCONER, ROBERT J. Observations on the Origin of the Miillerian Groove inHuman Embryos. pp. 159-164, 1 pl., 1 fig. (Contr. 229)

STREETER, GEORGE L. Prepared for publication by CHESTER H. HEUSER andGEORGE W. CORNER. Developmental Horizons in Human Embryos. Descrip-tion of Age Groups XIX, XX, XXI, XXII, and XXIII, Being the Fifth Issue of aSurvey of the Carnegie Collection. pp. 165-196, 9 pls., 14 figs. (Contr. 230)

593 PROSKOURIAKOFF, TATIANA. A Study of Classic Maya Sculpture. 1950. Quarto, xi + 299 pp.,111 figs.

594 SMITH, A. LEDYARD, and ALFRED V. KIDDER. Excavations at Nebaj, Guatemala. WithNotes on the Skeletal Material, by T. D. STEWART. 1951. Quarto, vii + 90 pp., frontispiece, 90

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figs.

595 RUPPERT, KARL. Chichen Itza: Architectural Notes and Plans. 1952. Quarto, vi + 169 pp., 151figs. (fig. 151, map in pocket).

596 Contributions to American Anthropology and History. Vol. XI, Nos. 52-56. 1952. Quarto, v + 236pp., 1 frontispiece, 145 figs.

WILLIAMS, HOWEL. Geologic Observations of the Ancient Human Foo prints nearManagua, Nicaragua. pp. 1-31, 11 figs. (Contr. 52)

SHOOK, EDWIN M., and ALFRED V. KIDDER. Mound E-III-3, Kaminaljuyu, Guate-mala. pp. 33-127, 81 figs. (Contr. 53)

ROYS, RALPH L. Conquest Sites and the Subsequent Destruction of Maya Architecture inthe Interior of Northern Yucatan. pp. 129-182, 4 figs. (Contr. 54)

STRÖMSVIK, GUSTAV. The Ball Courts at Copan; with Notes on Courts at La Union,Quirigua, San Pedro Pinula, and Asuncion Mita. pp. 183-214, frontispiece, 23 figs.(Contr. 55)

SMITH, ROBERT E. Pottery from Chipoc, Alta Verapaz, Guatemala. pp. 215-236, 26 figs.(Contr. 56)

597 LONGYEAR, JOHN M., 111. Copan Ceramics: A Study of Southeastern Maya Pottery. 1952.Quarto, xiii + 114 pp., 118 figs., 3 maps.

598 CHAMBERLAIN, ROBERT S. The Conquest and Colonization of Honduras, 1502-1550. 1953.Octavo, vi + 264 pp., 5 figs.

599 MACGINITIE, HARRY D. Fossil Plants of the Florissant Beds, Colorado. (Contributions toPaleontology.) 1953. Octavo, iii + 198 pp., 75 pls., 1 fig.

600 BURLEW, JOHN S., edited by. Algal Culture: From Laboratory to Pilot Plant. 1953. Octavo, ix +357 pp., 92 figs.

BUSH, V. Foreword. pp. iii-vi.1. BURLEW, JOHN S. Current Status of the Large-Scale Culture of Algae. pp. 3-23.2. SPOEHR, H. A. The Need for a New Source of Food. pp. 24-28.3. MYERS, JACK. The Biology of the Algae: A Brief Summary. pp. 31-36, 2 figs.4. MYERS, JACK. Growth Characteristics of Algae in Relation to the Problems of Mass

Culture. pp. 37-54, 4 figs.5. WASSINK, E. C., B. KOK, and J. L. P. VAN OORSCHOT. The Efficiency of Light-

Energy Conversion in Chlorella Cultures As Compared with Higher Plants. pp. 55-62.

6. KOK, BESSEL. Experiments on Photosynthesis by Chlorella in Flashing Light. pp. 63-75, 8 figs.

7. TAMIYA, H., K. SHIBATA, T. SASA, T. IWAMURA, and Y. MORIMURA. Effect ofDiurnally Intermittent Illumination on the Growth and Some Cellular Characteristicsof Chlorella. pp. 76-84, 3 figs.

8. KRAUSS, ROBERT W. Inorganic Nutrition of Algae. pp. 85-102, 4 figs.9. DAVIS, E. A., JEAN DEDRICK, C. S. FRENCH, H. W. MILNER, JACK MYERS, J. H.

C. SMITH, and H. A. SPOEHR. Laboratory Experiments on Chlorella Culture at theCarnegie Institution of Washington Department of Plant Biology. pp. 105-153, 25figs.

10. VON WITSCH, H., and R. HARDER. (English summary by H. A. SPOEHR.)Stoffproduktion dutch Grünalgen und Diatomeen in Massenkultur. pp. 154-165, 3figs.

11. GUMMERT, F., M.-E. MEFFERT, and H. STRATMANN. Non-sterile Large-ScaleCulture of Chlorella in Greenhouse and Open Air. pp. 166-176, 5 figs.

12. FOGG, G. E., and DOROTHY M. COLLYER. The Accumulation of Lipides by Algae.pp. 177-181, 1 fig.

13. GEOGHEGAN, M. J. Experiments with Chlorella at Jealott’s Hill. pp. 182-189.14. JORGENSEN, JORGEN, and JACINTO CONVIT. Cultivation of Complexes of Algae

with Other Fresh-Water Microorganisms in the Tropics. pp. 190-196.

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15. EVENARI, M., A. M. MAYER, and E. GOTTESMAN. Experiments on Culture ofAlgae in Israel. pp. 197-203.

16. TAMIYA, H., E. HASE, K. SHIBATA, A. MITUYA, T. IWAMURA, T. NIHEI, andT. SASA. Kinetics of Growth of Chlorella, with Special Reference to Its Depen-dence on Quantity of Available Light and on Temperature. pp. 204-232, 18 figs.

17. (Based on report by Arthur D. Little, Inc.) Pilot-Plant Studies in the Production ofChlorella. pp. 235-272, 12 figs.

18. MITUYA, A., T. NYUNOYA, and H. TAMIYA. Pre-Pilot-Plant Experiments onAlgal Mass Culture. pp. 273-281, 5 figs.

19. MILNER, HAROLD W. The Chemical Composition of Algae. pp. 285-302.20. FISHER, A. W., JR., and JOHN S. BURLEW. Nutritional Value of Microscopic

Algae. pp. 303-310, 1 fig.21. FISHER, A. W., JR. Microscopic Algae as Industrial Raw Materials. pp. 311-315.22. KRAUSS, ROBERT W., and WILLIAM J. MCALEER. Growth and Evaluation of

Species of Algae with Regard to Sterol Content. pp. 316-325, 1 fig. Bibliography.pp. 329-345.

601 WILSON, RALPH ELMER. General Catalogue of Stellar Radial Velocities. (Papers of the MountWilson Observatory, Vol. VIII.) 1953. Quarto, x + 344 pp.

602 RUPPERT, KARL, J. ERIC S. THOMPSON, and TATIANA PROSKOURIAKOFF, etc.Bonampak, Chiapas, Mexico. 1955. 71 pp., 29 pls. (some color), 10 graphs.

603 Contributions to Embryology Vol. XXXV. Nos. 231-241. 1954. 237 pp.

CORNER, GEORGE. W. and GEORGE W. BARTELMEZ. Early Abnormal Embryos ofthe Rhesus Monkey. pp 1-9, 5 pls.

GILBERT, CHRISTINE and CHESTER H. HEUSER. Studies in the Development of theBaboon (Papio ursinus): A Description of Two Presomite and Two Late SomitStage Embryos. pp. 11-54, 11 pls., 3 figs.

BARTLEMEZ, G. W. (with the collaboration of MARY P. BLOUNT). The Formation ofthe Neural Crest from the Primary Optic Vesicle in Man. pp. 55-71, 10 pls.

REYNOLDS, S. R. M., G. M. ARDRAN, and M. M. L. PRICHARD. Observations onRegional Circulation Time sin the Lamb under Fetal and Neonatal Conditions. pp.73-92, 3 figs.

WELLS, L. J. and G. VAN WAGENEN. Androgen-Induced Female Pseudohermaphrodit-ism in th Monkey (Macaca mulatta): Anatomy of the Reproductive Organs. pp. 93-106, 6 pls.

WELLS, L. J. Development of the Human Diphragm and Pleural Sacs. pp. 107-134, 33figs.

CHACKO, ANNA W. and S. R. M. REYNOLDS. Architectue of Distended andNondistended Human Umbilical Cord Tissues, with Special Reference to theArteries and Veins. pp. 135-150, 6 pls., 4 figs.

RAMSEY, ELIZABETH MAPELSDEN. Venous Drainage of the Placenta of the RhesusMonkey (Macaca mulatta). pp. 151-173, 7 pls.

