3312. 50 & HARVARD UNIVERSITY Library of the Museum of Comparative Zoology ^0^ B' '^^^'^^^'^^coirF-c'Fj^ PROCEEDINGS OF THE Indiana Academy of Science, 1 89 1. BIBLIOGRAPHY OF PAPERS. 188^-1891. BKOOKVILLE, IND. MUS. COMP. ZOOL^ LIBRARY M 5 tsi^a RD atroi^s. D. II. Baldwin & Co Indianapolis. BowEN & Merrill Co. Indianapolia. Noble C. Butler Indianapolis. Joseph Eastman ••-.... Indianapolis. E. S. Elder .- • • • Indianapolia. C. W. Fairbanks Indianapolis. Chas. B. Fletcher Indianapolis. S. S. Gorby Indianapolis. Griffith Bros Indianapolis. Franklin W. Hayes Indianapolis. T. H. Hibben Indianapolia. C. E. Hollenbeck Indianapolia. Alex. .Tamf^on Indianapolis. Sylvester Johnson Irvington. J. I. Kingsbury Irvington. Jas. T. Layman Irvington. Jas. W. Marsee Indianapolis. Ferd. L. Mayer Indianapolis. Model Clothing Store Indianapolis. S. E. Mor-ss Indianapolis. John H. Oliver Indianapolis. Progress Clothing Co Indianapolia. Louis Riebold Indianapolia. W. B. Roberts Indianapolis. Geo. ay. Sloan Indianapolis. PROCEEDINGS Indiana Academv of Science, 1 89 1. BIBLIOGRAPHY OF PAPERS. 188^-1891. O. r. HAY. I C. A. WALDO, Hditor; J. M. cor I.TEH. I TABLE OF CONTENTS. PAGE. Officers of the Academy . 1 Committees of the Academy 2 Past Officers of the Academy 3 Past Committees of the Academy 3 Members, honorary, uon-resident and active 5 Field meetings 9 Author list and bibliography of papers presented to the Academy 14 Abbreviations 32 Papers of the meeting of 18'J1 in full, by abstract, or by title; in the order of the programme 33 OFFICERS, 1891-92, J. L. CAMPBELL. YlCE-PltKSIDENTS. J. C. ARTHUR, W. A. NO YES. Secretary. AMOS W. BUTLER. Treasurer. C. A. WALDO. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE, •J. L. Campbell, J. C. Aktiiuu, W. A. Noyes, Amos W. Butler, C. A. Waldo, Jopin M. Ct)ULTEK, J. P. D. Joiix, T. C. Mendenhall, O. P. Hay. CURATORS. Botany Johx M. Coulter. Ichthyology Carl H. Eigenmann. Geology S. S. Gorby. Ornithology .' Amos W. Butler. Herpetology O. P. Hay. Entomology F. M. Webster. Mammology "" E. R. Quick. (1) COMMITTEES, 1891-92. C< M )PKHATI( )N OF EDT'CATK »XAL S( )CIP:TIKS. H. T. Eddy, C. A. Wai.do, ('. H. IIigenmann. riiOGRAMMK. Stanley ('()iM/n:i!, Ai,k\andki; Smith. MEMBERSHIT'. J. T. ScovKij,, W. S. Bi.at. P. Je.vkix.s, P). R. Moore, J. C. Braxner. 1886-87. C. R. Barnes, B. W. Evermann. 1887-88. D. S. Jordan, C. A. Waldo. 1889-90. O. P. Jexkixs, A. P. Carman. 1890-91. C. Li:o Mees, C. H. Gii.i'.ert, J. T. Scovki.l. NOMINATING. 18S()-S7. J. ('. Bkanner, Stanley Col'lter, P. S. Baker. 1887-88. D. W. Dexnis, J. T. SrovKi.L, J. S. Kincsley. PAST COMMITTEES— Continued. INCORPORATION. 1887-88. T. P.. REDDixfi, MAuracK Thompson, J. P. D. .loiix, A. W. Biti.er. 1890-91. o. P. JicNKiNs, B. W. EvEUMANN, C. A. Waldo. PUBLICATION. 1887-91. A. W. BiTLER, B. W. Evekmaxx, Stanley Coiltek. LEGISLATION FOR THE PROTECTION OF NATIVE BIRDS. 1887-91. A. W. Butler, D. S. .Iordax, B. W. Evermaxn. ON DIVIDINO THE ACADEMY INTO SPXTIONS. 1887-88. .T. P. D. John, J. C. Arthur, W. A. Noyes, O. P. .Texkins, D. W. Dexnis. LIBRARY. 1887-88. T. B. Ri:i.i)in<;, W. DeM. Hooper, J. S. Kix;ton, Ind. Herbert W. McBride . . Elkhart, Ind. Kobert Wesley McBride Waterloo, Ind. I). T. McDougal Lafayette, Ind. F. M. McFarland Palo Alto, Cal. J. "\V. ^Nlarsee Indianapolis, Ind. A'ernon F. Marsters Bloomington, Ind. C. Leo Mees Terre Haute, Ind. T. C. Mendenhall Washington, I). C. Joseph ]\Ioore Richmond, Ind. Warren K. Aloorehead Xenia, Ohio. David M. ]\Iottier Bloomington, Ind. J. P. Naylor ( Ireencastle, Ind. Charles E. Newlin Kokomo, Ind. AV. W. Gorman ( freencastle, Ind. "W. A. Noyes Terre Haute, Ind. J. H. Oliver Indianapolis, Ind. D. A. Owen Franklin, Ind. . Wallace C. Palmer Colundjia City, Ind. Alfred E. Phillips Lafayette, Ind. E. R. Quick Brookville, Ind. Ryland Ratlifl' Fairniount, Ind. Thomas B. Redding New Castle, Ind. I). C. lUdgley North Manchester, Ind Herman B. Ritter Greencastle, Ind. ( ieorge L. Roberts (ireensburg, Ind. W. B. Roberts Indianapolis, Ind. John F. Schnaible Lafayette, Ind. J. T. Scovell • Terre Haute, Ind. Henry E. Seaton Cambridge, Mass. W. P. Shannon (ireensburg, Ind. (J. W. .Sloan Indianapolis, Ind. W. J. Spillman • • Monmouth, Or. Sidney T. Sterling Camden, Ind. M. C. Stevens Lafayette, Ind. A\'inthrop E. Stone Lafayette, Ind. A. E. Swann Indianapolis, Ind. Frank B. Taylor Ft. Wayne, Ind. F. C. Test Washington, D. C. :\[ason B. Thomas Crawfordsville, Ind. AVm. M. Thrasher Irvington, Ind. A. L. Treadwell Oxford, Ohio. Joseph H. Tudor Baltimore, Md. A. B. I'lrey Bloomington, Ind. L. M. Underwood (greencastle, Ind. T. C. Van Nuys Bloomington, Ind. C. A. Waldo (Ireencastle, Ind. L. I). Waterman Indianapolis, Ind. F. M. Webster Wooster, Ohio. M. L. Wells '■ Indianapolis, Ind. James A. Wickersham Terre Haute, Ind. J. R. Wiest Richmond, Ind. H. W. Wiley Washington, J). C. AVilliam S. Windle College Springs, Iowa. William S. Wood Seymour, Ind. A. Harvey Young Hanover, Ind. Honorary member 1 Non-resident members .... 11 Active members 121 Total ' 133 FIELD :MEETINGS. It was fitting that the first "Field Meeting" of the Indiana Academy of Science should be held at Brookville. There the idea of such an organ- ization originated. There the steps were taken, tlirough the Brookville Society of Natural History, by which the scientific investigators of the state were brought together at Indianapolis, December 29th, 1885, to adopt articles of association and eflfect an organization. This first Field Meeting began Thursday evening, May 20th, 1886. The Academy was welcomed by Mr. D. W. McKee, President of the Brookville Society of Xatural History. President D. S. Jordan responded to his greet- ings. Dr. John €. Branner delivered an address on "The relations now existing between geologists and the people." The next day was devoted to visiting the localities of interest to 1 he persons attending. Luncheon was served at "Templeton's ford," on the east fork of White Water river, In the deep, clear water of the pool above the ford the baptism took place and the first "Field Meeting" was declared by the president to be a success.' Eecollections of that day — the first of united scientific work in Indiana, a meeting more successful by far than had been dreamed of, and yet which bespoke the fuller fruition to which the child of our minds should come in later years — can never be eftaced. At night a public meeting was held in the Town Hall. Dr. Jordan delivered an address on "Charles Darwin." He also told " How to uo fishing." Dr. Branner gave an account of methods of coral fishing. Dr. P. S. Baker spoke of recent j>rogress in Toxicology. The number of per- sons attending that meeting, and strange so say, several others, was thirty- three. The second " Field Meeting" of the Academy began its session at Wave- land, Ind., May I'Jth, 1887. The meeting that evening was informal — thoroughly so. The recollections of it will remain with those who partic- ipated, and it would hardly be j ust to attempt to give an account of the proceedings for the benefit of others. The following morning the members were driven to "Shades of Death," a delightful spot adjacent to Sugar creek. There the day was spent and luncheon served. FiVery one had heard of this beautiful spot, shaded, well watered, with its canons, the clift's of which were topped with pine and hemlock, and the walls draped with ferns and bedecked with mosses ; 10 its "blizzard's roost;" its lack of snakes, its peaceful dells and shady glens —of all of which " the half has not been told," At night a pul)lic meeting was held at the M. E. church in Waveland, when T)r. T. C. Mendenhall delivered an address upon " Weather Pre- dictions." An informal discussion of the natural features of the region visited was held. C. E. Barnes, J. M. Coulter. W. S. Blatchley and Stanley Coulter spoke of its botanical interest, 0. P. .Jenkins of the fishes, B. W. Evermann of the birds, A. W. Butler of the reptiles and amphibians, T. C. Mendenhall of the southern limit of the white pine, P. S. Baker and W. W. Byers of the geology. The following day the members were taken to " Pine Hills," in the valley of Indian creek, about a mile above the locality of the preceding day's explorations. The features of the country were somewhat difierent from those noticed the day before. A pleasant day was spent and lunch- eon was served at the club house. At this meeting also there were thirty- three persons. The third " Field Meeting" was begun at Paoli, Orange county, May 2, 1888. The meeting was held in the public hall and was presided over by Yice President O. P. Hay. Prof. James E. Humphrey delivered an address entitled "Asa Uray." Prof. J. 31. Coulter gave a lecture on "The Yellowstone Park." The day following the persons present, thirty-three in number, drove to Wyandotte cave, in Crawford county, going, in the way they traveled, about forty miles. The evening and the early part of the night was spent exploring the cave. The next day the party returned to Paoli, stopping at Marengo .cave. The journey was a hard one, but it had its pleasures and they were noteworthy. All will remember that meeting, some, in some respects, unpleasantly, others as a season of unusual brightness in their lives. The annals of that meeting are classic to Indiana's scientists. How xmfortunate the chronicler cannot always write the Avhole truth! At Greensburg, Ind., May 8th, 1889, the fourth "Field Meeting-" began. The session was held at 8:30 o'clock P. M. in the rink. Vice President J. L. Campbell presided. Dr. J. P. D. John delivered an illusti'ated lecture on "Our Celestial Visitors." The day following was pleasantly spent visiting the Upper and Lower vSilurian exposures along Cobb's Fork of Sand creek. After luncheon, which was kindly provided by the hospitable people of Greensburg, the 11 membei-s went to the Harris City quarries, thence returned to (ireens- burg. In the evening another session was held in High School Hall. The following persons spoke of some of the observations made during the day : J. L. Campbell, on Topography. G. K. Greene and W. P. Shannon, on Geology. J. M. Coulter, D. H. Campbell and J. C. Arthur, on Botany. Hon. Will Cumback then gave his impressions of the meeting. Edward Hughes gave an account of tlie Amphibians noted. A. W. Butler spoke of the reptiles. O. P. Jenkins spoke of the fishes of Cobb's Fork, and was followed by D. S. Jordan, who spoke of fishes also. Rev. Mr. Torrence and J. P. D. .John made appropriate remarks, the latter moving the adoption of a vote of thanks to the citizens of (Jreens- burg for their hospitality, which was voted. The roll showed twenty-seven persom^ present. The next day the members divided, a part going to St. Paul and Waldron, others to Cliffy creek. The former spent the day among the fossils of these famous localities, while the latter fished or lounged beside the quiet stream drinking inspiration and absorbing wisdom at the same time. Over a small fire the champion of "vegetable beefsteak" might have been seen, giving instruction in primitive culinary methods as applied to his favorite food, while sitting about were several individuals who dis- cussed the governor's jokes, the true name of the stream explored yester- day, and the unaccommodating manner of the fishes who persisted in re- fusing to be caught, as with rapid How alike of words and saliva they watched the slowly growing mushroom pile. And thus we remember Greensburg. The next " Field -Meeting" was appointed for Greencastle, where the meeting was called to order in Meharry Hall of DePauw University, at 8 o'clock P. M., May 8, 1890, by Prof. C. A. Waldo, acting president. Prof. C. Leo Mees delivered an address on " Inertia with reference to electric- ity." Dr. Daniel Kirkwood was elected the first honorary member of the Academy. President J. P. D. John, of DePauw University, extended to the members the courtesies of the university. The following morning the members, according to previous arrange- ment, went to " Fern," an interesting spot, where the day was pleasantly spent. In the evening the party returned to Greencastle. !•> At 8 o'clock P. M. the Academy convened in Meharry Hall with ex- President John in the chair. J. C. Arthur presented " Rome observations on parasitic plants taken at ' Fern.' " C. R. Dryer gave an account of the "Surface < ieology of Putnam county." C. W. Hargitt spoke on " Some observations on Economic Fa\- tomology." Stanley Coulter gave some notes on the day's work. D. H. Campbell spoke of the ferns at " Fern." C. A. Waldo referred to the pro- . posed meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Sci- ence at Indianapolis in August next. A vote of appreciation of the kind- ness and courtesy shown the members of the Academy by the citizens of Greencastle and T'niversity authorities was passed. O. P. Jenkins, being called upon, spoke concerning the influence of associations such as the Indiana Academy of Science upon the individual worker. After discuss- ing plans for welcoming and entertaining the American Association the Academy adjourned. According to appointment, the sixth " Field Meeting" was convened at the Arlington Hotel, Lake Maxinkuckee, May 14, 1^591, at 8 o'clock P. M. President Hay occupied the chair. Dr. P. S. Baker delivered an address upon "The Spirit of Scientific Work," for which the thanks of the Acad- emy were tendered him. The Executive Committee was instructed to prepare an abstract of the new law for the protection of birds, and to have a copy of the same mailed to each newspaper in the state. It was recommended that special attention be called to the fact that the English sparrow is not protected by law. J. T. Scovell spoke of the desirability of an effort being made to determine the height of Mt. Orizaba, Mexico, and of the advantages to be derived from such work being undertaken by running a line of levels from some determined point. to the summit and definitely fixing each thousand foot mark as a reference point for biologi- cal investigations. The Academy voted approval of the plan as presented and agreed to assist in any way in its power should such plan be under- taken. The next day was spent in exploring the lake and its shores, and was very much enjoyed. Boating, fishing, turtle hunting and collecting in many lines represented the various ways in which the members were employed. In the evening the Academy met again at the Arlington Hotel. A 13 committee consisting of J. M. Coulter, P. S. Baker, A. J. Woolman, A. P. Carman and A. W. Butler was appointed to consider the relation that should be sustained by teachers in the High Schools to the Academy of Science. The natural characters of the region about Lake Maxinkuckee were then discussed until the close of the session. Richmond was the place chosen for the "Field Meeting" of 1892. The kind and urgent invitation of the representatives of Earlham College made each one feel an assured welcome to Richmond and to Earlham. On the morning of May 12th the members met at the Arlington Hotel, and under the guidance of Professors Dennis and Moore proceeded to Thistlethwaite's Falls, above the city. The morning was agreeably spent along the several outcrops of the fossiliferous limestone. Before noon the party reached the college grounds. After examining the collections, dinner was served in the dormitory. In the afternoon, by the kindness of the people of Richmond, the members were driven in carriages to Elk- horn Falls, five miles down the Whitewater river. Upon their return they were driven about the city and given an opportunity to see its beauties, comforts and advantages. Thursday evening the Academy met in Lindley Hall, Earlham College. President J. L. Campbell occupied the chair. J. M. Coulter spoke briefly of the objects and plan of the Academy. Dr. Alfred Springer then de- livered an address upon "The Cell and Its Functions." The thanks of the Academy were tendered Dr. Springer for his address. The next morning the members visited the limestone outcrops below the city, going thence to the college where they again partook of dinner. Those who could remain spent the remainder of the day in the libraries, museums and laboratories All regretted when leaving time came. The meeting was too short in time but was full of pleasures for which all will hold the Richmond friends in grateful remembrance. AUTHOR LIST AND BIBLIOGRAPHY Papers Presented to the Academy I''R()M 188-') TO 1801 IXCLU.SIVE. .{I)tiri riiitiiiiix I xplniiial (lit /In pKijr fuUoiriiKj l/ii //.v/. Adams, B. F. 'So. [See Van Nuys, T. C] AXDERSOX, V. C. '89. Town geology — what it is and what it might be. Arthuk, J. C. '87. Life history of the plum leaf fungus. 'S"». Variation of plants from unripe seeds. 'ilO. A remarkable oscillating movement of protoplasm in a Mucor. '!>0. Accelerating germination by previous immersion of the seed in hot water. '91. Relation of available enzym in the seed to the growth of the jilant. '91. The potato tuber as a means of transmitting energy. Bakek, p. .S. '85. Indiana entomology. '8(5. The new alkaloid, cocaine. [Not published.] '89. Vapor densities of the volatile metalic " Halids." [Am. C. .T., XI, 134.] '89. Oxidation by means of the fixed alkaline hydrates. [Not pub.] '89. Action of chloroform on aluminum chloride. [Not published.] '89. The " Perkins Synthesis." [Not published.] '91. A copper ammonium oxj'^de. [Not published.] Barnes, C. K. '86. Collecting mosses. [Not published.] PiKACHLER, C. S. '91. The relation of the Keokuk groups of Montgomery county with the typical locality. [Am. G., Aug. '92. A part of paper en- titled " Keokuk group of the Mississippi valley."] '91. Comments on the description of species. [Not published.] BicxEV, A. J. '91. Preliminary notes on the geology of Dearborn county, Ind. [Pr. ^^] '91. Notes on Klaps fulvus. [Pr. \'.] 15 Blatciilev, W. S. '88. Lists of the plants of Monroe county, Ind. [Not published.] '89. Some rare batrachians. [Not published.] '89. The compositai' of Vigo county, Ind. [Not published.] '89, On some plants new to the state list. [Not published.] '90. The butterflies of Indiana. [17th Keport on the Geol. and Natural History of Indiana.] '90. The batrachians and reptiles of Vigo county, Ind. [.1. of C. S. of X. H., ApL, '91, p. 22.] . 'SO. Acridid;t> of Vigo county, Ind. [C. E. XXIII, '91, pp. 74, 98; al.. (J. XV., 'M).] '89. "Snake cactus." [Not pub.] '89. The National Herbarium. [Not pub.] '89. Mycorhiza and Epiphegus. [Not pub.] '89. Distribution of Cornus. [P. A. A. A. S. Indianapolis meeting.] '90. Biological surveys. [Not pub.] '90. The Hora of Texas. [Cont. Nat. Herb., Vol. II.] '91. Biological surveys. [Not pub.] CoiTLTER, Stanley. '86. The chlorophyll bands of Spirogyra. [B. {}.. Nil, pp. 153-157.] '87. Histology of the foliage leaf of Taxodiuni distichum. [B. G., NIA', pp. 76-Sl and XIY, pp. 101-107.] '88. Amoeba - a query. [Not pub.] '88. Strengthening cells and resin ducts in Coniferee. '89. Determination of lower plant forms. [Not pub.] '89. Porest trees of Indiana. '90. Preliminary notes on genus Polygonum. [Not yet pub.] '90. Aberrant fruit of .luglans nigra. [Not yet pub.] '90. \'alue of minute anatomy in plant classification. [Not pub.] '91. I'nused forest resources. [Trans. Ind. Hort. Soc, 1891, pp. 1.57- 192.] '91. Distribution of cei'tain forest trees. [As above.] '91. Cleistogamy in Polygonum. [B. G., XVII, pp. 91-92.] Davis, B. M. '90. [See Jordan, D. S.] Davi.s, Sherman. '91. Results of estimations of chlorini' in mineral waters by Volhardt's method. [Pr. W] Dennis, D. AY. '86. The bearing of the Lebanon beds on evolution. '87. The east-west diameter of the silurian island about Cincinnati. '87. The transition of Orthisoccidentalis, Hall, into Orthis sinuata, Hall. '91. Some observations on photomicrography. Dkesslar, F. B. '88. The American mackerels. Drew, Frank M. '89. Explorations of the V. S. Fish Commission in Missouri. Dryer, C. R. '86. The surface geology of the Wabash-P^rie divide. [16th Ind. State Geo. Rep., p. 105, et seq.] '87. The kames of Allen county, Indiana. [As above.] U) '89. The moraines of the Maumee glacier. [17th Ind. State Geo. Kep.] '89. Observations on the lakes of Indiana. [As above.] '89. The glacial geology of the Irondequoit glacier. [Am. (i., Apl., 1890.] EiGKNMAXx, Carl H. '88. Origin of the egg membrane in teleostean fishes. [Bulletin of the Museum of Comp. Zool. at Harvard College, XIX, p. 129-154.] '88. A Cyprinodon from Hot Springs in southern Xevada. [P. C. A. S., 2d Series, I, p. 270.] '91. The development of the viviparous fii^hes of California. [In press.] '91. Recent additions to the ichthyological fauna of California. [A, M. Y. A. S., 1892, and Proc. V. S. Xat. Mus., '92, pp. 123-178, and Pr. v.] '91. The continuity of the germ plasm in vertebrates. [J. of M., V, pp. 481-492, an(), 1890.] '91. The eyes of blind fishes. [Zoe I, pp. 6o-72, and Proc. U. S. Xat. M., 1892, pp. lo9-l()2, and Pr. V.] '91. On the presence of an operculum in the Aspredinid;c. [Am. X. XXVI, p. 71.] EiGEXAfAxx, Carl H., and Rosa S. '88. Revision of the Xematognathi of South America. [Occasional Papers of the Cal. Acad, of Sci., I, pp. 1-508.] '88. The Erythrinimc. [P. C. A. S., 2d Series, II, pp. 100-1 Ki.] '88. The edentulous Curimatinie. [A. X. Y. A. S., IV, pp. 1-32.] EiGENMAxx, Carl II., and R. L. GitEKx. '91. The relation of nucleoplasm to cytoplasm in the segmenting egg. EicEXMAXx, Carl H., and Jexxie Hornuxg. '86. Review of American Chaetodontidee. [A. X. Y. A. S., IV, pp. 1-18.] EiGEXMAXx, Carl H., and Elizabeth G. Hlghes. '86. Review of Diplodus and Lagodon. [Proc. U. S. Xational ^luseum, 1887, pp. 65-74.] EvAx.s, S. G. '90. Notes on distribution and habits of Argynnis diana. [Xot pub.] EvAxs, Walter PI. '87. Lichens of Indiana. '88. The spines of Cactacea'. '91. The cactus flora of the Southwest. EVERMAXX, B. W. '86. The work of the A. O. U. committee on bird migration. [Xot pub.] '86. Notes on birds observed in Carroll county, Indiana. [Auk. V.] '87. The fishes of Carroll county, Indiana. [Pr. V. S. X. M., '88.] '87. The occurrence of the star-nosed mole in Indiana. [Am. N.] '88. The occurrence in Indiana of the wood ibis. [Am. X.] '88. Additions to the fish fauna of Vigo county, Indiana. [Xot pub.] '88. [See .Jenkins, O. P.] 20 'S8. [See Jenkins, O. 1'.] '89. Description of a new species of Rhinoptera from the Gulf of Cali- fornia. [Pr. T^ S. N. M., '91, pp. 121-105.] '90. Some notes on Indiana birds. [Not pub.] '90. [See Jenkins, O. P.] '90. Audubon's old mill at Henderson, Ky. [Not pub.] EvERMANN, B. W., and Amo.s W. Bi tlkr. '90. Notes on Indiana mammals. [Not i)ub.] EvERMANN," B. W., and O. P. Jenkixs. •'90. Fishes of the Wabash basin. [Not pub.] Feslak, Bert. ' '88. [See Dresslar, F. B.] I-'lSHER, E. M. '89. Some structures in Epiphegus. [Not pub.] '90. Parasitic fungi of Indiana. [Not pub.] '91. Preliminary notes on the genus Hoffmanscggia. [Cont. Nat'l Herb, I, pp. 143-150.] Gilbert, C. PI. '88. Plan of work of the " Albatross" on the coast of Lower California. [Not pub.] '89. Explorations of the V. S. Fish Commission steamer " Albatross " in the Pacific ocean. [Not pub.] '\)0. The identification of ghost fishes. [Not pub.] '90. The deep water fishes of the Pacific. [Not pub.] Glick, V. F. '89. Some unusual forms of lime carbonate deposition. [Not pub.] '90. Notes on some Actinia. [Not pub.] Golden, Miss Katiierine E. '90. Weight of the seed in relation to production. [Ag. S., V, pp. 117-122.] '91. Diseases of the sugar beet root. [B. I. E. S., Ill, pp. 54-62, and Pr. v.] Goss, W. F. M. '90. A brief description of the new steam engineering laboratory at Purdue University. [P^ngineering Journal, Dec, '91, p. 549; also. Mechanics, Dec, '91, p. 291.] Gray, Thos. '88. Sea bottom temperatures. '88. A mantel piece seismoscope. '89. Apparatus for the determination of power consumption in friction and the cutting of metals. '89. Thomson's portable magnetostatic electrical measuring instru- ments of long range. '89. On the determination of the elasticity constants of materials by the deflection method. •21 '90. Exact and approximate formulte for calculating the force at any point in the plane of a circular circuit conveying an electric current. '90. Some data as to the resistance to cutting of metals. '90. An apparatus for determining strength of electric currents in ab- solute measure. '90. Specimens of diagrams obtained in testing iron and steel. '90. The relative magnetic resistance of air and iron. '90. On the solution of the equation : du= ._,_" ^.,- Gray, Tho8., and C. Leo Mees. '89. Preliminary report on the changes. in density of wire in stretching. Green, E. L. '89. The uses of infinity and zero in algebra. '91. Some suggested changes in notation. '91. [See Eigenmann, C. H.] Har(;itt, C. W. '87. Some curious monstrosities in egg formation. [Am. X. XXII, p. 535.] '87. Xotes on Scajihiopus holbrookii. [Xot pub.] '88. Evidencesof shallow water deposition of silurian rocks. [Xot pub.] '88. Occurrence of Agkistrodon contortrix in Dearborn county, Indiana. [Not pub.] '88. Some strange cases of color variation in animals. [Am. X. XXIII, p. 449.] '89. Notes upon the economic phases of entomology and ornithology. [Not pub.] '89. Some habits of the cray fish. [Am. M. M. .7., XI, p., 179.] '89. Some remarkable fioral variations. [B. G., XIV, p., 179.] '90. Food habits of the blue jay. [Not pub.] '90. Notes on Hydra fusca. [Xot pub.] Hathaway, A. S. '91. A graphical solution for eiiuations of liigher degree, both for real and imaginary roots. [Vr. V.] '91. On some theorems of integrations in quaternions. [Pr. V.] '91. A note on the early history of potential functions. [Pr. V.] Hay, 0. p. '85. The present condition of our knowledge of Indiana herpetology. '86. A curious habit of the red-headed woodpecker. [Auk., Apl., '87.] '86. The higher classification of the amphibia. [Xot pub.] '86. Some reptiles and amphibians that appear to be rare in Indiana. [Not pub.] '86. Some reptiles and amphibians that are to be looked for in Indiana. '86. Notes on the winter habits of Amblystoma tigrinum and A. micro- stoma. [Am. N., 1890.] '8(). The manner of deposit of the glacial drift, and the formation of lakes. [Am. J. 8., 1,S87.] '87. Notes on some fossil bones found in Indiana. [Not pub.] '87. Observations on the Amphiuma. [Am. N., 1890.] '87. Some additions to the list of Indiana reptiles. [Not pub.] '8S. On the skull of the larva of Amphiuma means. [Am. N., 1890.] '88. On the hyobranchial apparatus of Amblystoma microstomum. [Not pub.] '88. Further notes on the habits of some Amblystouias. [Am. N., 1890.] '89. The breeding habits and larval stages of Amblystoma microsto- mum. [Am. N., 1890,] '89. Some points in the anatomy of Amphiuma. [Am. N. 1890.], '89. Aquatic respiration of the Amblystomas. [Am. N., 1890.] '89. The life historj' of Chorophilus triseriatus. '89. On certain species of the genus Chorophilus. '91. The present state of the theory of organic evolution (President's address.) [Present vol.] '91. On Leconte's terrapins, Emys concinna and E. floridana. '91. The eggs and young of certain snakes. [Pr. Y.] '91. Observations on the turtles of the genus 3fal6chlemys. [Pr. V.] '91. Our present knowledge concerning the green triton. [Pr. \.] '91. The proper systematic name of the prairie rattlesnake. Hay, O. p. and W. P. Hav. '88. Contributions to the knowledge of the genus Branchipus. The production of the larv;i' of P. vernalis. [Am. N., 1889. ] '88. Description cf a supposed new species of Branchipus found in In- diana. [Am. X., 1889.] Hav, W. p. '91. The blind cray fishes of Indiana. '91. Eemarks on the crustaceans of Indiana. [Pr. \.~\ Hessler, Robert. '88. [See Van Nuys. T. C] [Not pub.] '88. Railroad migrants among Indiana plants. [I. F., NXIII, p. 1.] HioiiT, R. F. '8(). On the Thysanura. HoLZMAN, C. L. '91. Development of the sporangium and apical growth of the stem of Botrichium virginianum. [B. G., NVIt, p. 214.] Hooi'Ei:, AV. DkM. '89. Incandescent gas lighting. HoRMXG, Miss .Texxie. '86. [See Eigenmann, C. H.] HriiHAKD, G. C. '8G. Additions to the flora of Indiana. [Not pub.] 'S7. List of butterflies of .Tefferson county, Ind, [Not pub.] 'S7. Additions to the flora of Indiana. [Not pub.] '88. List of one hundred species of Jefterson county birds. [Not pub.] '88. List of the solitary wasps of Jefterson county. [Not pub.] '90. Geophila in .lefterson county, Ind. [Not pub.] '91. .Jefferson county cystidians. [Pr. V.] '9L Hudson river fossils of Jefferson county, Ind. [Pr. A^.] '91. The upper limit of the lower silurian at Madison, Ind. [Pr. V.] '91. A new microtome. [Pr. V.] HrsTox, H. A. '90. Oxydation of phosphoric acid. [Xot pub.] '90. Albuminoid nitrogen in Indiana feedini: material. [ 1>. I. E. S., XXXVIL] '91. The sugar Ijeet in Indiana. [B. I. E. S., XXXIV.] '91. Forms of nitrogen for wheat. [B. L E. S., XXXVI and XLL] '91. Laboratory and field work on the phosphate of alumina. [liuUe- tin 28, Chem. Division. F. S. Dept. of Ag., p. 170.] '91. Recent methods for the determination of phosphoric acid. [Bul- letin 81, Chem. Div. F. S. Dept. of Ag.. pp. 107-179.] Jen-kins, 0. P. '85. Account of the work done in invertebi'ate zoology in Indiana. '86. The fishes of the Wabash and some of its tributaries. [Not pub.] '87. Notes on some southern Indiana fishes. [Not pub.] '89. The state of the crater of Kilauea in August, 1.S89. [Not pub.] "89. Preliminary note on the fishes of Sandwich Islands. [Not pub.] '89. Fishes of Putnam county. [Not pub.] '89. Notes on some fishes from the west coast of Africa, collected by Carl Stecklemann. [Not pub.] '90. Sailor spiders on Lake INIaxinkuckee. [Not pub.] '90. Chsetodontida' of the Sandwich Islands. [Not pub.] '90. [See Evermann, AV. B.] '90. Notes on structure of mut^cle cells in salamanders. [Not pub.] Je.nkins, O. p. and W. A'. Biiowx. '87. Location of Eel river falls. [Not pub.] 'S8. The determination of the least discernible interval between sounds. [Not pub.] Jexkins, O. p. and B. AV. EvEK.^[.\XN. '88. The fishes of the bay of Guaymas, including nineteen new species. Pr. V. S. N. M., '88, pp. 137-158. '88. Some notes on the natural history of (juaymas, Mexico. [Not pub.] '90. Contribution to the distribution of the fishes of the west coast of North America. [Pr. F. S. N. M., '91, pp. 121-l(i5.] Jenks, Jeremiah AV. '89. The eft'ects of trusts. John, J. P. D. '88. Religion and the law of continuity. (Presidential address.) [Methodist Review, X(.v. 'S9, pp. 870-887.] 2i JOEDAX, D. S. '85. Sketch of ('. >S. Kafinesque. [Pop. Sci. Monthly.] '85. Account of the work done for ichthyology in Indiana. '8(5. The relation of latitude to the number of vertebra' in fishes. [Pr. U. S. N. M., 1891, pp. 107 et seq.] '86, The dispersion of fresh-water fishes. (Presidential address.) [Science Sketches, '88. A. C. McClurg & Co.] '87. Blind fishes and natural selection. [Not pub.] '87. The Isthmus of Panama as a barrier to marine fauna. [I'r. i'. S. N. M., 1885, p. 394.] '87. The ori,o;ln of genera. [Not pub.] '88. The relation of systematic zoology to museum administration. [Not pub.] '88. Explorations of the V. S. Fish Commission in \'ir«rinia and North Carolina. [Bulletin U. S. Fish Com. for 1889.] '88. Analogy between river faun;o and island faunic [Not pub.] '88. The ancestry of the blind fishes. [Not pub.] '89. Fishes of the Yellowstone Park. [Bulletin V. S. Fish Comm. for 1890.] '89. The top of the Matterhorn. [Not pub.] '89. Explorations of the U. S. Fish Commission in Colorado and I'tah. [Bulletin V. S. Fish Comm. for 1890.] '90. The death of salmon after spawning. [Letter to Forest and Stream, 1892.] 'iiO. The fishes of the upper Columbia and the Shoshone Falls. [Not pub.] '90. Relation of the number of vertebra' in fishes to the temperature of water. [Pr. V. S. N. M., 1891, pp. 107 et seq.] '90. The colors of letters. [P. S. M., July, 1891.] Jordan, D. S. and B. M. Davis. '90. Eels of America and Europe. [Report U. S. Fish Comm., 1892.] Karstkn, Gustaf. '90. The colors of sounds. Kellerman, W. a. '91. Notes on a Kansas species of l)uckeye. [Not pub.] '91. Photographing certain natural objects without a camera. [.I. C. S. of N. H., 1892, pp. 53-54.] Kellicott, D. S. '91. The Aegeria of central Ohio. [C. E., NNIV, p. 39.] KiNOSLEY, J. S. '87. The origin of arthropods. '88. The invertebrate homologues of the infundibulum and pineal eye. '88. Segmentation of the arthropod egg. '88. The Myriapoda, a heterogeneous group. [Am. N., 1889.] Kirk WOOD, Da.mel. '85. Astronomical studv in Indiana. 'SG. The zone of minor planets. [Author's monograph on the aster- oids.] KiRSCH, p. H. '88. The American star-gazers — T'rauoscopidae. [Proi-. of Acad, of Nat. Sci. of Phil'a., 1S89, pp. 258-265.] Lackey, B. A. '90. Freezing process of excavation. LOTZ, DUMONT. '90. [See Stone, W. E.] Lyons, Robeet E. '88. [See Van Nuys. T. C] '90. [See Van Nuys, T. C] '90. An improved chemical test for blood in urine. 'V)0. An apparatus for determination of water in oils and fats. '91. [See Van Nuys, T. C] McBkide, R. Wes. '9L Some observations on Indiana birds. [Pr. V.] McDouGAL, D. T. '89. The plants of Putnam county. '90. Aberrant forms of Juglans nigra— structural changes. '9L Plant zones of Arizona. [Pr. V.] McNeill, Jerome. '86. A remarkable case of longevity in the longicorn beetle, Eburia quadrigeminata, Say. 'SO. The teaching of entomology in the high schools. '86. Descriptions of four new species of myriapods from the United States. '90. A list of the ( )rthoptera of Illinois, with descriptions of new species and observations on the songs and habits of little known species. MartixV, G. W. '91. Organogeny of Aster and Solidago. [B. G., XVII, No. 11, and Am. N., XXVI, No. 31L] Martin, Miss Lillie J. '86. Outline of a course in science study based on evolution. '87. A chemical study of Juglans nigra. '87. The value of organized work in plant chemistry. Means, J. H. '86. [See Branner, J. C.] Meek, S. E. '86. Elegatis pinnulatis at the east end of Long Island Sound. Mees, C. Leo. '88. Notes of the comparative value of several photometric methods. '88. Some curious phenomena in a four-plate Toeppler-IIoltz machine. '88. Simple device for measuring the coefficient of expansion of solids. '89. [See Gray, Thos.] 2(i '89. The use of two mirrors for the determination of the coefficient of expansion in solids. '89. Cause of periodicity in thermometers as discussed by I'rof. W. A. liodgers. '90. Description of a powerful electro-magnet with preliminary deter- mination of its magnetic field. '90. Continuation of experiments in the change of density of metala under stress. Mkndeniiall, T. C. '86. Recent progress in seismology. '88. Recent researches in atmospheric electricity. [Popular Address.] '90. The work of the I'nited States Coast and < ieodetic Survey. [Presi- dent's Address.] ^Ikyxcke, O. M. '87. The late drouth and its effect on vegetation. '87. Companion plants. '87. Xoles on the whitespored agarics of Franklin county, Ind. MiKELS, Mrs. Rosa Reijdixi;. '91. Preliminary paper on the flora of Henry county, Ind. [Not yet pub.] MOOKE, D. 1\. '85. Our knowledge of Indiana conchology. 