4 HI 'i tifi,f 'j'f'i1!1 'l» r i'. !i ' H ■ * I1!1* ' i||||||||pi {j'jiijiiiliji JiSJi! i.'itcji^ijiio «.' HHhBhRhh iuifjfi * jlJ'f'i'J '}»<*{»« •}*{'•;«» JiJ^lfjc* i t« it .1 Ji .r.tx;«U: #*. tztliUWU: Ham vol. 35 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY OF ARTS AND SCIENCES. Vol. XXXV. FROM MAY, 1899, TO MAY, 1900. BOSTON, MASS.: JOHN WILSON AND SON. Slmbcrsttg $3rcss. 1900. n At /In CONTENTS. LIBRARY NEW YORK BOTANICAI GARDEN Page I. The Development and Application of a General Equation for Free Energy and Physico-Chemical Equilibrium. By Gilbert Newton Lewis 1 II. Short Studies of North American Tryxalinae. By Samuel H. Scudder 39 III. A Revision of the Atomic Weight of Cobalt. Third Paper. — The Analysis of Cobaltous Chloride and Oxide. By Theo- dore William Richards and Gregory Paul Baxter . 59 IV. On the Thermal Conductivity of Vulcanite. By B. O. Peirce . 73 V. Two Genera of North American Decticinae. By Samuel H. Scudder 81 VI. Note on the Finite Continuous Groups of the Plane. By F. B. Williams 95 VII. The Echelon Spectroscope. By A. A. Miciielson 109 VIII. The Electrochemical Equivalents of Copper and Silver. By Theodore W. Richards, Edward Collins, and George W. Heimrod 121 IX. Preliminary Diagnoses of New Species of Laboulbeniaceae. — /. By Roland Thaxter 151 X. Ferrous Iodide. By C. Loring Jackson and I. H. Derby' . 211 XI. Note on the Constitution of Diparabrombenzylcyanamide. By C. Loring Jackson and R. W. Fuller 229 iv CONTENTS. Paoi XII. A '■ f Lie's Theory of Continu Groups. Bi mi I'm \ 1m. mi b Slocdm 287 XIII. .1 Revision of the Atomic Weight of Iron. Preliminary Paper. By THEODOBE W 11 mam RlCHABDfl am> GbEGOKI PAUL Baxter ur. l XIV. On Certain Colored Substances Derived from Nitro Compounds. Third Paper. By C. Losing Jackson am. !•'. II. Gazzolo 261 XV. The Metamerism of the Hirudinea. By W. E. Castle . . . 283 XVI. 1. New Species and Varieties of Mexican I 'Ian Is. l!v J. .M. (ikl.l NMAN. 2. Synopses of the Genera Jaegeria an, l Russelia. By B. L. Robinson. 3. New Dioscoreas from Mexico. By E. B. I'i.ink. 4. New Phaenogams, chiefly Gamopetalae, from Mexico and Central America. By B. L. Robinson 805 XVII. The Freshwater Tertiary Formations of tin Rocky Mountain Region. By W. M. Davis :;;:; XVIII. On tin1 Ihtt rmination of Sulphuric Acid in the Presence of Iron ; a Note on Solid Solutions. By THEODOBE Wii.i.iam Ri< hards 876 XIX. Tht Species of the Orthopleran genus Derotmema. By Samuel II. Scuddkk 385 XX. View of the Carboniferous Fauna of the Narragansctt Basin. By Axpheus S. Pa<"kaki> 397 XXI. Preliminary Diagnoses of New Species of Laboulbeniaceae. — 77. By Roland Thazteb 407 XXII. Historical Notes relating to Musical Pitch in the United States. P.y Chables R. Cboss l"'l XXIII. The Driving Energy of Physico- Chemical Reaction, and its Temperature Coefficient. ByThi >re Wii 1 1 in Rich lbds I6fl XXIV. Supplementary Note on the Chief Theorem of Lie's Theory of FiniL Continuous Groups. B\ Stephen Elmer Sloccm . 4S1 CONTENTS. V Page XXV. 1. A Synopsis of the Mexican and Central American Sjjecies of Salvia. 2. A Revision of the Mexican and Central American Solanums of the Subsection Torvaria. 3. Some undescribtd Mexican Phanerogams, chief y Labiatae and Solanaceae. By M. L. Fernald 487 XXVI. On the Singular Transformations of Groups Generated by In- finitesimal Transformations. By Henry Taber .... 575 Proceedings G01 A Table of Atomic Weights. By Theodore William Richards . 621 Report of the Council 623 Biographical Notices 625 Epes Sargent Dixwell 625 John Cummings 628 John Codman Ropes 629 John Lowell 634 Officers and Committees for 1899-1900 643 List of the Fellows and Foreign Honorary Members . . . 