TORREY, THEODORE W. The Early Development of the Human Nephros. pp. 175-197,4 pls., 3 figs.

HERTIG, ARTHUR T., JOHN ROCK, ELEANOR C. ADAMS, and WILLIAM J.MULLIGAN. On the Preimplantation stages of the Human Ovum: A Description ofFour Normal and Four Abnormal Specimens Ranging from the Second to the FifthDay of Development. pp 199-220, 5 pls.

SETTLE, GEORGE W. Localization of the Erythrocyte-Forming Areas in the Early ChickBlastoderm Cultivated in Vitro. pp. 221-237, 11 figs.

604 MORRIS, EARL H. and ROBERT F. BURGH. Basketmaker II Sites Near Durango, Colorado.1954. 135 pp., 116 illus.

605 GODSKE, C. L., T. BERGERON, J. BJERKNES, and R. C. BUNDGAARD. 1957. 800pp.

606 Contributions to American Anthropology and History. Vol. XII. Nos. 57-60. 1960. 264 pp., 19 pls.

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ROYS, RALPH L. The Maya Katun Prophecies of the Books of Chilam Balam, Series I.pp. 1-60.

PROSKOURIAKOFF, TATIANA. Varieties of Classic Central Veracruz Sculpture. pp 61-94.

BERLIN, HEINRICH. Late Pottery Horizons of Tabasco, Mexico. pp. 95-154.SANDERS, WILLIAM T. Prehistoric Ceramics and Settlement Patterns in Quintana Roo,

Mexico. pp. 155-264.

607 ROBERTS, RICHARD B., PHILIP H. ABELSON, DEAN B. COWIE, ELLIS T. BOLTON, andROY J. BRITTEN. Studies of Biosynthesis in Escherichia coli. 1955. 521 pp.

608 SMITH, A. LEDYARD. Archaeological Reconnaissance in Central America. 1955. 87 pp., 141 pls.

609 SHEPARD, ANNA O. Ceramics for the Archaelogist. 1956. 414 pp.

610 MERRILL, PAUL W. Lines of the Chemical Elements in Astronomical Spectra. [Papers of theMount Wilson Observatory, Vol IX.] 1956. 167 pp.

611 Contributions to Embryology, Vol. XXVI. Nos. 242-251. 1957. 210 pp., 60 pls.

HEARD, OSBORNE O. Methods Used by C. H. Heuser in Preparing and Sectioning EarlyEmbryos. pp. 1-18, 3 pls., 12 figs.

MOFFETT, BENJAMIN C., JR. The Prenatal Development of the Human Temporoman-dibular Joint. pp. 19-28, 2 pls.

HEUSER, CHESTER, H. and GEORGE W. CORNER. Developmental Horizons in HumanEmbryos. Description of Age Group X, 4 to 12 Somites. pp. 29-39, 2 pls., 2 figs.

SMITH, E. IDE. The Early Development of the Trachea and the Esophagus in Relation toAtresia of the Esophagus and Trachoesophageal Fistula. pp. 41-57, 4 pls., 11 figs.

GILBERT, PERRY W. The Origin and Development of the Human Extrinsic OcularMuscles. pp. 59-78, 14 pls., 2 figs.

PADGET, DORCAS H. The Development of the Cranial Venous System in Man, from theViewpoint of Comparative Anatomy. pp. 79-140, 6 pls., 18 figs.

SENSENIG, E. CARL. The Development of the Occipital and Cervical Segments and TheirAssociated Structures in Human Embryos. pp. 141-152, 4 pls.

BARTELMEZ, GEORGE W. The Form and Function of the Uterine Bood vessels in theRhesus Monkey. pp. 153-182, 15 pls.

O’RAHILLY, RONAN, D. J. GRAY, and ERNEST GARDNER. Chondrification in theHands and Feet of Staged Human Embryos. pp. 183-192, 1 pl.

CROWDER, ROY E. The Development of the Adrenal Gland in Man, with SpecialReference to Origin and Ultimate Location of Cell Types and Eveidence in Favor ofthe “Cell Migration” Theory. pp. 193-210, 8 pls., 7 figs.

612 DEMEREC, M., ZLATA HARTMAN, PHILIP E. HARTMAN, TAKASHI YURA, JOSEPH S.GOTS, HARUO OZEKI and S. W. GLOVER. Genetic Studies with Bacteria. 1956. 136 pp.

DEMEREC, M. Terminology and Nomenclature. pp. 1-4.DEMEREC, M. and ZLATA HARTMAN. Tryptophan Mutants in Salmonella typhimurium.

pp. 5-34.HARTMAN, PHILIP E. Linked Loci in the Control of Consectuve Steps in the Primary

Pathway of Histidine Synthesis in Salmonella typhimurium. pp. 63-76.YURA, TAKASHI. Suppressor Mutation in Purine-Requiring Mutants of Salmonella

typhimurium. pp. 77-86.GOTS, JOSEPH S. The Biochemical Nature of a Suppressor Mutation in a Purine-requiring

Mutant of Salmonella typhimurium. pp. 87-96.OZEKI, HARUO. Abortive Transduction in Purine-Requiring Mutants of Salmonella

typhimurium. pp. 97-106.HARTMAN, ZLATA. Induced Mutability in Salmonella typhimurium. pp. 107-120.GLOVER, S. W. A Comparative Study of Induced Reversion in Escherichia coli. pp. 121-

136.

613 ROYS, RALPH L. The Political Geography of the Yucatan Maya. 1957. 187 pp., 17 maps.

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614 MOSER, HERMAN. The Dynamics of Bacterial Populations Maintained in the Chemostat. 1958.136 pp.

615 CLAUSEN, JENS and WILLIAM N. HIESEY. Experimental Studies on the Nature of Species. IV.Genetic Structure of Ecological Races. 1958. 312 pp.

616 BLAKE, MARION ELIZABETH. Roman Construction in Italy from Tiberius through theFlavians. 1959. 195 pp., 31 pls.

617 Miocene Floras of the Columbia Plateau. (Contributions to Paleontology) 1959. 237 pp., 44 pls.

Part I. Composition and Interpretation. RALPH W. CHANEY. pp. 1-135Part II. Systematic Considerations. RALPH W. CHANEY and DANIEL I. AXELROD.

pp. 136-229.

618 SANDAGE, ALLAN. The Hubble Atlas of Galaxies. 1962. 31 pp., 50 pls.

619 POLLOCK, H. E. D., RALPH L. ROYS, T. PROKOURIAKOFF, and A. LEDYARD SMITH.Mayapan, Yucatan, Mexico. 1962. 442 pp., 53 pls., 2 maps.

620 FORBUSH, SCOTT E., and MATEO CASAVERDE. Equatorial Electrojet in Peru. 1961. 135 pp.,98 tables.

621 Contributions to Embryology. Vol. XXXVII. (Nos. 252-258) 1962. 129 pp.

BARTELMEZ, GEORGE W. The Proliferation of Neural Crest from Forebrain Levels inthe Rat. pp. 1-12, 8 pls., 7 figs.

BARTELMEZ, GEORGE W. and A. S. DEKABAN. The Early Development of theHuman Brain. pp. 13-32, 30 pls.

BÖVING, BENT G. Anatomical Analysis of Rabbit Trophoblast Invasion. pp. 33-55, 15pls., 1 fig.

DELANNEY, L. E. and J. D. EBERT in collaboration with C. M. COFFMAN and A. M.MUN. On the Chick Spleen: Origin; Patterns of Normal Development and TheirExperimental Modification. pp. 57-85, 14 pls., 1 fig.

DE VRIES, PIETER A. and JOHN B. DE C. M. SAUNDERS. Development of theVentricles and Spral Outflow Tract in the Human Heart. pp. 87-114, 9 pls., 9 figs.

NARBAITZ, ROBERTO. The Primordial Germ Cells in the Male Human Embryo. pp.115-119, 5 pls.

MCKENZIE, J. The Deveopment of th eSternomastoid and Trapezius Muscles. pp. 121-129, 13 pls., 2 figs.

622 STEINHART, JOHN S., and ROBERT P. MEYER [with contributors WILLIAM E. BONINI, T.JEFFERSON SMITH, and GEORGE P. WOOLLARD.] Explosion Studies of Continental Struc-ture. 1961. 409 pp., 2 pls.

623 NOBS, MALCOLM A. Experimental Studies on Species Relationships in Ceanothus. 1963. 94 pp.

624 ROBERTS, RICHARD B., edited by. Studies of Macromolecular Biosynthesis. 1964. 702 pp.

625 Contributions to Embryology. Vol XXXVIII. Nos. 259-263. 1966. 131 pp.

O’RAHILLY, RONAN. The Early Development of the Eye in Staged Human Embryos.pp. 1-42.

HARRIS, JOHN W. S. and ELIZABETH M. RAMSEY. The Morphology of HumanUteroplacental Vasculature. pp. 43-58.