3IooRE, Joseph. '89. On the remains of a giant beaver found near AVinchester, Indiana. [Not pub.] '90. A recent find of musk ox remains in Indiana. [Not pub.] '91. Variations in the dynamical conditions during the deposit of the rock beds at Richmond, Ind. [Not pub.] Mooke, J. E , and E. M. Linglev. '91. Hysteresis curves for mitis and other cast irons. MOKCJAX, JOKX. '90. Circulation of sap. ^looEEHEAi), Warren K. '91. Recent archaeological discoveries in southern Ohio. '91. Methods observed in archfeological research. MoTTiER, David ]\I. '90. Notes on the apical growth of liverworts. [B. G., M&y, 1891.] '90. Notes on the germination of spores of Notothylas. '91. Notes on the development of the archegonium and fertilization in Tsuga canadensis and Pinua sylvestris. [B. G., ^lay, 1S92, and Pr. v.] NAVI...R, J. P. '85. The progress of physics in 1 ndiana. '8S. A new electrometer. '!)0. A set of resistance coils and AVheatstone's bridge. '91. An adjustment for the control magnet on a mirror galvanometer. '91. A combined Wheatstone's bridge and potentiometer. Xef, J. r. '87. On carboxylated derivatives of ben/.oquinone. [.lourn. Loud. Chem. Soc, 1888, p. 428.] '87. On chloranil. [B. d. c. G., 1887, p. 2027.] '88. The constitution of the anilic acids. [Am. C. J., 18S!t, p. 17.] '88. On tautomeric compounds. [Am. C. J., 1S89, p. 1.] New UN, C. E. '90. Some new crustacean fossils. Ne\V80M, J. F. '90. A review of the Niagara group in Bartholomew county, Ind. '90. Shelby county " Earthquake.'' NOYES, W. A. '87. Beta-nitro-para-toluic acid. [Am. C. .1., N, p. 472.] '88. On the atomic weight of oxygen. [Am. C. J., XI, p. 1-35.] '89. Atomic weight of oxygen. [Am. C. J., XII, p. 441.] '90. Detection and estimation of titanium. [.T. of A. C, V, p. 39.] '91. Di-benzyl carbinamine. [Am. C. .1., XIV, p. 22."), and I'r. N.] '91. The character of well-waters in a thickly populated area. [Pr. Y.] NoYES, W. A., and Chas. Walker. '80. On the oxidation of paraxylene-sulphamide by potassium ferri- cyanide. [Am. C. J., IX, p. 9.3.] NoYE.s, W. A., and AY. B. Wiley. '88. On para-nitro-ortho-sulphamine-benzoic acid. [Am. C. J., XI, p. 161.] O^ijoii.x, H. L. '86. Osphradium in Crepidula. [Am. :M. M., Apl., 18S7, p. (i.] Owen, D. A. '87. A geological section of .lohnson county, Ind. '91. Strange development of stomata upon Carya alba caused by phyl- loxera. [Pr. v.] '91. Some observations upon Heloderma suspecta. [Pr. \'.] OWEX, KiCITARL). '8.3. Sketch of the work accomplished for natural and jihysical science in Indiana. Palmer, Chase. '89. On sulphophenyl-propionic acid. Phillips, A. E. '89. The portable water supply of the City of New York. Phinxey, a. J. '86. Natural gas and petroleum. •28 '86. Loantharia rugosa. Tkodlk, J. B. '88. [See Waters, E. G.] PoTTKu, Theodore. '91. The contest against infection. [Cincinnati J.ancet-CUinic, August 0, '92.] ill UK, E. E. '85. The progress of the study of mammalogy in Indiana. '86. Our blind mice. Ra(;.vx, W. H. '85. Meteorology in Indiana. Redding, T. B. '87. Man an evolution — biological proofs. [Souvenir of Western Writers' Asso., 1890, pp. 173-184, and Pulpit and Tew.] '91. The prehistoric earthworks of Henry county, Ind. [New Castle Courier, Dec. 20, '89, and Pr. Y.] Rett(;er, Louis. '89. [See Drew, Frank M.] '89. Morphology of the siphonophores. [Not pub.] Ho,sE, .1. X. '86. The mildews of Indiana. [B. G., XI, pp. 60-63.] '87. Characters in Vmbellifer;e. [B. G., XII, pp. 237-243, and Coulter and Rose's Revision of Umbellifera\"pp. 9-lG.] '90. Distribution of T'mbellifer;e in Xorth America. [Not yet pub.] '90. Plants collected by Dr. Palmer in Arizona in 1890. [Cont. fr. IT. S. Xat'l Herb., I, pp. 117-127.] ScjlNAlBLE, JOIIX r. '89. Soap analysis. [J. of A. C, IV, p. l.")7.] SCOVELL, J. T. '85. Geographical studies in Indiana. [Xot pub.] '86. The geology of ^'igo county, Ind. [Not pub.] 'S(). The Xiagara river. [Xot pub.] '87. Erosion in Indiana. [Xot pub.] '88. The old channel of Xiagara river. [Xot pub.] '".lO. Sections of drift in Yigo county, Ind. [Xot pub.] '91. Exploration of Mt. Orizaba. [Xot pub.] Seatox, Hexry E. '88. The epidermal cells .of Tillandsia. '89. Some stem characters in Composita*. '90. Xotes on Gautemalan Composita-. '<»] . The flora of Mt. ( )rizaba. [Pr. V.] Selhy, Aio. D. '91. On the occurrence of certain western plants near ( olumbus, ( )hio. [Partially B. G., 1891, p. 155, and Pr. Y.] SlIA.NXON, W. P. '86. The physical geography of Decatur county, Indiana, during the Xiagara period. [Xot pub.] •29 '87. A list of the fishes of Decatur county, Ind. [Published privately. Apply to the author.] '87. List of butterflies of Decatur county, Ind. [Not pub.] '90. The occurrence of Yeratrum woodii in Decatur county, Ind. Smith, Alex. '91. Condensation of acetophenone with ketols by means of dilute po- ■ tassium cyanide. [Pr. V.] '91. Condensation of acetone with benzoin, by means of dilute potassi- um cyanide. [Pr. Y.] '91. Pyrone and pyridone derivatives from benzoyl-acetone. [Pr. Y.] 8PILL.MAN, W. J. '89. A comparison of the life histories of difi'erent forms of plants. '89. The height of the atmosphere. '90. A refraction rainbow. '90. Geological section at Yincennes. '90. Preliminary list of Knox county plants. '90. Introduction of noxious weeds. Stone, W. E. '89. The carbohydrates of the sweet potato. [Ag. S., l\', p. :>] and B. d. c. G., XXIII, p. 1406.] '89. Specific reaction for the penta glucoses. [Not pub.] '90. Notes on xylose. [Not pub.] '90. On qualitative and quantitative reactions for furfurol. [Journal of Analytical and Applied Chem. Y. No. 8, and B. d. c. G., XXIY, p. 3019.] '91. The digestibility of the pentose carbo-hydrates. [Am. C. J.. XIY, No. 1 and B. d. c. G., XXY, p. 563.] '91. The action of phenyl-hydrazin on fufurol. [Not pub. elsewhere.] Stone, W. E. and Dumont Lotz. '90. On a pentaglucose obtained from corn cobs. [Am. C. J.. XIII, Xo. 5, and B. d. c. G., XXIY, 1657.] Sweeney, R. G. '88. [See Waters, E. G.] Taylor,. F. B. '88. An objection to the contraction hypothesis as accounting for mountains. '88. The sun's light. '90. The highest old shoreline on Mackinac Island. '90. The effect of the Great Lakes on the ice sheet. Test, Fked C. '88. A new kind of phosphorescent organ in Porichthys. [Bulletin Essex Institute, XXI, pp. 43-52.] Thomas, M. B. '91. An apparatus for determining the iseriodicity of root pressure. [B. G., 1892, p. 212, and Pr. V.] 30 '91. The scales of Lepidoptera. [Not pub.] Thompson, Matrick. '85. Mineralogical investigation in Indiana. 'S7. The secondary functions of the hyoid cornua in Picus and Colaptes. [Chapter on "Hyoid Hints" in the author's " Sylvan Secrets," pp. 125-i:;<), John B. Alden, X. Y., 1887.] Tixe. Of these variations, some may be indilferent, some use- ful, some harmful. According to these authors, these variations may affect all parts of the body, the form, the size and strength of single organs, color, or mental ({ualities. Again, all species tend to increase beyond the limits of space and food supply. From this latter cause there arises between the members of any species a struggle for existence. More- over, all species are warred ui)on by many others, by which their food is appropriated and through which they themselves may be appropriated as food. In such a dire struggle it is,. on the average, the best endowed individuals that will succeed in maintaining themselves and in produc- ing offspring to inherit their useful characters ; that is, the most vigorous individuals, those which have developed in the highest degree weapons of offense and defense, or protective colors, or the greatest cunning. The weakest, the most exposed, the most stupid, will perish and leave few or no young. From all the young produced by every species there is thus a constant and unsparing selection being made in favor of those individ- uals which can best endure the stress of the conditions. Hence the meaning of Darwin's phrase " natural selection,'' and of that used by Spencer, " survival of the fittest." Through the selection, for many gen- erations, of the individuals possessing certain beneficial characters, these at length become fixed in the organization and strengthened until the organism is no longer what it was, but may have departed widely there- from. Since success in the struggle is constantly demanding greater strength of limb and body, more efficient organs for each function, more weapons for assailing and repelling, more perfectly protective coloration, the general tendency of evolation has been upward ; but the vigor with which the battle is waged may result in driving some species into such situations that degeneration may occur. Such are many burrowing ani- mals and most parasites. This process of natural selection is therefore quite similar to the artifi- cial selection which is practiced by breeders in their effort to develop new varieties of animals and plants. Those individuals are selected which possess in the highest degree the desired quality ; they are crossed with others having, if possible, the same quality, and the offspring of the pair are treated in the same manner, until the character sought is fully devel- oped. The rigorousness of the selective process that is going on in nature can 35 hardly be appreciated by one who has not given attention to the matter. To a casual observer, it may appear as if the most worthless individuals got a living, while the better perished. The well-favored do often suc- cumb, and in ordinary times the weak may escape ; but when periods of great food-scan^ity, or of intense heat or cold, or of drought come, then the weak perish miserably. The eggs produced by some fishes reach into the millions. Could each one develop into an adult fish, which should in its turn give origin to an equal number of off'spring, a very few years would sufiice to fill all the seas with that fish. As it is, only perhaps one egg in a million becomes an adult fish. The least protected eggs are swallowed by enemies, the weakest young fishes die from disease and ex- posure, while only the most vigorous escape. Our wild rabbits pro'luce several young at a litter and a number of lit- ters each year; yet the number of rabbits does not, on an average, in- crease. As many rabbits must therefore die each year as are born, and they seldom die of old age. Dogs and men, extreme cold and hunger, carry them ott' by thousands. Is there not here abundant opportunity for the development of swiftness of foot, acuteness of eye and ear, and of endurance ? As long as the environment remains about the same, little or no change may occur in the structure or specific characters of animals ; but the whole organization is kept up to the highest grade of efficiency. Should there, however, be a gradual change in the conditions under which any animal is living, there would come about a corresponding change in the animal itself. Should there, for example, be developed a gradual increase in the speed of our dogs, there would, I doubt not, occur a corresponding- improvement in the swiftness of our rabbits. I can see no reason for supposing that natural selection would not have the same effect here as man's selection does in the case of trotting horses. Darwin's theory of natural selection was based almost entirely on ob- servations made on domesticated animals and plants. Organisms in a state of nature did not seem to him to be subject to such frequent and extensive variations, ^^e are only now beginning to appreciate how numerous and how important these variations are. They do not affect in only a slight degree a single organ of one individual in a decade or a century, but isrobably every organ of every individual, and to a veiy appreciable extent. The proverbial unlikeness of the individuals of every species is due to this variation. Wallace, in his "Darwinism '' has given us most impressive illustrations of this variation. ]Most of these illus- trations have been drawn from the publications of our countryman, Dr. J. A. Allen, and relate to the winter birds of Florida. Allen made large collections and took accurate measurements of thos^e portions of the body which are especially depended upon by naturalists in determining species, the length of body, wings, tail, tarsus, toes, and bill. All these parts were found to vary independently of one another, and the variations from the mean length often amounted to from 12 to 25 per cent, of the mean length. While, too, most of the parts measured were not far from the mean on each side, yet there were always a considerable number of individuals of each species that furnished measurements wide of the mean. The same principle is shown by Wallace to hold good among such lizards and mammals as have been studied. AVhat is greatly needed is more extended observations among all classes of animals. I have examined some of our common snakes with reference to this matter of variation. We get the specific characters among snakes from the number of rows of scales across the back, the number br^ad plates along the abdomen and on the tail, and from the kind and arrangement of the colors. Anybody who has studied snakes has soon learned how extremely variable are their colors. Among specimens of the spreading adder, for example, may be found snakes of a plain gray or olive color without other markings, snakes with mere indications of blotcTies. snakes with most conspicuous spots of bright red or yellow and black, and snakes which are plain black. The other characters vary to a perplexing extent. What are merely individual, or at most, varietal peculiarities, have often furnished the basis for new species. In order to bring before you the range of the variations in im- portant parts of these animals, I present the results of estimates which show how four species of our common snakes vary. ■■ These are the common garter snake [Euiainla sistalis), the black snake {Bascanion constrictor), the smooth, green snake {Cydopfm vernal'k), and the ring-necked snake {Diadophis pundaius.) From these it appears that in the number of the body vertebrte the garter snake varies from the aver- age to the extent of 14 per cent., the black snake 6 per cent., the green snake only 4.5 per cent, and the ring- necked snake 13 per cent. In number of caudal vertebrae, the garter snake varies 35 per cent., the black snake 20 * The results here giveu have been deduced from the tables of measurements and countsof ventral and caudal plates giveu in Baird and (Jirard's "Serpeuts of North America." Any considerable collection of the species above studied would furnish still sreater deviations from the means. 87 per cent., the green snake 23 per cent., and the ring-necked snake 23.5 per cent. In proportion of tail to body the garter snake varies 9.4 per cent., the black snake 28 per cent., the green snake 25 per cent., and the ring- necked snake over 35 per cent. There is scarcely a doubt that every character in each of these species will be found to be as unstable as those which have been studied. And it must be observed, too, that each of the characters varies independently of the others, so that we may get any combination that we may want. If breeders should find it to their inter- ests to raise a varied assortinent of black snakes they could, doubtless, by careful selection and crossing, produce short-bodied snakes with long tails, long-bodied snakes with short tails, or snakes extremely short or very long in both parts. Much more might we expect that natural se- lection, which has more abundant materials to work upon and unlimited time, should be able to produce varieties and species to suit the require- ments of the changing conditions of geological periods. While the main proposition of Darwin and Wallace that species arise from earlier species by descent with modification, has been almost unani- mously accepted by the scientific world, a number of scientific authorities have, within recent years expressed more or less dissatisfaction with the prominence that Darwin and Wallace and their followers have given to the doctrine of Natural Selection as an explanation of organic evolution. This dissent has expressed itself in degrees from questioning whether or not natural selection has been the only factor concerned, to open decla- rations that it has had little or nothing to do with evolution. ( )f course, those who deny the efliciency of selection to transform species endeavor to find some other principles or forces which, in their estimation, act as efficient causes, and thus we are beginning to witness the evolution of various schools of evolution. And here it seems proper, as a matter of justice to Darwin, to deny that he, at least in his later works, maintained that natural selection is the only influence at work to bring about changes in organisms. One cannot read his works with even moderate attention without recognizing that he admitted the operation of the very forces and principles that many of these later evolutionists rely on to explain the phenomena of organic change. < )nly Darwin did not assign the same high value to these factors that some authors do now. Wallace, ijn the other hand, in his latest work advocates the earlier position of Darwin, and stands for what he calls the "overwhelming importance of Natural Sele recede from this position. But if it be true that external influences have had nothing directly to do in bringing about inheritable changes in organisms, and if the species of one age have descended from more ancient species, how did the hered- itary individual differences arise in the beginning? With most other evolutionists he believes that the Metazoa have been derived from the Protozoa. In the Protozoa, there is no reproduction by means of eggs. The animal is at once parent and egg. When reproduction occurs, it is usually accomplished by the division of the animal into two portions of equal size and similar form, so that it is impossible to say that either is parent or offspring. Each part reproduces in a similar way ; and since there appears to be no reason why, in case the environment remains favorable, any of the products of division should ever die, AVeismann re- gards them all as having potential immortality. It must be remembered now that AVeismann admits that external forces and conditions, as well as the use anil disuse of organs, may affect pro- foundly the organization of even the higher animals, although he denies that any of the direct effects will be passed on the next generation. In like manner the Protozoan is influenced by external conditions and would 42 have changes wrought in its body. Xow since its body is at the same time the reprodueUce element, whatever modifications have arisen in the body would be inherited by the two portions into which it would divide. " If," says Weismann, " a Protozoon, by constantly struggling against the me- chanical inrtuence of currents in water, were to gain a somewhat denser and more resistant protoplasm, or were to acquire the power of adhering more strongly than the other individuals of his species, the peculiarity in question would be directly continued on into its two descendants, for the latter are at first nothing more than the two halves of the former." By the time, therefore, that some of the Protozoa, through more and more intimate association into colonies, by differentiations of the cells for the performance of different functions, and the production of germ-cells as distinguished from the body-cells, became modified into the primitive Metazoa, those individual differences had arisen which, constantly multi- plied ever since by sexual mixture, have furnished the materials on which Natural Selection has worked to produce all the living animal forms that now exist. It must be understood that, as regards the reproductive elements of the higher animals, AVeismann contends for the continuity of the germ-plasm, not for that of the germ-cells. Embryology proves that the latter cannot be maintained. As Weismann says, " continuity of the germ-cells does not now take place, except in very rare instances." In certain insects there are, at the very beginning of development, a few cells separated from the others and afterwards received into the body of the embryo, in order later to develop into eggs. In some crustaceans, the germ-cells be- come distinct when about thirty cells have been produced. In verte- brates they do not usually become distinct from those composing the body until the embryo has been completely formed. Among the Hydroids, re- production occurs largely by budding. The buds may develop into inde- pendent bodies, jelly fishes, which swimming away and attaining a large size, give origin to the germ cells. These do not make their appearance until after hundreds and thousands of cell -generations have been passed through. They arise oi'iginally from certain cells of the ectoderm, but make long migrations to the places whei'e they finally undergo develop- ment into perfect eggs. Among plants, a fertilized ovule gives origin to an embryo. This may develop into a large tree, which finally will, at the tii3s of branches a hundred feet away, produce new ovules. Through millions of cells the germ-plasm must have made its way to reach those 48 terminal buds. And the cells must contain this precious .substance with- out showing its presence. Weismann says, " It is therefore clear that all the cells of the embryo must for a long time function as somatic cells ; and none of them can be reserved as germ-cells and nothing else." How then does he explain the transferrence, through such long distances, of the germ- plasm ? Keferring to the Hydroids he says : " I concluded that the germ-plasm is present in a very finely divided and therefore invisible state in certain somatic cells from the very be.iiinning of enibrj'^onic de- velopment, and that it is transmitted through innumerable cell-genera- tions to those remote individuals of the colony in which the sexual pro- ducts are formed." But this transportation of the germ-plasm through so many generations of cells is by no means the only difiiculty that besets Weismann's theory. There is a number of plants, among them the begonia, which may be pro- pagated from pieces of the leaves. It would almost appear as if single cells of the leaf would reproduce the plant perfectly. Among the ferns it is no uncommon thing for new plants to spring from the surface of the leaves or of the stalks. Among mosses almost any cell of the root-hairs will develop into new plants. As pointed out by Strassburger, the germ- plasm must, in these cases, not merely travel through the plant to the reproductive origans, but be widely diffused throughout every part of the plant, and Weismann admits that this is the case. Similar phenomena occur among animals. If the fresh water Hydra is divided into two pieces, each will develop into a perfect Hydra. Trembly, in his experiments on these things, minced some of them into as small pieces as he could, and almost every piece developed into a perfect animal. It is stated that as many as forty were thus reproduced from a single one. When certain worms are cut in two, each part develops into a perfect individual. All animals show some power of reproducing lost and injured parts. How shall we explain these facts of reproduction and restoration? Is the restoration of the hydra due to the presence of germ-plasm or not? If it is claimed that it is due to the germ-plasm, it may be replied that it has not reproduced the animal, but only a part, that part which was missing, it may be the half of it or the greater part of it. When the worm is cut in two one cut surface may develop a new tail, the other surface a new head. Had the cut been made the thickness of a cell further forward, those cells that in the first case engaged in developing a new head would probably as readily have gone to work to produce a new tail. Does germ- 44 plasm possess the power of reproducing the whole animal, or the head end or the tail end, according to circumstances ? If the germ- plasm is con- cerned in these restorations of parts, we can hardly exclude it from other cases of restorations, and this will lead us to the admission that germ- plasm is present in nearly all the tissues of all animals. If the position is taken that the germ-plasm is not concerned in the cases that have been referred to, but some degraded product of germ-plasm, then we may say that such materials have powers curiously similar to those of germ-plasm itself, but even more wonderful. To what extent is the material of the cells of the cut surface of the worm different from that of germ-plasm itself, when those cells have the inherited power to produce either head or tail as demanded by the needs of the worm? If the molecular struct- ure of germ-cells and of body-cells is so similar, is it impossible that some of the body-cells may undergo retransformation into germ-cells? Further- more, whether this suppositious reproductive material is or is not con- cerned in the restoration of the minced hydra it must, if it exists at all, be present in all the cells. For, so far as we may judge, each hydra that has grown from a minute bit of hydra is capable of giving origin, when divided, to many new hydras, and these to others indefinitely. Since the last of such a series would, without doubt, be able to produce eggs the germ-plasm must have been contained in all the cells of all the series. Weismann's conception is that the highly organized germ-plasm found in the nucleus is, after the first division, no longer what it was before, except that part which has been reserved, — is indeed no longer germ-plasm at all. At each subsequent division its structure becomes simpler as it gives origin to more and more complex tissues ; that is, its energy runs down as it does work in forming tissues. He claims that, when the germ- plasm has thus become simplified, its character as germ-plasm can never be restored. It might be supposed that, if we could find any cells which, having once formed a part of any body-tissue, should take upon itself the powers of a reproductive cell, "Weismann's theory would stand disproved. We then direct attention to the somatic cells of hydroids Avhich develop into eggs. But Weismann accounts for this by supposing that the germ- plasm enters the cells and takes the place of the germ-plasm. However, it appears to me that it must be admitted that the germ- plasm is so widely diffused through the tissues of many, if not all, organ- isms, and is so much like the substance of many other cells in its repro- ductive powers, as to make it doubtful whether there is any such dis- 45 tinct material. We may not be able to prove tbat it does not exist, but we may do as we do with other ghosts, prove the superfluousness of its existence. It is indeed a wonderful property that ia possessed by the germ-cells of the animal, that of reproducing the form, organs, tissues, and millions of cells of the parent : but the cells that can reproduce the severed head of any animal, with its many sense organs, appear to me to possess a property even more wonderful. For the germ-cell has a struc- ture and corresi)onding capacities which are the ingrained results of countless repetitions of the act of reproduction, while nothing of this kind can be said with regard to the cells which reproduce the head, or the tail, or the foot. It looks as if every cell o,f the whole body were originally endowed with the capability of reproducing all the others in 0. Time Min. Filtered. To ^■ Na CI. tVN. Ag.NOg iV N Am. Sulph. Ferric Alum. HNO, (1.2)' - 1 . . 5 no 4 1.62 o 3 o 9 5 5^ 1.85 a 3 1.70 4 2 " 1.70 5 3 a 1.75 fi o u 1.65 7 u (1 1.70 8 1 2 (( 1.80 These data seem to indicate that even though the time be reduced to a minimum, the results are inconsistent and misleading. Now these varia- tions may be eliminated by a process of filtering. Introduce a quantity of sodium chloride, say 4cc from a ^\ normal solution, into a 200cc graduated flask, add 4cc nitric acid (1.2 sp. gr.), free from nitrous acUl, and with dis- tilled water at 15° C fill to mark. Mix well. When the silver chloride has been separated, filter off lOOcc of the fluid through a dry filter. Introduce the filtrate into a titrating flask, add 2— 3cc sat. sol. ferric alum and titrate with the j\ nor. sol. am. sulphocyanide, till the addition of one drop causes a light brown color to appear. This color once produced will be permanent. The results of such a device are shown by the following data : No. Time Filtered. Na CI. Ag. NO3 j\ N Am. Sulph. Ferric Alum. HNO, (1.2) 1 2 3 4 5 () 7 8 yes 4cc 7( :c ( ( 1.55 1.50 u These results agree with the quantities introduced and are constant. This device was employed in estimating the chlorine in the waters from AVest 51 Baden, French Lick, Mt. Aris, Indian and Trinity Springs. The results were constant and accurate. It also holds in waters containing much mineral matter and organic matter to 350 parts in 100,000. Second. "Will there, without filtering, be an appreciable error? We pro- duce the following data : WITH DISTILLED WATER. No. Time. ' 10 -^^ NaCl. tVN Ag.NO. TO Am. Sulph. Ferric Alum HNO3 (1.2) 1 2 ■> 4 o 6 / 8 1 5 10 12 10 10 10 10 3cc 5 '•> (> 6 3.0CC 3.5 3.5 6.5 6.5 .7Scc .75 .75 .82 .75 1.00 .88 1.00 3 3 We differed from the authors in this — that the solution was gently agitated until the color no longer disappeared. With such a standard the error may reach 1.77 pts. in 100,000 pts. as shown by the eighth titration. The observa- tions justify the following inferences : First. There is an appreciable reaction between the silver chloride and the ammonium sulphocyanide. Second. The error varies directly with the quantity of chlorine present, and the time employed. Third. When the reaction of chlorine upon silver nitrate is effected in the presence of ammonium sulphocyanide, the results are inconstant. Fourth. That it is necessary to filter off the silver chloride, before add- ing the ferric salt. Fifth. That by filtering the results are eery accurate. Sixth. That if the solution, unfiltered, be allowed to stand ten minutes, the reactions which take place, will produce very appreciable errors. Some suggestions to teachers of science or mathematics ix high schools. By Thos. C. Van Nuys. It is the purpose of the writer to endeavor to indicate, as briefly as prac- ticable, the spirit which should influence teachers of science or mathematics in high schools. » It is needless to state in this connection that the spirit, in which a teacher 52 performs his duty, arises from his conception of what education is, conse- quently, correct views of education in general, are of very great import- ance to teachers. No system of education can exist, without grave defects, unless there is in the system a certain degree of uniformity in the curricu- lum of study. Classes of studies for periods of time should be so grouped, that by the pursuit of them, the pupil is led to the highest degree of disci- pline and culture. Fortunately, the course of study in the public schools of this country is pretty well formulated, but, unfortunately, the course is better adapted for preparing pupils for technical or business education than for scholarship or the learned professions. This defect, however, may, in part, be remedied by the efficiency of teachers. In order that the teacher of elementary science or mathematics in a high school may become proficient in his work he should first determine what benefit are the pupils to derive from a course of instruction in mathematics a ad elementary science. Notwithstanding, the tendency of the age is in favor of technical education, the fact is, no class of studies can take the place of the inflected languages, history and literature for a high degree of discipline and culture, and, that full benefit should be derived from lin- guistic studies, they should be introduced, early in the course, as training in them is easier at an early age. The study of the humanities, if pursued early in life, when the emo- tional faculties are springing into existence, results in refining, cultivating the tastes and engendering a broad philanthropy. This is readily under- stood when it is taken into consideration that through the study of the ancient languages, the pupil becomes acquainted with different phases of human thought, and, because different from modern thought, they are not the less human. With thorough training in these studies, early in life, the pupil becomes disciplined and refined, disciplined, by long continued mental drill, neces- sary in acquiring knowledge of the inflected languages, and refined, by sympathy for mankind acquired by a knowledge of the vicissitudes through which the human race has passed. This comes from the study of the hu- manities being subjective as well as objective. On the other hand, the study of science and mathematics is objective. In these pursuits, the emo- tions may be dormant, while reason is called into activity. If this be true, it is readily understood why the study of languages, history and literature should precede the study of the sciences and higher mathematics. To reach tlie highest results in education the tastes, the moral faculties 53 and the sensibilities should be developed as well as the intellectual ; other- wise, the development is not symmetrical. The teacher should not encourage the popular opinion that the education which does not enable a person to superintend a factory, make shoes, or build a bridge, is worthless. In this materialistic age we are apt to employ our educational forces so as to intensify the mad strife we have about us, to make prominent those studies, by a knowledge of which, wealth is acquired and to neglect those studies which tend to refine, temper and balance the mind. The word discipline is perhaps the most difficult term in pedagogical science to define. No attempt will be made to offer a definition here, further than to state, that by discipline, the pupil has power of self-con- trol, that by it, undivided attention can be concentrated to the subject un- der consideration. By discipline, there is economy in mental work. The mind is disciplined when it possesses the art of thinking. To many it would seem absurd that it requires many years of systematic study, under good instruction to read a book, or study a subject with pi-ofit and, there- fore, with understanding, and yet, it is true. While it is claimed that the study of the inflected languages, history and literature, pursued early in life, is imperative for discipline, culture and scholarship, yet if the study of higher mathematics and science be not