644 Statutes and Standing Votes 653 Index 665 Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Vol. XXXV. No. 1. — July, 1899. CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE CHEMICAL LABORATORY OF HARVARD COLLEGE. THE DEVELOPMENT AND APPLICATION OF A GEN- ERAL EQUATION FOR FREE ENERGY AND PHY SIC 0- CHEM1 CAL EQ UILIBRl UM. By Gilbert Newton Lewis. CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE CHEMICAL LABORATORY OF HARVARD COLLEGE. THE DEVELOPMENT AND APPLICATION OF A GEN- ERAL EQUATION FOR FREE ENERGY AND PHYSICO-CHEMICAL EQUILIBRIUM. By Gilbert Newton Lewis. Received June 5, 1899. Presented by T. W. Richards, Juue 14, 1899. Introduction. The advance of modern physical chemistry has been largely clue to the application to physico-chemical problems of the first and second laws of thermodynamics and the gas law, — the latter both directly and by analogy. Upon this basis the whole theoretical treatment of chemical equilibrium rests at present. For this reason it may not be without interest to attempt to express the relations deduced from these laws in a single equation, the most convenient and the most general possible, which may serve to systematize a part of our present knowledge, and perhaps jjoint out new laws. Such an attempt will be made in this paper. I. General Equations of Free Energy and Equilibrium. The simplest expression embodying the first and second laws of ther- modynamics is, A=Td/T+C7, (1) where A is the diminution in free energy (Helmholtz) of a system in any isothermal process ; U is the diminution in internal energy in the same _, , d A ii- process ; T is the absolute temperature ; -t-j=, represents the change in A as the temperature of the process varies, — the system changing in every case from the same initial to the same final volume. A, the diminution of free energy, is a quantity which denotes the max- imum amount of work obtainable in an isothermal process, and which is determined definitely by the initial and final states of a system. It may, 4 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMT. therefore, 1"' expressed as the difference between two quantities, one representing what maj be called the total free energy of the initial Btal the other, the total free energy <>t the final Btate. Representing th( quantities !■;• .1 and .,1. . we have, .1 = X -3,. Similarly, if we represent by ?.![ the total internal energy of the system in the initial State, ami It)' £l._, the same in the final st:* equation (1) may he w ritten, d% , d% , . — -— and , " be mil taken at constant, volume. d T d 1 ° This equation may be separated into two equations, %i=T^ + *Ll + M% (2 and <&=T^ + &a + Ml (-2 in where M is an undeterminable quantity which can have only arbitrary physical significance, since we are in practice only concerned with chai of tree energy at constant temperature, and in such changes J/alw disappears. In two special cases, viz. the ideal gas and the dilute solution, the expression for the change in free energj has been found to assume a very simple form, A=?iIiT\n ' 'l where n denotes the number of gram-molecules of the gas or solute; /,, the gas constant : T, the absolute temperature ; In, a natural logarithm; '•, and r.j respectively, the initial and final molecular volumes. Al- though ibe above expression gives a complete statement for the change in free energy only in the tWO special cases mentioned, .-till we are led by many considerations to believe that it forms an important factor in many other, if not all, free energy changes. Evidence on this point is offered by the tact that the above term is present in the general equations of equilibrium which have found experimental verification in the most LEWIS. — FREE ENERGY AND EQUILIBRIUM. 5 diverse systems. Moreover, we are led to the above expression for free energy change by the kinetic theory, the extended application of which to much more complicated cases than that of a perfect gas has already produced important results. 