RAMSEY, ELIZABETH M. and JOHN W. S. HARRIS. Comparison of UteroplacentalVasculature and Circulation in the Rhesus Monkey and Man. pp. 59-70.

ROSENQUIST, GLENN C. A Radioautographic Study of Labeled Grafts in the ChickBlastoderm: Development from Primitive-Streak Saes to Stage 12. pp 71-110.

ROSENQUIST, GLENN C. and ROBER L. DEHAAN. Migration of Precardiac Cells inthe Chick Embryo: A Radioautographic Study. pp. 111-121.

Index of Authors, Volumes I-XXXVIII, 1915-1966. pp. 122-129.

626 Atlas of Solar Magnetic Fields.

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627 LINDSLEY, D. L. and E. H. GRELL. Genetic Variations of Drosophila melanogaster. 1967. 472 pp.

628 HIESEY, WILLIAM M., MALCOLM A. NOBS, AND OLLE BJÖRKMAN. Experimental Studieson the Nature of Species V: Biosystematics, Genetics, and Physiological Ecology of the ErythrantheSection of Mimulus. 1971. 213 pp., 73 figs.

629 GARZOLI, SILVIA L. An Atlas of Galactic Neutral Hydrogen for the Region 270° < i < 310°; -7°< b < 2°. 1972. 123 pp.

630 TUVE, MERLE A., and SOREN LUNDSAGER. Velocity Structures in Hydrogen Profiles: A SkyAtlas of Neutral Hydrogen Emission. 1973. 178 pp.

631 O’RAHILLY, RONAN. Developmental Stages in Human Embryos. Part A: Embryos of the FirstThree Weeks (Stages 1-9). 1973.

632 BAJAJA, E. and F. R. COLOMB. Observations in the 21-cm Neutral Hydrogen Line. 1973. 77 pp.

633 PÖPPEL, W. G. L. and E. R. VIEIRA. An Atlas of Galactic Hydrogen: I. The Region 0° < i < 12°;+3° < b < +17°. 1974. 46 pp., 42 figs.

634 HOFMANN, A. W., B. J. GILETTI, H. S. YODER, JR., and R. A. YUND, edited by. GeochemicalTransport and Kinetics: Papers presented at a conference at Airlie House, Warrenton, Va., June,1973. 1974. 353 pp.

635 SANDAGE, ALLAN, and G. A. TAMMANN. A Revised Shapley-Ames Catalog of Bright Galaxies.1981. Second printing. 157 pp.

636 HIESEY, WILLIAM M. and MALCOLM A. NOBS. Experimental Studies on the Nature of Species:VI: Interspecific Hybrid Derivatives between Facultatively Apomictic Species of Bluegrasses andtheir Responses to Contrasting Environments. 1982. 118 pp., 23 tables, 28 figs.

637 O’RAHILLY, RONAN and FABIOLA MÜLLER. Developmental Stages in Human Embryos. 1987.306 pp.

638 SANDAGE, ALLAN and JOHN BEDKE. The Carnegie Atlas of Galaxies. 1994. 2 volumes. 750pp.

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Abelson, P. H. . . . . . . . . . . 607Adams, E. C. . . . . . . . . . . . . 592, 603Adams, E. B. . . . . . . . . . . . . 523, 560Adams, E. D. . . . . . . . . . . . 13Adams, E. F. . . . . . . . . . . . . 396Adams, F. D. . . . . . . . . . . . . 46Adams, W. S. . . . . . . . . . . . 138Aitken, R. G. . . . . . . . . . . . . 417Albrecht, S. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 468Allen, E. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 380, 414Allen, E. T. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31, 157, 360, 378, 466Allison, W. H. . . . . . . . . . . . 137Alsberg, C. L. . . . . . . . . . . . 177Amsden, M. . . . . . . . . . . . . 477Andersen, D. H. . . . . . . . . . 362, 380Anderson, J. A. . . . . . . . . . . 110Anderson, R. . . . . . . . . . . . . 87Andrews, C. M. . . . . . . . . . 90, 90AAndrews, E. W. . . . . . . . . . 509, 546Antevs, E. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 352, 469Ardran, G. M. . . . . . . . . . . . 603Arey, L. B. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 496Atwater, W. O. . . . . . . . . . . 42Atwell, W. J. . . . . . . . . . . . . 407Ault, J. P. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 175 (III, V), 571Axelrod, D. I. . . . . . . . . . . . 476, 516, 553, 590, 617

B

Babcock, E. B. . . . . . . . . . . 484, 504Babcock, H. D. . . . . . . . . . . 396, 579Baird, A. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 87Baird, J. W. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29Bajaja, E. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 632Baker, F. C. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 538Baker, J. T. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 592Baldwin, A. L. . . . . . . . . . . 87Baldwin, D. L. . . . . . . . . . . 208Ball, S. C. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 252Balsam, E. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 175 (VII-C, X-A, X-B, X-C)Bandelier, A. F. A. . . . . . . . 330Bandelier, F. R. . . . . . . . . . 330Banks, N. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 491Banta, A. M. . . . . . . . . . . . . 67, 305, 513Barber, H. G. . . . . . . . . . . . 555Bardeen, C. R. . . . . . . . . . . 272Barnard, E. E. . . . . . . . . . . . 247Barnes, G. W. . . . . . . . . . . . 475Barnett, S. J. . . . . . . . . . . . . 175 (IV)Barrera Vasquez, A. . . . . . . 585Barry, L. W. . . . . . . . . . . . . 274Bartelmez, G. W. . . . . . . . . 362, 443, 557, 592, 603, 611, 621Barth, T. F. W. . . . . . . . . . . 587Bartlett, H. H. . . . . . . . . . . . 461Bartsch, P. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 212, 282Barus, C. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40, 62, 96, 149, 186,

229, 249, 310, 383Bassett, H. P. . . . . . . . . . . . 60, 80

Bassett, J. S. . . . . . . . . . . . . 371Bassler, R. S. . . . . . . . . . . . 291Bast, T. H. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 407Bates, R. W. . . . . . . . . . . . . 569Bauer, L. A. . . . . . . . . . . . . 175(I, II, III, IV, V)Baxter, G. P. . . . . . . . . . . . . 135Baxter, J. S. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 459Bean, R. B. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 272Becker, G. F. . . . . . . . . . . . . 31Bedke, J. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 638Behr, G. E., Jr. . . . . . . . . . . 61Bell, H. C. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 372Benedict, C. G. . . . . . . . . . . 446Benedict, F. G. . . . . . . . . . . 42, 77, 123, 126, 136,155, 166,

167, 176, 187, 201, 203, 231, 232,261, 279, 280, 302,324, 377, 395,425, 431, 446, 456, 474, 489, 494,497, 503

Bensley, C. M. . . . . . . . . . . 592Bequaert, J. C. . . . . . . . . . . 431, 457, 491, 499Bergen, H. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 262Berger, C. A. . . . . . . . . . . . . 496Bergeron, T. . . . . . . . . . . . . 605Berkner, L. V. . . . . . . . . . . . 175 (XI, XII, XIII)Berlin, H. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 606Beyer, H. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 483Bidwell, P. W. . . . . . . . . . . 358Bingham, E. C. . . . . . . . . . . 80Bingham, H. C. . . . . . . . . . . 426Bjerknes, J. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 605Bjerknes, V. . . . . . . . . . . . . 88Bjorkman, O. . . . . . . . . . . . 628Blackwelder, E. . . . . . . . . . 54Blake, M. E. . . . . . . . . . . . . 570, 616Blake, W. P. . . . . . . . . . . . . 193Blakeslee, A. F. . . . . . . . . . 451Bland, L. J. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 414Blossom, P. M. . . . . . . . . . . 485Blount, M. B. . . . . . . . . . . . 603Bode, F. D. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 440, 453Bolton, E. T. . . . . . . . . . . . . 607Bolton, H. E. . . . . . . . . . . . . 163Bonini, W. E. . . . . . . . . . . . 622Bonnet, F., Jr. . . . . . . . . . . . 76Boschma, H. . . . . . . . . . . . . 391Boss, B. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 386, 419, 468Boss, L. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 115, 246, 386Böttger, W. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63Böving, B. G. . . . . . . . . . . . 621Bowman, H. H. M. . . . . . . . 252Boyd, J. D. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 479Boyden, E. A. . . . . . . . . . . . 518Boynton, E. P. . . . . . . . . . . 518Bramlette, M. N. . . . . . . . . . 344Branner, J. C. . . . . . . . . . . . 87Brannon, M. A. . . . . . . . . . . 193Breder, C. M., Jr. . . . . . . . . 435, 452Brehme, K. S. . . . . . . . . . . . 552Breitenbecher, J. K. . . . . . . 263