subsequently pursued (and it might be added in proper spirit), the work of preparation is incomplete. It is a recognized fact that the body soon becomes accustomed to certain movements which are, with sufficient practice, made almost unconsciously, so the mind, with practice, soon becomes accustomed to certain processes of reasoning. Although the study of the humanities presents many aspects of thought, yet the mind of the classical student runs in grooves. For him the study of higher mathematics opens up a new field of thought as the processes of reasoning are essentially dift'erent from those employed in the study of the humanities. Method and system in the processes of reasoning are characteristic of the mathematical mind. The study of chemistry is of importance as a means of cultivation of the powers of observation, but, perhaps, the greatest value of the study of chemistry, is the knowledge of the constitution of matter and the changes it undergoes, producing new bodies. The cultured pupil reads here a won- derful story. His mind dwells on the growth and consequent changes of 54 living languages, so rapid are these changes that a language is scarcely the same each decade. Every period of history is stamped with changes. Na- tions grow like plants, remain in the developed state a time, then they de- cline and upon their ruins other nations spring up, likewise to perish. The student reads in chemical science a similar story told in symbolic lan- guage. Hitherto he knew but little of the laws of matter, he now learns that matter and its laws form the basis of all. Were it not for the facts on which the atomic theory is based and were it not that forces are evolved by the reduction of organic matter there could be no mental process, in fact no brain, no muscle. Now, while this expresses a phase of materialistic philosophy yet the pupil who has a thorough training in the studies of the humanities is not easily thrown oflf' his balance. By his long continued training he recognizes the fact that the moral sense or sentiment is a po- tent factor in nature, that man is not a selfish animal seeking to survive that he may enjoy his sensuous pleasures. Although the age is becoming more rationalistic, yet there never was a time when society was subject to so much vaccination, frivolity and extremes. The craze for something new or sensational precludes sober thought. We may as a nation excel all others in inventions and conveniences and yet we may become a nation of artisans and tradesmen. The pupil who is educated in the humanities, and therefore has a disciplined mind, does not seek for wild theories, even if founded on the results of modern research. Too many men, who repre- sent the results of the new education are without convictions. The char- acter of too many is reflected by current of popular opinion. The greatest need of this age is a generation of men, cultured and disciplined, who have convictions and therefore are not moved by the great waves of thought which often sweep over the country like an epidemic. The teacher of science, or higher mathematics, in a preparatory school, should consider himself employed to build over, or bridge a chasm at the end of a long line. He should consider his work a necessity to fill out, and round up the intellectual and moral character of the pupils, under his charge. However diflferent his work may appear from the work of his colleague who teaches the Greek language, or his colleague who studies, with his classes, Shakspeare, Dante or Milton, his work is along the same line. The teacher of science will benefit his pupils much more by confining his instruction to general principles, whether he teaches elementary chemistry, botany or zoology. After having spent years of persistent study of languages, literature and history, acquiring a knowledge of the inflections of verbs, memorizing the definition of words and becoming familiar with the outline of all forms of speech, with the political divisions of countries of the remote past — in short, with the life of a world in its childhood and now to be introduced into the world of the present, constitutes the most interesting period in the life of the pupil. The teacher guides with watchful care the mental processes awakened by the study of nature. He witnesses a wonderful mental development, wonderful because it springs from a rich store-house of knowledge and because the mental processes are new. After all, the ultimate object of education is utilitarian in character. The educated man or woman, who is a useful member of society, who is of value to the state, must be of the world. He must be brought in intimate relationship with the affairs of the present, and, for this purpose, the study of science and mathematics is well adapted. A full degree of utilitarianism is not wholly technical in kind. To become useful in any of the learned professions all of the discipline afforded by classical and scientific training, in addition to the training in the professional studies proper, is required. If education is to be the i^afeguard of the nation, if it is to prevent the enactment of extreme measures, if it is to act as the balance wheel in the machinery of the social state, it must result in the development of all the resources of the intellect as well as the sense of justice and love of hu- manity. The siGAR HEKT IN Indiana. Bv H. A. Huston. Forms of nitrogen for wheat. By H. A. Huston. A copi'Ei; a:mmonium oxide. By P. S. Baker. Dl BENZYL CAEBINAMINE. By W. A. XOVES. [ABSTRACT.] [Published in the American Chemical Journal, 14, 225.] Di-benzyl carbinamine was prepared by the reduction of the oxim of di- benzyl-ketone by means of sodium and absolute alcohol. The new base melts at 47° and boils at 330°. The chloride, Cj ■, Hj , NH2. HCl, separates in compact crystals which melt at 205°. The chloro-plati- nate, the nitrite and the di-benzyl carbinamine sulphocarbamimate of di- /~1 TT "WW benzyl carbinamine, q h^^ NH HS-^^^' ^^^^ ^^^° prepared. B Especial interest attaches to the nitrite which is stable at ordinary tem- peratures, and a dilute solution of which can be boiled with very slight de- composition. In these respects the base is intermediate in its properties between the "alicyclic" bases of Bamberger and the ordinary aliphatic amines.— [Rose Polytechnic Institute, Dec. 1S91. The character of well waters in a thickly popllated area. By W. A. No YES. [abstract.] A table was shown giving the results of the analysis of a number of well- waters taken from wells in various parts of the city of Terre Haute. The amounts of free and of "albuminoid" ammonia in these well waters is us- ually very low, but the amounts of chlorine and of nitrates, and especially the latter, when compared with the amounts of the same substances found in a well water in the country east of the city show that the waters of the city wells are seriously contaminated with surface drainage. The fact that a large proportion of the cases of typhoid fever and of dysentery (477 cases out of 500 cases investigated) occur in families where well water and not hydrant water is used for drinking purposes justifies the condemnation of such well waters, even where the amount of organic matter in the water is very small.— [Rose Polytechnic Institute, Dec. 1891. 0/ Laboratory and field work on the phosphate of alumina. By H. A. HrsTON. Recent methods for the determination of phosphoric aciu. By H. A. HrsTON. The digestibility of the pentose carp.ohydrates. By W. E. Stone. The action of phenyl-hydrazin on rrRFUROi.. By W. E, Stone. A graphical solution for equations of hiCtHer de(.ree. for both real AND IMAGINAItY ROOTS. By A. S. HaTHAWAY. •1. Preliminary on imaginary numbers. The usual idea of imaginary numbers, as presented in our text books of algebra, is that they are symbols introduced for the sake of making the laws of algebra formally complete. It is implied in the name given to these numbers that they have no actual meaning. This is a mistake. The failure to mean anything in ordinary cases is not the fault of the numbers, but results from the nature of the concrete quantities with which they are generally used. Like difficulties are experienced with real numbers under similar circumstances. Let us go briefly over the list of numbers and em- phasize this point. First, the numbers 1, 2, 3, 4, that denote repetitions of a concrete quan- tity. If the quantity be incapable of the indicated repetition the result is imaginary. Thus: Three spaces of four dimensions. This may be com- prehensible to a different order of beings, but not to us. Second, the numbers I, };, \, that denote partitions of a concrete quan- tity. Nevertheless, a space of I a dimension, a school of 1 a student, are impossibilities. Third, the number — 1, This number must be used with quantities of two kinds such that two of equal magnitude and different kinds give, when *NOTE.— This preliminary ou the graphic representation of imaginary numbers was not presented to the Academy. It is a simple and direct presentation of the subject without the use of analytical geometry, and on that account may be interesting to mathematicians; at the -^ame time, it places the whole article upon an elementary basis, and makes it available to a larger circle of readers. 58 combined, zero result; e. g., assets and liabilities. In this case — 1 reverses quality without altering magnitude, so that 1 -p ( — 1 ) = 0. But what is a farm of — 80 acres? Imagine a farm that put with an SO acre farm gives no land at all. Fourth, the incommensurable numbers, e. g.. the ratio of a diagonal to a side of a square. These require continuous quantitj'^, and their use with quantity whose partitions are limited is impossible. What is a space of |, '7 dimensions, a country with ^ '7 presidents, a man with i 7 dollars in his pockets? We recognize a number by what it can do with appropriate quantity to operate upon, not by what it can not do with inappropriate quantity. The interpretation of imaginary number requires quantity that has magnitude and different qualities. These quantities, whether geometrical or physical, may be represented by certain geometrical quantities called by Clifford steps. The step from a position A in space to another position B has length and direction. Two steps are equal that have the same length, and the same direction ; i. e., the opposite sides of a parallelogram taken in the same di- rection are equal steps. The sum of any number of successive steps in various directions is the step from the first point of departure to the last point reached ; e. g., A B + B C + C D = A D. In particular the sum of two successive steps along the sides of a parallelogram is equal to the step along the diagonal. As the remaining sides in the parallelogram form equal steps added in reverse order, we learn that the order of successive steps in a sum may be changed without altering the sum. Positive numbers operating on steps change lengths but not directions ; — 1 reverses direction without altering length ; e. g., — 1 A B = B A. If x be any real number we see by similar triangles that x ( A B + B C) = x A B J-xBC. A valuable analysis may be developed by the use of steps and real num- bers only. From its simplicity, and its value in physical applications, it ought to displace ordinary analytical geometry, in technical schools at least. The main difticulty is the lack of a suitable text book. Let us confine ourselves, now, to steps in the plane of the paper, and consider the nature of the number that multiplying 0 A produces O B. It must alter the length of O A into the length of O B ; this is the tensor fac- tor, an ordinary positive number. It must turn O A thus lengthened into OB; this is the versor factor; the angle of this turn, reckoned as positive 50 when it is counter clockwise, is the angle of the number. Thus, let (2, oO°) denote a number that doubles length and turns 30° counter clockwise. Its tensor is 2, its vei'sor is (1, 30°), and its angle is 30°. After multiplying a step by (2, oO°) multiply the result by (:>, 20°). Plainly the final step is (6, 50°) times the first step. This example of a product enables us to see at once that : The tensor of a product equals the product of the tensors of the factors ; and the angle of a product equals the sum of the angles of the factors. Hence the factors may be combined in any order without altering their product. The definition of a sum of two numbers p and q is that (p + q) O B=: p O B - q 0 B. ■• Replacing O B by r O A we have that (p — q) r = p r + q r; and since the factors of a product have been shown to be interchangeable, therefore r(p-i-q) = {p — q)r=rp + rq. We thus find that these versi-tensors follow the ordinary laws of alge- braic combination. To identify them with imaginaries, notice that (1, 90°)- = (1, 180°) = — 1 = (1, —90°)-, These two square roots of —1 are nega- tives of each other, for —1 (1, —90°) = (1, 180°) (1, —90°) = (1, 90°). So — 1 has three cube roots, — 1 and (1, =b 60°); and so on. It is convenient to represent versi-tensors by steps. Some step O A is taken to represent unity ; and then any other step represents its ratio to the unit step O A. Thus, if 0 B, O B^ are steps of the same length as 0 A, and make angles of 60° and — ()0° respectively with O A, they represent the imaginary cube roots of — 1. AVe may use geometry to put these roots in the standard form x y i, where x and y are real numbers and i = (1 , 90°). Let BBi meet O A in C; then OC represents, or say =, i, and CB= i l/7 i = — C Bi ; and from O B = O C ^ C B, O B^ = 0 C + C B^ we have (1, ± 60°) = i ± ^, 7 i. This example just given makes it plain that any imaginary number may be put in the form x ^ y i, in one and only one way ; and from the right triangle involved, we also see that the tensor of x + y i is v x- + y-, the so-called modulus in imaginaries. It is easy to show by geometry how it is that every equation with real or imaginary co-efficients has at least one root, and therefore just as many roots as its degree and no more, or even to show the whole directly. ♦ In fact, all the fundamental properties of imag- "To see that this does detiiie the sum, try it for the case of p = {2, 30 ), q= (2, 150 ), which gives p -r q= (2. 90' i. Also compare with the verification that 2-j-i= 5. (50 iuaries may be made visible realities rather than symbolic results based upon certain assumptions. When dealing with steps not limited to the plane of the paper, then ( O A, n°) may be taken as the symbol of a number that turns any step that is perpendicular to O A, n° round'O A as axis, counter clockwise to an ob- server at A, and lengthens in the ratio of the length of O A to the unit length. This is a quaternion. Quaternions whose angles are o° or 1S0° are ordinary positive and negative numbers, and are called scalars. Qua- ternions whose angles are 90° are called vectors. The square of a vector is a negative scalar. The ordinary rules of algebra hold except that factors are not interchangeable without altering the product. A quaternion, also, cannot multiply a step that is not perpendicular to its axis. It can be geo- metrically represented only by two steps. A vector (O A, 90°) or briefly (O A) may be represented by the step ( ) A. The value of this representa- tion is expressed by the equations : (OB)4-(OA)=-(OB-rOA) (OB) : ( 0 A ) - OB : O A. The calculus of quaternions is superior for all purposes of investigation to analytical geometry, and as its results can be immediately turned into ana- lytical formulas, it is likely to be very much used and developed in the future. It is especially valuable in mathematical physics. An account of the -system by Sir Wm. Rowan Hamilton, the inventor, was first presented to the Royal Irish Academy in 1843. The first book upon the subject, " Hamilton's Lectures," appeared in 185o. II. Let a x^ r b x^ + c x + d = o be an equation with general imaginary co-efficients. Divide this by x — r: the quotient is a x- + (a r -f b) x + (a r- -r b r + c) and the remainder is a r ' -j- b r- -[- c r + d. The co-effi- cients of the quotient, and final remainder are best found by synthetic di- vision, which shows the general method of forming each co-efficient by multiplying the last by r and adding the next coefficient of the original equation. The process is identical with the reduction of the compound number (a, b, c, d) whose radix is r. The test of a root is that the remain- der should be zero. The steps that represent these numbers may be constructed as follows : Take in the plane of the paper steps O A, A B, B C, C D, representing the numbers a, b, c, d. Take any point A', and let A' k: 0 A be the r we Gl are to try in the equation for x. To find the result of the trial, construct the triangle A^ B' B similar to O A' A, and then the triangle B' C^ C, also similar to O A' A. We have O A = a, A' A = a r, and hence A' B = A^ A + AB = ar+b; also by similar triangles, B^ B = r A^ B --= a r- -{- b r, and hence B^ C = B^ B + B C = a r- + b r + c. Again by similar triangles, C^ C = r (a r2 + b r + c) = a r3 ^ b r^ + c r and hence C D = C C + C D = a r^ + b r^ + c r + d, the remainder sought ; moreover, the co-eflacients of the quotient are represented by O A, A/ B, B^ C. The problem is to so choose the first point A' that the last vertex C of the series of similar tri- angles O A' A, A^ B' B, B' C C, shall coincide with D : then A' A : O A is a root of the given equation. With the ability to construct a series of sim- ilar triangles with ease, a position for A^ may be approximated to without much difficulty. Observe that O A^, A^ B^, W C^ are equi-mulliples of O A A' B, B^ C. This follows from the similar triangles 0 A' A, A^ B^ B, B' C C, which give O A^ : O A = A' B' : A^ B = B^ C : B' C both as to tensor and angle parts. Hence the circuit O A^ B' C represents the quo- tient on the new scale in which 0 A/ instead of O A represents the first co-eflBcient a. If the co-eflScients of the given equation are all real numbers and only the real roots are sought, the method fails, since A^ must be taken on 0 A produced giving no triangle 0 A' A. In such a case, put x = -^— where m is a given versor, say (1, 60°), or (1, 90°); the equation becomes ; a z^ + m b z- + m- c z + m^ d ^ o. The figure O, A, B, C, D that represents the co-efficients of this equation will have equal angles at A, B, C, viz.: the supplement of the angle of m (since a, b, c, d are real numbers, their angles are O or 180°). We are to seek for roots of this equation whose angles are, angle of m or angle of m— 180°. (Since z = mx, therefore angle z = angle m ^ angle x.) Thus A' must be taken on A B produced ; and since the angles at A, B, C, are equal, it follows that the similar triangles required will have their vertices B', C^ on B C, C D, produced, so that the construction of these triangles is simplified, e. g., to find B^ draw from A^ a line making with O A^ an angle equal to the angle A; that line meets B C in B'. The broken line O A^B' C has its angles A^, B^ equal to the angles A, B, and its vertices A', B', C in the sides A B, B C, C D; trials of this construction must be made until C co-incides with D, when A^ A : m O A is the real root of the equation in x. Taking m=(l, 90°), this is Lill's construction for the real roots of an equation with real co-eflScients. Lill has devised an instrument for facili- 62 tating his construction, which is described as follows (Cremona Graph. Statics (Beare), p. "ti): "The apparatus consists of a perfectly plane circular disc, which may be made of wood ; upon it is pasted a piece of paper ruled in squares. In the center of the disc, which should remain fixed, stands a pin, around which as a spindle another disc of ground glass of equal diameter can turn. Since the glass is transparent, we can with the help of the ruled paper under- neath, immediately draw upon it the circuit corresponding to the given equation. If we now turn the glass plate, the ruled paper assists the eye in finding the circuit which determines a root. A division upon the cir- cumference of the ruled disc enables us by means of the deviation of the first side of the first circuit from the first side of the second, to immediately determine the magnitude of the root. For this purpose the first side of the circuit corresponding to the equation must be directed to the zero point of the graduation." Linkages might be found to perform mechanically what must be done by successive approximations in the method above, viz.: to bring the last vertex C/ into co-incidence with D. Kempe has given some linkages for a diflTerent construction. [See Messenger of Mathematics, Vol. 4, 1875, p. 124.] III. The following constructions are given as illustrations: (a.) Roots of 2x'- + 4x -^ 1 = o. [Fig. i.] As the co-eflBcients are all real it is preferable, and for real roots neces- sary, to transform the equation by putting x = -^, m = (1, 90°). The equation becomes 2 zH -^ m z + m^ -= O, and 0 A = 2, A B = 4 m, B C == m3 = _ 1. If A' A : () A is a root of this equation then, dividing by m, we find A/ A : m O A «s a root of the original equation. If this is real A' must lie on A B, produced if necessary. Ilemember that A^ is such that O A' A, A^ C B are similar triangles and we see that the angle O A^ C is a right angle when A' lies on A B. Hence the circle on O C as diameter cuts A B in'the sought points A', A'^. From the figure the roots A' A : m O A, A'^ A : m O A are approximately — . 3 and —1.7. (b.) Rootsof 2x2 + 2x + 4 = 0. [Fig. ii.] Here 0A = 2, AB = 2m, BC = 4m2 ... —4. The circle on O C as di- ameter does not cut A B and the roots are imaginary. Since 0 A^ A, A'' C B are similar, therefore A' is equally distant from A and B, and that distance is mean proportional between O A and C B. A circle with this mean pro- portional as radius and center at A or B will therefore cut the perpendicu- lar erected at the middle point (M) of A B in the sought points A', A'\ The circle with center at M and cutting the circle on 0 C as diameter at ()8 right angles also passes through these points. Conceiving the step m. O A drawn from A' we see that M A and A' M, kf^ M are the real and imagi- nary components of the roots. The roots given by k/ and K'^ are by the figure — 5 — 1.3m and — } -f- 1.3m. (c.) Real root of 2 x^ + 4 x- -f 8 -f 4 = o. We have O A = 2, AC = 4m, BC = 8m2= —8, CD = 4m3 = — 4m. The circuit O A' W D was drawn by aid of transparent paper turned round a pin with cross section paper underneath, after the manner of Lill's wooden and ground glass discs. The root, A' A : m O A = tan k.' O A, may be read ofT from the cross section paper to several decimal places. It is here — .64.... O A^ B^ D is the circuit for the quadratic equation that gives the remain- ing pair of roots of the cubic. The circle on 0 D as diameter will not cut A^ B' so that these roots are imaginary. On .soj[e theorems of ixtec;katioxs in qcatekxioxs. By A. S. Hatha- way. There are certain identities among volume, surface and line integrals of a quaternion function q=/(h) that include as special cases the well known theorems of Green and Stokes, that are so often employed in mathematical physics. These indentities were first demonstrated by Prof. Tait by the aid of the physical principles usually employed in forming the so-called "Equa- tion of Continuity." [See Tait's Quatermous, third ed., ch. XII J.] If dh dih,d2h be non-coplanar differentials of the vector h, the theorems may be written : (1) — /fJSdhdihd2h.~q=/J V dhdjh.q (The surface integral extends over the boundary of the volume integral and Vdhdih is an outward facing element of the surface.) (2) /fV (Vdhdih.~).q=/dhq (The line integral extends over the boundary of the surface integral in the positive direction as given by the vector areas V dhdjh.) These theorems are analogous to the elementary theorem, (3) /dq=qB — qj or in quaternion notation, •^ A — /Sdh'v.q=q 64 It has not been noticed, so far as I am aware that these identities are equivalent to simpler identities pertaining to the operator V, as follows : (1)' Sdhdihd2h.V=Vdihd2hSdhV+Vd2hdhSdih\7+VdhdihSd2hV (2/ V(Vdhdih.V)=dhSdih^— dihSdhV In fact (1) and (2) become these (into q) when applied to the elements of volume and surface just as (3) becomes SdhV=di (into q) when applied to the element of length; To identify (1) and (1)^, let h be the vector of the mean point of the par- allelopiped whose edges are dhjdih.djh. The outward vector areas "of the two faces parallel to djh.dah are — VdihdahjVdjhdoh, and the correspond- ing values of q are q+JSdh.V-q, q— iSdhV-q; so that sum of the vector areas into q is — VdihdohSdhV-q- Similarly for the other faces. So to identify (2) and (2)', the line elements bounding the parallelogram dh,dih are dh,dih, — dh, — djh, and the corresponding values of q are q+^Sdih^.q, q+oSdh^y.q, q — iSd,h\7.q, q— ^Sdh^Z-qandthe sum dhq is dhSd.hy.q— dihSdhy.q. To obtain (1) irom (1)^ divide the given volume into infinitesimal parallel- epipeds by any three systems of surfaces, one of which includes the bound- ary of the volume. In summing the terms (1)^ the introduced interior sur- faces between adjacent elements of volume are gone over twice with the vector areas oppositely directed. These surfaces balance one another, therefore, and may be dropped from the summation, leaving the volume integral equal to the surface integral over the boundary of the volume integral. We see also that if any discontinuity in q or its derivatives exists within the given volume that the proper way to overcome this is to surround the discontinuity by surfaces and so exclude the discontinuity. Usually this alterg only the surface over which the surface integral extends without aflFecting the volume integral. Similarly (2) is obtained from summation of (2)^ and, as every student of integral calculus is aware, (3) is obtained from dq in a similar manner. The sectioxs ok the anchor king. By W. Y. Brown. 65 Note on the early history of the potential functions. By A. S. Hath- away. This is to call attention to an injustice that has been done by Todhunter in his "History of the Theory of Attractions" in assigning to Laplace in- stead of Lagrange the honor of the introduction of the potential function into dynamics. This injustice has been perpetuated by various encyclope- dias, notably the Encyclopedia Britannica, and by leading text books, such as Thompson and Tait's Natural Philosophy, and Maxwell's Electricity and Magnetism. In an article in Vol. 1 No. 3 of the Bulletin of the New York Mathematical Society (Dec. 1891) I have shown conclusively that Lagrange anticipated Laplace by at least ten years in investigations on the potential. Laplace's first announcement is fixed by Todhunter as between 1783 and 1785, and this was merely through the paper of another, Legendre. La- grange on the other hand, wrote distinctly upon that subject in 1773, 1777 and 1780 ; and in the last paper the notation is the same as that used by La- place three or four years later. There is also evidence that Lagrange had begun to develop the idea of the potential as early as 17G3, in connection with his celebrated generalized equations of motion. Some geometrical propositions. By C. A. Waldo. Notes on numerical radices. By C. A. Waldo. Some suggested changes in notation. By R. L. Green. An adjustment for the control magnet on a mirror galvanometer. By J. P. Naylor. A combined Wheatstone's bridge and potentiometer. Bv J. p. Naylok. Histeresis curves for mitis and other cast iron. By J. E. MoouEandE. M. TiNGLEY. 5 Heating op a diki^ectiuc in a condenser — I'reliminary note. By Albeki P. Carman. PrELIMINAHY notes on the (4E0L0GY OF DeAUHORN county. By A. .1. BlONEY. The geological formations in Dearborn county are the lower Silurian which is found in almost every part of the county, the upper silurian occu- pying only a small area in the northwest part of the county and the glacial deposit of the post-tertiary times. Blue limestone is the characteristic rock. The rock is abundantly supplied with fossils, much of it being composed almost entirely of brachiopods, corals and other closely related fossils. On this account they are of little value for building purposes, the chief use be- ing for foundation stones. Some of the hardest will weather very percep- tibly in only a few years. Along the railroad at Moore's Hill, the rocks are so easily disintegrated that the cliflFs appear more like immense shell banks than true rocks. In the northern part of the county, near the upper silurian outcrop, the rock is much harder and is quarried in considerable quantities, and is re- garded as a very fine quality of stone. It, however, is not equal to that which is found in Ripley and Decatur counties. Where there is no drift the soil is marly — that is, composed of lime, clay, sand, etc. In the greater part of the county and especially in the western section there is much clay ; on the fiats this is very tenacious. In the eastern part of the county along the Ohio drift deposits are very prominent. There is some drift at New- town, near Lawrenceburgh, but the most important deposits are just outside the county, in Ohio county, and where it is about fifty feet thick and three miles below Aurora on the Kentucky side, above and below Wolper creek. About five miles further to the south in Boone county, Ky., still more drift is to be found. This last deposit is about on a level with the highest part of the cliff, that is, 1,000 feet. The drift at the mouth of Wolper creek, called Split-rock, is an immense mass of conglomerate fully 100 feet thick and nearly 400 feet lower than that five miles to the south. There is one perpendicular clifi" that measures 7.'^ feet high, and above this there is a rise of about 20 feet more, and how deep it extends no one has investigated. About one- fourth mile to the south, on the opposite side of a small creek, is still more deposit and one cliff is even higher than the one just described. 07 In the lower part of this drift, which is finer than the upper drift, gold has been found, more particularly, however, on the Indiana side. The fossil remains in the county are rich, and a fuller report may be given at some future time. Only a few can receive our attention in this paper. Near Aurora and Lawrenceburgh numerous bones of the mastodon and mammoth have been found. The bones of a sloth and the skull of a black bear have also been found, and a few other mammals. Brachiopods, crin- oids, trilobites, mollusks, bryozoa, corals, etc., are found in great abundance. The trilobites are not so numerous as they used to be, for most of the speci- mens have been collected — that is, the surface specimens. While exploring a mound four miles north of Moore's Hill several large specimens of the coral, tetradium fibratum were found. One of them required four men to place it in the wagon. One little ravine seemed to be literally filled with it. Prof. Gorby pronounced these the finest specimens of the kind in the state. They are now in the museum at Moore's Hill College. The cystidiaxs of Jefferson couxtv, Ind. — By Geo. C. Hubbard. These fossils form an order of the crinoids, and are most abundant in the Niagara group. About thirty species, up to this time, have been found in Jefferson county, which proves it to be the richest locality in this respect in North America, if not in the world. Fifteen new species will be described and figured in the 17th report of the Geological Survey of Indiana, most of which, if not all, were collected by Mr. John Hammel. Those found be- long to the genera holocystites, caryocrinus and allocystites. These fossils are uniformly found in shale or soft limestone, near the bottom of the Ni- agara group. Near Madison few have been found and these are in poor condition; but along Big creek, in the northern part of the county, they are more numerous and are well preserved. On two or three occasions I had the pleasure of accompanying Mr. Hammel to Big creek. Numerous other fossils were found, but few cystidians. If an experienced collector finds two or three good specimens in a day's search he may consider him- self fortunate. A few are found in the debris at the base of the low cliffs or in the bed of the creek ; more are obtained, however, by moving along on hands and knees and closely examining the various strata known to con- tain them, as well as the bottom of the projecting rocks above, for they are often found adhering to the lower surface of certain strata. 68 Hudson rivek fossils of Jefferson cointv, Indiana. By Geo. C. Huh- BABD. In the Geological Report of Indiana for 1874, there appeared a list of Hudson River fossils prepared by Dr. W. J. S, Cornett, containing the names of seventy-six species and varieties. They were classified as ^jfon- tx, encrinites, parasitic corals, unhrtlvcs, orthis and trilobites. Among the "or- this" were modiolopsis modiolaris, a lamellibranch, and streptelasma cor- niculum, a cup coral. Tetradium fibratum, a columnar coral, was placed under "univalves." Young and old of the same species were sometimes classed as two species. Strophomena nutans, which has never been found in Indiana, was included in the list. These and similar errors, together with the incompleteness of the list, call for a second attempt. The species included in this second list have been collected chiefly by myself in the vicinity of Madison. Most of the crinoids, however, were named from Mr. Jno. Hammel's extensive collection. The list, which is too long for an abstract, contains: Plantse 8 species. Porifera 6 " Anthozoa 25 " Crinoidea 28 Stellerida 0 " Bryozoa 14 " Brachiopoda 32 " Pteropoda 3 Gasteropoda 20 " Cephalopoda 18 " Lamellibranchiata 26 " Annelida • 4 " Crustacea 8 " Total 198 Among these some ten or twelve are believed to be undescribed species. The upper limit op the lower Silurian at Madison, Ind. — By George C. Hubbard. The upper strata of the bluffs along the Ohio river belong to the Niagara group, and the lower to the Hudson river or Cincinnati group ; but the exact line of demarcation between them has long been an unsettled ques- tion. The importance of this parting is recognized when we remember 69 that it exists wherever the Silurian rocks are exposed, and that here in an altitude of more than 20,000 feet of the earth's crust, representing a period of untold ages, the greatest break in animal life occurred ; but one-fourth of the genera represented in the lower silurian being found in the upper Silurian, while the species are almost entirely new. In Ripley county, along Graham creek, this parting is easily determined by means of the abundant and well preserved fossils, but at ]\Iadison this is not the case. Fossils are easily found from the level of the river to a height of 300 feet, where the favistella stillata bed outcrops. Above this for sev- enty-five feet the strata are nearly non- fossiliferous. At three hundred seventy-five feet above the Ohio the "cliff rock" outcrops, which contains characteristic Niagara fossils. In 1859 Prof. Richard Owen, after a hasty examination, stated the favis- tella reef to be the limit. A few years later Prof. Eaton discovered tetra- dium fibratum, a Hudson river fossil, six feet higher. Subsequently, Dr. W. J. S. Cornett claimed that he had discovered a 10 i,nch stratum about fifty feet above the favistella reef containing orthis occidentalis and other Hud- son river fossils, and announced this stratum as the last of the lower Si- lurian. In 1889 I commenced collecting fossils, being unacquainted with what has been stated just above. Occasionally at the head of ravines I found fossils in fallen rocks which were undescribed in any of my books on pa- laeontology. Some were sent to S. A. Miller, of Cincinnati, who returned them, saying they were new species. This made me eager to ascertain the position from which the rock bearing them came. Mr. John Hammel and I commenced an investigation and discovered that it is situated near the summit of the precipices forming the various falls west of Madieon. Imme- diately above we found a hard, durable salmon-colored stone which, on ac- count of its greater resistance to decomposition, shielded and concealed the stratum beneath. The upper stratum was found to contain certain Niagara fossils, and later investigation has shown that there is an abrupt palfeon- tological break between the two strata, corresponding to the cycles of time when the lower silurian rocks were elevated above the surface of the ocean and subjected to the disintegrating action of the elements. By comparing the upper stratum, according to our determination, with that selected by Dr. Cornett at the stone quarry near his residence, they were found to be identical. Hence, to this gentleman belongs the honor of the discovery, our labors simply confirming his conclusion. 