1" The term n R T\x\ mav be written in the form — nRT\n vx + nRT\nv2 . Then we may consider that the quantity — nR T In i\ represents an essential part of the free energy of n gram-molecules of a simple sub- stance in a given state, and similarly, nR T\\\ v., , a similar part of the free energy in another state, and we may write for the free energy of one gram-molecule of a simple substance the eutirely arbitrary equation, %1=-RT\nv1 + xx, where xx represents that part of the free energy not contained in the term — R T\u v\ ; differentiating this equation, j^ = -Xlnv.+y1, (3) where Vi = jj, Now substituting in equation (2 a), % = - R Tlnv, + yx T+ mi + M. (4) Differentiating this at constant volume, d% p] dyx d^x dM — = -R\n vx + 9l +1 dT + •J¥ + dT. Comparing this with equation (3), dy, dj\, dM dfr 1 dWit 1 dM dT+dT+dT~ ; \lT~ TdT'TdT' Since f&x in this case represents the internal energy of one gram- molecule, at constant volume will be equal to the molecular heat capacity, at constant volume, which may be designated by cn . There- fore, ,, C^1T dM 6 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. Integrating, /'7> C ' '/ -1/ where li', ia the integration constant whose value depends on the value chosen for / as the lower limit of integration. Substituting in equa- tion i 1). we obtain for ,d\, the free energy, per gram-molecule, of a simple Bubstance in any given Btate, 9t = --B^ln»x- TfT%dT+% T-\- Kx4 N, (5) ./ if 7 and .Vis, like M} a quantity which will vanish in any expression for the difference in free energy at constant temperature. From this we may obtain an equation for the change of free energy in any process. In tlic most general case, a Bystem composed of any num- ber, //>! , of different molecular constituents,* and any amount. //, . //', , etc. gram-molecules of each constituent, undergoes any change, phys- ical or chemical, arriving at a condition in which it is composed of m, molecular constituents, and ?i.,, n'.,, etc. gram-molecules of each constituent. If&i, ~l'i . etc. represent the free energies per gram-molecule of the various simple molecular constituents, a total change in free energy will be gi\ en by the equation, A = (n, »i + n\ Zl\ + ...)- (»., 3, + n'a 3', + . . . I . If we substitute for 11, , ZT, . etc, their values as in equation i 5 ), the N terms will all vanish and the equation will become, A ■=■ — R V < «j In i\ + n\ In r\ + ... — w2 In r., — it'.. In i/a — • • • ) — T fJ ?h r" + Hl C'vx + ' * ' " ~ "n- c„, — n'n c'VJ — . . . T t'T0 + ^(«i?t?i + n\ $',+ ...- i,,%}, - ,,', 1,'2 -...)+ (». ©, + n\ Zl\ + . . ■- n, IX, — i/., (K's -...). ■ * Molecular constituent is used to moan a single molecular species in a single phase. Thus two phases of the same molecular species are regarded as two con- BtitUentS, SI are two different molecular species in the same phase. LEWIS. — FREE ENERGY AND EQUILIBRIUM. 7 If we represent by Cv and 0Vi the total heat capacity, when each constituent remains at constant volume, in the initial and final states respectively ; by H the total change in the various functions denoted by nx f^x , n-2 2^« j etc- 5 by U the total change in the internal energy of the system, then the equation may be written, A = XT\n 2 l* ,"' -T \ n m ndT + JTT+ U. (6) vp v\" l . . . J t0 1 We have in this equation a 'perfectly general expression for the change of free energy in any isothermal change, chemical or physical, in any system, whether homogeneous or heterogeneous. The quantities con- tained in the equation are all capable of direct experimental determination with the exception of the quantity H, of which we only know that it is not a function of the temperature, since it enters as the difference between a number of integration constants each of which is independent of the temperature. The value of this function and the simple form that it assumes in many important cases of equilibrium will be considered later. The form which equation (G) takes in the simple cases where all the molecular species participating in the reaction are gases and dilute solu- tions mav be shown as follows. Equation (5), applying to the free energy of one of the simple con- stituents of a system, is, a = - r T\nv-rfT^ dT+$T+wi + ir, i/2*o differentiated with respect to volume, at constant temperature, « *r_rr£i,r+r« + «i. (7) dv v J r0 do T do dv w Since d 3 represents the work accomplished in a reversible change, we may write c?