INDEX

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Bremer, J. L. . . . . . . . . . . . . 459Brewer, J. I. . . . . . . . . . . . . 496, 525Bridges, C. B. . . . . . . . . . . . 237, 278, 327, 399, 552Brink, F. N. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 76Britten, R. J. . . . . . . . . . . . . 607Britton, N. L. . . . . . . . . . . . 248Bronikovsky, N. . . . . . . . . . 565Brooks, W. K. . . . . . . . . . . . 102Broughton, L. N. . . . . . . . . 208Brown, A. P. . . . . . . . . . . . . 116Brown, C. J. D. . . . . . . . . . . 457Brown, L. A. . . . . . . . . . . . . 513Buchanan, D. . . . . . . . . . . . 161Buck, T. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 161Buell, C. E., Jr. . . . . . . . . . . 277Bullington, W. E. . . . . . . . . 517Bundgaard, R. C. . . . . . . . . 605Burckhalter, C. . . . . . . . . . . 87Burgh, R. F. . . . . . . . . . . . . 533, 604Burlew, J. S. . . . . . . . . . . . . 600Burnett, E. C. . . . . . . . . . . . 299Burnham, S. W. . . . . . . . . . 5, 168Burns, R. K., Jr. . . . . . . . . . 541, 557Bush, V. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 600Buwalda, J. P. . . . . . . . . . . . 404Byerly, P. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 382

C

Cady, W. G. . . . . . . . . . . . . 167Callaway, M., Jr. . . . . . . . . . 169Calvert, M. R. . . . . . . . . . . . 247Campbell, A. S. . . . . . . . . . 537Campbell, D. H. . . . . . . . . . 140Campbell, W. W. . . . . . . . . 87Cannon, W. A. . . . . . . . . . . 98, 117, 129,131,

178, 308, 354, 368Canu, F. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 291Carr, H. A. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 257Carroll, C. G. . . . . . . . . . . . 80Carpenter, T. M. 123, 126, 216, 261, 303, 303A,

303B, 303C, 369Cary, L. R. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 182, 213, 251, 252, 413, 435Casaverde, M. . . . . . . . . . . . 620Case, E. C. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55 , 145, 146, 181, 207,

283, 321, 375Cash, J. R. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 276Castle, W. E. . . . . . . . . . . . . 23, 49, 70, 114, 144,179, 195,

196, 205, 241, 288, 320, 337, 427Cathcart, E. P. . . . . . . . . . . . 187Catterall, H. T. . . . . . . . . . . 374Chacko, A. W. . . . . . . . . . . 603Chamberlain, R. S. . . . . . . . 509, 560, 574, 582, 598Chamberlin, J. C. . . . . . . . . 491Chamberlin, R. T. . . . . . . . . 106, 340Chamberlin, R. V. . . . . . . . 491Chamberlin, T. C. . . . . . . . . 107Chambers, A. A. . . . . . . . . . 213Chaney, R. W. . . . . . . . . . . 346, 349, 415, 439,

476, 507, 553, 617Chapin, E. A. . . . . . . . . . . . 555Chapman, F. M. . . . . . . . . . 103

Chailot, J. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 406, 424Chatelain, V. E. . . . . . . . . . 511Chitwood, B. G. . . . . . . . . . 491Churchill, W. . . . . . . . . . . . 134, 154, 174, 184, 244, 255Clark, A. H. . . . . . . . . . . . . 555Clark, E. L. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 272Clark, E. R. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 222, 272Clark, H. L. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 182, 212, 214, 251, 281, 566Clark, L. B. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 524Clark, S. D. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 499Clark, V. S. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 215B, 488Clarke, K. B. . . . . . . . . . . . . 544Clausen, J. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 520, 564, 581, 615Clawson, A. B. . . . . . . . . . . 64Clements, F. E. . . . . . . . . . . 242, 290, 315, 326, 336

355, 356, 398, 521Clench, W. J. . . . . . . . . . . . 431, 457, 491Cleven, N. A. N. . . . . . . . . . 510 Cline, H. F. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 559Clover, A. M. . . . . . . . . . . . 170Cobb, S. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 114Coblentz, W. W. . . . . . . . . . 35, 65, 97, 164Cochran, D. M. . . . . . . . . . . 555Cockerell, T. D. A. . . . . . . . 346Coffin, F. B. . . . . . . . . . . . . 135Coffman, C. M. . . . . . . . . . . 621Coker, E. G. . . . . . . . . . . . . 46Colbert, E. H. . . . . . . . . . . . 487Collyer, D. M. . . . . . . . . . . . 600Colomb, F. R. . . . . . . . . . . . 632Conard, H. S. . . . . . . . . . . . 4, 94Condit, C. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 476, 553Congdon, E. D. . . . . . . . . . . 277Conger, P. S. . . . . . . . . . . . . 538Conklin, E. G. . . . . . . . . . . . 103Connell, F. H. . . . . . . . . . . . 431Connolly, G. C. . . . . . . . . . . 230Convit, J. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 600Cooke, C. W. . . . . . . . . . . . 291Cooke, E. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 177Coolidge, W. D. . . . . . . . . . 63Coonfield, B. R. . . . . . . . . . 517Cooper, C. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 578Cooper, H. C. . . . . . . . . . . . 63Cooper, L. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 202Cooper, W. S. . . . . . . . . . . . 319Corner, G. W. . . . . . . . . . . . 222, 272, 274, 276, 332, 364, 394,

525, 541, 557, 575, 592, 603, 611Embryology Reprint Vol. I, Vol. II

Corson-White, E. P. . . . . . . 177Cosgrove, C. B. . . . . . . . . . 585Cosgrove, H. S. . . . . . . . . . 585Coville, F. V. . . . . . . . . . . . 6Cowdry, E. V. . . . . . . . . . . . 224, 271Cowie, D. B. . . . . . . . . . . . . 607Cowles, R. P. . . . . . . . . . . . 103, 132Crampton, H. E. . . . . . . . . . 228, 228A, 410Crandall, R. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 87Creaser, E. P. . . . . . . . . . . . 457, 491Cresse, G. H. . . . . . . . . . . . . 256Cressman, L. S. . . . . . . . . . . 538Crist, J. W. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 316Crow, R. M. . . . . . . . . . . . . 571

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Crowder, R. E. . . . . . . . . . . 611Cuajunco, F. . . . . . . . . . . . . 380, 518, 541Cummins, H. . . . . . . . . . . . . 394Cunningham, R. S. . . . . . . . 224, 361Cushman, J. A. . . . . . . . . . . 213, 291, 311, 342, 344

D

Dahlgren, U. . . . . . . . . . . . . 183, 212Daly, R. A. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 340Danchakoff, V. . . . . . . . . . . 274, 363, 407Danchakoff, V. E. . . . . . . . . 407Danielson, F. H. . . . . . . . . . 188Darby, H. H. . . . . . . . . . . . . 435, 452, 475, 517Darlington, P. J., Jr. . . . . . . 457Daugherty, L. H. . . . . . . . . . 365, 526Davenport, C. B. . . . . . . . . . 52, 95, 121, 188, 236

259, 329, 395, 428, 496Davenport, F. G. . . . . . . . . . 90, 254David, L. R. . . . . . . . . . . . . 551Davidson, G. . . . . . . . . . . . . 87Davis, C. L. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 332, 380Davis, E. A. . . . . . . . . . . . . 600Davis, J. H., Jr. . . . . . . . . . . 517, 524Davis, P. B. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 180, 210, 230, 260Davis, W. M. . . . . . . . . . . . 26Day, A. L. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31, 157, 360, 378, 466Day, C. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 488de Allende, I. L. C. . . . . . . . 557Dean, B. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32Decker, F. F. . . . . . . . . . . . . 120Dedrick, J. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 600DeHaan, R. L. . . . . . . . . . . . 625DeLanney, L. E. . . . . . . . . . 621de Laubenfels, M. W. . . . . . 435, 467, 555DeMay, I. S. . . . . . . . . . . . . 530Demerec, M. . . . . . . . . . . . . Drosophila Guide, 612Denison, J. H., Jr. . . . . . . . . 543de Terra, H. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 493Detlefsen, J. A. . . . . . . . . . . 205Devik, O. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 88De Vries, P. A. . . . . . . . . . . 621Dice, L. R. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 349, 485Dickson, L. E. . . . . . . . . . . . 256, 464Doan, C. A. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 277, 361Dobzhansky, T. . . . . . . . . . . 421, 554Dodge, R. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 232Dole, R. B. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 182, 213Donnan, E. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 409Doolittle, E. . . . . . . . . . . . . 417Dorf, E. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 412, 476, 508Dorsey, G. A. . . . . . . . . . . . 17, 21, 41, 59Dotti, L. B. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 569Dougherty, J. F. . . . . . . . . . 514Douglass, A. E. . . . . . . . . . . 192, 289, 486Doyle, M. M. . . . . . . . . . . . 517Doyle, W. L. . . . . . . . . . . . . 452, 517Doysié, A. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 392Drescher, A. B. . . . . . . . . . . 530Drew, G. A. . . . . . . . . . . . . 281Drew, G. H. . . . . . . . . . . . . 182Duerden, J. E. . . . . . . . . . . . 20