7() The only facts which militate against the validity of the limit assigned are that a survey of the two strata up and down the river for several miles shows them to be conformable ; but as stated above, in Ripley county the fifty feet of non-fossiliferous rock is absent, proving non-conformability, and that the fossils, with few exceptions, are unlike others found in the Hudson river group. The Kankakke kiveh and pure water for Northwestern Indiana axd Chicago — By J. L. Campbell. The Kankakee river is the unsolved engineering problem of Indiana. How to secure the proper drainage of the vast basin known as the Kan- kakee marshes is a question which has not had a practical answer— chiefly on account of the expense necessary to carry out any of the proposed plans. A new interest in this question may be developed in connection with the problem of an adequate supply of pure water for the new cities in north- western Indiana and of Chicago, beyond our borders. The fact exists, although vigorously denied by citizens of Chicago, that pure water has not been obtained by the tunnel system into Lake Michigan, and it is more than probable that further extension of the system will fail to furnish pure water, and after the most costly experiments or repeated disappointments the city will seek its water supply from other sources. The effort to keep the lake water pure by artificial drainage of the city into the Illinois river may be partially successful — but even this is doubt- ful— and at best changes will be enormously expensive, — literally an up-hill business. It will not be denied that a vast territory around Chicago cannot be in- cluded in the artificial drainage system, and this territory will continue to be drained into Lake Michigan. The mouth of the tunnel, whether located two or ten miles from the shore, is the source of an artificial stream toward which currents must tend from all directions. Into these currents the impure drainage of the city will be carried, and the water supply will be contaminated. The extension of the tunnels doubtless will furnish less impure water, but certainly not the pure supply necessary for the health of a great city. The practical (luestions connected with the question of the water supply of a great city are : — 71 (1) Purity of water. (2) Adequacy of supply. (3) Elevation. (4) Cost of construction. The purpose of this paper is to show that the Kankakee river furnishes a satisfactory answer to these questions. The river takes its rise in the marsh land near South Bend, in St. Joseph county, Indiana, at an elevation of seven hundred and twenty feet above sea level, and by an extremely crooked course through Indiana, enters Illi- nois a few miles east of Momence. The length of the river in Indiana is nearly two hundred and fifty miles. According to a survey made by the author of this paper for the State of Indiana in 1882 this channel could be reduced for better drainage to less than one hundred miles. The chief tributary of the Kankakee is Yellow river, which rises in the eastern part of Marshall county. The country adjacent to the river is a broad plain, varying in width from one to twenty miles, along the borders of which are sand ridges which give to the region the designation of the Kankakee ^'alley, and which have pro- duced the erroneous impression that the marsh is a low irreclaimable swamp, whereas the fact is that it is an elevated plateau with a mean level of ninety feet above Lake Michigan and six hundred and seventy feet above the ocean. The plateau has a slope westward of one foot per mile. The water of the Kankakee is remarkably pure and clear, and is regarded by all who have used it as exceptionally healthful. Iron is found in solution, which doubtless adds value to the water for general purposes. The bed of the Kankakee and of its tributaries generally is fine sand and gravel, and the underlying strata throughout the valley are fine sand in- creasing to coarse gravel. Clay beds are rare and there is no stone along the stream throughout Indiana. The overlying loam varies in thickness from a few inches to several feet, and the surface generally is an unre- claimed marsh in which coarse grass, wild rice and weeds grow in the great- est luxuriance. The crookedness of the stream is readily explained by the instability of the sandy strata through which it flows — the twelve inches of surface slope being reduced to four inches, measured in the channel of the stream. The sandy substratum makes the entire valley a vast filtering basin — a great lake filled with sand and gravel, whence issues the pure and limpid water of the Kankakee river. This is a satisfactory answer to the first and most important question con- cerning a city water supply. The second question is the adequacy of supply. The most convenient point on the Kankakee for starting a pipe line to Chi- cago or any of the new cities in the northwestern part of Indiana is in township 33 north, range ('•> west, not far from the boundary line between Porter 'and Lake counties. The drainage area of the basin above this point is about twelve hundred square miles, which is four times the area of the Croton basin whence is derived the water supply of New York. The sluggish flow of the river, due to the fall of only four inches to the mile, substantially makes this basin of over a thousand square miles a re- servoir more than sufficient for the greatest demands, and satisfactorily an- swers the second general question concerning a city supply. In answer to the third and fourth general questions, the state survey of 1882 shows that the eleva'ion of the initial point already designated as the proper beginning place for a pipe line is seventy-three (73) feet above lake Michigan, or sixty-nine feet above the Illinois Central depot on the lake front of Chicago, or fifty- one feet above the railway station at Toleston. The distance from the initial point to Chicago is less than fifty miles and to Toleston twenty-five miles. The sand ridge on the north side of the Kankakee has a probable altitude of fifty feet, and in the absence of a survey it cannot be stated whether it would be better to excavate through this ridge for the pipe line or to pump the water to the summit. If it is found feasible to excavate for the line a a flow of water by gravity alone can be secured from the Kankakee to the lake front in Chicago, with a fall of one foot per mile, into the receiving reservoir twenty-three feet above the level of the street. The first Croton aqueduct has a fall of forty-seven feet in thirty-eight miles. If it is found more expedient to pump the water to the summit it is pos- sible that an open channel along the surface of the ridge could be con- structed so as to" reduce the closed pipe line to twenty- five miles and to de- liver the water in Chicago with a standpipe pressure of from fifty to seventy- five feet. These questions cannot be satisfactorily answered until after a careful survey has been made. The importance of this enterprise cannot easily be overestimated, and the cost of the work, even if it should reach millions, will be insignificant in comparison with the results to be obtained. Explorations of Mt. Orizaba. By J. T. Scovell. Variations in the dynamical conditions during the deposit of the kock BEDS at Richmond, Ind. By Joseph Moore. The relation of the keokuk groups of Montgomery county with the typical locality. By C. S. Beachler. Comments on the descriptions of species. By C. S. Beachler. On a deposit of vertebrate fossils in Colorado. By Amos W. Butler. Topographical evidence of a great and sudden diminution of the an- cient water supply of the Wabash river. Bv J. T. Campbell. Source of supply to medial morains probably from the bottom of the GLACIAL CHANNEL. Bv .J. T. CaMPBELL. 74 Notes o\ a Kansas species of buckeye. By W. A. Keli-ekman, pjrotographing certain' natural objects without a camera. by w. a. Kellerman. On the occurrence of certain western plants at Columbus, ()hio. By Aug. D, Selby. [abstract]. It is my purpose in this paper to point out two features of the flora in the vicinity of Columbus, Ohio, which combine to present in it a represen- tation of western plants ; as a result of the one, we find in that locality the beginning of western species, and by the other are to note the compara- tively recent introduction of a good many far-western and southwestern plants, some of which appear there, perhaps, for the first time east of the Mississippi river. In Central Ohio there is a marked blending of eastern and western spe- cies of plants ; east and southeast of Columbus but a short distance will bring one into the typical Appalachian flora, while to the westward the entire half of the state is underlain by the great limestone formations and with the outcrop of the corniferous limestone, the first to be met with traveling westward, plants of a well-marked western range begin to appear. This feature was referred to by Prof, J. S. Newberry* in 1859, He points out a peculiar facies due (in part) to the presence of a number of the prai- rie plants of the west here on the eastern limits of their range. The following species may be cited as illustrating this fact, all occurring near Columbus : Erysimum asperum, Trifolium stoloniferum, Cornus asperifolia. Aster azureus, Aster Shortii, Helianthus doronicoides. Camassia Fraseri, Bouteloua racemosa. But it is to the presence of a number of distinctly western and south- western plants introduced by wholesale, as it were, that more particular at- tention is directed. Columbus, in common with all railroad centers through which shipment Ohio Agricultural Kcport, 1859, p. 210. lO of products from the west regularly occurs, is in a position to receive the plants thus dropped. Artemisia biennis and Verbena stricta have been received by this means ; the latter is especially abundant around the rail- road intersections. In addition to this opportunity, an exceptional one, as it would appear, is presented by the permanent quarters of a circus and menagerie (Sells Brothers'). On the grounds about these winter quarters near Columbus, about twenty species of plants have been introduced and more than half of them have not appeared elsewhere in the vicinity. The range and distribution of the plants found is such as to increase the interest attaching to their ap- pearance. The seeds were evidently brought upon the return at the close of the season, carried in cars, cages, wagons, or preserved in the intestines of animals. The litter of cars and cages seems to the writer the most likely vehicle for the seeds of the larger number of plants found. Below are the species found on the circus grounds and appearing by .some agency connected therewith ; those introduced independently at other points in the county are marked with an asterisk ; accompanying certain ones the range of the species is copied from the Manual or Synop- tical Flora : Callirrhoe involucrata, Gray. Minnesota to Texas. Erodium cicutarium, L'Her. Clarkia pulchella, Pursh. Western Montana and westward. Amphiachyris dracunculoides, Nutt. Plains, Kansas and southward. Aster pauciflorus, Nutt. Kansas and west (?). Artemisia annua L. Dysodia chrysanthemoides. Lag.® Gutierrezia Texana, Torr & Gray. Sterile plains throughout Texas. Helenium microcephalum, DC. Southern Texas and adjacent Mexico. Helenium nudiflorum, Nutt. Helenium tenuifolium, Nutt. West of Mississippi river. Parthenium Hysterophorus, L. Throughout Eastern and Central Texas, also east of Mississippi river. Solanum rostratum, Dunal. Plains of Nebraska to Texas, spreading east- ward. Verbena angustifolia, Michx. Monarda citriodora, Cerv. Nebraska to Texas. Plantago Patagonica, Jacq., var aristata, Gray.* Amarantus spinosus, L. Ohenopodium ambrosioides, L. var. anthelminticum, Gray. Croton capitatus, Michx. Avena fatua, L. Of those here much beyond their assigned limits, three show decidedly weedy tendencies. They are Solamum rostratum, Dysodia chrysanihem- oides and Parthenium Hysterophorus. The two last named promise to become permanent additions to our flora, undesirable though they may be. The circus is at present in Australia and we shall watch with interest to secure anything that may be brought from there. Biological surveys. By Johx M. Coulter. Some stran(;e developments of stomata upon Carya alka caused by Phylloxera. By D. A. Owen. [abstractJ. Upon the upper side of the leaf of Carya alba are found some hemispher- ical and conical galls produced by the little insect Phylloxera. These galls are the receptacles for the eggs, or nest of these insects. The stomata in leaves uninjured are all found upon the lower surface. But in those containing galls there are seldom any stomata found in the epidermis just beneath the gall. The upper side is entirely free from sto- mata with the exception of the gall itself. In no case was any gall exam- ined in which stomata were not found upon the upper surface. And with but one or two exceptions no stomata were found upon the under surface just beneath the gall. Surrounding and within the opening of the gall upon the under side of the leaf minute hairs were found, all extending outward as if to guard the opening against the entrance of an enemy. There seems, from the above, to be an intimate relation existing here be- tween the plant and animal. Preliminary paper ox the flora of Henry' county, Ind. By T. B. Red- ding and Mrs. Rosa REoniNG Mikels. A NEW COMPOUND MICROTOME. By GeO. C. HuBBARD. Wishing to prepare some slides exhibiting the structure of various ani- mal tissues and organs, but having no microtome, I made one of wood chiefly, at a cost of thirty cents and two or three days' labor. The principle of the machine is to prepare sections by quickly forcing the tissue, supported on a carrier attached to the circumference of a 12-inch wheel, across the edge of a razor, which is brought automatically a slight distance nearer the tissue at each rotation of the wheel. The base of the machine is a heavy board about thirteen inches long by eight in width. At the middle of each side inflexible standards are erected and adjustable bearings provided, the centre of the opening in each being six and one half inches above the board. In these bearings rests the axis of the 12-inch wheel, which is turned by means of a crank. The support for the tissue consists of a round brass disc of any conve- nient size attached at its centre to one end of a short cylindrical rod. This rod fits into a corresponding orifice extending through the middle of a half- cleft sphere, which fits loosely in a corresponding socket in the circumfer- ence of the wheel. One side (the one opposite to the automatic feeder) of this socket is made adjustable by removing a round bit of wood and in- serting in its stead a concave disc, which is attached to the short end of a straight lever extending down the side of the wheel to near the axis. A screw passing loosely through the lever about an inch from the center of the disc into the wheel serves as a fulcrum. Let this lever be called A. The long arm of A is moved by means of a circular wedge turning upon the round end of the wheel's axis. The thick part of the wedge is allowed to project four or five inches beyond the line of the circumference of the circle, and provided with a knob, thus forming a second lever, B, to which the power is applied. Instead of B and the wedge, a thumb-screw may be screwed through the long end of A, its end turning against the side of the wheel. When the tissue has been fastened to the brass disc in the usual way, its round support is thrust into the opening of the ball. The carrier is turned and bent in any direction and pushed out or in until tne tissue is in the right position with regard to the razor. A slight force exerted on the knob of B moves B forward thus causing a thicker part of the circular wedge to pass between the wheel and the long arm of A, which forces the concave disc at the other arm against the half-cleft ball, thus causing it to grip firm- ly the tissue support. If a thumb-screw be used, it must be turned three or four times to produce the same eflect. 78 At one end of the board forming the base of the machine is fastened, by means of two hinges, a perpendicular piece of wood six and one-half inches long, ciit so that there are three arms above. Each of two of these has an opening at its upper extremity suitable for receiving the razor, and is pro- vided with a set-screw for clamping the razor. To the third arm is attached a nut in which work the threads of a bolt, which extends horizontally to near the axis. The head of the bolt is at- tached to the centre of a wheel some four or five inches in diameter. The bolt now forms the axis of this wheel and must be supported at the wheel by an unyielding bearing. Turning this wheel once in the right direction pulls the razor forward a distance equal to that between the threads, which we shall suppose to be one-sixteenth of an inch. On the face farthest from the razor of the small wheel, about twenty round brads are inserted near the circumference at equal distances apart, and all the same distance fimn the centre of the bolt. If the wheel be rotated the distance between two brads, the razor is drawn forward one three hundred and twentieth of an inch. A small rectangle of tin or brass about three-fourths of an inch long is bent at right angles, and one edge is cut to form a slightly concave set of twelve vertical teeth of equal size, to turn the 4-inch wheel by pushing against the brads. If ten of the teeth are used, one tooth will move the razor forward one thirty-two hundredth of an inch. This ratchet is now fastened to the side of a long horizontal lever, which is secured at one end to an upright support. The other arm rests upon an eccentric on the square end of the axis of the 12-inch wheel. Turning this wheel causes an up-and-down motion of the ratchet. The eccentric has a rectangular opening so that it may be slipped upon the axis and made more or less eccentric. It is held in any desired position by a set-screw. A peg, or better a screw with the head removed, projects from the under side of the lever just mentioned into a groove made in the circumference of the eccentric. This groove must be so arranged, that when the ratchet is rising, a tooth catches under a brad ; but when it ceases to rise, a short oblique portion of the groove moves the tooth from under the brad. The groove now resumes its straight course so as to prevent the next tooth above from coming in contact with the brad as the ratchet descends. An- other short oblique portion of the groove brings this tooth under the brad. As one brad escapes from the top of the ratchet, another enters at the bottom. 75) To prevent any lost motion, and to push back the razor support when the 4-inch wheel is turned backward, a strong spiral spring may be placed on the bolt so as to extend from the bearing to the nut. With the above described arrangement of parts, sections can be cut one thirty-two hundredth of an inch thick. By shifting the eccentric so that alternate teeth work, the sections are of double the thickness, etc. But little eccentricity is needed, about one-sixteenth of an inch being sufficient when each tooth of the ratchet is employed. On the organogeny of Composit^e. By G. W. 3Iartin. On the development of the akchegonium and apical growth in the STEM OF TsUGA CANADENSIS AND PiNUS SYLVESTRIS. By D. M. MOT- TIER. [abstract.] This work consisted in a study of the development of the archegonium and the meristems of the stem. The results obtained in reference to the archegonium differ from those of Strasburger in that the neck of that organ in Tsuga consisted of two cells in as many cases as where one only was found, and very rarely three. In Pinus the neck of the archegonium was found to be made of two layers of cells, four in each layer, lying one above the other, instead of one layer. As regards the growth of the stem it is argued that we can not say with certainty that growth proceeds from a single initial cell, as claimed by Du- liot for the Gymnosperms. Preliminary notes on the genus Hoffmanseggia. By E. ]M. Fisher. Development of the sporangium and apical growth of stem of Botrych- lUM ViRGINIANUM. By C. L. HOLTZMAN. 80 . The flora of Mt. Orizaba. By Henry E. Seaton. As botanist of the J. T. Scovell expedition during July and August, 1891, collections were made by the writer on Mt. Orizaba through a range of 3,000 to 14,000 feet. The first collections of importance on the mountain were made by Fred- eriS; Liebmann in 1811. Others who have collected on the mountain, and especially in the valley of Orizaba and Cordoba, are Henri Galeotti, August Ghiesbreght, E. Bourgeau, M. Botteri and Frederick Mueller. The volcano of Orizaba is described by Liebmann as the most interesting mountain in North America. It has a latitude of 18 degrees and lies surrounded by the very fertile country of southern Mexico. It is only ninety miles from the gulf, and having such a situation there is presented upon its eastern slope every phase of vegetation from tropical to alpine. The region in the vicinity of Cordoba, at an elevation of 3,000 feet and a distance of sixty miles from the coast, has a sub-tropical vegetation. Palms grow in abundance and orange, banana and coffee trees attain a high de- gree of cultivation. Prominent among the families that make up the shrubby and herbaceous flora are the Malvace*, Leguminosse, Rubiacea', Compositte, Aeclepiadacere, Convolvulacea?, Solanacea?, Euphorbiacea^ and Bromelliacere, besides the grasses, sedges and ferns. The town of Orizaba, 1,000 feet higher up the mountain, has a somewhat less tropical vegetation in the way of cultivated plants. At this altitude the Composite have their greatest display. The Helianthoideae are the forms most abundant, and not only are they characteristic of this particular region but have in Mexico their greatest concentration, amounting, it has been estimated, to thirty-two per cent, of the species and two-fifths of the genera of all the Compositse of the country. The sub-order Eupatoriacese ranks second in numerical strength, the genera Eupatorium and Stevia, how- ever, contributing nearly all the species. The Asteroideee, have but little representation in the forms Aster, Erigeron and Solidago, which are so char- acteristic of the north. All the other sub-orders of the family are present excepting the Arctotidefo and Calendulactte, which are confined principally to southern Africa. Collections were made at three successively higher stations till the alti- tude of 9,000 feet was reached, and this zone of 5,000 feet above the town of Orizaba may be considered as the temperate region, and that above 9,000 feet as alpine. Many plants of the sub-tropical region extend their range to the temperate and even to the alpine district, this being especially true 81 of the low growing plants like Oxalis, Stellaria Trifolium and several of the Malvas. The temperate zone is characterized, nevertheless, by many genera and families that are not present or are hardly noticeable in the more trop- ical regions. The genus Salvia and order Lythraceae have a strikingly large distribution. Of these latter Cuphea is the most conspicuous element, growing in great abundance under all conditions of soil and moisture. There are many representatives from the Geraniacere, Borraginace*, Scroph- ulariacea?, Verbenacea? and Acanthacea% which take the place in a great measure of the Malvaceae, Kubiacese, Asclepiadaceie, Solanaceee and Euphor- biacesB in the tropics. Great and rapid changes are experienced in the flora as the slopes are as- cended above 9 000 feet, and there are well marked zones for the distribu- tion of plants till the limit of vegf tation is reached. Between 9,000 and 10,- 000 feet, species of Sisymbrium, Lepidium, Geum, Epiiobium, O^.nothera, Krynitzkia, Mimulus, Castilleia, Verbena, Salvia, Plantago and Chenopo- dium, are the most characteristic forms of the herbaceous flora. Promi- nent among the Compositpe are Steria, Avillea, Dahlia and Tagetes, and be- sides Eupatorium and Baccharis the shrubby flora is represented by Rubus, Symphoricarpos and Bu'idleia. Prominent among the grasses are Agrostis, Muehlenbergia and Bromus, and the ferns are represented by Adiantum, Cheilanthes, Woodsia and Asplenium. Between 11,000 and 12,000 feet the forests are entirely of pines and spruce. The greater part of the herbaceous flora at this altitude is composed of Ce- rastium, Lupinus, Acaena, Eryngium, Arracacia, Halenia, Penstemon, Cni- cus and Stenanthium. Penstemon and Stenathium are exceedingly abun- dant, though possessing a very limited range. At 13,000 feet the vegetation consists principally of Ceraetium, Arenaria, Potentilla, Castelleia and Lithospernum. The pine woods, beginning at 7,000 feet, disappear at 13,000 feet, excepting stunted forms that continue to 14,000 feet. At 13,500 feet the vegetation becomes scantier and the slopes more sandy and beset with masses of sharp pointed rocks. The dry, sandy soil produces species of Draba, Gnaphalium, Senecio, Cnicus, Agrostis, Bro- mus and Asplenium. Even a.% 14,000 feet on the higher slopes, just at the snow line, there exists quite a varied vegetation, with species of Draba, Sisymbrium, Gnaphalium, Cnicus, Asplenium and the grasses of the sandy plain belo ST. This was the highest point colleci ions were made, but sev- eral species extend their range a hundred feet higher, and Dr. Scovell secured a Draba at 15,000 feet. 6 82 The collection numbered 510 species, distributed among 459 Phanero- gams and 51 Pteridophytes. In this limited space no mention has been made of species, the object being only to present the geiieral character of the flora of the mountain, as shown by the distribution of certain families and genera. A more complete report will be published later, with notes on species. Ax APPAKATIS FOR DETERMINING THE PERIODICITY OF ROOT PRESSIRE. By M. B. Thomas. [acsthact.] The paper presented the need of a self-registering apparatus for deter- mining the periodicity of root pressure, and gave an outline of the ones now in use, all of which were seen to need constant attention. An appa- ratus made in the following manner was suggested. The base of the in- strument is about 1^x3'^ and is supported by legs about ?/^ high. About W^ from one end and in the center of the base is erected a standard about 2^ high and 4'^ in width. On the short end of the base and near the post is fastened a set of strong clock-works. The works are covered with a box and the end of a cylinder (V in diameter and V 10^' high is fastened to the hour pinion of the clock by means of a pin passing through a hole in the end of the pinion and fitting in a slot in the end of the cylinder. The top of the cylinder is held in place by a pin passing through a support from the main pillar and a hole in the end of the cylinder. To the large upright pillar is fastened a U tube of about V in diameter ; one arm being nearly as high as the pillar and the other but half the height. The tube is filled with mercury to within about an inch of the top of the short arm. The stem of the plant is cut off near the base and placed in position. An in- verted U tube is fastened lo the stem in the usual way by means of a rub- ber tube fastened with wire while the other end of the U tube is connected with the larger one in the same way. The small XJ tube is filled with wa- ter through an opening in the top. The cylinder which is made of light tin is blackened by revolving it slowly in the flames of a candle or gas jet. The indicator consists of a light steel wire with a cork at the end some- what smaller than the diameter of the tube. This rests on the mercury. It is then at the top of the tube bent twice at right angles and allowed to extend to the bottom of the cylinder where it is again bent twice at right 83 angles and the end allowed to rest against the smoked surface of the cylin- der. A pin driven in the pillar prevents the wire from turning to one side because of the friction of its end with the cylinder. As the root absorbs water the pressure upon the column of mercury increases, causing it to rise in the tube lifting the cork and indicator with it. The indicator then marks a continuous spiral course on the cylinder. The hourly variation can be studied by observing the distances between the lines. The supply of water given to the plant must be kept constant. An eight day clock should be used and the apparatus need scarcely be touched until the plant is exhausted. The distkibutiox of tropical kekns in Peninsilar Florida. By LirciEx M. Underivood. To one who makes a visit to Florida for the first time, constant surprises appear on every hand ; sand, palmetto and Spanish moss were expected, but the excess of dry pine lands over hamaks, the multitudinous lakes of every size and shape, the comparative purity of the waters, and the variety of elevation apparent in short distances, formed elements that were not looked for and that serve to modify the botanical features of the country to a considerable extent. The river systems are mostly in a north and south direction, and the rivers are sluggish and often rather deep. Throughout the interior of the state, lakes of all sizes are abundant ; twenty-five to thirty lakes in a single township (six miles square) is not unusual. Most of the small lakes are without outlets, and frequently stand in deep hol- lows. Sometimes you may find two lakes a half mile or so apart with a difierence of elevation from 50 to 100 feet. Except for a slight discolora- tion from roots, the water is remarkably clear and few algae were seen. With the exception of river borders where clay and black mud are found, there is everywhere the loose gray sand that rolls under foot of man or beast, making progress slow and tedious, that supports no turf and only a scattered vegetation, that absorbs moisture rapidly, and th^t contains a fine dust that filters through the clothing and renders one black and grimy after even the shortest tramp. Occasional swamps occur where a forme r pond has given way to a bog, or where a small stream is choked up and thus overflows its usual bounds ; here a variety of deciduous trees stand thick together interwoven with the omnipresent and exceedingly spiny 84 Smilax of many species. Here and there are occasional overflows of larger streams where the cypress flourishes, but pine is the prevailing forest growth. From Gainesville southward through Ocala and on toward the center of the state is found higher ground which, long before the phos- phate fiend had bored the rocks for paying phosphate, was pitted with nat- ural sink holes and caves where moisture is ever present and where the frosts rarely penetrate. These extend to Brooksville and beyond, and are found on either side of the Withlacoochee river. Further southward and including the lower fourth of the peninsula are the low everglades with saw grass lakes and scrub-palmetto barrens soaked with water during the spring rains, which is reduced to scattered shallow ponds in the dry season. Although Florida possesses a larger number of ferns than most of the states of the Union (-43), and of these more than half (24) are found in no other state, one who visits the state in the winter season will be impressed with the rarity of ferns unless the state is reached before the usual Decem- ber frosts have cut down the fronds. Along the rivers and wherever moist- ure is abundant Woodward a Virginica grows luxuriantly in its season as the most abundant fern. With it appear two of the Osmundas though far less abundant than in northern swamps. It seems out of harmony with our preconceived notions to find the fertile fronds of 0. cinnamomea grow- ing from a circle of older sterile ones, but this condidon is common even in January. Farther down the state Blechnum and Aspidium unitum and some other species are occasional, but are rarely abundant, at least in the upper two-thirds of the peninsula. In drier land Ptcris aquilina grows in a more or less stunted condition, but in the more tropical parts of the state it grows occasionally to an excessive height. Next to Woodwardia it is probably the most abundant species. Polypodium incanum is everywhere found to a lim- ited extent on tree trunks, but is found in profusion only in the southern third of the state. At Orange Bend we found the mucrnnata form of Mar- silia vestita in abundance rooting in sand and mud. While this is more or less common from Oregon and Dakota to Southern California and Texas it has never been reported bi fore from east of the Mississippi. Its presence in Central Florida becomes almost as interesting a problem as that of its congener, M. quadrifolia, in Northwestern Connecticut. No fruit could be found in January, but in the latter part of March fruit was found in great abundance. The uncertainty of frosts makes the collecting peiiod difficult to predict. Sometimes the fall frosts hold ofl" until Januaiy, and often cease to be 8.5 troublesome after the middle of February. In other years they appear anywhere from December to April. Often they are local, while again there will be a general freeze that will cut down all tender vegetation. The "great frost"' of March, 1886, was sufHciently severe to kill the young fruits of the cocoanut as far south as Lake Worth, and killed out much of the Vittaria as far down the gulf side as ^Manatee. During last winter several frosts appeared in January as far south as the lake region, and on the 8th of April the Woodwardias along the St John's from Sanford to Palatka were all drooping from a cutting frost. Of course in secluded places ferns may be found at any season, but only in comparatively frostless winters can they be seen to advantage in the northern half of the state. The rarer ferns of Florida are tucked awaj' in inaccessible quarters and are not to be found without much searching. Of the ferns peculiarly trop- ical three groups may be considered: (1.) The swamp species. (2.) The epiphytes, (o.) The lime-rock ferns. Of the swamp species, i>Zec/i/mm ser- rulatum is perhaps the most common ; ordinarily this species grows from two to three feet high, but toward its northern limit along the outlet of Lake Dora we found robust forms six and seven feet high. Nephrolepis ex- altata we found in profusion at the same place growing on decaying stumps and logs. In fact this seems to be its usual habitat instead of palmetto trunks, as so often stated. A^pidium unitum has much the same range. Polypodium phiillitidls comes north on the gulf side as far as the Manatee river and we found it not uncommon at Lake Worth. Acrostichum aureum frequents the brackish borders of tidal streams occasionally encroaching below high water mark. In the west coast it comes up as far as Tampa, and on the Atlantic coast it is more or less common throughout the Indian river country and comes well up to the coast above Titusville. We did not find Asplenium serratum in any part of the state visited, though Garber reported it from Manatee in 1879. It more properly belongs in the really tropical portion of Florida. Of the epiphytic species Mttaria and Polypodium aureum come furthest north. We found abundance of the former between lakes Griffin and Har- ris ; the latter may be seen occasionally in the vicinity of Lake Monroe, though it is more common below Titusville on the east and Tampa Bay on the west. Vittaria grosvs pendent on palmetto trunks at every height and in every stage of growth from prothallus to mature plant.* Its northern "■■It may be of interest to state that a species of liverwort, Biccia rdiculala, was basrd on the prothallus of this fern. S(i limit as we found it is in Lake county. Poh/podium aureum usually grow s just under the clustered leaves of the cabbage palmetto, often at a height of twenty-five or thirty feet. OpMoglossum palmatum comes as far north as Manatee where we found the sterile fronds in February after a wearj' search, for it grows well up on the palmetto trunks, burying its roots deeply between the old decaying bases of the palmetto leaves. He who attempts to climb the palmetto trunk is not usually anxious for the second trip. The Ophioglossum fruits in April or perhaps the last of March and is the most peculiar member of its order, since most of its congeners are terres- trial in habit. The remaining epiphytes have not been found north of the tropical portions of Florida, which include the Keys and the region of Bis- cayne Bay. The rock-loving species have a more extensive distribution as they grow in places beyond the reach of ordinary frosts ; in the high hamak region to which allusion has been made, several of the tropical species linger in por- tions of Florida, too cold even for the successful culture of the Orange. In the various limestone sinks about Ocala may be found Pteris cretica, As- plenium rhizophyUum, Asplenium firnmm, Poli/podium. pecctinaium, Aspidium patens and Adiantum teneritm. From this same region the rare Phegopteris tetragona was collected, but its discoverer holds the exact locality in secret, and furnishes herbarium specimens at 50 cents apiece. While this method of procedure is not what is expected among botanists, one who knows the diflBculty and expense of securing some of the rare Florida ferns can scarcely have the heart to criticise too harshly. A still more interesting locality for the rock ferns is on the Withla- coochee river, two and a half miles below Istachatta. This town which makes considerable display on the maps, consists of two houses and a store and must be reached from Pemberton the nearest railroad station by boat I r private conveyance. As the exact locality has never been defined it was by merest chance that we met ]\Ir. F. M. Townsend, the proprietor of the store at Istachatta, who conducted Donnell Smith to the same location in 188:'). The locality, which is on the premises of Mr, George K. Allen, was reached just at nightfall. Here, besides a much greater profusion of the species found at Ocala, are found the rare and variable Phegopteris rep^ tans and a great profusion of Aspidium trifoHatwu. Other stations are found near Brooksville and farther down the river on either side. In these shel- tered sink holes, protected from frost and so far removed from sunshine as to retain moisture in the driest season, these relics of a tropical flora still 87 persist, never attracting the attention of either the native "cracker" or the northern migrant, both of whom stare alike at the botanist and his outfit and doubtless wonder what he can want of "fearns." While the higher flora of the tropics does not begin to appear until we reach the Manatee on the west coast and Lake Worth on the Atlantic seaboard, these outliers of the tropical flora extend from two to three degrees farther north, and rep- resent the stragglers in the southern retreat that has marked the southern extension of the peninsula from reef to key and from key to everglade. With all the information that could be gathered before starting we found that the experience of the winter was necessary to learn the peculiarities of the country and the best localities for exploration and especially how to reach them after they were made known, for of all English speaking coun- tries to learn how to reach a given point Florida is one of the worst in our experience. To point out some of the best localities for future exploration is partly the object of this paper. We would like also to protest against the stupid method of sending out collectors to look simply for the higher vegetation of a new region. Mosses and hepatics, algjv-, lichens and fungi form just as much a part of the flora of a country as do the seed plants and ferns and often furnish more valuable information regarding the true char- acter of a region than can be gained from a study of the higher flora alone. Four distinct regions in Florida suggest themselves as likely to yield not only more interesting tropical ferns than have yet been brought to light, but a rich har.vest of new facts and species illustrating the nature and dis- tribution of the tropical flora of the peninsula. This, however, will only be possible when the critical botanist gets away from his dried herbarium fragments and studies the flora face to face in its native fastnesses. Then only can biological surveys prove a success. These regions are : 1. The river region>i of West Florida. — The AVithlacoochee, especially from Pemberton Ferry to the mouth, and including lakes Tsala Apopka and Pen- asoffkee on either side, the ]\Ianatee, the Myakka and the Peace. Explor- ations along these rivers can best be made in boats* and are likely to well repay the cost, for while nearly all have been somewhat visited by bota- nists, the country has been skimmed rather than explored. 2. The interior lake region of South Florida. — This would involve a trip from Kissimmee southward down the chain of lakes to Okeechobee and -The region of Lake Tsala Apopka and Lake Penasuffkee conld best be explored with a horse and wagon, though the develoinnent of phosphate beds in Citrus coxinty is likely to extend the public means of conveyance. Kailroads in Florida are too slow and uncertain for much depeudeuce for short trips. and then westward through the drainage canals and the Caloosahatchee river to Punta Raesa. This means from 200 to 250 miles by boat, subjec- tion to considerable hardship, and could only be undertaken by a party. 3. The Keys. — Within the triangle whose base is a line running from Key West to Key Largo, and whose apex is at Punta Rassa, there are myr- iads of small islands, all lying in the tropical portion of Florida, which have never received anything like a thorough botanical exploration. These can only be explored by boat. A small sailing craft can be obtained at Tampa, INIanatee, or Key West, for $40 a month furnished with a sailor who will also act as cook. Board is cheap, for game and fish are abundant, while other supplies will have to be obtained at the point of embarkation. The scattering trips that have already been made to this region have yielded some of the rarer ferns, to say nothing of extensive additions to the higher flora of the state, ranging from a new genus of palms down. Unless it be among the algtc not a single specimen of the lower cryptogams has been collected in this region. 4. The Biscayne Bay region. — The fairest spot we found in Florida during last winter was Lake Worth. The northern tourist who leaves this out misses the best of the state. Here the climate is that of Southern Califor- nia, mild and balmy like all Florida, and yet with the invigorating tonic that nearly all the rest of Florida sadly lacks. Here, too, if you are fortu- nate enough to stop at Oaklawn on the mainland, you will find as we did the first square meal in Florida, served by the genial judge of Dade county, who is also the proprietor of the best hotel on the lake. Here was the firat real taste of the tropics. Tropical fruits and cocoanuts in profusion, man- groves without trunks set up on spider like roots, banyans, and a profusion of strange shrubs and trees. It was only when too late to avail ourselves of the trip that we learned how to reach Biscayne Bay from the Atlantic side. Of course it could be reached from the Gulf side by boat,* but in vain did we try to learn whether there was an overland passage from Mi- ami to Lake Worth. Here we found that a solitary mail carrier tramps the distance (about 60 miles) once a week, thus bringing the two settlements of Dade county within reach of each other. He goes up and down the beach, for there is no other path. Life saving stations are scattered along the coast at intervals of about 25 miles, and the only places where there is real danger is at the inlets, which, during the high seas are difficult to nav- * Miami may he reached from Tampa by a tri-weekly mail steamer to Key West (fare $10), thence by sailing vessel which carries bi-weekly mail to Miami (fare $4). 89 igate in the frail barks that serve lor ferries, and the inlets are usually in- fested with both sharks and " 'gators." The best collecting ground is usu- ally within 300 yards of the coast line. The ordinary guide books state that " there is nothing of interest below Lake Worth," but one who has seen the country below from a botanical standpoint says " there is nothing above Lake Worth," Botanically this is doubtless the most interesting region of all Florida. The part between Lake Worth and Miami has so far as we know never been trodden by a botanist. Around Miami and on the neighboring Keys have been found most of the remaining tropical ferns of Florida, viz.: PolypocUum Sirartzii, Asplenium serratum, A. dentatum, Nephro- lepis acuta, Pteru longifolia, Tirnitis lanceolata and Aneimia adiantifolia. Some ai>ditiuns to the istatk flora ikom I^ltnam county. By Lucien M. IJXDEKAVOOD. While the higher flora of Indiana seems to be fairly well known, it is surprising to find so little on record regarding the lower cryptogams of the state. Except a short paper on " The Mildews of Indiana,"* a few bulletins from the experiment station relating to some injurious fungi, a shortlist of mosses and lichens from Richmond,! and a few scattering notes in the Botanical Gazette, nothing has been placed on record, which, however, is far from saying that nothing has been done in this direction. It is a question whether as teachers of botany we have not swung the pendulum too far in training our students to become expert section- cutters and discrioainating histologists and have thereby left out of their course that cultural feature of botany that comes only from bringing them in direct contact with na- ture. I plead for considerable field work as an invaluable adjunct to labora- tory instruction. In a year's study of botany a student ought to become fairly proficient in the manipulation of the microscope and at the same time learn how and where plants grow (and especially the less conspicuous plants), and where their position is in the system, thus gaining a love for nature as well as a knowledge of the methods of manipulation. Botany ought to be a cultural study as well as a purely technical one. When we -J. N. Rose, Botanical Gazette, XI, CO-'J:! (188(1). tMary P. Haines, 8th, 0th and 10th Ann. Reports, Geol. Survey, 235--J;!9 (1870). consider the tendency of botanical instruction for the past ten years, it is not surprising that the younger generation of botanists do not know how to collect, and when turned loose in some highly interesting botanical field find, to the sorrow of those who want something of them, that their eyes are trained only for an immersion lens and not at all for learning the rich- ness of the flora about them. AVhile the season since our advent to the state has been exceedingly dry and therefore unfavorable to the development of fungi, we have in three or tour short excursions in the immediate vicinity of Greencastle, secured suf- ficient material to show a rich cryptogamic flora. A few of the more inter- esting discoveries will be noted and exhibited : 1. On the sandstone rocks at Fern, a rare moss, Eustichia Norvegica, is found in great abundance covering many square rods of the rock wall. It was first reported by Sullivant in 184(3 from Lancaster, Ohio, and distri- buted in his Musci AUeghanienses as no. 188. Rau has reported it from Penn- sylvania and Mrs. Britton found it in fruit for the first time in the Dalles of the Wisconsin in July, 1883. Its sterile states have been figured by Sul- livant* and its fruit by Mrs. Brittont. This Indiana station makes the fourth in the fourth state. 2. On clay banks at Fern we have found a hepatic new to America, Fos- sombronia cristata, Lindb.t In Europe it has frequently been confounded with F. pusilla and is possibly the plant reported under that name by Sul- livant in one of the earlier issues of Gray's Manual. Of the true pusilla we have seen no American specimens in fruit, and Fos»ombronia is one of the few genera of the Jungermaniaceie in which the exospore is sufficiently difi^erentiated to furnish satisfactory specific characters. F. cristata is easily recognized by the confluent crests of its spores. Its known range hitherto includes Finland, Sweden, Germany, France and England. 3. Trametes ambigua (Berk.) Fr. This is not an an uncommon species in the vicinity of Greencastle and Fern. It was iirst described by Berkleyi< from specimens collected by Lea in the vicinity of Cincinnati, and has since been reported from Ohio by Morgan, from Kansas by Cragin, and from Missouri by Demetrio, through whom it was distributed by Ellis in N. A. Fungi under the original name Dxdalia ambigua (no. 1593.) 4. Hjfdnum stratosum Berk, has been found once under a rotten log near -Mem, Amer. Acad. n. s. Ill, 1. 1 (1846.1 tBull. Torrey Bot. Club. X, 99 (1883.) JNotiser pro Fauna et Flora Fennica, XIII, 388 (1874). ^.Dxdalea ambigua Berk. Decades of Fungi, n. 83 (184(i). 91 Greencastle. It was first reported from the vicinity of Cincinnati by Lea in 1845, ■ and afterward by JMorgan. AVe found it in 1889 near Syracuse, N . Y. This makes the third station known to us. The species when fully mature is unlike any other species of Hi/dnum in the stratification of the spines. 5. Cordi/ceps capitata Fr. We have found one specimen of this species in rich woods at Fern. It belongs to a group of fungi that are usually para- sites either on living animals like the "caterpillar fungus" of New Zea- land, or on living pupte of insects like f. militaris, or on truffles like the present species. This species is usually reported as growing in pine woods, but we found it last year at Cambridge, Mass., growing under oaks on Elap]Lomiieei< grannlatus which is the usual host on which it has been re- ported from North Carolina by Curties and from New York by Peck. The present specimen seems to be saprophytic, growing from a nidus of decay- ing matter. It was found of course under deciduous trees. 6. Phallus Ravcneln B. & C.t seems to be the common stink-horn of this vicinity. It was originally reported from South Carolina and we found it once at Cambridge, Mass. Fnder a rotten log at Fern we found its myce- lial strands a ramifying network which extended ten feet or more, giving rise to fifteen or twenty fruits in various stages of development. In addi- tion to these fruits there were irregular swellings on the mycelial strands in great abundance ; the larger ones were hollow, the smaller solid. They suggest fichrotla which so far as we know have never been reported among phalloids. As the specimens were collected in November, it would seem that the plant was making an effort to store up nutriment in these tuber- like bodies for the necessities of the following season. Besides PhalJm Rannelli, which is easily recognized by its rudimentary veil, its thin pileus, and its mild fragrance (?), we have found two other P/ia/^i in this vicinity. P. dupJIcatus we have found once. An enormous specimen ten inches in height and with a large bell-like veil fully four inches acroes is evidently the plant that was referred by MorganJ to P. D<, Prof. F. AV. Putnam t states that a female taken July 22, contained forty-two nearly developed young. Each of these was 5^ inches long. The mother snake was 35 inches long. Dr. J. Schneck, of Mt. Car- mel. 111., writes + that seventy-eight were taken from a female. He implies that he saw this done. C. Few Seiss says? that the sexes of this species copulate in early spring and produce from thirteen to eighty young. That he has seen the latter number from a single snake he does not say. Drs. Coues and Yarrow refer j! to the habits of Eutainia sirtalis parietalis, as ob- served by them in Montana during the month of August. "At this sea- son all the female individuals observed were gravid with nearly matured embryos. Like others of the genus, this species is ovoviviparous, the young being some 6 inches in length when born." In a specimen of E. ■' Riverside Natural History, Vol. Ill, p. 371. t Amer. Nat., Vol. II, p. 134. t Amer. Nat., Vol. XVI, p. 1008. f. Scientific Amer., Vol. LXIII, p. 105. 11 Bulletins U. S. Geol. & Geo. Survey, Vol. IV. p. 27 Ill siHalis (U. S. Nat. Mus., No. 17960), captured near the city of Indianapolis by Dr. Alex. Jameson about August 1, I find thirty-nine partially devel- oped young. Of these, twenty-five are in the right uterus. The young measure G inches in length. There is a considerable amount of yolk still remaining attached to these young, a fact which indicates that they will increase in size before birth. An examination of the mouth of some of these little snakes shows that the egg- tooth is present. The membrane which surrounds each egg is quite thin. The female bearing this lot of young is 33 inches in length. Another female (I^. S. Nat. Mus., No. 17961), from Paris, 111., of nearly the same size, contained about thirty- five young snakes, these being packed together so densely in the mother's body that it was difficult to determine the number accurately without removing them. They are each 7 inches long, and are evidently just ready to be expelled. An examination of about half a dozen of them failed to reveal the presence of the egg-tooth, which has therefore been shed. Nor could I determine with certainty that any egg-covering was present. The yolk of the egg, also, is wholly consumed. On opening these young snakes 1 find little or none of the yolk within the body. In this respect they contrast strongly with the young of the rattlesnakes. The young garter-snakes must from the first depend on their own activi- ties for support. This accords well with the report of Mr. C. Few Seiss, that the young of a female kept in confinement began to feed shortly after birth, strugglinji vigorously with one another for the earthworms thrown them. At what time during the summer the Paris, 111., specimen was captured I do not know. Seiss' statement that the sexes of E. sirta- lis pair in the early spring has already been mentioned, Drs. Coues and Yarrow {o^k cit., p. 278) tell us that the females of the closely related spe- cies, E. radix, are pregnant in July and August, bringing forth as many as thirty to forty young ; and that they are found in coitu in September and October. Can it be that snakes copulate twice in the year, as Agassiz says* some turtles do, and as Gage has recently found t to be the habit of the newt, Diemyctijlusf Observations on this point are to be desired. The ribbon-snake, E. saurita, appears to be. wholly similar in its breed- ing habits to its relative just considered, although it probably does not bring forth so many young at each birth. Prof. Putnam informs t us that a female, taken in Massachusetts on July 13, had nine eggs, each three- - Contributions, Vol. II, p. 491. t Amer. Nat., Vol. XXV, p. 1091. t Amer. Nat., Vol. II, p. 134. 112 fourths inch long and containing an embryo 2-2 inches in length. An- other, taken July 31, contained but four eggs, and these are ready to be burst by the young. The eggs containing the coiled embryos were then an inch and a quarter long, while the extended young had a length of 5^] inches. Dr. Goode has quoted * a note from Herman. Strecker, of Rf ad- ing. Pa., who states that some years previously he had found and caged a female of this species which soon produced thirty or more young ones. He supposed that the little snakes had been hidden in the mother's stom- ach. There is possibly some confusion here with E. sirtalis, judging merely from the number of the young. Prof. S. I. Smith, of the Sheffield Scien- tific School, is quoted! by Dr. Goode as having se«-n two young snakes, each 3 or 4 inches long, run down the mother's throat. The statement is no doubt incorrect, so far as regards the size of the young. In a female (U. S. Nat. Mus., No. 179G5) of the variety faircyi, taken probably in Mis?>is8ippi, I find nine eggs, the hindermoet three of which are in the left oviduct. The eggs are about three quarters of an inch long and a third of an inch in the short diameter. The development of the embryo had just begun. In a female (U, S. Nat. Mus., No. 17952) of faircyi, 28 inches long, taken at Vt- edersburg, Ind., are twelve ovarian eggs of the same size as those just mentioned. The hinder four are in the hft ovary. At what time of the year the two specimens last described were killed, I do not know. In a specimen of faireyi, 40 inches long (U. S. Nat. Mus., No. 17958), captured at Vicksburg, Miss., about the 4th of July, there are twenty young snakes, each close to 9 inches in length. The hindermost nine of these are in the left oviduct. All were evidently ready to be expelled. They did not appear to be contained in any egg-covering, and the egg tooth was not found in any of the three which were examined. Not only is this date not so early as that given by Dr. Abbott for the finding of the eggs of this species in New Jersey, we must take into account the difference in the climate, and especially the difference in the size of the young snakes. The species of the related genus Tmpidonntus are also ovoviviparous. T. s^pedon, our water-snake, is the commonest species of the genus in the eastern United States, It is extiem^-ly variable and reaches a large size. Prof. Putnam has a note reg feet o inches. When they were separated, the intromit- tent organs of the male were everted some o inches. A dissection shows that the hollow portion of the organ extends behind the vent 3 inches, while the retractor muscles form a cord which extends back nearly to the tip of the tail. At the base of the evertible portion, near the vent, the in- ner surface, which when the organ is everted becomes the outer surface, is furnished with numerous plications. Near the middle of the organ are found many hooked papilla, some of them large and horny. The remain- der of the organ has the surface raised up into numerous anastomozing folds, Eo that under the microscope it reminds one of the reticulum of the ox's stomach. On opening the female I find in her sixteen eggs. Of these eggs, four lie about the middle of the animal's body, while the other twelve occupy a much more anterior position ; the one farthest forward be- ing within S inches of the tii^ of the snake's snout, the hindermost one only 9 inches farther back. Several of these eggs are lying apparently loose in the body cavity. It might be supposed that they had just left the ovary and were about to enter the oviduct; but they are surrounded each •'Jour. Cincinnati Soc. Nat. Hist., 1891, p. :>i. tl'roc. A. A. A. S. 187:"., p. 185. 119 with a covering nearly as thick and tough as that of the egg of the Hetero- don. Could these eggs have have been in the oviducts and then squeezed out into the body cavity during the time of being entwined with the male ? The thickness of the egg covering makes it appear to me highly probable that the eggs are destined to be laid before the young will be mature enough for independent existence.* t Some years ago, in midsummer, I found a number of the eggs of the house enake which had been deposited in a pile of stable manure. This was in Bureau county. III. Xo record was kept of the number of the eggs, but a few of them (U. S. Nat. Mus., No. 17955) were preserved in alcohol. When found, the eggs were glued together into one mass. Each egg is 2 inches long and nearly an inch and a quarter in the short diameter. On the outside is found a thick, leathery, yellow covering, beneath which is a much thinner coat. From one of these eggs I have taken a young snake which measures lOi] inches in length. Attached to this embryo is a con- siderable mass of yolk, a condition which indicates that the embryo is not ready for hatching. Nevertheless, all the generic and specific characters are well shown. There is a well-developed egg-tooth. The intromittent organs are everted in the specimen examined. I^ach consists of a rather slender and twisted basal stalk, at the end of which is the swollen glans. This is acorn-shaped at the base, but terminates, at the dietal end, in two blunt lobes. The base of the glans is densely spinose, the remainder re- ticulately papilose. The seminal groove winds around the basal stalk and terminates at the tip of one of the terminal lobes, the larger one. Concerning the breeding habits of the black-racer, Bascanion constrictor, I find little in print. It is well known that the young differ markedly from the adults, being decidedly spotted. Dr. Weinland, as already stated. '•'■Since the above has gone to press, I have had the opportunity, April 29, of dissecting a recently raptured female, the length of which was 4 feet 4 inches. The ovaries lie in the region situated about two thirds the distance from the head to the vent. Each oviduct ends close to the corresponding ovary. It seems evident, therefore, that at least some of the eggs of the specimen described above are really lying loose in the body cavity. In the specimen dissected, the ovarian eggs are very immature, none of them exceeding about a quarter of an inch in length. It may be of some interest to add that this female had the anterior three- fourths of the body ornamented with blotches of a decided red color, the red occupying both the surfaces of the scales and the skin between them. The blotches were separated by scales which were partly yellow. Soon after death a great part of the red disappeared. The stomach contained eight wild mice, six of them young. 1 1 am able to state that Coluber obsohfas is oviparous. Mr. Thomas Marron, of the Na- tional Museum, early in April, 1889, collected a number of snake eggs in a hollow stump near the Potomac river. They were opened and found to contain fully developed young of this species, (U. S. Nat. Mus., No. 15334).— Leonhard Stejneger. 120 described the egg-tooth. In one female, taken near Indianapohs, I find nineteen egge, seven of which Ue in the left ovary. These eggs are quite immature. Some alcoholic eggs (U. S. Nat. Mus., No. 17956) of this species from an unknown locality furnish some points. They, are of the usual elongated oval form, an inch and a half long and close to an inch in short diameter. The outer covering is thick and tough, and it is furnished with numerous hard points, as if of deposits of lime salts. Within the egg is a young racer lOo inches long and evidently nearly ready to come forth. The intromit- tent organs of this specimen are somewhat flattened, broad at the extremity, and with prominent terminal angles. The organ begins to expand from its base. It is furnished plentifully with spines. When the sexes unite, when the eggs are laid, how concealed, and when they hatch, are some of the things which we need to learn. I have examined a specimen (U. S. Nat. Mus., No. 17969) of Haldea stria- tula from some point in Arkansas. It is 92 inches long and contains five eggs, each with a young Haldea in it. Only the hinder most egg is in the left oviduct. This is a little over an inch long, but the others are only a little more than three-quarters. The short diameter of the egg is about a quarter of an inch. The embryos are far from mature, being only 24 inches long when extended. They have a considerable mass of yolk still attached to them. The egg-coverings are very thin. This circumstance causes me to conclude that the young are brought forth alive. A series of sections through the snout of an embryo reveals the presence of the usual ogg- tooth. Some observations on the tui!tles of the (iems malaclkmys. By O. P. Hay. Of the turtles belonging to the genus Malarlevu/s there are now recog- nized five species, two new ones having been described within recent years by Dr. G. Baur. The genus is a very distinct one, and is distinguished from Chrysemi/s especially by the extremely broad and flat crushing surfaces of both upper and lower jaws. As a result of the provision made for the support of these wide, horny, masticatory plates, the internal nares are thrown far back, so as to lie behind the level of the eyes. In the Catalogue \-2l oi the Chelonians in the British Museum, 188!), Dr. G. A. Boulenger eays that the " pjastron is extensively united to the carapace by suture, with feeble axillary and inguinal peduncles, the latter ankylosed to the fifth costal plate." Sometime ago I macerated a large specimen, M. geographica, until the whole plastron fell away from the carapace, thus showing that there was no ankylosis of the parts. The Map tortoise, M. geographica, wag described by the naturalist Le Sueur, in the Journal of the Philadelphia Academy for 1817. In the M6- moires du Museum de Paris for 1827, Le Sueur presented the description of another species of this genus from specimens which he had taken in the Wabash river, at New Harmony, Ind. Neither figure nor systematic name accompanied the description, although he appears to have had a name in manuscript, pseudogeographica. It is evident that Le Sueur had in mind the terrapin, which has for the most part gone by that name since then, although the description is in some respects erroneous. The first mention that I find of this manuscript name of Le Sueur is found in connection with the Emi/s lesueurii, described by Dr. J. E. Gray in his Synopsis Rep- tilium, 1831. It is also given by Dumeril and Bibron in Erp^tologie G6n^r- ale, vol. II, p. 256, as a synonym of Emyx geographica, with the remark, "jeune age." In his work, Herpetology of North America, published in 1842, Dr. Holbrook recognized the fact that this terrapin is distinct from the earlier described geographica, and gave to it the name that Le Sueur had bestowed on it in his manuscripts. He also accompanied the descrip- tion with a colored plate. It is from this date, 1842, that we must reckon in determining the tenability of the name j)seudogeographica. In ISol Dr. J. E. Gray, in his Synopsis Reptilium, p. 31, published a de- scription of a species which he called Emi/s lesueurii. This supposed new species was founded on either a specimen of geographica or on one of what Holbrook afterwards called pseudogeographica. Dr. Gray himself, in all his subsequent publications, wrote down the name lesueurii as a synonym of geographica, although previously to the publication of his Catalogue of the Shield Reptiles he did not recognize Le Sueur's pseudogeograjihica as being distinct from the earlier described geographica. In 1857 Louis Agassiz, in his Natural History of the T'nited States, ar- ranged both the species referred to under the genus fjraptemys. Of his G'raptemys lesueurii he say : " This species is commonly called Emi/s pseudo- ijeographica, but the specific name Le Sueurii is older. It is evident from his reference that Gray at first applied the name of Emi/x Le Sueurii to thia 122 species, and not to Gr. (jcographlca ; now Gray calls it also Emus pseudo- (jeographica" Since that time Prof. E. D. Cope, in his Check List of 1875, employed the name used by Holbrook, but ISlr. F. W. True, in Dr. Yar- row's Check List of 1S82, adopted Agassiz's suggestion and called the spe- cies MahACoclemys hioieurii. Since now the name by which we are to know the species called by Le Sueur and Holbrook psendogcographica depends on what Gray had before him when he described his Emiis lesuenrii it becomes necessary, if possible, to determine that matter. More certainly depends on that than on Gray's references to any previous writings. Among other differt-nces existing between the two species of 31i e.nguvs, Scudder, Boston Jour. Nat. Hist., VII, 1862, 429, (Not Acheta exigua, Say.). Xemobius fasciatus exiguus, Fernald, Orth. N. Eng., 1888, 16. Also a very common species and found in company with the preceding, the habits of the two being essentially the same. From vittatus it may be known by its much smaller size, lighter color, and by the last two segments of the maxillary palpus being white. Moreover the ovipositor is much shorter, being only one-half to two-thirds the length of the hind femur, whereas in vittatus it is fully as long as that segment. A careful examina- tion of a large number of specimens leads me to believe that these differ- ences are constant, with no intermediate forms, hence the two species should be separated. Length of body, male, 7 mm. ; of female, S mm. ; of hind femora, 6 mm. ; of ovipositor, o to 4 mm. 9. Nemobius fas( iatus, DeGeer. The Long-winged Striped Cricket. Nemobivs fasciatus, Scudder, Bost. Jour. Nat. Hist., VII, 1862, 436. Fernald, Orth. N. Eng., 1888, 16. McNeill, Psyche, VI, 1891, 6. This species has not been seen by the writer within the boundaries of the state ; but Scudder, he. cit., says that it has been taken at Delphi, Indiana. From the two preceding species it may be known by the presence of the inner wings, which extend beyond the end of the ovipositor. McNeil, loc. cit., records it as being common about the electric lights at Eock Island, Illi- nois. 137 V. AxAxiPHCs, Sauesure (1874). Our native species of this genus are very small crickets resembling those of Nemob'us in form of body, breadth of head, etc. ; but having the ovipos- itor very much compressed and curved strongly upwards as in many of the common species of Locustid:v or katydids. 