Duerst, J. U. . . . . . . . . . . . . 73Duesberg, J. . . . . . . . . . . . . 223, 272Durand, W. F. . . . . . . . . . . . 79Du Toit, A. L. . . . . . . . . . . . 381Dyar, H. G. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 159, 387

E

Eakle, A. S. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 87Eastman, G. W. . . . . . . . . . . 63Ebert, J. D. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 621Edmondson, C. H. . . . . . . . 102Eigenmann, C. H. . . . . . . . . 104Elias, M. K. . . . . . . . . . . . . 476Emerson, B. M. . . . . . . . . . . 592Ennis, C. C. . . . . . . . . . . . . 545A, 545BEnteman, W. M. . . . . . . . . . 19Epling, C. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 522, 554Essick, C. R. . . . . . . . . . . . . 222, 272Estabrook, A. H. . . . . . . . . . 240Evans, H. M. . . . . . . . . . . . . 273, 362Evans, L. C. . . . . . . . . . . . . 208Evenari, M. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 600

F

Fairbanks, H. W. . . . . . . . . . 87Falconer, J. I. . . . . . . . . . . . 358Farlow, W. G. . . . . . . . . . . . 8Farnam, H. W. . . . . . . . . . . 215A, 215B, 488Faulconer, R . J. . . . . . . . . . 592Faust, A. B. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 220Feldman, H. W. . . . . . . . . . 337Felsch, J. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 382Feltham, C. B. . . . . . . . . . . . 435Ferry, E. L. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 156Finley, E. B. . . . . . . . . . . . . 277Finley, J. P. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 184Fish, C. R. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 128Fisher, A. W., Jr. . . . . . . . . 600Fisk, H. W. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 175 (IV, VI)Fitz-Gerald, P. A. M. F. . . . 518Fleisher, M. S. . . . . . . . . . . 177Fleming, J. A. . . . . . . . . . . . 175 (II, III, V, VII-A, VII-B),

545A, 545B, 571Flexner, L. B. . . . . . . . . . . . 394, 479Flint, A. S. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 515Fogg, G. E. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 600Folse, J. A. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 400Forbes, A. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49Forbes, G. S. . . . . . . . . . . . . 56, 69Forbes, T. R. . . . . . . . . . . . . 518, 541Forbush, S. E. . . . . . . . . . . . 175 (VII-A, VII-B, X-A, X-B),

175 (XIV), 571, 620Fowler, H. W. . . . . . . . . . . . 252, 312Fox, H. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 177Fox, P. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 93Free, E. E. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 193, 368French, C. S. . . . . . . . . . . . . 600Frevert, H. L. . . . . . . . . . . . 135Frost, E. B. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43, 247Furlong, E. L. . . . . . . . . . . . 404, 418, 453, 530, 551

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Furness, C. E. . . . . . . . . . . . 45Furtos, N. C. . . . . . . . . . . . . 457, 491

G

Gaige, H. T. . . . . . . . . . . . . 457, 491Gardner, E. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 611Gardiner, M. S. . . . . . . . . . . 413Garrod-Thomas, R. N. . . . . 118Garzoli, S. L. . . . . . . . . . . . 629Gates, W. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 219Gates, W. H. . . . . . . . . . . . . 337Gault, C. C. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 251Gazin, C. L. . . . . . . . . . . . . 404, 418Gee, H. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 435Gentry, H. S . . . . . . . . . . . . 527Geoghegan, M. J. . . . . . . . . 600George, W. C. . . . . . . . . . . . 541Gersh, I. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 479, 525Gesell, A. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 395Getman, F. H. . . . . . . . . . . . 60Giesecke, A. A., Jr. . . . . . . . 175 (X C)Gilbert, C. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 603Gilbert, G. K. . . . . . . . . . . . 87, 262Gilbert, P. W. . . . . . . . . . . . 611Giletti, B. J. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 634Gillman, J. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 575Gilmore, C. W. . . . . . . . . . . 393Girty, G. H. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54Gish, O. H. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 175 (XVI), 568Githens, T. S. . . . . . . . . . . . 177Gleason, H. A. . . . . . . . . . . 522Glock, W. S. . . . . . . . . . . . . 486Glover, S. W. . . . . . . . . . . . 612Godske, C. L. . . . . . . . . . . . 605Golder, F. A. . . . . . . . . . . . . 239Goldfarb, A. J. . . . . . . . . . . 183, 251Goldman, M. I. . . . . . . . . . . 213, 344Goldsmith, G. W. . . . . . . . . 356, 420Gooch, F. A. . . . . . . . . . . . . 73 16Goodale, H. D. . . . . . . . . . . 243Goodner, K. . . . . . . . . . . . . 431 171Goranson, R. W. . . . . . . . . . 408Goss, W. F. M. . . . . . . . . . . 66, 127Gots, J. S. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 612Gottesman, E. . . . . . . . . . . . 600Graham, H. W. . . . . . . . . . . 542, 555, 562, 565Grave, C. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 435, 452, 517Gray, D. J. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 611Gray, L. C. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 430Green, J. W. . . . . . . . . . . . . 175 (VII-B, VIII)Gregory, P. W. . . . . . . . . . . 407Gregory, W. K. . . . . . . . . . . 495Grell, E. H. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 627Grey, I. M. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 340Griffin, F. L. . . . . . . . . . . . . 161Grinnell, J. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 481Grodzinski, Z. . . . . . . . . . . . 414Grollman, A. . . . . . . . . . . . . 525Gudger, E. W. . . . . . . . . . . . 183, 252, 281, 391Gulick, J. T. . . . . . . . . . . . . 25Gummert, F. . . . . . . . . . . . . 600

Guy, J. S. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 180, 190

H

Haasis, F. W. . . . . . . . . . . . 450Hackett, C. W. . . . . . . . . . . 330Hafenrichter, A. L. . . . . . . . 420Hagle, F. J. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58Haight, F. J. . . . . . . . . . . . . 452Hale, G. E. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 93, 235, 498Hall, E. R. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 473, 551Hall, F. G. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 457Hall, H. M. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 313, 326, 389Hamilton, C. E. . . . . . . . . . . 583Hanchett, D. S. . . . . . . . . . . 215AHansen, H. P. . . . . . . . . . . . 538Hanson, H. C. . . . . . . . . . . . 398Harder, R. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 600Hardin, G. J. . . . . . . . . . . . . 586Hargitt, C. W. . . . . . . . . . . . 132Harper, R. A. . . . . . . . . . . . 37Harris, J. A. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 279Harris, J. E. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 452, 475Harris, J. W. S. . . . . . . . . . . 625Hartman, C. G. . . . . . . . . . . 380, 433, 443, 525, 541, 557,592,

Embryology Reprint Vol. IHartman, P. E. . . . . . . . . . . 612Hartman, Z. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 612Hartmeyer, R. . . . . . . . . . . . 132Harvey, E. B. . . . . . . . . . . . 251Harvey, E. N. . . . . . . . . . . . 132, 183, 212, 251, 281, 312Hase, E. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 600Hasse, A. R. . . . . . . . . . . . . 85, 185Hatai, S. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 251Hawkins, L. A. . . . . . . . . . . 204Hay, O. P. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75, 322, 322A, 322B, 390Hayden, J. J. . . . . . . . . . . . . 374Hayes, F. R. . . . . . . . . . . . . 435Hayford, J. F. . . . . . . . . . . . 87, 317Heard, O. O. . . . . . . . . . . . . 611Hebel, J. W. . . . . . . . . . . . . 208Hedrick, H. B. . . . . . . . . . . . 245Hedrick, J. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 461Heidel, W. A. . . . . . . . . . . . 442Heizer, R. F. . . . . . . . . . . . . 538Hellman, M. . . . . . . . . . . . . 495Hendee, E. C. . . . . . . . . . . . 413Hendrix, W. C. . . . . . . . . . . 545B, 578Henshaw, P. C. . . . . . . . . . . 514, 530Hertig, A. T. . . . . . . . . . . . . 459, 525, 557, 583, 592, 603Hess, W. N. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 475, 517, 524Hesse, C. J. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 476Hesselberg, T. . . . . . . . . . . . 88Heuser, C. H. . . . . . . . . . . . 332, 380, 394, 414, 433

459, 525, 557, 592, 603, 611Embryology Reprint Vol. I, Vol. II

Hiesey, W. M. . . . . . . . . . . . 520, 564, 581, 615, 628, 636Hildebrand, S. F. . . . . . . . . 517, 535Hildebrandt, F. M. . . . . . . . 230Hilferty, M. M. . . . . . . . . . . 431, 499Hill, G. W. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9Hill, R. R. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 234