10. AxAxii'iii.s PULicAKUs, 8aussure. Anaxipha pulicaria, ^McNeill, Psyche VI, 1891, (>. Head andpronotum brick red in color, sparsely clothed with long hairs; wing covers and legs very light brown ; abdomen and ovipositor darker. Both sexes are wingless, but the wing covers of the male are well devel- oped, fully covering the abdomen, while those of the female reach but little beyond its middle. The cerci are exgeedingly long, tapering, and covered with fine yellow hairs. The hind femora of the males are propor- tionally much longer than those of the females as will be seen by the fol- lowing measurements: Length of body — male, (i. 5 mm., female, 8 mm.; length of posterior fe- mora— male, (5.5 mm., female, 6 mm.; length of ovipositor, 3.5 mm.; of an- tennic of male, 32 mm. This handsome little cricket was first taken in the state on Aug. 26, 1891, at Kewanna, Fulton county, where it occurred in small numbers among the sphagnum mosses growing in a tamarack swamp. On Sept. ii, it was found in Vigo county, 135 miles farther south, about the borders of a large pond. Here it was abundant in isolated spots on the leaves and stems of the arrow a\nm, Peltandra nndulatu, Eat. It is very active and diflicult to capture, and, on account of its small size, is doubtless over- looked in many localities where it occurs in abundance. It is not described in any of the works to which I had access, and specimens were sent to Prof. Lawrence Bruner, Lincoln, Neb., who kindly identified them for me. VI. Phylloscirtus, Guerin. (1846). The members of this genus are small crickets which have the head broader than the prothorax. They may be readily known from all other ( Jryllids by having the apical joint of the maxillary palpus flattened, oval, and much longer than the preceding joint which is triangular. The ovi- positor is somewhat compressed and curved upwards. 11. PiiYLLOsciKTi s piLCHEi.i.us, Uhler. The Handsome Cricket. Phyllopalpus pulchellvs, Uhler, Proc. Ent. Soc. Phil., 11, 1864, 544. Phylloscirtus pukhellus, Riley, Stand. Nat. Hist., II, 1884, 183. McNeill, Psyche, VI, 1891, (i. 188 This is the only species of the genus known to occur in the eastern United States, and is the most brightly colored of all our native crickets. In the living specimen the head and thorax are crimson, the wing covers a shining pitch black, while the thick hind femora are almost transparent but become white in alcohol. The wing covers reach the end of the abdomen, and the wings are almost as long. A single female specimen was taken on September 6th, from a leaf of the button bush, Cephalanthus occidentalis, L., near the border of a large pond in Vigo county. When discovered it was motionless, but was vibrating its large maxillary palpi in a very rapid and curious manner. It is a southern species but has been recorded from New York and Illinois, and probably occurs in low wet woods throughout the southern half of this state. According to T^hler, it is found most frequent- ly " amongst the grass and low bushes near ditches where it jumps about with great rapidity.'' Measurements: Length of body, S.5 mm.; of ovipositor, 3.5 mm.; of pos- terior femora, 6 mm.; of antennte, 18 mm. VII. Orociiaris, Uhler (1864). The members of this genus have the head slightly narrower than the base of the pronotum; the maxillary palpi with the third segment longest, cylindrical ; the apical one a little longer than the one preceding, enlarged gradually from the base, obliquely truncate. Both wing covers and wings are longer than the abdomen. The posterior femora are less thickened and the body less robust, longer, and flatter, than in the preceding or the following genus. T2. Orochakis SALTATUR, Uhler. Orociiaris mltator, Uhler, Proc. Ent. Sec. Phil., II., 1864, .^45. Riley, Stand. Nat. Hist., II, 1884, 182. Apitlu's McNeilli, Blatchley, Canadian Entomologist, XXIV, 18i>2, 27. General color, after immersion in alcohol, dull brownish yellow, the male the lighter. A dark brown stripe reaches from the eye along the side of head and prothorax to posterior border of pronotum. The wing covers each with a small brown spot at base ; those of the female with many cross veinlets which are darker than those running lengthwise, giving the dor- sal field a checkered appearance. In the male the vein separating the dor- sal field of the wing cover from the lateral is yellow ; in the female the yellow is broken by a number of oblong dark spots. All the femora are rather thickly marked with small, dark spots; those on the posterior pair 139 being arranged in regular rows. The wings extend 2.5 mm. beyond the tip of wing covers. Measurements: Female, length of body, 16 mm.; of wing covers, 14.5 mm. ; of posterior femora, D mm.; of ovipositor, 12 mm. Male, length of body, 14 mm.; of wing covers, 12.5 mm.; of posterior fe- mora 7.5 mm. A single pair have been taken in Vigo county. The female was secured Oct. 21, 1891, from the lower leaves of a golden rod, SoUdago latifolia,'L., which grew in a thick, upland woods. The male was taken just a year later from the under surface of a leaf of prickly ash, Xanthoxylum ameri- canum, Mill, It Jletv. from one leaf to another and, before its capture, was thought to be a species of Blattidx, so flat did its body appear. Not having Mr. Uhler's paper when the female was taken it was sent to Mr. S. H. Scudder, of Cambridge, Mass., for identification. He returned it with the statement that it was, in his opinion, " an undescribed species of Apithes, allied to A. azteca, Sauss, and very different from A. quadrata, Scud- der." On the strength of his statement, and prematurely on my part, it was described as new in the Canadian Entomologist, loc. cit. Having since secured Mr. Uhler's paper diagnosing the two genera, Apithes and.Orocharis, a. careful comparison with the descriptions therein proves it to belong to the latter genus ; and, although diflFering somewhat in the details of color and measurement from Uhler's description of saltator, yet the differences are not sufficient, in my opinion, to make of it a distinct species. It has heretofore, been recorded, as far as I can ascertain, only from the south- eastern United States. VIII . Ai'iTHES— (Hapithus), Uhler (1804). Thick bodied crickets resembling in general form the members of the genus Gryllus but having the head narrower than the posterior margin of the pronotum. The maxillary palpi with the apical segment as long as the 2d and 3d together. The wing covers do not reach the base of the abdo- men and the wings are much shorter, i;'.. Apithes agitator, Uhler. Hapithus agitator, Uhler, Proc. Ent. Soc. Phil., II, 1864, 546. Riley, Stand. Nat. Hist., II, 1884, 183, fig. 258. A short, heavy-bodied cricket ; dull reddish brown in color, with the vein, separating the dorsal field of the wing cover from the lateral, a yel- lowish white. The top of head and pronotum, and the surface of all the femora densely covered with brownish-yellow hairs. Measurements : Fe- male, length of body, 11 mm.; of wing covers, 7.5 mm.; of posterior femo- 140 ra, 9 mm.; of ovipositor, S mm. Male, length of body, 10 mm.; of poste- rior femora, 8 mm. A large number of specimens of this cricket were taken in two localities in Vigo county, Indiana, during the last half of September. The first ones discovered were on the slender twigs of some prickly ash shrubs which grew in a damp upland woods. The place was visited a number of Jimes and the crickets were always found, perfectly motionless, and immediately above or below one of the thorns or prickles jutting forth from the twigs. The tips of the hind femora were raised so as to project above the body thus causing them to resemble the thorns ; and the color of the insects cor- responding closely to that of the bark, made them very difficult to discover even when in especial search of them. On every clump of prickly ash in the woods mentioned a number of specimens were secured but they could be found no where else thereabouts. The second locality where they were discovered was about the roots of a scarlet oak, Quercus coccinea, Wang, which grew on a sandy hillside. Here they were plentiful, and resting motionless in the depressions of the bark or beneath the leaves in the cavi- ties formed by the roots of the tree. Of all the males taken, over thirty in number, there was not one with perfect wing covers, and, in almost every instance, the wing covers as well as the rudimentary wings were wholly absent; while every female had both pairs unharmed. I at first ascribed this wing mutilation to the males fighting among themselves, but finally discovered a female in the act of devouring the wings of a male. Why this curious habit on the part of the one sex ? Possibly the females require a wing diet to requite them for their bestowed affections, or, perchance, they are a jealous set, and, having once gained the afi'ections of a male, devour his wing covers to keep him from calling other females about him. Quien sabe f Agitator is said to be common in the middle and southeastern states. The eggs of the female are there deposited in twigs of the white elm, Ulmus Americana, L., and the insects are very active at night, running and jump- ing about on the trunks of various trees. IX. (EcANTHus, Serville ( 1831 ). From the other Gnjllidx of the state the members of this genus may be known by their slender hind femora, their narrow, elongated prothorax, and their whitish or greenish- white color. The wing covers of the females are wrapped closely about the body, while those of the male are much 141 firmer in texture, broadly spread out, and very transparent ; causing such a diflference of appearance between the two sexes that tyro collectors often take them for widely different insects. Three species have, so far, been collected in the state, and two others very likely occur, but have not yet been taken. 14. fficANTHcs NivEL>i, DeGeer. The White Climb'ng Cricket. (Ecanthus niveus, Harris, Ins. Inj. Veg., 1S62, 153, figs. 71, 72, (In part). Fitch, Third R^p. Nox. Ins., N. Y., 1856, 86. Scudder, Bost. Journ. Nat. Hist., VII, 1862, 431. Rathvon, U. S. Agr. Rep., 1862, 381, figs. 17, 18. Thomas, Trans. 111. St. Ag. Sor., V, 1865, 444. Walsh, Prac. Entom., I, 1866, 126; II, 1867, 54, 94. Scudder, Dist. Ins. in N. H., 1874, 365, (Note of, set to music). Glover, U. S. Ag. Rep., 1874,143, fig. 16. Packard, Guide Stud. Ins., 1883, 564, figs. 561, 562. Id., Rep U. S. Eat. Conn., V, 1890, 230, 591, figs. 75, 76. Fernakl, Orth. N. Eng., 1888, 17, figs. 7, 8, 9. Comstock, Intr. Ent., I, 1888, 122, figs. 109, 110 Murtfeldt, Inst ct Life, II, 1889, 130, (Carnivorous hab- its of). McNeill, Psyche, VI, 1891, 6. Both sexes of this species are in color ivory white, more or less tinged with a delicate green, especially in the female. The top of head and basal joint of antennae are usually suffused with ochre yellow, while on the lower face of each of the two basal join's of the antennae is a small b'ack spot. The ovipositor of the female is ^hort, perfectly straight and usually tipped with black. The maxillary palpi are longer in this than in any other spe- cies of the genus and the wing covers of the male are broader in proportion to their length than in any other except 0. latipennis, Riley. Measurements : Male, length of body, 13 mm. ; of wing '-overs, 13.5 mm. ; width of wing covers, 6.5 mm. Female, length of body, 14.5 mm. ; of wing covers, 14 mm. ; of ovip isitor, 5.5 mm. The white climbing cricket is very common throughout the state, and mature specimens are to be found in numbers abi ut grape viuf s, shrubbery, etc., from August 1st till November, In my experience the females appear more plentiful than the males, the latter being more often heard than seen. 142 During the day they keep themselves hidden among the foliage and flow- ers of various plants, but as night approaches they come forth and the male begins his incessant, shrill, chirping note, which he continues with little or no intermission till the approach of morning warns him to desist. Prof. McNeill, in Psyche, loc. cit., has given an excellent description of the songs of the diflferent species of Oecanthus. "That of niveus," he says, "is the well known t-r-r — r-ee: t-r-r — r-e-e, repeated without pause or variation about seventy times in a minute. It is heard only at ni»ht and occasionally on cloudy days, but in the latter case it is only an isolated song, and never the full chorus of the night-song produced by many wings whose vibrations in exact unison produces that characteristic 'rhythmic beat,' as Burroughs has happily phrased it." The females of niveus do much harm by ovipositing in the tender canes or shoots of various plants, as the raspberry, grape, plum, peach, etc. ; no less than 321 eggs, by actual count, having been found in a raspberry cane 22 inches in length. The eggs are laid in autumn and at first the injury is shown only by a slight roughness of the bark, but afterwards the cane or branch frequently dies above the puncture, or is so much injured as to be broken off by the first high wind. If the injured and broken canes con- taining the eggs be collected and burned in early spring the number of in- sects for that season will be materially lessened. Niveus, however, in part if not wholly, offsets this injurious habit by its carnivorous propensities, as the young, which are hatched in June, feed for some time upon the various species of aphides or plant lice which infest the shrubbery they frequent. Mr. B. D. Walsh, in the Practical Entomolo- gist, loc. cit., was the first entomologist to call attention to this carnivorous habit, but it seems little attention was given to the matter. Recently, however, it has come up again, and in Insect Life, for November, 1891, Miss Mary E. Murtfeldt, of St. Louis, Mo., has given a most interesting account of some experiments and observations concerning it which were made by her. From this article the following extract is taken: "Some leaves of plum infested with a delicate species of yellow aphis were put into a jar with the young of Oecanthus niveus, but attracted no immediate attention. As twilight deepened, however, the crickets awakened to greater activity. By holding the jar against the light of the window, or bringing it suddenly into the lamp light, the little nocturnal hunters might be seen hurrying with a furtive, darting movement over the leaves and stems, the head bent down, the antennro stretched forward, and every sense apparently 143 on the alert. Then the aphides provided for their food would be caught up one after another with eagerness and devoured with violent action of the mouth parts, the antennse meanwhile playing up and down in evident expression of satisfaction. Unless T had provided verj' liberally not an aphis would be found in the jar the next morning and the sluggish crickets would have every appearance of plethora." 15. OEcAXTHi s FAsciATUs, Fitch. The Striped Tree Cricket. (Ecanthus fasciatus, Fitch, Third Rep. Nox. Ins., N. Y., IS5(), 96. McNeill, Psyche, VI, 1891, 6. (Ecanthus niveus, Harris, Ins. Inj. to Veg., 1862, 154, (In part), liathvon, U. 8. Ag. Rep., 1862, 381. In its general form this insect resembles the preceding, but it is always darker in color, varying from a deep black to ivory white with fuscous markings. Most specimens, however, are greenish white with three black stripes on the head and pronotum and a broad dusky line along the center of the abdomen beneath. The wing covers of the male are less broad in proportion to their length than in niveus ; while the ovipositor is longer and more distinctly turned upwards at the end than in that species. Measurements: Male— Length of body, 14 mm.; of wing covers, 11. "i mm.; width of wing covers, 5.5 mm. Female — Length of ovipositor, 6.5 mm. In Indiana this species is fully as common if not more so than 0. niveus. It is more frequently found on wild plants than that species, being, in au- tumn, an abundant visitor of sun- flowers and golden rods. Mature speci- mens were taken in Putnam county, as early as August 9th. 16. (Ecanthus angistipennis, Fitch. The Narrow-winged Tree Cricket. (Ecanthus angustipennis, Fitch, Third Rep. Nox. Ins., N. Y., 1856, 95. McNeill, Psyche, VI, 1891, 8. This species is readily distinguished by the narrowness of the wing cov- ers of the male, their breadth being just about one third their length. The wings are longer than in either of the two preceding, extending in one specimen at hand, 9 mm. beyond the wing covers. The head and protlio- rax are less prominent, and the latter is much narrowed anteriorly. The general color is an ivory white, rather deeply tinged with greenish. Measurements: Male — Length of body, 13 mm.; of wing covers, 11.5 mm. width of wing covers, 4 mm. Angustipennis probably occurs in all parts of the state but is much less 144 common than either niveus or fasciatus. A fully developed male was taken from a leaf of an iron weed, Vernonia fasciculata Michx., on August 11th. This completes the list of Gryllidni so far known to have been taken in the state. Other species undoubtedly occur, and it was a desire to awaken an interi st in the family and so lead, if possible, to their discoverj% which, in the main, prompted the preparation of the present paper. The species most likely to occur, but which have not, as yet, been noted are: Tridactylus terminalis, Uhler; Tridactylus minutus, Scudder; CEcan- thus latipennis, Riley ; (JEcanihus bipunctatus, De Geer, and one or two species of Myrmecophila, which are the smallest crickets known. They resemble closely the young of cockroaches and inhabit the nests of ants. The writer will be pleased to receive specimens of Gryllidos and other Orlhoptera from any part of the state, and will return the names of those sent to all who may so desire. Biological Laboratory, Terre Haute, High School. Entomologizing in Mexico. By W. S. Blatchlkv. The OUTLOOK in the warfare against infection. By Theodore Potter. Our present knowledge concerning the green triton, diemvctylus viri- descens. By 0. P. Hay. The green triton, or newt, Diemyclylus viridescens, has been before this academy for discussion at a previous meeting. Since that time there have been some accessions to our knowledge regarding it. This pretty and harm- less newt probably inhabits all parts of the state, but I have n<.t found it abundant anywhere, though no doubt it is plentiful in suitable localities. 145 It is quite common in the Eastern States, and has been studied a good deal by the naturalists there, to whom it has presented some interesting prob- lems. It is interesting because of its position near the top of the order Uro- lela. Salamandrina perspicHlata, of Europe, is very closely related to it ; but since the digits of the hinder foot of that species are reduced to four, it must be regarded as standing higher than ours, which has five digits. The newt has given the systematists a good deal of trouble, a fact result- ing, as in so many other cases, from a lack of knowledge regarding its life- history. Formerly there were believed to be two entirely distinct species, the one living on the land and being of a red color, the other living entirely in the water and being of a general greenish color. Rafinesque, who first described these animals, placed the two forms under different subgenera. Baird saw that they must be included under the same genus, but regarded them as distinct species. Dr. Hallowell seems to have been the first to re- gard them as belonging to the same species. For a long time, in fact until very recently, they have been regarded as being varieties of the same spe- cies. A few observers have, within a few years, claimed to have seen the red land form transform into the aquatic stage, and some have thought that they saw indications of a change of the aquatic animal into the terrestrial form. Hence, it was supposed that the differences were due to seasonal changes. It was supposed that the animal went into the water to deposit its eggs, took on the characters peculiar to that state, and afterwards, when the breeding season was over, again sought the land and became red again. At the 1891 meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, at Washington, Prof. Gage, of Cornell University, read a paper which gave the results of his studies on this animal for some years. His con- clusions, in brief, are that all the modifications that the animal undergoes belong simply to different stages in the development of one and the same individual. The eggs are laid in the water and hatched in due time. For some time the young have gills, like any other well regulated Urodele. When a length of about an inch and a half has been attained, they leave the water, having lost their gills, and betake themselves to the land. They then assume a red color, varying from orange to blood-red, the tail becomes round and the skin usually rough. Here they appear to remain until they are about three years old, hiding under rocks and logs, and appearing after rains. When the season of sexual maturity arrives, they go again into the water, and, according to Gage's opinion, remain there the remainder of their lives, unless the pools dry up or food becomes scarce. Prof. Gage's 10 14(i paper has appeared in the American Naturalist for December, 1891, illus- trated with a colored plate. During the past summer, before I knew of Prof. Gage's work on the newt, I attempted to solve the question about the tAvo forms of the animal by a study of the specimens in the National Museum, about two hundred and fifty in number, and from all parts of the country. I reasoned that if there were two varieties of the animal we ought in a large collection to find them both in all stages of growth ; if the red form was only the young stage of the animal then the green aquatic specimens ought to be all larger than the red ones. One of the first things that I discovered was that there was not a single character on which I could depend as a means of distin- guishing the two forms. Neither redness, nor roughness, nor lack of tail- fin, belonged to the land form alone. Of some it seemed to be impossible to say with any certainty to which form they ought to be assigned. Nevertheless it was apparent that the red or miniatus form reached a max- imum length of a little over three inches, while the undoubted viridescent form ranged from a little less than three inches up to four or more. Yet a breeding male of the viridescent form was found to be only two and three-fourths inches long. On the whole, it seemed clear that at a cer- tain stage the red, land form must enter the water and assume characters to some extent different from those possessed while on land. As to the color of the aquatic form, olive is the prevailing tint. Yet many have more or lees red mingled with it, and not a few are decidly red. It is probable that none of those which have betaken themselves to the water are as scarlet as those living on the land, yet they must come pretty near it. As to the purpose of the coloration assumed in the water, it is not diffi- cult to see that it will be highly protective to an animal that dwells amid green vegetation ; but why the land-dwellers should be so conspicuously red is not so easily decided. No concealment seems to be sought here. It is possible that the land form is a distasteful morsel to such animals as it comes in contact with, and the color is developed as a warning signal. Those who have the opportunity to experiment with them ought to en- deavor to settle the question. The salamanders are given to eating all such animals, and the red young of the newt might be offered to Ambystoma tigri- num, for instance, in order to determine whether or not the latter would eat the young newt. There are some interesting matters connected wtth the size of the larva^ at the time of the transformation. Prof. Gage states that he has never seen 147 a larva at this period less than three centimeters long or more than four, while some of the bright red ones are only five centimeters long, that is, two inches. Now in the national collection I found larva- yet with remains of gills, and some of these larva? were two and three-fourths inches long. These were from .Jersey City, N. J. Not long ago Prof. Gage sent me a spec- imen for examination, which he had taken at Wood's HoU, and this one is fully as large as those I have mentioned. The smallest red specimens men- tioned by Prof. Gage are two inches long. Some of the red specimens seen by me at Washington were only an inch and a half, an inch and three-quar- ters, and one only an inch and five-sixteenths long. Here we have evidence of very great variation in the size of the larvse at the time of transforma- tion. I believe also that there is, during the transformation, a considerable shrinkage in the size of the whole body. Such shrinkage occurs during the transformation of Amhy stoma microstomum, and probably of most salamanders. Thus, while we are gradually getting at a correct knowledge of this in- teresting animal, the green triton, or newt, it is a good subject for further study. The proper systkmatii- name ok the prairie rattlesnake. By O. P. Hay The jn.iND crayfishes of Indiana. By W. P. Hay. The Crustacea ok Indiana. By W. P. Hay, M. S. The following list of the crustaceans of Indiana is to be regarded as a first contribution to the knowledge of this interesting group. Although it represents the labor of quite an extended period, the labor was confined mostly to the central part of the state, and to the larger forms ; and there still remains the great multitude of microscopic forms only a few of which are here numbered. It is for the purpose of directing the attention of the 148 Indiana Academy to this interesting and much neglected part of our fauna that this paper is written. Camharuii argillicola Faxon. Very common in central Indiana. It is very similar, both in appearance and habits, to its near relative, C. diogencs. Like this latter species, C argillicola burrows and raises mud chimneys at the mouth of its hole. It is apparently of smaller size than C. diogenex, the largest specimen measuring barely 2^ inches from the rostral spine to the end of the tail. The bearded hand spoken of by Dr. Faxon in his monograph is hardly a constant feature. Indeed, of all the specimens which have come under my notice at least half, without distinction as regards sex, were with- out the beard. The eggs are laid in the early spring, often, it seems, before the females retire to their burrows. A small female bearing eggs was taken from a pond April 2, and a female with young was dug from a burrow April 20. The burrows were excavated in the tough clay, near a pond, to a depth of about 2^ feet. Cambarus bartonii Fabricius. This species will probably be found to occur throughout the state. It is much more common, however, in rocky localities than elsewhere. It is a cave-loving species, occurring in nearly every one of the caverns of southern Indiana. I have often observed both it and C. pelluddus in the same cave. Cambarus hlandhigii Hagen. A number of specimens from English Lake seem to be this species, though they may be the following, which is re- ported by Dr. Faxon. Cambarus Uandingii var. acuta Faxon. This species is reported from Wheatland, Knox county. Cambarus diogenes Girard. In early spring this is the most conspicuous crayfish, both by its abundance, large size, and fine coloraticm. The females far surpass any other species in the different colors, which are beautifully blended. As they are strictly a burrowing species, they are to be found only during the breeding season, which begins about the first of April. At this time they are very common, even in the daytime. At night they are abund- ant. Thirty-five large specimens were collected in one evening, April 2, 1892. Of this number twenty-nine were males and six females. A number of fe- males found in copulation were separated from the rest to observe the time elapsing before the eggs were laid. The first eggs were laid April 18, while another specimen of the same lot, with well developed but unlaid eggs, was killed and dissected April 20. After the breeding season they retire to their burrows, and for the rest of 145) the year their presence is known only by the chimneys which they raise over the mouth of the holes. Cambarus immunis Hagen. This species is exceedingly abundant dur- ing the summer in muddy ponds. They burrow into the mud on the dry- ing up of the ponds. T have never observed them in running water. Cambarus pellucidus Tellkampf. The common blind crayfish occurs in many of the caves of southern Indiana. They are usually small, the larg- est I have ever seen, among 40 specimens, being barely 2 inches in length. They are kept from extinction only by the inacessibility of their home. They are very conspicuous when in the water, and are very easily caught. When startled they are utterly at loss where to go, and often dart out upon the shore. I think it may be safely said that as a rule they grow spinier as one advances southward, although there are exceptions. A female col- lected in Wyandotte Cave is almost without spines ; but three specimens from a small cave near there are exceedingly spiny. Cambarus pellucidus var. trstii Hay. This crayfish, although at first thought to be a distinct species, is probably only a variety of the preceding, characterized Ijy the entire absence of spines. There are no teeth on the rostrum or spines on the sides of the carapace, things never lacking in the common species. The type specimens, 12 or 13 in number, were collected in Mayfield's cave, near Bloomington. They have since been received from Truett's cave, in the same county. Cambarus propinquus Girard. This is apparently the common species throughout the state. In the central portion it is very abundant at all sea- sons of the year, being almost invariably found in running water. The median carina on the rostrum, one of the characteristic marks of the spe- cies, may vary from a long ridge to a mere papilla-like elevation. The color in life is a dingy dark olive. The tips of the cheLc are sometimes red, and the spines on the rostrum brown. Cambarus putnami Faxon. In his " Monograph on the American Asta- cidjB," Dr. Faxon mentions the probability of this species occurring in the southern part of the state. I have specimens taken between Paoli and Wyandotte cave, in the summer of ISSS. Cambarus rusiicus Girard. This species, which is very like propinquus, is tolerably common. It has been collected at Madison and at Indianapolis. Cambarus sloanii Faxon. The only known locality for this species in Indiana is in the region about New Albany. 150 Cambams virilis Hagen. Is verj^ common and widely distributed in the northern part of the state. I have also found it at Irvington. Pahemon ohionis. Smith. The river shrimp has been taken in large numbers in the Ohio at Lawrenceburg. It will probably be found to occur in the lower Wabash and possibly some of the other large streams in the south of the state. Allorchestes dentata Smith. This small crustacean was taken on one oc- casion from a small pool along Fall creek, north of Indianapolis. It has also been observed by Prof. S. A. Forbes in northeastern Indiana. Crangom/x gracilis Smith, ^'ery common in stagnant water in central Indiana. I have never observed it in the streams. Early spring is the beet collecting time for this crustacean, as it then attains its largest size. Crangonyx packardi Smith. I have not yet collected this species, but it is said to be common in the southern portion of the state. Crangoni/x mncronatus Forbes. This interesting species, I think, will be fourid to occur over a large portion of Indiana. I have found it under logs in a swamp near Irvington, have taken it from at least one well in the vicinity, and have observed and collected it in nearly every cave in Mon- roe, Lawrence, Crawford and Harrison counties. Mancasellxs tenax Harper. An exceedingly large and abundant species which may be found in early spring in the water courses. I have often ob- served it in stagnant water, but in running water, as at the mouth of a tile drain, they may be collected by the hundreds. Ascllus communis Say. This species appears to take the place of the preceding species in the ponds. I have rarely observed it in running water, but in early spring it is very common in the ponds about Indianapolis. Asellus stygins Packard. This interesting blind AseUus I have found in two wells, three or four miles north of Irvington. It is also very common in the caves, but does not appear to grow to so large a size as those taken from the wells. Scyphacella putea W. P. Hay. This very curious and remarkable crus- tacean is as yet undescribed, but is here included. The type specimens were obtained from a well in Irvington. Soon after the specimens were taken the well was cleaned, and no crustaceans have been observed since. Its nearest relative is Scypliacella arenicola, a salt water crustacean. Branchipus rernalis Verrill, In the central portion of the state, about Irvington, this beautiful crustacean is very abundant. In one sweep of the 151 net I have taken over a hundred of them. It has also been taken at Bloomington, Ind. Bi-anchipxs gellidus W. V. Hay. Abundant at times about Irvington. It was described February, 1883, in the American Naturalist, from speci- mens collected in the early spring of that year. On the drying up of the ponds it disappeared, and although careful search was made every winter after, it was not seen again till April, 1892, when it was again found to be common. It is much smaller than B. vernalis, and seems to congregate in little groups of 15 to 20. They are very delicate and die soon after capture. Euphiloscia elrodi Packard. This is the only " sow-bug " described from the state, although several species are common. Diaptomus sanguineus Forbes. At times so common as to give the pond water a pinkish color. I have observed it only about Irvington. Daphnia rosea 8ars. ^'ery abundant, in company with other species, in ponds about Irvington. Ceriodaphnia quadrangvla. Common, in company with other species, in ponds about Irvington. Ceriodaplmid cristata Birge. Occurs frequently with the two preceding species. Cyclops parens Herrick. Collected from ponds about Irvington. Ci/clops insedus Forbes. Collected from ponds about Irvington. It will be seen that so far thirty-one species of crustaceans have been collected from the state. A little careful search would doubtless more than double the number. XoTKs ON KLAi's iTi.vrN. By A. J. Bi(;ney. About two years ago a very beautiful snake was taken to the drug store of V. W. Bigney, at Sunman, Ripley county, Indiana; it having been found near Milan, in the same county. It was preserved in alcohol and a little more than a year ago it was sent to me for identification. After carefully examining it I pronounced it to be the Flaps fulvius, or bead snake, be- longing to the order of the Harlequin snakes. A careful study has revealed some interesting tacts. The order to which this snake belongs is very widely distributed, being found not only in North America but also in Southern Asia, Australia, South America, and the isles lo-2 of the sea. The warmer regions are their regular home. In the United States it is found in Virginia, Georgia, Florida, Texas, Arizona, New Mexico, and Arkansas. Xo mention is made of its being found further north than Virginia and Arkansas. Only one species inhabits North America, but there are several varieties, distinguished chiefly by the arrangement of the colored bands. This snake is ordinarily found in the ground in sweet potato fields. The question naturally arises, How came it so far north ? Has it ever been found in this state before? Was it carried here and escaped? I am rather inclined to the latter view. If, however, it has been found in this state by other parties, then this view is evidently erroneous. The specimen under consideration is about 25 inches long. It has more than 200 gastrostroges, which are entire, and the urostroges bifid. The anal plate is also bifid. Dr. Jordan, in his " Manual," speaks of it as being entire. This is evidently an exception to the rule, and this plate is, there- fore, somewhat variable. The snake has seventeen bands of crimson, bordered by yellow. The occipital band is yellow and the bands on the tail also have no red. It has no loral plate, but in another species it is present. It has two fangs in the upper jaw, which are hollow, and on the front side there is a permanent groove ; back of these fangs are small teeth. The Elaps fulvius is classed among the venomous by Dr. .Jordan. If any one has found another specimen in the state I shall be glad to learn of it. Some oBSEJiyATioxs ox iiei.odkkma suspectum. i>y D. A. Owen, Moore's Hill College. About the middle of last May the museum of Franklin College came into possession of a fine specimen of Hdoderma auspectum or "Gila monster," from Sacaton, Arizona. This is one of the largest of lizards, and the only one in America reputed venomous. The specimen received is eighteen inches long from the tip of his snout to the end of his tail, which is six inches long and of an uniform diameter of about one inch and a half until within a short distance of the end, where it terminates in a blunt point. The body is beautifully marked by black and fiesh colored tubercular scales, much resembling Indian bead work. Its habits are very sluggish, 153 and not infrequently whole days are spent in sleeping. This is almost universally the case during very cloudy weather. Its food has consisted of raw eggs, of which three or four are consumed in a week. Sometimes it will eat an egg each day for two or three days, and then will touch noth- ing for nearly a week. The method of taking this food is by suction, as- sisted by sliding back and forth its flat, forked tongue. When the eggs were given without first breaking the parts, it was very difficult to swallow, the food would be forced out through the nostrils and some time would be spent holding the head elevated so that gravity might force it down the throat. Other foods were offered, but in no case were they touched. Although its native home is in that arid region where rain seldom falls in abundance, it showed a special fondness for water. It would frequently lie in a pan of water during the whole day. At times, when the appetite made no demands for the food, he would frequently crawl into the pan, as if he preferred to take it by absorption. In breathing, there seemed to be a full expansion of the lungs every 50 or GO seconds. The air is then expelled, as it seems, in a kind of pulsations. These pulsations are seen on each side of the neck and vary from fifteen to thirty per minute. But during the torpid state, which began about the middle of October, there appears to be no full expansion of the chest, but respiration is conducted wholly by this pulsation. If, however, the animal be disturbed, the air is immediately forced out of the lungs with a sound very much resembling a deep sigh. The moulting began about the last of July or the first of August, and was not completed until the last of September. The skin was removed in pieces, beginning about the middle of the body. In regard to the nature of the vermin and the fatality of the bite there is little to ofter that is new. The result of experiments, however, seem to cast some doubt upon the idea formerly held that the action of the poison was very rapid. The first animal that was bitten was the common tiger salamander. In this case there was no more deleterious efl^'ect than would have occurred from the bite of any other animal. The same thing was true with the next, which was a common toad. In both of these cases, after the bite, the helo- derma frothed considerably at the mouth and refused to make the second bite. The next animal bitten was a rat. After the rat had been bitten two or 154 three times, with seemingly no perceptible effects, it was taken out and placed in a cage with a rattlesnake, where it was bitten twice, and within the space of two hours was dead. A second rat, after an absence of a few days, was put in with the heloderma and was bitten three times ; once upon the fore leg, and once upon the tail, and again through the lower jaw. The first two bites occurred before nine o'clock in the morning, the third about one in the afternoon. At four o'clock the same day the rat seemed all right, with the exception of being cowed and having a desire to get as far from the lizard as possible. The next morning, upon observation, the rat was found dead, and when picked up a greenish fluid ran out of its mouth. The heloderma, when undisturbed, is a harmless individual, and at no time was its biting voluntary. But when disturbed he elevated his head with mouth open, giving forth the aspirate sound of hah, and if at this time any thing is placed within his open mouth, the jaws immediately close upon it. The biting is simply holding fast for a few minutes. There are no fangs in the upper jaw, as in the rattlesnake, and if there be any poison it must be from the ordinary saliva and depends upon the degree of irrita- tion of the animal. Judging from the actions of the two rats bitten, one by the snake and the other by the lizard, we believe the poison in the two reptiles acts differ- ently. From the death struggles of the one bitten by the rattlesnake there appears to be a paralysis of the respiratory organs, while from the stupor which appeared to take hold of the other, we judge in that case to be a paralysis of the circulatory organs. Some ohservatioxs ox photomicrograimiv. By D. W. Dennis. Contributions to a knowledge of the grain toxoptera (toxoptkra GRAMiNi'Mi. By F. M. Wekster. 155 BVFFALU 6XATS (sIMULID.k) IN INDIANA AND ILLINOIS. By F. M. WkHSTKR. In his "Guide to the Study of Insects," p. 1)91, and again in his " Our Common Insects," p. 73, Dr. A. S. Packard acknowledges the receipt of ex- amples of a buffalo gnat from Prof. J. T. Cox, State Geologist of Indiana. In this notice it is not stated whether the examples were taken in Indi- ana, or in Illinois, where the author accuses the insect of causing the death of horses on the prairies. The late Dr. E. K. Boardman, of Stark County, Illinois, wrote me some years ago of the former occurrence of these gnats in his State, as follows : " I spent the summer of 1843 here on Spoon River. The settlers used to watch for the appearance of the buffalo gnats every year, and they usually came from the 10th to the 20th of May, from the Winnebago Swamp. That year it was about the 12th or 15th of May, when we were planting corn, that a neighbor rode up and told us to look to our stock, as the gnats were coming. In less than an hour the cattle and horses came tearing in off the prairie, the former bellowing with pain, the latter kicking and throwing themselves on the ground, and rolling to rid themselves of their tormentors. The gnats did not usually remain more than four or five days at the longest, and often not over twenty-four hours, when a wind w^ould carry them oft. " When they used to come in such numbers, I have known them to run stock from here, thirty or forty miles down the Henderson River, and when the stock were recovered they would be so used up by running as to be al- most useless. The deer used to leave the swamps about the time the gnats appeared, and take shelter along Spoon River, often coming in droves, and when hard pushed would take to the water. "The gnats came more like a swarm of bees than anything else I can compare them to. I never saw them at Pawpaw, DeKalb county, nor do I recollect of seeing or hearing of their occurrence here, for the last thirty years — since the swamp has been drained and pastured." The following, from a letter received several years ago from Mr. John Marten, at that time residing in Decatur, Illinois, will give additional in- formation as to the distribution of Simulium in Illinois, and also add a valuable hint as to remedial measures for the relief of stricken animals. " I have found the buffalo gnat in Edwards county, llUinois. In the spring of 1883 or 1884, I do not now remember which, two, and possibly more, horses were killed in that county. During both seasons the gnat was found there. Farmers from Richland and Lawrence counties, north of P^dwards, lo(j complained of the pest. My observations were too limited to say more than these general things. " My father-in-law, before his death, told me that in former years the gnats had been very troublesome in Edwards county, and that whenever he had been called upon to treat cattle or horses they always "recovered. He condemned, roundly, the notion that the bites of the gnats were neces- sarily fatal, saying that cures could easily be made by such treatment as would cause copious urination. He used nitrates and kindred remedies. He was a practicing physician and thoroughly acquainted with his profes- sion. . John Marten." Owing to the obscurity regarding the locality from which Prof. Cox ob- tained his specimens, it was not until the year ISsn that we had any exact information as to the occurrence of the buffalo gnat in Indiana ; our atten- tion being called to the fact by Prof. S. B. Boyd, of Washington, Davies county, who informed us that these insects occurred along White River in considerable numbers. With a view of gaining further information respect- ing this matter, we addressed a letter to Hon. Samuel Hargrove, of Union, Pike county, from whom we received a reply, not only corroborating Prof. Boyd, but stating the fact of their occurrence along the Patoka River, also. On the 10th of November, 188G, we started on a trip to Pike county and vicinity, by way of Seymour, Jackson county, where we were informed by Mr. J. A. Peters, an extensive farmer of the bottom lands, that no gnats oc- curred in that vicinity, but about Bloomfield and Worthington, in Greene county, they often annoyed stock greatly. From Seymour we went to Washington, Davies county, where we again met Mr. Boyd, and learned from him that these gnats infested the bottom lands along the entire west- ern, and also a portion of the southern, borders of that county. In White county we examined a portion of the Patoka River, a small stream wdiose winding course is nearly due west, emptying its waters into the Wabash River a short distance below the mouth of the White. The bottoms are wide, and the bed is of clay, the current in low water, as it was at that time, is rather sluggish, but in high water it is quite swift and cov- ers the bottoms, which are often cultivated, but fully as often timbered and grown up with brush. The stream also has more or less drift-wood, stumps, and other debris in it, but we found no place where this caused any per- ceivable increase of the current. We examined such of this drift-wood as we could disengage, but could find no trace of the buffalo gnat in any stage of development. 1")7 We learned from people residing along this stream, that in 18S2 the gnats occurred as far up as Jasper, Dubois county, and several mules and horses, in the vicinity of Bovine, Pike county, died from the effects of being bitten by gnats. Usually, however, the insects did not occur in that vicinity in any considerable numbers. At Hazleton, on White River, in Gibson county, Dr. P. H. Curtner in- formed me that gnats had appeared, with more or less regularity, every sea- son for the last seventeen years, being very much more abundant in seasons of high water during spring time. Localities between Hazleton and the Wabash River were especially noted for the great numbers of gnats occur- ring there. Dr. Curtner's facts are of especial value, as he has had several years' experience with buffalo gnats in Louisiana, during the war, having been connected with a battery of Federal artillery. A quite significant fact was noticed, in that wherever the insects were reported as being the most abundant, the stream was very tortuous, thereby presenting many narrow points of bottom-land, more or less covered with trees and underbrush, across which the water flows whenever the stream is very much swollen. Lumbermen, who are much on the river, say that where the bottoms have been cleared, gnats are not usually abundant. Like the Patoka, White River has rather a sluggish current. At Hazle- ton, the latter is estimated to flow at the rate of about six miles per hour in ordinary high water ; during low water it is much less. The following letter adds much to a knowledge of the distribution of buffalo gnats in southwestern Indiana : "Makco, Ind., December 21st, 1886. "Mr. F. M. Webster, Dear Sir : — I am somewhat acquainted with buf falo gnats. I first find them on the head waters of a stream called River De- Shee, and also on W'ilson Creek, in the southern part of Harrison township, Ivnox county, southeast of Vincennes. They are not so much in the White River bottoms as they are in the low, marshy land adjoining said b ^tt >ms. I find them in said township, further north, in the vicinity of a low, slug- gish creek, called Pond Creek. Where the high lands come near the river, I find none until I get above Eiiwardsport, at the mouth of Black Creek ; but following that creek in Greene county, I find them abundant in low, wet land that makes and adjoins said creek, to-wit: Cain Drain, or Dela- ware Creek, a large mareh in Knox county, Carico Marsh, the Goose Pond, Bee Hunter Marsh, and Ladies' Creek Marshes, all in Greene county. In the bottoms, on the west side of White River, you will find plenty of them ; but above Worthington they have never been known, so far as I have heard. 158 ■"•^he buffalo gnat in his natural state is about one -half as large as the common house fly. They make their appearance in early spring. A few days, — with the temperature from forty to fifty degrees — is apt to bring them. They cannot exercise when the temperature is 32°, but will come immediately upon the weather's getting warmer. Rain and wet weather will down him for awhile. His life varies as to the weather. One week of clear weather, with the temperature from 70 to 80 degrees, ends his exist- ence. Generally they last from four to six weeks. They are very severe on all kinds of stock, and run the cattle and hogs, and drive them to the open ground, where the wind and hot sun has a tendency to drive the gnats down. They have been known to kill horses by blood sucking, and, when full of blood, are about as big as two house flies. They never attack a man. "As a preventive, we use coal oil, rubbing it on the horse's head, neck, breast and flanks, as these are the parts generally attacked. " Yours truly, Dr. R. A. J." At least two species of Simulium occur in the Wabash River, near New Harmony, Posey county, in what is known as the Cut Off. This cut oft has existed since Ijsfore the country was settled, though, in an earlier day it was much narrower and used as a mill race, an oil painting by LeSuer, showing it as it appeared :it an early day, is yet in possession of a son of Robert Dale Owen, residing at New Harmony. The channel has widened of late years, the bottom being rocky as of old, and at the lower extremity filled with rocks and bowlders, over and among which the water flows ver\ swiftly. A number of head of stock were killed by gnats in this vicinity in 1884, and they were quite troublesome in the spring of 1890. On June 12th of the latter year I caught adults in the vicinity, belonging, without much doubt, to Simulium 2JecKariim, Riley, and feel quite sure that S. meridionale, Riley, also occurs there. From the number of pupa shells that, at the time of my visit, were attached to willows and branches of trees which had been inundated in spring, I judge that adults had been quite numerous, Larvae were also found in the swifter flowing portions of the stream, but in limited numbers. It appears somewhat strange that the only species of Simulia described hy Thomas Say, for a long time a resident of New Harmony, should be ac- corded to Ohio, his specimens being from Ohio Falls, near Louisville, Ken- tucky. It would now appear almost impossible that they should not have inhabited the lower Wabash, while he was engaged in his entomological labors and within sight of the locality where they now occur. An almost parallel case is found in the chinch bug, which Say described in 1831 from 159 a single specimen "taken on the east shore of Virginia," while Prof. S. A. Forbes, in 16th Report of the State Entomologist of Illinois, p. 50, gives what seems to be incontrovertible proof that the insect was abundant in Illinois, within a few miles of New Harmony, as early as 1S23. Therefore it does not seem improbable that Simulia may not have occurred in the Lower Wabash, and the Little Wabash, in Illinois, even before Say's resi- dence at New Harmony, though, in attempting to secure proof of this I have been less fortunate than Prof. Forbes, as none of the oldest inhabi- tants about New Harmony can remember of the occurrence of buffalo gnats, except during recent years. At the field meeting of the Academy, at Richmond, Indiana, May 12, 1S92, we found another location for these insects, in Indiana, this being at at Elkhorn Falls, situated five miles below the city. The larv?e, which ap- pear to be different from any I have collected elsewhere, were found cling- ing to the rock and also to the algse which overhangs the falls. No adults were found at the time, and but few puppe. The development of the vivd'arous fishes of California. By Cari. H. ElGENMANN. Recent additions to the ichthyological fauna of California. By Carl H. Eigenmann and Rosa S. Eigenmann. Published in part in Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus. for 1892 and in part in the Annals New York Acad. Sci. for 1892. [austract.J We have prepared an enumeration of the fishes occurring on the Pacific coast of America, north of Cerros island, and to the depth of 150 fathoms. The explorations of the U. S. Fish Commission steamer Albatross, during the last three years, have added a large number of species to those previ- ously known from this region, and our own explorations have added about as many new forms from San Diego alone as were discovered by the Alba- tross along the whole coast included in the present paper. These additions, as well as the extension of the habitat of many species, make the present list desirable. Several forms have recently been discovered by the Albatross in deeper water. Most of these, however, have little relationship to the littoral fauna and the deeper water has not been sufficiently explored to warrant a list at the present time. We have placed the dividing line between the littoral and the bathybial faunas of this region at 150 fathoms, because all of the genera so far recorded from this depth have representatives in the shallower water — fifteen to fifty fathoms. Some of the littoral gen,era, as Sebastodes, have representa- tives in deeper water, but this is not of general occurrence. Cerros island is a convenient and natural southern boundary to this region. South of it few, if any, of the characteristic genera (Sebastodes, genera of Embiotocidae,) of this region are found. A number of southern forms extend further north, but the number has not been materially increased by our explorations at San Diego; on the other hand a large number of northern forms, or representatives of northern forms, which had not been found south of Point Conception, were added to the San Diego fauna. The California fauna has hitherto been divided into a southern and a northern at Point Conception. This division was the result of insufficient exploration, and the results mentioned above have made it evident that no definite boundaries can be assigned for a northern and a southern California fauna. It is quite evident, and readily admitted, that the fauna of California is distinct from the Alaskan fauna, and the latter has been added for conven- ience and comparison only. But four of the species found at San Diego are also found in Alaska. The California fauna is characterized by the abundance of species of Sebastodes, of Cottidse and of Embiotocidae. The last are entirely absent from Alaska, while only a few species of Sebastodes are found here. The boundary between these two regions lies somewhere between Sitka and Puget Sound. No Embiotocidae are found at Sitka. The relative number of species at the principal localities is as follows: The whole of Alaska 109 species Puget Sound 106 ',' San Francisco 155 " Monterey 149 " Santa Barbara 119 " San Pedro 82 " San Diego, including Cortes Banks 168 " There are known from the entire region 382 species, belonging to 228 161 genera. Of these 116 genera, or more than half, are also found in the Atlantic ocean, and thirty-two species are found both in the Atlantic and in the Pacific. The genera having species in both oceans practically all belong to one of three classes : First, Tropical genera; second, Arctic genera, whose species are distributed throughout the Arctic seas; third, Pelagic and other genera having a wide distribution. Among the remarkable additions made to the fauna of California during recent years are the following: Bronchiostoma elongatum, which had been recorded but once, we have found in large quantities at San Diego. Khinoptera encenad^e, based on a fragment of a jaw found at Encenada. Perkinsia, a new genus of herrings. Six species of Scopelidae. The albacore Euthynnus pelamys, whose nearest recorded habitat had been Japan, was found at San Diego. On Indiana shrews. By Amos W. Butj-er. Among the smaller mammals is a group of small forms generally known as shrews or mole mice. These are insect eating forms. They are little mouse- like bodies. The snout is quite elongated, extending beyond the incisors some distance. It is naked, and on its sides are to be found the nostrils. Although these small mammals are very abundant they are not often seen. They are doubtless most active at night but are not strictly nocturnal, for examples are sometimes to be found moving about in the bright sunlight. They feed upon such animal food as comes in their way, chiefly grubs, larvfe, slugs, terrestrial insects. They are very pugnacious, following mice into their nests and often attacking them. They also attack and kill each other, eating the carcass. They eat almost any kind of animal food, but of vegetation eat little. They are said to be fond of beechnuts, and will, when starved to it, eat corn, oats, wheat and other grains. In confinement they have been known to attack and kill mice much larger than themselves. Their eyes are small, and while not covered, they can see but imperfectly. Their burrows may be found every wherrf beneath meadow, pasture and lawn, under the accumulated vegetable mould of the forest, or the collection of decaying weeds of the thicket. Anywhere and 11 1(52 everywhere their small tunnels may be found. In no respect, that I know, are they injurious, but in all laborers in their little spheres for good. It has been thought, from the number of dead shrews that are sometimes found, that these little mammals are subject to epidemics. They are naked and blind at birth. None hibernate, but all move about in the coldest weather. Shrews seem to be rejected as food by other ani- mals, on account of an unpleasant odor they emit. Often have I known a cat to catch one and carry it about for some time, apparently loth to give it up, but never eating it and, in the end, rejecting it. Many superstitions are prevalent in Europe, particularly in Great Britain, regarding these little creatures but, so far as T know, nohe of them are notable in tlie folk-lore of our land. The most abundant shrew in our state, and perhaps the most widely dis- tributed in the United States, is the short-tailed shrew, Blarina brevicavda, (Say ) . An interesting account of u nest of this species is given by my friend, Mr. Charles Dury, of Avondale, Cincinnati, Ohio, in a letter of Dec. 28, 1891. The notes have since been published, (Journal Cincinnati Sdc. Nat. Hist., 1892, p. 183), and I give them here: "It is well known to entomologists that some very curious and interesting- insects live in the nests of mice and other small mammals. December lo. 1891, I went out to hunt nests of 'field mice,' in hopes of finding a wonder- ful little beetle, called Leptimus testaceous, said to live in such nests. This species was an especial desideratum to me, as I had never succeeded in find- ing it. I went to an old orchard, and under the first log rolled over I dis- covered a nest and secured a mouse as she rushed out. She proved to be the 'Short-tailed Meadow Shrew,' Blarina brevicauda, (Say). The nest was made of small bits of leaves of the sycamore tree, lined with grass fibers, and situated in a hole or pocket excavated in the ground. I lifted the nest into the sifting net and sifted it over a sheet of white paper, and was over- whelmed at the result. The fine debris was a jumping, crawling mass of insect life, beetles, fleas, ticks and larvse. I gathered and bottled 106 Lep- timns, and many ran over the edge of the paper and escaped. There were over a hundred large, vicious looking fleas, most energetic biters (as I dis- covered from those that secured a lodgment in my clothing). How the mouse could live in such a den in a mystery. The other beetles associated with Leptimus were Staphylinidx, or ' Rove Beetles ' of species new to me, and so far I have been unable to identify them. Leptimus is a small, fiat beetle, of a pale testaceous color, one-eighth inch long, without any trace of eyes." 1(58 A smaller shrew, which seems to be comparatively common in Vigo county and is found in the Whitewater valley, is Blarina exilipes, (Baird.) This shrew is locally known in Vigo county as the 'Bee Shrew," from its habit of entering the hives and destroying the young brood. A form from Hanover, Jefferson county, which is about the size of the last mentioned, was identified by Prof. S. F. Baird as the Cinereus Shrew, Blarina cinerea, (Bach.). From Franklin county several very small shrews were sent to Dr. Elliott Coues. He pronounced them the "Least Shrew," Blarina parva, (Say). The species had remained unknown from the time of Say's description. This is, perhaps, the smallest mammal in the United States, and seems to be rather common in the Whitewater valley. A specimen from North Manchester, Wabash county, taken by Mr. A. B. Ulrey, proves to be the Common Shrew, Blarina platyrhinus, (DeK), which has not before been found in the state. A revision of our shrews will prob- ably soon be undertaken, and it is very much needed for they are now in a verj- tangled condition. Further investigation will doubtless add other forms to our fauna. There are three species described by Puvernoy in 1N42, from this state, that are not now known. They are : Brachijsorex harlani, (Duver.), New Harmony, Ind. Brachysorex brevicaudatus, (Duver.), New Harmony, Ind. Amphisorex leseurii, (Duver.), Wabash valley, Ind. I should like to request all who have specimens of shrews and other small mammals to inform me of that fact, and to urge upon all our members the importance of obtaining and preserving all such animals they can. Espe- cially is such material desirable from all parts of the Wabash valley. The specimens may easily be dropped into small bottles or jars of alcohol after being tagged and marked, in lead pencil, with date and locality of capture. A little co-operation on the part of the members of our academy, a little thoughtf ulness in saving what is thrown in our way, will do much to clear up many of the murky places in our nomenclature, many of the fogs along the lines of geographical distribution. 164 NoTi:s ON Indiana Bikds. By A.mos W. Butlei;. Since the publication of my recent paper on Indiana birds* several valu- able notes have been received, relating to the birds of the state. Besides these, a fuller notice of some of the brief notes given in the paper men- tioned may be worthy of note. Not only is much additional information needed as to the occurrence of birds within the state, but also it is of great value to have continued observations on the range, breeding range and habits of birds. From the results of such work, carefully performed, we may map the range of birds by counties and even by townships, and, as a result, be enabled to solve many of the knotty and unravelled problems of geographical distribution. One of the labors which this academy may well carry on, and none can be more valuable, is a biological survey of the state, carefully and sincerely worked out. Junco hyemalis shufeldfi (Coale). Shufeldt's Junco. The specimen of thifs bird taken at Lafayette, and reported by Dr. Erastus Test, is the second one taken east of Illinois. A single specimen having been taken in Maryland near Washington. This is a form of the Rocky Mountain region which seems to extend its range southeastward. Ammodramus hensloivii (And.) Henslow's Sparrow. Mr. Ruthven Deane informs me that he spent a day in July, 1891, making the acquaintance of Henslow's Sparrows at English Lake, Ind. He reports seeing no less than twenty-five specimens and says: "two of us killed about ten. They have been there all summer." Within five days after receiv ing Mr. Deane's notes my friend, Mr. Charles Dury, of Avondale, Cincinnati, Ohio, informed me of a visit of two friends of his to English Lake in July and August. He said they found Henslow's Sparrows rather common and breeding, and took some specimens, including some young birds. An adult taken there was kindly presented to me by Mr. Ralph Kellogg, one of the collectors. Upon inquiry, I learned that these gentlemen and a friend visited the same locality noted by Mr. Deane, and, further, that they were acquainted and had collected in the same meadows. Cistothoms steUarU ( Licht) . Short-billed Marsh Wren. I am under obliga- tions to Mr. Deane, to whom I am indebted for many valuable notes, for some o\)8ervations on the breeding of the Short-billed Marsh Wren in the state. He says an employe at their club house at English lake brought in a nest taken there two or three years ago. In Mr. G. Frean Morcom's col- -The Birds of ladiaaa, with illustrations of many of the species, by Amos W. Butler. (Transactions Indiana Horticultural Society, 3890.) 