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Hinds, N. E. A. . . . . . . . . . . 463Hines, M. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 518, 541, 592Hines, M. A. . . . . . . . . . . . . 135Hinks, A. R. . . . . . . . . . . . . 147Hirth, F. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54Hobe, A. M. . . . . . . . . . . . . 119Hodell, C. W. . . . . . . . . . . . 89Hofmann, A. W. . . . . . . . . . 634Hoffman, G. F. . . . . . . . . . . 87Hoffmeister, J. E. . . . . . . . . 343, 344Holmes, A. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 210Holmes, F. S. . . . . . . . . . . . 230Holmes, J. E. L. . . . . . . . . . 230Holway, R. S. . . . . . . . . . . . 87Hooker, D. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 132Hopkins, H. S. . . . . . . . . . . 555Hosford, H. H. . . . . . . . . . . 170Houghtaling, H. . . . . . . . . . 451Howard, H. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 429, 487, 514, 530, 551, 584Howard, L. O. . . . . . . . . . . . 159Howard, S. F. . . . . . . . . . . . 170Howard, W. T., Jr. . . . . . . . 351Howe, M. A. . . . . . . . . . . . . 213, 291Howes, H. L . . . . . . . . . . . . 298, 384Hu, H. H. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 507Hubbell, T. H. . . . . . . . . . . . 491Hubbs, C. L. . . . . . . . . . . . . 457, 491Huber, E. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 447Huebner, G. G. . . . . . . . . . . 215AHughes, E. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 87Hughes, H. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 210Hungerford, H. B. . . . . . . . . 457Hunter, R. H. . . . . . . . . . . . 414Huntington, E. . . . . . . . . . . 26, 73, 192, 352Hussakof, L. . . . . . . . . . . . . 146Hutchinson, J. F. . . . . . . . . . 230Hyde, W. W. . . . . . . . . . . . . 268Hyman, L. H. . . . . . . . . . . . 491

I

Iddings, J. P. . . . . . . . . . . . . 31Ingalls, N. W. . . . . . . . . . . . 227, 274Ingle, L. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 513Ivens, W. G. . . . . . . . . . . . . 253, 300Ivie, W. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 491Iwamura, T. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 600

J

Jackson, R. T. . . . . . . . . . . . 182, 306Jacobs, M. H. . . . . . . . . . . . 183Jacobs, W. C. . . . . . . . . . . . 544Jacobson, C. A. . . . . . . . . . . 170Jahns, R. H. . . . . . . . . . . . . 514James, H. G. . . . . . . . . . . . . 334Jean, F. C. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 316, 357Jenkins, G. B. . . . . . . . . . . . 272, 276Jenkins, H. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 468Jenks, A. E. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 200Jennings, H. S. . . . . . . . . . . 16Jennings, J. D. . . . . . . . . . . 561

Jesse, R. H., Jr. . . . . . . . . . . 135Jochelson, W. . . . . . . . . . . . 367, 388, 432Johnson, D. S. . . . . . . . . . . . 206, 269Johnson, E. R. . . . . . . . . . . . 215AJohnson, E. R. F. . . . . . . . . 475Johnson, F. P. . . . . . . . . . . . 226Johnson, R. H. . . . . . . . . . . 122Johnston, E. S. . . . . . . . . . . 230Johnston, H. F. . . . . . . . . . . 175 (VII-A, VII-B, X-A, X-B)Jones, G. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69, 135Jones, H. C. . . . . . . . . . . . . 60, 80, 110, 130, 160,

170, 180, 190, 210, 230Jones, H. O. . . . . . . . . . . . . 525Jones, J. C. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 193, 352Jones, N. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 517Jordan, H. E. . . . . . . . . . . . . 102, 182, 251Jorgensen, J. . . . . . . . . . . . . 600Joslin, E. P. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 136, 176, 323Joyner, M. C. . . . . . . . . . . . 402, 532

K

Kanolt, C. W. . . . . . . . . . . . 63Kapteyn, J. C. . . . . . . . . . . . 402Kasha, M. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 574Kato, Y. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63Kaufmann, B. P. . . . . . . . . . Drosophila GuideKeck, D. D. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 520, 564, 581Keiller, V. H. . . . . . . . . . . . 132Kellner, C. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 102Kellogg, R. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 346, 348, 447, 482, 491Kempron, J. H. . . . . . . . . . . 483Kennedy, A. G. . . . . . . . . . . 353Key, J. A. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 276Key, W. E. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 296Kidder, A. V. . . . . . . . . . . . 456, 546, 561, 574, 576

585, 588, 594, 596Kidder, H. H. . . . . . . . . . . . 73Killip, E. P. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 461Kilmartin, J. O. . . . . . . . . . . 437King, A. S. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 153King, J. L. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 363Knab, F. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 159Knobel, E. B. . . . . . . . . . . . 86, 250Knox, A. A. . . . . . . . . . . . . 98Koenigswald, G. H. R. von, 530Koff, A. K. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 443Kok, B. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 600Kopac, M. J. . . . . . . . . . . . . 452Krafka, J., Jr. . . . . . . . . . . . 525Krauss, R. W. . . . . . . . . . . . 600Kreider, H. R. . . . . . . . . . . . 170, 180Krynine, P. D. . . . . . . . . . . . 493Kullmer, C. J. . . . . . . . . . . . 192, 198Kunimoto, K. . . . . . . . . . . . 271Kunkel, B. W. . . . . . . . . . . . 435

L

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Embryology Reprint Vol. ILi, J. C. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 399Limson, M. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 433Lincoln, J. S. . . . . . . . . . . . . 528Lindsay, C. F. . . . . . . . . . . . 80Lindsley, D. L. . . . . . . . . . . 627Lineback, P. E. . . . . . . . . . . 274Linsdale, J. M. . . . . . . . . . . 481Lincon, E. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 102, 133Lipman, C. B. . . . . . . . . . . . 340, 391Little, C. C. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 179Livingston, B. E. . . . . . . . . . 50, 204, 284Lloyd, F. E. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82, 139Lloyd, H. H. . . . . . . . . . . . . 230Loeb, L. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 177Loftfield, J. V. G. . . . . . . . . 314Long, F. L. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 313, 336Long, H. H. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 518Long, J. A. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 142Long, R. C. E. . . . . . . . . . . . 456Longley, W. H. . . . . . . . . . . 517, 535Longley, W. R. . . . . . . . . . . 161Longyear, J. N., III . . . . . . . 597Lothrop, S. K. . . . . . . . . . . . 335, 444, 472Louderback, G. D. . . . . . . . 87, 440Lowe, E. A. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 304Lundell, C. L. . . . . . . . . . . . 436, 478, 522Lundsager, S. . . . . . . . . . . . 630Lunn, A. C. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 107Lutz, F. E. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 101, 143Lynn, W. G. . . . . . . . . . . . . 541

M

MacCurdy, H. . . . . . . . . . . . 70MacDougal, D. T. . . . . . . . . 6, 24, 81, 99, 129, 141, 193, 297,

307, 350, 365, 373, 397, 441, 462MacDowell, E. C. . . . . . . . . 196

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183, 212, 213, 251, 252, 312, 340McAleer, W. J. . . . . . . . . . . 600McCall, A. G. . . . . . . . . . . . 230McClendon, J. F. . . . . . . . . 132, 183, 251, 252McGee, J. M. . . . . . . . . . . . 325McGlone, B. . . . . . . . . . . . . 102McKee, E. D. . . . . . . . . . . . 440, 492, 563McKenzie, J. . . . . . . . . . . . . 621McLaughlin, A. C. . . . . . . . 22, 38McMaster, L. . . . . . . . . . . . 60, 80McMurrich, J. P. . . . . . . . . . 411McNish, A. G. . . . . . . . . . . 175 (VII-A, VII-B, X-A, X-B)Medes, G. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 212Meffert, M.-E. . . . . . . . . . . 600Mehl, M. G. . . . . . . . . . . . . 181Melcher, A. C. . . . . . . . . . . 63Mendel, L. B. . . . . . . . . . . . 156Meng, J. J. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 392Menke, J. F. . . . . . . . . . . . . 459Mera, H. P. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 523Merriam, J. C. . . . . . . . . . . . 346, 347, 393, 422, 440, 500, 501Merrill, P. W. . . . . . . . . . . . 610Merritt, E. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 152, 298Merwin, H. E. . . . . . . . . . . . 466Metz, C. W. . . . . . . . . . . . . 328Meyer, A. W. . . . . . . . . . . . 222, 272, 275