1(>5 lection is a set of live eggs of this species, taken at Davis Station, Ind., June 3d, 1887. Mr. C. E. Aiken informs me he found them in marshes bordering sloughs in Lake county, in 1871. Profonotaria citrea (Bodd) — Prothonotary Warbler. I desire to express my appreciation of the work of Mr. Herbert W. McBride in exploring the counties of Elkhart, Lagrange and Steuben, in Indiana, and St. Joseph county, Michigan, thereby adding materially to our knowledge of the range of the birds in that region, and especially in extending the known range of the Prothonotary Warbler into all of these counties. It was found com- monly in all but Steuben. This, with Mrs. Jane L. Mine's discovery of the species in DeKalb county, is very interesting to students of bird distri- bution. For the following notes 1 am indebted to Mr. C. E. Aiken, of Salt Lake City, Utah, well known for his zoological investigations in Colorado. He formerly lived in Chicago and collected in northwestern Indiana, in 1860- 7-9 and 71, and occasionally in later years : Ardea egretfa (Gmel) — American Egret. Mr. Aiken informs me it breeds on the Kankakee river, near Water Valley, Ind. Charadriuf. s'jiiatarola (L) -Black-bellied Plover. One was killed by Mr. Aiken, in Lake county, in 1871. Contopus horealis (Swains) — Olive-sided Flycatcher. Not rare in Lake county where I obtained a number of specimens in 1871. (Aiken.) Xanthocephalvs xanthocephaJus (Bonap — ) Yellow-headed Blackbird. Found abundantly along the Calumet river, in Lake county, in 1871, (Aiken.) CoccothravMes vespertina (Coop) — Evening Grosbeak. A large number of specimens were obtained near Whiting Station, Ind., in 1886-7, by Mr. 11. A. Turtle, of Chicago. (Aiken.) Loxia curvirostra minor (Brehm) — American Crossbill. One of the most interesting of Mr. Aiken's notes is one of the occurrence of the crossbills in the extreme heat of summer, in the vicinity of Chicago and northwest Indiana. Of the American Crossbill he says: " In July and August, 1869, this bird became very abundant in the door yards in Chicago, and remained until late in the fall. They fed greedily upon seeds extracted from sun- flowers and were so sluggish that one could approach within a few feet of them, so that they fell an easy prey to boys with catapults. In the latter part of August, of the same year, I found them common in flocks about farm yards in Lake county, Indiana. Loxia leucoptera (Gmel) — White-winged Crossbill. Accompanied the pre- ceding species, in ]S(3;i, and remained through the winter. Noticed inLake county preceding. (Aiken.) Ammodramiis lecnntdl ( Aud) — ^Leconte's Sparrow. I am pleased to be able to note, upon the authority of Mr. Aiken, the occurrence of this bird in northwest Indiana. Aboijt April 15th, 1887, he observed two birds which he thought were this species at Water Valley. About the same time in 1889, near the same place, he saw three of what appeared to be the same birds. Two of them were shot and proved to be this species. Geothlypin Jonaosa (Wils) — Kentucky Warbler. Mr. Aiken is able to ex- tend the range of this species as far as Gibson Station, Ind., where, he says, several specimens were taken in May, 1887. In addition might be added that the extreme dryness of the fall for the past two years has had a noticeable effect in lessening the number of marsh birds and water fowl throughout the part of the state where shooting such game is extensively indulged in. Rail, snipe and duck shooting has been worth- less the past two autumns. Birds were few, for their favorite haunts were unsuited to their wants. Marshes and sloughs were dry, as were the creeks. Much of the lakes had disappeared, leaving instead " mud fiats." Many species, ordinarily common, were rare and others altogether wanting. The open winters two years past and so far this winter, have encouraged many species which ordinarily pass the winter further south to remain with us, and other species which stay in winter in litniterl numbers have re- mained in quantities. SOiME XOTKS ON TlIK IJIRDS OV IXDIANA." By R. WeS McBrIDK. Loon, Urinator imher, Gunn. Mr. A. W. Butler, in his admirable and ex- cellent catalogue of the birds of Indiana, says of the Loon, or Great North- ern Diver : "I have no knowledge of their breeding within the state, al- though they will probably be found to do so." 1 can personally testify that it is a summer resident of Steuben county, and that it breeds in at least two of the many beautiful lakes of that county. Their eggs have been taken at Lake James and Crooked Lake. I have been familiar with those lakes for more than twenty years, and have never failed to find them there in summer. I have also seen them in the breeding season in Hamilton Lake and ( iolden Lake, also in Steuben county ; in Turkey Lake, on the 1()7 line between Steuben and Lagrange counties, and in Bear Lake, Noble county. Yellow-bellied Wood-pecker, Sphyrapicus varing, L. Is said, in the cata- logue, to have bred rareh', if at all, in DeKalb county since 1888. Herbert W. McBride found a nest with three eggs near Waterloo, May 13, 1880. Bobolink, DoJidtoni/x oryzivorus L. Ten years ago this bird was very rare in DeKalb and Steuben counties. Now it is a common summer resident and breeds in both counties. It is, however, still very rare in Elkhart county, only a short distance west, with the apparent conditions not ma- terially different. Brown Creeper, Certhia familiaris americana, Bp. Of this bird Mr. Butler says: " I have never known it to breed in the state, but Mr. H. W. Mc- Bride thinks it breeds in DeKalb county." I can say positively that I know it breeds in Steuben county. In my note-book I find the following under date of May 8th, 1882: " Brown Creeper; taken near Golden Lake, Steu- ben county, Indiana. Nest in crevice, where the bark had started from a dead tree, about four feet from the ground, in a swampy tract in " Crane town." Nest composed of sticks, bark and feathers. Six eggs, beauties. Incubation commenced. Embryos about half developed." I have a very distinct recollection of the matter. The "Crane town" referred to in the .note is a heronry which we were exploring. The water was high and we were in a boat. I placed my hand against a tree to push the boat past it, when the bird llew off the nest, which was within a few inches of my hand. The bird remained near me until after I had secured the eggs and exam- ined the nest. The appearance and characteristics of the Brown Creeper are so marked that it could hardly be mistaken for any other bird. I could not possibly be mistaken in its identification. In addition to this, the lo- cation and construction of the nest and the eggs themselves are all typi- cal and characteristic. Another nest and set of eggs were taken in May, 188.», at Fox Lake, near Angola, by my sons, Charles H. and Herbert W, The identification in this case was as satisfactory and unmistakable as in the other. Since that time, while I have frequently seen them during the breeding season, both in Steuben and DeKalb counties, I have found no other nests. Tufted Titmouse, Pares bicolor, L. Is noted in the catalogue as an occa sional straggler in northern Indiana. It breeds in Elkhart county. June 12th, 1891, Herbert W. ]\IcBride found a nest near Elkhart containing seven young birds. 168 The scales ok lepidoj-teka. By M. B. Thomas. The kgeria ok cextkal Ohio. By I). S. Kellicott. Some ixsects ok Tasmania. By F. M. Webster. [ABSTRA("r.] Although occupying a position in the southern hemisphere similar as to latitude to the northern half of Indiana and southern Michigan, the insect fauna more nearly resembles that of southern Texas, being strikingly semi- tropical. In the vicinity oi Hobart, during the last of January, a season corresponding to our August, Phytophagus coleoptera, especially of the C'hryeomelidif and Rhynchophora, were very abundant, while carniv- orous species, though strikingly poorly represented, included several Coc- cinellidfe and one Lepidopterous species— a rare object in any country. A noticeable feature, but one peculiar to island insects, was the lack of flying species along the coast. A single butterfly, swift and strong of wing, was the only capture made in Lepidoptera. Another feature of island insects was noticed in the prepon- derance of species of a bronzy or yellowish color. The young euculyptus trees afford a rich field for collectors during the summer season. Early published i;EFEJtExci;s to ix.iuriois ixsects. By F. M. Webster. The coxtixuity of the germ klasm in vertebrates. By Carl H. Eigex- MAxx. Published in part in the Journal of Morphology, pp. 481-492, plate XXXI, 1892, under the title " On the precocious segregation of the sex-cells in Micrometrus aggretatus Gibbons." The theory of the continuity of the germ plasm as finally formulated by Weismann assumes that "there is not only a continuity between the ovum which gives rise to parent and the ovum which gives rise to the oflf- spring " but in the successive generations between the ovum which pro- 1()9 duces the parent and the ovum which produces the offspring the character of the original ovum is never lost by differentiation. There is then a con- tinuous chain of reproductive cells quite apart from the body cells or more frequently a series of body cells through which the unchanged germ plasm of the parent is transmitted to future generations. The germ cells are, therefore, not the product of the adult Ijody but the direct offspring from the germ cell of the preceding generations. The observations bearing out much of this theory have been mostly con- fined to invertebrates. All of our works on the comparative anatomy of vertebrates, as well as our works on embryology, tell us that the sexual or- gans in vertebrates arise from the germinal epithelium which is not differ- entiated until the embryo is completely formed. The most lucid descrip- tions of the early stages were given by Balfour for Elasmobranchs ten years -ago, and the latest observations published by Jungersen in 1889 have not given anything concerning the stages less than two millimeters long. While preparing the sections for the ontogeny of C>imatogaster aggr'egaius, one 'of the viviparous Embiotocidae, I frequently observed large, indifferent cells in the mesoblast. I at first supposed them to be cells in a pathologi- cal condition. When, however, all the eggs from one ovary were observed to contain such cells, I re-examined every embryo, and soon found that the cells are not pathological, but are a normal structure present in all embryos of a certain age. Further study showed them to be sex-cells of the future germinal epithelium. Our knowledge of the early stages of the sex-cells of vertebrates does not extend back beyond the condition described by Balfour and .]ungersen. In the present study I have been able to trace them back to probably the fifth segmentation. Our knowledge of the sex-cells in general has been summed up by Weis- mann as follows : " In certain insects the development of the egg into the embryo, that is, the segmentation of the egg, begins with the separation of a few small cells from the main body of the egg. These are the reproductive cells, and at a later period they ai"e taken into the interior of the animal and form its reproductive organs. Again, in certain smaller fresh-water Crustacea (Daphnidte) the future reproductive cells become distinct at a very early period, although not quite at the beginning of segmentation, i. e, when the egg has divided into not more than thirty segments. Here also the cells which are separated early form the reproductive organs of the animal. The separation of the reproductive cells from those of the body takes place at a still later period, viz. at the close of segmentation, in Sag- 170 itta, a pelagic free-swimming form. la vertebrata they do not become dis- tinct from the cells of the body until the embryo is completely formed." It will be seen that in some vertebrates (Cf/matogasfer) a similar segregation, of " germ plasm " takes place quite early. In brief, the sex-cells of Cumato- '/aster first become normally conspicuous in the mesoblast where the germ layers are fused before any protovertebra- are tormed. They can be seen in earlier stages, but they do not stand out so prominently from the other cells. In exceptional cases, the sex-cells can be traced back to probably the fifth segmentation. The sex-cells can first be distinguished from the surrounding cells about the time the blastopore closes. The earliest ones distinguishable, exclu- sive of abnormal cases, are from an ovary in the eggs of which the blasto- pore is not yet closed, or is just closed and in which the mesoderm is not yet split off from the entoderm. Only two cells which can with certainty be said to be sex-cells are seen in one of these eggs. They differ from the surrounding cells in having well-defined, rounded outlines, and in the distribution of the chromatin in the nucleus. The chromatin of Ihe surrounding cells is collected in one, or, if the cells are undergoing divis- ion, in two or three masses. The chromatin of the sex-cells is uni- formly distributed in email granules. In the eggs of another ovary, in which thickenings are formed for some distance, and the mesoblast is separated from the entoderm by a well- marked line, the sex-cells stand out from the surrounding cells with great prominence. This is not due to any marked change in the sex-cells them- selves, but rather to the fact that the surrounding cells have undergone further division and are crowded so that the boundaries are not defined , while those of the rounded sex-cells are well marked. The largest and most conspicuous cell of this stage lies in the mesoblast just beside the chorda. It measures 18x23 m, and has a nucleus measuring about 6 }n. On comparing this with segmenting eggs, it is found that it agrees in size with some of the cells of an egg undergoing the ninth seg- mentation and in all probability it is a cell remaining unchanged from that stage. It contains yolk particles. Most of the sex-cells are collected in a limited region at this stage in the thickened portion of the embryo, where the three germ layers fuse. This would lend force to the supposition that they are derived from two cells at most— one dextral and one sinistral. There are a few scattered cells in other parts of the embryo which cannot be so derived unless they early migrate from their original position. 171 There are, on an average, thirteen sex-cells in an egg of this stage. The largest number noticed is seventeen, the smallest nine. In a larva just hatched, the longest diameter of which, measuring in a straight line, is 0.45 mm., there are ten sex-cells. In this embryo about nine protovertebra? have been formed. Most of the sex-cells are large, the largest having a diameter of 23 rii, with a nucleus of 8 m. The smallest cell measures but 11 ;/* in diameter. The distribntion of these cells has become markedly changed from the conditions obtaining in the two-proto vertebra' stage. Two of the cells, in the embryos examined, are found in the cephalic region, one on either side a short distance posterior to the or- igin of the chorda. The remainder are distributed as follows: one below the seventh sinistral protovertebra ; three in the left side of the tail, i. e. in the region in which protovertebrae have not yet appeared ; and three in the right side of the tail. The cells in this stage stain deeper and much more uniformly than the surrounding cells with Grenacher's hamatoxylin. They greatly resemble the very early conditions of these cells, and the number would seem to in- dicate that there has been no segmentation since the two-proto vertebra- stage. In other larva^ of the same stage there are ten, eight, five, and nine cells, respectively. In larvpe 2.5 mm. long there are fourteen to sixteen cells and the num- ber cannot have been increased much since their earliest condition, even if we assume that two or more have been lodged in the gill region, and two in the anterior part of the body. The majority of the cells in this larva are confined to a region only 0.20 mm. long; and if we consider the doubt- ful cells in the anterior region, the total length over which these cells are distributed is about 0.50 mm. from the anus forward. The sex-cells in this stage measure 9-13 >//. Balfour's admirable account of these "primitive ova" (Elasmobranch Fishes, pp. 130-13(5) might almost be used bodily to describe the same structures in Cymalogadcr and Ahrona 2.5 mm. long. He observed that the younger ones contain many yolk spherules, and sug- gests that the cells themselves may have migrated to their position from a peripheral portion of the blastoderm, since " they are the only mesoblast cells filled at this period with yolk spherules." He was at a loss as to how they arose, and thought he could detect cells intermediate in size between them and the neighboring cells. As has been seen, the yolk particles sim- ply remain unchanged from the original condition when the sex-cells are segregated. 172 Several figures would seem to indicate that one of the larger cells of an early stage divides and gives rise to the groups of smaller cells in a later stage. This can scarcely be the case, since the number of cells in the earlier and later stages are about equal, unless a number of the earlier cells atrophy or are resorbed. The loss of four cells, two in the gill region, and two in the region of the fifth body somite, is probable, but even with the addition of these, the number of cells in the last stage examined does not exceed the average number in early stages when the cells are quite large. The reduction in size can, therefore, be explained only by supposing that the individual cells are reduced in size during development. It would be interesting to consider here the causes that lead these sex-cells to again grow and divide. Since, however, this process does not begin in the stages under consideration, this matter must be left till later stages are examined. Biological Stations. By Cakl H. EKiEXMAXN. The early naturalists noted briefly the animals and plants they saw at home or abroad. A few centuries later they added figures to their enumera- tions. Later still skins were preserved, and last of all the whole animals were preserved, gathered into large museums, where they soaked and rotted twenty- five years, perhaps, before some one came along to study them. Some of our ornithologists and conchologists, and even some ichthyologists have not yet passed beyond this skin stage in their development. Many others, on the other hand, have passed this last stage and have ceased to contt-nt themselves with the catalogueing of specimens and now stud^-^ the method, whys and wherefores of the things about them. This school was established when .Johannes Midler first dipped a net for pelagic animals. When it was found that the hows, whys and wherefores could best be studied in the lowest creatures, naturalists flocked to the sea shore, at first during their vacations. As methods for study increased and apparatus multiplied permanent Marine Biological Stations were evolved. First of these were the Naples Zoological Station and Agassiz's School at Penikese, both established in 1873. The aims of the two were slightly different. The Naples station was for original investigation. The Penikese school it was hoped would awaken an interest in zoology in America. There are now a large number of stations along the P^uropean coast, some large and some small, but it is not the intention to speak of these. 173 Penikese died with Agassiz. I have lately been on a pilgrimage to the old buildings. The motto " eat, drink and be merry " still hangs in the old dining-hall. On the walls of the lecture-room are the mottoes placed there by Agassiz's pupils : " A laboratory is to me a sanctuary. I would have nothing done in it unworthy its great author." "Study to translate what actually exists. Be courageous enough to say ' I do not know,' " and " Study nature not books." The outlines of the last lecture delivered at Penikese eighteen years ago are still on the blackboard. At this w^indow Dr. Whit- man stuffed terns, at the other Dr. Brooks cracked clams and at another Dr. Jordan studied seaweeds. Penikese had been donated and the buildings erected by a tobacco mer- chant, Anderson, of New York. It was found that the location was too inaccessible and the fauna of the island too poor so that the $30,000 buildings were abandoned for less commodious but more favorably situated quarters. There are at present several marine laboratories on the coast of America, and several summer schools which are located on the seashore, and do a certain amount of marine biological work. In 1881 a number of Boston women established a laboratory at Annis- quam, Mass., where students and teachers could work during the summer. These ladies were afterwards instrumental in the foundation of the Marine Biological Association whose laboratory is at Woods Holl on Vineyard Sound. Alexander Agassiz several years ago built the Newport Marine Labora- tory, to which he has frequently invited students. Here the advanced students of Harvard University work during the summer. This laboratory is the best equipped of any in the United States, but it is practically private aud has room for but eight students. The United States Fish Commission, after spending several summers at various places on the Atlantic finally built a permanent station at Woods Holl. This is by far the largest station in America and it was Professor Baird's hope and intention to make it the equal of the famous station at Naples. But the elaborate laboratories, aquaria, docks, boats and large hotel did not attract the men it was hoped to collect. Another laboratory has lately been established on Long Island, but of this nothing definite can be said yet. Still another has been established by the University of Pennsylvania. This brings us back to the station of the Marine Biological Association which deserves a better notice. 174 It is by far the most important in its scope, aims, methods and future prospects. It is chiefly supported by the munificence of Boston people. The buildings consist at present of the laboratory and the newly acquired dwelling house. The north side of the upper floors is divided into small rooms 7x10 feet. Each of these is supplied with a table, an aquarium, sink, shelves and a full set of reagents and glassware. These rooms are oc- cupied by investigators doing independent work and are offered free. The remaining portion of the second floor is occupied by the library, the director's rooms, reagent room and the laboratory of the advanced stu- dents. The lower floor by the lecture room and laboratory for students most of whom are teachers at one place or another. This is the Mecca of the modern school of naturalists, and there are collected, at this place, teachers and students from all the leading institu- tions. The laboratories for students are open during July and August. Investi- gators come earlier and stay later. In enumerating what has been done on the east coast it is perhaps well to state what may be done on our west coast. Our eastern laboratories necessarily close during winter. On the Southern California coast where the thermometer never records the freezing point ice does not drive the investigator away in winter. The boundless wealth of the fauna and flora together with the favorable climate will doubtless sometime attract to this region a number at least the equal of that now collected at Woods Hull or Naples. At present the sole marine station on the whole coast is my little laboratory at San Diego which is a mile from the shore and the windows of which are now nailed up. I have before [San Francisco Chronicle, November 30, 1890.] urged the establishment of marine laboratories on the west coast where they can equal the Naples station and it is to be hoped that one may soon be endowed not only for elementary work but for original research with a permanent corps of investigators. P. S.— Since this was written Timothy Hopkins has endowed a marine lab- oratory to be established at Monterey, and Adolph Sutro will maintain another at the entrance of San Francisco Bay. "Who will utilize the best locality— San Diego ? 175 The eyes of blind fish. By Carl H. Eigexmann. Published in Proc. U. S. JVat. Mus. for 1S92, with plates. [abstract.] Whenever the conditions are favorable blind fishes are developed. These are always related to species inhabiting neighboring open waters. Blind fishes are found in caves, in the deep sea, and at San Diego one lives beneath rocks. While such regions usually contain blind fishes not all the fishes inhabiting these regions are blind. Many species found in the deeper parts of the ocean have well developed eyes, while others living in shal- lower water are blind. The explanation for this fact probably lies in the length of time a given species has inhabited the present locality. In all blind fishes the eyes have undergone a process of degeneration. This is very strikingly seen in the development of the Point Loma blind fish, Typh- logolnu calif or niensis Steindachner. The embryo, before it is hatched, has eyes as well developed as the embryo of any other fish. When the indi- viduals have reached the length of an inch they can still see a short distance, but it is evident that the eye has stopped growing long before this age is reached. In the adult condition the eye has become degenerate and covered with a thick skin, and the fish is totally blind. On the PKE^itat: Vancouver Island to San Diego. Rare southward. 14. Phanerodon furcatum Girard. Habitat: San Diego to San Fran- cisco. 15. Phanerodon atripes Jordan and Gilbert. Habitat : Monterey to Cor- tes Banks. in. Brachyistius frenatusGill. Habitat: San Diego to Puget Sound. 17. Brachyistius rosaceus Jordan and Gilbert. Habitat: Ofi" San Fran- cisco in deep water. 18. Cymatogaster aggregatus Gibbons. Habitat: Pacific coast of the United States. 10. Abeona minima Gibbons. Habitat : San Diego to San Francisco. 20. Abeona aurora Jordan and Gilbert. Habitat: Monterey Bay. 21. Hysterocarpus traski Gibbons. Habitat: California (Sacramento river in fresh water). GENERAL INDEX. INDEX. ACETONE, condensation with benzoin, Acetophenone, condensation with ketol; Aeheta abbreviata. i:'>2. vittata, 1.!"). Acrididae of N'igo county, lo. Action of phenyl-hydrazin on furfnrol, Actinia. 20. Aesthesionieter, li'.. -Vegeria of Central Ohio, IfiS. -Vgkistrodon, breeding habits, etc. of lO" Agkistroilon, contortrix, 107, IDS. piscivorus, los. -Vlbumen in urine, :!0. Allen county Karnes, is. Allocystites, 67. .\mblystoma tigrinum, 21. Amblystomas, 22. Animodramus henslowii, 1(1 1. leconteii. Hid. Amphisore-x lesenrii, 10:'.. Amphiuma means, 22. .Vnaxipha pulioiiria, 1:17. Anaxiphus, 12H, i:!7. Anchor ring, sections of M. Anilic acid, 27. Annelida, 118. .\nthrozoa, 08. Apatuna ccltis, ;;i. .Vpical growth of Botrychinm, 71i. of Pinns, 7i>. of Tsuga, 79. .Vpithes, 12S, l;iu. agitator, 1:10. azteca, ].'!9. McNeilii, l:w. qnadrata, K\). .\rch:cological discoveries, 2r>, ;)s. methods, 98. research, 2G. .Vrchegoninm of Finns. 79. of Tsnga, 79. .\rdea egrctta. Km. 17. Argyunis diana, 19. ■;,4('i. Arizona plants, 28. .\rizona plant zones, 25. .\rkansas, ir>. Arthropods, 24. S7. Arthur, J. C, 97. Asprenidae, onthe presence of an opercul- um in, 17.5. Aster, 2.'). . 108. Astronomical study in Indiana, 24. .\tmospheric electricity, 2<'). -Vtomic weight of oxygen, 27. .Vutomatic repeater, :14. BACTERIA CULTURE, 15. Bacterial disease of sugar-beet root, 92. liaker, P. S., 55. Bamberger, E., 58. Bascanion constrictor, breeding habits of, 106, 119, 120. Beet-root, diseases of, 92. Benzoin, condensation with acetone, 47. Beta-nitro-paratolui(> acid. 27. Bigney, A. J., 1.51. Biological stations, 19, 172. Biological survey.s, 18, 76. Bird migration, 19.' Birds, destruction of, 16. iMrds, Indiana, 164, 166. Black racer, 106, 119, 120. Blarinabrevicauda, 162. cincrea, 16;!. platyrhinus, 16:!. parva, 16:!. Blue jay, 21. Blind fishes, 24. ancestors of, 21. Botany, systematic, is. Botrychium, 17, 27. Botrychinm, sporangiiim and apical growt 79. F>rachiopoda, 68. Branchi]ius, 22. tl Branchysorex hnrlanii. 16;?. brevicaudatiis, l(i:5. Brown, W. v., 04. Buckeye, a Kansas species, 74. Buffalo gnats, 01. in Illinois and Indiana. l-W. Building stone. (j. Chloranil, 07. Chlorine estimations, is, 19. (Chloroform, U. Chrysomelid;r Tasmanian, lOS. Cincinnati siluriau island, 18. (Jistothoriis stellaris, 101. Cleistogamy in Poly.soniiim. 92. Cnicus discolor, l.'i. Cocoaine, 14. Coccinellidae Tasmanian, 108. Coccothranstes vespertina. Km. ( ocflicienl of expansion of solids. J.'i, 20. Colaptes, 00. Collecting mosses, II. (^oUett glacial river, 17. Colors of letters, 24. Colors of sounds, 24. Color variation. 21. Columbian Exposition and science. 9s. Committees, 2. past. 0,. Conipanion plants, 26. Composita', organogeny of. 79. (Condensation of acetone with benzoin. 17. Conifer;e, 18. Contopus borealis. lO.'i. ("ontrol magnet, 27. Copper ammonium oxide, 14. Copperhead, 107, los. Corals, 07. Corncob pentaglucose, 29. Cornus, distribution of, IS. Coulter, ,lohn M.. 7i). Coulter, ,=!tanley, 92. Cray tish, 21, 22. Cray fishes of Indiana, 117. Cremation. 17. Crepidula, 27. Crickets, 12s. Crinoidi;e, OS. Crustaceie, OS. Crotalidae. 107, 109. Crustaceans of Indiana, 147. Curimatina', 19. Cyprinodon, 19. DAVI.S, SHERMAN, 49. Dearborn county, 14. Decatur county, physical geography of, 2S. fishes, 29. butterflies, 29. I>evel<)pment of viviparous fi.shes of «'ali- foruia, l'i9. Diagrams from iron and steel, 20. Di- benzyl carbinamine, 27, 28. Diemyetylus viridescens. Hay on. 111. Digestibility of the pentose carbohydrates. Diseases of sugar-beet root, 92. Diplodus, 19. Dolichonyx oryzivoiiis, 107. Drift deposits, Oti 07. Drift, limit of, l.'i. K.MlTIKil'AKK CENTER, ;!0. Eburia (luadrigemiuata, 2.'). Egg membrane. 19. Eigenmann, C. II., 1.59, 109, 172. 17.'). Eigenmann, (.'arl H. and Rosa, l-'>9. Elaps fulvus, l.'il. Elasticity constant, 20. Electric currents, strength of, 20. P^lectro-magnet, 20. I'leetromi'ter, new, 20. Embiotocida', a review of, 170. Emys, concinna, 22. concinnus, loO. Horidana, loO. Eutainia, breeding habit, etc., of. 109. saurita, 111. sirtalis, 109. Entomology, economic. 20. in high schools, 2.'i. Entoniologizing in Mexico, 144. Euzym, relation in seed to growth, 97. T>IDEX. Krythrinia', 19. Eels of America aud Europe, ii4. Estimation of chlorine by Volhard's plan, I'.i. Equations, graphical solution of, '>'. Evolution, 17. and Lebanon beds, is. address on, .'.o, 4.'). FAUNA, river and island, s:!. Field aud home crickets, l:!2. meetings, 9. Fisher, E. W., 79. Fishes, distribution of, l'3. dispersion of, 24. aspredinidiv, on the presence of an operculum in, ]7"i. development of the viviparous lishes of California, 1">9. Floral decorations, 21. Floras, Arizona, 97. Florida, S3. Henry county, 7ri. Mt. Orizaba, sd. I'utnam county, 7. ."). Long winged mole cricket, 131. striped cricket, 130. Lyons, K. Iv— See Van Nuvs. 'P. ('.. 10. MACKINAC ISLAND, 29. Madison, 23. Magnetic permeability, 17. Maiaclemys genus, observations on. 120. 120. Malacdemys genus, geographica, 121. oculifera, 121. pseudogeographica, 121. Mammalia, 67. Man an evolution, 28. Martin, G. W., 79. Map tortoise, observation on, 121, Matterhorn, top of, 3J. Maumee glacier, 19. Maxima and minima, 30. McBride. R, \V.. Notes on Indiana birds. 106. McDougal, D, T., 97. Meetings, field, 9. Members, -"i. Mexico, 1.'). entomologizing in, 144. ^Microtome, a new compound. 77. Migration of western ]>lants. 74. ^likels, Mrs. Rosa Redding, 70. Minor planets, some of the, 2.'i. Mole crickets, 129. Monroe county, 15, 10. Monstera deliciosa, 31. Montgomery county, 14. Mosses, 14. Mottier, D. M., 79. Mount Orizaba. 2s. Moore, J. K., O-'i. Mooreliead, Warren K.. 93. Mucor. 14. Musk Ox, 20. Mycorhiza, 18. Myriapods, 1.'), 24, 25. Myrmecophila, 144. Myrmelon absohitus, 132. NARROW WINGED TRKK CIUf'KKT. 143. National Herbarium, 18. Natural gas and petro]e\ini, 27. Naylor, J. P., 65. Necturuus lateralis, 31. Nematognathi of South America, 19, Nemobius. 128, 1341, 135. exiguus, 130. fasciatus, 130, fasciatus exiguus, I3ii. vittatns, 135. New crustacean fossils, 27. New switch, 3.1. Newt, notes on, 1 II. Niagara group, fossils of, 07. Niagara river, 28. Nitrate of ili-bcnzyl carbinamine, 5,s. Nitrogen from wheat, 'J.'i. forms for wheat. 'i'\ Norlheru mole cricket, I8ii. Notation, clianges in, (>'). Notothylas, 2ii. Noyes. W. A.. "iCi. Xumerieal radices, :!i). Nyssa, stone characters of, 1<^. OECANTHUS. 128, 138, MO. angustipennis, 14:'.. latipeiiDis, 111, 14-1. niveus, ] 11. Ul, 143. oilicers, I. past, o. Ohio, aegeria of central, KW. recent archaeological discoveries iu. '.•S. Orochari.'^. 1-28, ]:W. saltator, 13s. Organized work in chemistry, orgaaogeny of compositae, 7'.i. Ornithology, economical, 21. orthis occidentalis and sinuata, 18. <>rtho]>tera of Illinois, 2"). Osmundaeeae. 17. Ontlook iu warfare a.uainst infection, 1 II. Owen. 1). A.. 7(i, I-VJ. Oxidation. 11. Oxygen, atomic weight of, 27. PACIFK^ DEEP WATER FISHES, 20. I'ara-nitro-ortho-siilphamine - benzoic acid. 27. Paraxyleue-sulphamide, 27. Parus bicolor, 1{')7. Peltandra undulata, 1 '.7. Penta-glncoses, 2'.i. Pentose carbohydrates, digestibility of.-'>7. Periodicity in thermometers, 26. of root-pressure, 2li. Perkins synthesis. 14. Petrolenm in southwest Indiana. :i(i. Phenyl-hydrazin, action on furfurol, -'17. Phosphate of alumina. 23. .57. Pliosphoric acid, 23, .57. .Photography without camera, 24, 27. Photometric methods, 25. Photomicrography, 18. Phylloscirtus, 128, 137. pulchcllus, ].!7. l'hy.siology. .82,91. Phytophagus coleoptera Tasnuiuian, Ids. Picus. 30. Pinus, archegouium and apical gfowth, 7ii. sylvestris, 2(j. I'lantae, ti8. Plants, variations of, 14. Plant zones of Arizona, !'7. Plum leaf fungus, 14. Polygonium, 18. cleistoKamy in, '.i2. Polyporoid fungi. 30. Porichthys, phosphorescent organ of, 2'.). Porifera, 6:'>, Potato tuber, 14. as means of transmitting energy. '.17. Potential functions, history of, (15. Potter, Theodore, 144. Prairie rattlesnake, 147. Prehistoric earthworks, ii5. Protonotaria citroa, 105. Protoplasm in mucor, 11. Psychic pihenoniena, 31. Pteropoda, 68. Puccineae, 15. Purdue I'niversity, Laboratory of, 20. Putnam county fishes, 23. flora, 30. plants, 25. Pyroneaud pyridone. from benzoyl acetone. 4.8. Ol'ATERNION INTE(iK.\TI()N!^. 03. t^iercus coccinea, 140. llAFINESfiL'E, Sketch of, 21. Rattlesnakes, breediug habits, etc of. 107, 109 Recent archieological discoveries. 08. Recent methods of determination of pho.'^- phoric acid. 57. Redding, T. B., 76, 08. Refractive index, value of, 31. Religion and continuity, 2!. Khlnoptera, new speci-^s of. 2o. Rhynchophora Tasmanian, 1€.^. Root pressure, apparatus for ])eriodicity. 2s. SAILOR SPIDERS, 2:;. Sandwich Islands, fishes of, 23. Sap circulation, 2i;. Scales of I^epidoptera, bis. Scaphiopus holbrookii, 2o. Seatou, H. E., .so. Seismology, 26. Seismoscope, 20. Selby, Aug. D., 71. ' Shelby county earthquake, 27. Shrews, Indiana, 161. Simulium, meridionale, 1-58. pecuarum, I.5.S. Siphonophores, 2.s. Sistrusus, breeding habits etc., of, lo'.i. Smith, Alex., 46, is. Snake cactus, 18. Snakes, breeding habits of, fod-pjo. Soap analysis, 28. Some suggestions to tcafhors of scionco or mathematics in high scliools, .")l. Sorghum sugar,:!!. Si>e('ies, descriptiou of. 1 1. Si)hyra7)icus varius liiT. Spirogyra, is. Sporangium of Hotryohium, T'.i. Spreading aider, Ijrceding liahits, etr., of, 111. Starch in cereals, ;'.«. Steamer ".Ml)alross." 'JO. siellcrida, (is. StomaUi developed by phylloxera, Tli. Stone, W. K., .■)7. Storeria dekayi, breeding habits, etc, of. 111. Striped tree crieket, 148. ground ericket, VM. Sucrose in sorghum, 31. Sugar beet iu Indiana, -Vi. Sun fishes, 1"). Sun's light, '2>.i. Sweet potatoes, 'i'.i. Syuaptomys cooperii, Hi. TAU'^miORIC COMPOrNDS, 27. Tasmauian insects, :'.!, 16.s. Taxodium di.stichum, is. Texas, llora of, 18. Ihomas, M. 1!., .si2, 16s. 'I'liysanura, '21. Tillaudsia, 'iS. usneoides, 17. Tingle J. K. M.,(m. Titanium, 27. Toeppler-IIoltz machine, 25. Tridaetylus, 12s-i2'.». specialis, I2'.i. miuutus. 1 f I. terminalis, 111. Tri phenyl benzene, formation of, 17. Tropidonotus, breeding habits, etc., of, 112. grab a mil, 11:'.. kirtlandii. 111. leberis, lb!, sipedon, 112. Trusts, effects of, 23. Tsuga, archegonium aud apical growth, 7!». canadensis, 26. Turtles, observations on, 12(i. ILMUS AMKKIC.VNA. 1 in. rmbellifer;c, 28. ("mbellifers, 13. rnderwood, ly. M., «:!, s'.i, '.i2. Urauoscopidie. 2."). Trinator imbex, KKl. Irine. blood in, 2'). I'nited States Coast and