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Meyer, R. P. . . . . . . . . . . . . 622Meyer, B. H . . . . . . . . . . . . 215CMeyers, M. K. . . . . . . . . . . . 177Miles, W. R. . . . . . . . . . . . . 266, 280, 333Miller, A. H. . . . . . . . . . . . . 514Miller, L. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 349, 584Miller, R. A . . . . . . . . . . . . 413Miller, W. S. . . . . . . . . . . . . 272Mills, H. B. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 491Milner, H. W. . . . . . . . . . . . 586, 600Mituya, A. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 600Moberg, E. G. . . . . . . . . . . . 562, 571Moffett, B. C. . . . . . . . . . . . 611Mohr, O. L. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 295Moldenke, H. N. . . . . . . . . . 522Mollison, T. . . . . . . . . . . . . 73Moodie, R. L. . . . . . . . . . . . 238Moody, C. L. . . . . . . . . . . . 347Moore, B. N. . . . . . . . . . . . . 404Moore, C. E. . . . . . . . . . . . . 396, 579Moore, F. C. . . . . . . . . . . . . 119Moore, J. P. . . . . . . . . . . . . 457, 491Morgan, L. V. . . . . . . . . . . . 399Morgan, T. H. . . . . . . . . . . . 237, 278, 285, 327, 399Morimura, Y. . . . . . . . . . . . 600Morley, F. R. . . . . . . . . . . . 509Morley, S. G. . . . . . . . . . . . 200, 219, 436, 437, 509, 585Morris, A. A. . . . . . . . . . . . 406Morris, E. H. . . . . . . . . . . . . 406, 519, 533, 604Morse, A. P. . . . . . . . . . . . . 18, 68Morse, H. N. . . . . . . . . . . . . 198Mortensen, T. . . . . . . . . . . . 294Morton, C. V. . . . . . . . . . . . 461Moser, H. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 614Moses, M. S. . . . . . . . . . . . . 328Mossman, H. W. . . . . . . . . . 479Mottier, D. M. . . . . . . . . . . 15Moulton, F. R. . . . . . . . . . . 107, 161Mueller, E. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69, 135Mulholland, S. . . . . . . . . . . 251Mullenix, R. C. . . . . . . . . . . 114Müller, W. M. . . . . . . . . . . . 53Müller, F. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 637Mulligan, W. J. . . . . . . . . . . 603Mun, A. M. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 621Munz, P. A. . . . . . . . . . . . . 453, 487Muratori, G. . . . . . . . . . . . . 479Murschhauser, H. . . . . . . . . 231Myers, B. D. . . . . . . . . . . . . 272Myers, J. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 600

N

Narbaitz, R. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 621Nelson, L. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 567Newcomb, S. . . . . . . . . . . . 10, 11, 72Newell, Q. U. . . . . . . . . . . . 414Nicholas, H. M. . . . . . . . . . 517Nichols, E. L. . . . . . . . . . . . 152, 298, 384Nicholson, S. B. . . . . . . . . . 498Nicoll, P. A. . . . . . . . . . . . . 517Nihei, T. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 600

Nobs, M. A. . . . . . . . . . . . . 623, 628, 636Noguchi, H. . . . . . . . . . . . . 12, 1llNolan, L. S. . . . . . . . . . . . . 445Norris, E. H. . . . . . . . . . . . . 479, 496Noyes, A. A. . . . . . . . . . . . . 63Nyunoya, T. . . . . . . . . . . . . 600

O

Old, M. C. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 457Oliver, E. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 455Omori, F. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 87O’Neale, L. M. . . . . . . . . . . 567, 574O’Neill, H. T. . . . . . . . . . . . 522Oorschot, J. L. P. van . . . . . 600Opdyke, D. F. . . . . . . . . . . . 569O’Rahilly, R. . . . . . . . . . . . 611, 625, 631, 637Ordeman, G. F. . . . . . . . . . . 230Osborne, T. B. . . . . . . . . . . 84, 156Osburn, R. C. . . . . . . . . . . . 182Osgood, C. G. . . . . . . . . . . . 189Overton, J. B. . . . . . . . . . . . 397Ozeki, H. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 612

P

Packard, E. L. . . . . . . . . . . . 418, 447Padget, D. H. . . . . . . . . . . . 575, 611Page, J. L. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 431, 437Palmer, H. K. . . . . . . . . . . . 119Parish, S. B. . . . . . . . . . . . . 193Parker, D. W. . . . . . . . . . . . 148, 172,372Parkhurst, J. A. . . . . . . . . . . 33Parkinson, W. C. . . . . . . . . 175 (VII-B, VII-C, X-C), 568Paterson, T. T. . . . . . . . . . . 493Paul, J. H. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 571Paullin, C. O. . . . . . . . . . . . 90B, 254, 401Paulus, M. G. . . . . . . . . . . . 210, 230Paxson, F. L. . . . . . . . . . . . . 90BPayne, F. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 361, 475Pearce, J. N. . . . . . . . . . . . . 180Pearl, R. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58, 64Pearse, A. S. . . . . . . . . . . . . 391, 435, 457, 491Pearson, G. A. . . . . . . . . . . . 486Peirce, G. J. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 193Pepper, O. M. . . . . . . . . . . . 58Pérez, L. M. . . . . . . . . . . . . 83Perkins, H. F. . . . . . . . . . . . 102Perret, F. A. . . . . . . . . . . . . 339, 458, 512, 549Perrine, C. D. . . . . . . . . . . . 119Peters, C. H. F. . . . . . . . . . . 43, 86Peters, W. J. . . . . . . . . . . . . 175 (III, IV, V)Phillips, A. H. . . . . . . . . . . . 251, 312Phillips, J. C. . . . . . . . . . . . 144, 195Pickering, E. C. . . . . . . . . . 147Pickford, G. E. . . . . . . . . . . 491Piggot, C. S. . . . . . . . . . . . . 556Plough, H. H. . . . . . . . . . . . 517Poincaré, H. . . . . . . . . . . . . 9Pollock, H. E. D. . . . . . . . . 424, 456, 471, 477, 619Popenoe, W. . . . . . . . . . . . . 483Pöppel, W. G. L. . . . . . . . . . 633

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Ramsey, E. M. . . . . . . . . . . 479, 496, 583, 603, 625Rand, E. K. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 304Rathbun, M. J. . . . . . . . . . . 291Rauch, V. M. . . . . . . . . . . . 569Raymond, H. . . . . . . . . . . . . 468Read, C. B. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 416Redfield, M. P. . . . . . . . . . . 456, 523Redfield, R. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 431, 448, 509, 523Reed, F. R. C. . . . . . . . . . . . 381Rehfuss, M. E. . . . . . . . . . . 177Reichert, E. T. . . . . . . . . . . . 116, 173, 270Reichert, F. L. . . . . . . . . . . . 276Reid, H. F. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 87Reighard, J. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 103Reinke, E. E. . . . . . . . . . . . . 183Resser, C. E. . . . . . . . . . . . . 563Retzer, R. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 272Revelle, R. R. . . . . . . . . . . . 556Reynolds, S. R. M. . . . . . . . 583, 592, 603Richards, H. M. . . . . . . . . . 209Richards, O. W. . . . . . . . . . 452, 517Richards, T. W. . . . . . . . . . . 7, 28, 56, 61, 69, 76, 118, 125Richmond, M. L. . . . . . . . . 402Ricketson, E. B. . . . . . . . . . 436, 477Ricketson, O. G., Jr. . . . . . . 403, 431, 477Riddle, O. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 257, 569, 572Rienhoff, W. F., Jr. . . . . . . . 407Ritzman, E. G. . . . . . . . . . . 324, 377, 494Rivas, D. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 177Rivers, W. H. R. . . . . . . . . . 200Roberts, R. B. . . . . . . . . . . . 607, 624Robertson, J. A. . . . . . . . . . 124Rock, J. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 525, 557, 583, 592, 603Rogers, F. J. . . . . . . . . . . . . 87Rooney, W. J. . . . . . . . . . . . 175 (IX, XV, XVI)Ropes, M. W. . . . . . . . . . . . 414Rose, J. N. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 248Rosenquist, G. C. . . . . . . . . 625Ross, F. E. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72, 532Ross, W. H. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 193Rossman, I. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 541Roth, P. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 280Rouiller, C. A. . . . . . . . . . . 80Rowe, L. S. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 258Roy, A. J. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 246, 386, 419, 468, 515Roys, L. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 436, 456Roys, R. L. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 438, 505, 523, 548, 560,

585, 596, 606, 613, 619Ruppert, K. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 403, 454, 543, 546, 595, 602Russell, H. N. . . . . . . . . . . . 147

S

Sabin, F. R. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 223, 226, 272, 277, 361Saglik, S. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 496St. John, C. E. . . . . . . . . . . . 396Sanborn, E. I. . . . . . . . . . . . 439, 465Sandage, A. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 618, 635, 638Sanders, W. T. . . . . . . . . . . 606Sandground, J. H. . . . . . . . . 431, 499Sandström, J. W. . . . . . . . . . 88Sargent, R. H. . . . . . . . . . . . 54Sarton, G. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 376Sasa, T. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 600Saunders, G. M. . . . . . . . . . 431Saunders, J. B. de C. M. . . . 621Sawin, P. B. . . . . . . . . . . . . 427Schaeffer, A. A. . . . . . . . . . 345Scharf, D. W. . . . . . . . . . . . 453Schellenberg, H. C. . . . . . . . 73Schmidt, H. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73Schmidt, M. R. . . . . . . . . . . 180Scholes, F. V. . . . . . . . . . . . 523, 560Schopper, W. . . . . . . . . . . . 459Schuchert, C. . . . . . . . . . . . 192Schultz, A. H. . . . . . . . . . . . 272, 394, 479, 518, 525, 583

Embryology Reprint VolSchultz, J. R. . . . . . . . . . . . . 473, 487Scipiades, E., Jr. . . . . . . . . . 496Scott, K. J. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 273Scott, W. E. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 175 (VII-A, VII-B, VII-C)

175 (X-A, X-B, X-C), 580Scripture, E. W. . . . . . . . . . 44Scudder, M. T. . . . . . . . . . . 259Seares, F. H. . . . . . . . . . . . . 402, 532Seaton, S. L. . . . . . . . . . . . . 175 (XII), 545BSeibert, R. J. . . . . . . . . . . . . 522Sellards, E. H. . . . . . . . . . . . 146Sensenig, E. C. . . . . . . . . . . 583, 592, 611Senum, T. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 569Sergi, G. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73Setchell, W. A. . . . . . . . . . . 341, 555Settle, G. W. . . . . . . . . . . . . 603Shaeffer, E. J. . . . . . . . . . . . 170, 210, 230Shattuck, G. C. . . . . . . . . . . 431,499Shaw, J. B. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78Shelley, P. E. . . . . . . . . . . . 340Shepard, A. O. . . . . . . . . . . 506, 519, 528, 561, 573, 574, 609Shepherd, E. S. . . . . . . . . . . 571Shepherd, W. R. . . . . . . . . . 91Shibata, K. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 600Shields, R. T. . . . . . . . . . . . 332Shikinami, J. . . . . . . . . . . . . 363Shipley, P. G. . . . . . . . . . . . 223Shoemaker, C. R. . . . . . . . . 435Shook, E. M. . . . . . . . . . . . . 561, 596Shorr, E. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 557Shreve, E. B. . . . . . . . . . . . . 194Shreve, F. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 199, 217, 284, 350, 591

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588, 594, 608, 619Smith, D. E. . . . . . . . . . . . . 413Smith, Edgar F. . . . . . . . . . . 267Smith, Erwin F. . . . . . . . . . 27Smith, E. I. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 611Smith, G. M. . . . . . . . . . . . . 397Smith, H. B. . . . . . . . . . . . . 413Smith, H. G. . . . . . . . . . . . . 475Smith, H. M. . . . . . . . . . . . . 280, 309Smith, J. H. C. . . . . . . . . . . 586, 600Smith, L. B. . . . . . . . . . . . . 522Smith, L. D. . . . . . . . . . . . . 170, 210Smith, N. R. . . . . . . . . . . . . 344Smith, R. E. . . . . . . . . . . . . 456, 596Smith, T. J. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 622Snyder, L. H. . . . . . . . . . . . 395Sommer, H. O. . . . . . . . . . . 74Sosman, R. B. . . . . . . . . . . . 63, 157Soule, F. M. . . . . . . . . . . . . 545ASpalding, E. S. . . . . . . . . . . 141Spalding, V. M. . . . . . . . . . 113Spaulding, M. H. . . . . . . . . 276Speert, H. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 575Speidel, C. C. . . . . . . . . . . . 281Spence, J. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 517Spoehr, H. A. . . . . . . . . . . . 287, 325, 490, 586, 600Springer, A., Jr. . . . . . . . . . 170Squier, R. R. . . . . . . . . . . . . 433Stadelman, R. . . . . . . . . . . . 523Stachler, A. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69Stager, H. W. . . . . . . . . . . . 151Stagner, H. R. . . . . . . . . . . . 526Standley, P. C. . . . . . . . . . . 461Stebbins, G. L., Jr. . . . . . . . 484, 504Steggerda, I. D. . . . . . . . . . . 395Steggerda, M. . . . . . . . . . . . 395, 434, 456, 531Steinhart, J. S. . . . . . . . . . . . 622Stelter, B. F. . . . . . . . . . . . . 208Stevens, N. M. . . . . . . . . . . 36, 51Steward, F. C. . . . . . . . . . . . 475, 517Stewart, T. D. . . . . . . . . . . . 594Stieglitz, J. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 107Stine, C. M. . . . . . . . . . . . . 180Stock, C. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 331, 346, 347, 393, 404

418, 422, 440, 453, 473, 584Stock, L. F. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 338Stockard, C. R. . . . . . . . . . . 103, 132Stone, R. G. . . . . . . . . . . . . 435, 452Stout, A. B. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 218Strain, H. H. . . . . . . . . . . . . 490, 586Stratmann, H. . . . . . . . . . . . 600Straus, W. L., Jr. . . . . . . . . . 380Streeter, G. L. . . . . . . . . . . . 227, 271, 272, 274, 277, 363, 380,

394, 414, 496, 525, 541, 557, 575,

(Streeter, G. L. cont’d) 583, 592 ,Embryology Reprint Vol. I, Vol. II

Stromsten, F. A. . . . . . . . . . 132Strömsvik, G. . . . . . . . . . . . 403, 456, 528, 577, 596Strong, W. W. . . . . . . . . . . . 130, 160Stuart, G. H. . . . . . . . . . . . . 370Stull, W. N. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7, 76Stunkard, H. W. . . . . . . . . . 491Sturgeon, G. . . . . . . . . . . . . 534Sturgis, S. H. . . . . . . . . . . . 583Sturtevant, A. H. . . . . . . . . . 264, 278, 301, 399, 421Sugiyama, S. . . . . . . . . . . . . 363Sverdrup, H. U. . . . . . . . . . 175 (VI), 545A, 545BSwallen, J. R. . . . . . . . . . . . 436, 461Swann, W. F. G. . . . . . . . . . 175 (III)Sykes, G. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 193, 460, 480

T

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528, 574, 589, 602Thomson, A. . . . . . . . . . . . . 547Thorp, E. M. . . . . . . . . . . . . 452Thurlow, M.D. . . . . . . . . . . 226Tilley, G. S. . . . . . . . . . . . . 135Torreson, O. W. . . . . . . . . . 175 (XVI, XIX), 568Torrey, T. W. . . . . . . . . . . . 603Tower, W. L. . . . . . . . . . . . 48, 263Traut, H. F. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 332Treadwell, A. L. . . . . . . . . . 251, 293, 312, 555Trelease, S. F. . . . . . . . . . . . 230Trik, A. S. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 509Tucker, R. H. . . . . . . . . . . . 386Turnage, W. V. . . . . . . . . . . 529Tuttle, L. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 177Tuve, M. A. . . . . . . . . . . . . 630

U

Uhler, H. S. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60, 71

V

Vail, A. M. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24, 81Van Deman, E. B. . . . . . . . . 108, 423Van der Stricht, O. . . . . . . . 227, 272van der Westhuysen, O. P. . 518

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W

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407, 414, 433, 459, 496, 518Embryology Reprint Vol

Witsch, H. von . . . . . . . . . . 600Witschi, E. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 575Wolf, F. A. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 491Wood, F. W. . . . . . . . . . . . . 175 (VII-C)Wood, H. O. . . . . . . . . . . . . 87Wood, R. W. . . . . . . . . . . . . 71Wood, T. R. . . . . . . . . . . . . 513Woodring, W. P. . . . . . . . . . 366, 385, 418Woodson, R. E., Jr. . . . . . . 522Woollard, G. H. . . . . . . . . . 622Woollard, H. H. . . . . . . . . . 277Working, E. B. . . . . . . . . . . 441Wriedt, C. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 295Wright, A. H. . . . . . . . . . . . 197Wright, E. S. . . . . . . . . . . . . 459Wright, F. E. . . . . . . . . . . . . 158, 219Wright, J. K. . . . . . . . . . . . . 401, 469Wright, S. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 241Wyckoff, R. W. G. . . . . . . . 318

Y

Yoder, H. S., Jr. . . . . . . . . . 634Yonge, C. M. . . . . . . . . . . . 452, 475, 517York, H. H. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 206Yund, R. A. . . . . . . . . . . . . 634Yura, T. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 612

Z

Zeleny, C. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 103Zies, E. G. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 458