& = — p dv, where p denotes the gas pressure or the osmotic pressure, as the case may be. Then _,=_££_rr^(Ir+ra + ^. (8) v J r0T do dv dv w Now we know that in the case of perfect gases and dilute solutions the heat of free expansion and the heat of dilution respectively are zero. 8 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. d cl de riii-n-iore = 0 ; moreover. - 0. This is experimentally a uniform pressure, LEWIS. — FREE ENERGY AND EQUILIBRIUM. 9 normal to the surface, and in "which the effects of gravity, surface tension, etc. may be neglected. A necessary and sufficient condition for equilibrium is, that any change in a system in equilibrium is reversible. In other words, the change in the free energy of the system must be equal to the external work.* In the case under consideration the external work is the product of the external pressure, P, by the change, F, in the volume of the system. Therefore in equilibrium, A = PV. (11) Let us consider a system, of any degree of complexity, which is capa- ble of change. In general this change will consist in a loss by some constituents of the system, accompanied by a corresponding gain by others. Then according to equation (G), r "-r' fTp — C A = RT\n L /-'„/•••- T " ... >->dT+HT+ U, ''l '<" 1 * • • • J T0 I where quantities with subscript 1 refer to the constituents which suffer loss; those with subscript 2, to those which gain, and nv n\, etc., and a.,, ji'n, etc. represent the number of gram-molecules of each constitu- ent lost and gained respectively. Combining equations (G) and (11) we have as the general equation of equilibrium, PV=HTln 7„, '"-W ' *dT+BT+U, (11 o) J>1 » V i l . . . J 1 where P is the external pressure and J 'is the total change in volume. I ' i //, r, + n'2 v'2 +...)- (/?! vx -f n\ r\ +...). This equation (11 a) expresses the equilibrium of the system in regard to the particular change in question. When a system is in perfect equi- librium there will be an equation of the above form for every change or reaction which can take place independently. These equations, however, will not all be independent. For example, if both liquid and gaseous acetic acid are composed of two kinds of molecules, namely. CH3COOII and (CHgCOOH)2, then when acetic acid and its vapor are in equilib- * Of course the change must not be great enough to disturb the condition of equilibrium. The following demonstration would be somewhat more rigorous if the infinitesimal notation were used. 10 PROCEEDINGS OF TUi: AMERICAN ACADEMY. Hum, wo have four equations of the type of (11a); one referring to the equilibrium in the gaseous of the reaction, 2CH ( <>oil = 'CII (<)()ii .; another, referring to the Bame reaction in the liquid phase; a third, referring to the liquefaction or vaporization of the 'loulile molecules; the fourth, to the liquefaction or vaporization of the single molecules. (>i these f'"ur equations three are independent. Returning to the discussion of tli-' general equation of equilibrium, equation | 1 1 a), it is interesting first to determine what form it will take when we limit the system considered t<> the conditions tinder which equation (10) was deduced, namely, that the reacting Bystem shall in- clude, besides gases and dilute solutions, only " condensed w phases of definite composition. Combining equations 1 10) and (1 1), PV=BTln\«J '••+€. Vi v i ' • • • Now T", the change of volume, is due in this case to the change in vol- ume of the gaseous constituents, and will then-fore, a: constant temper- ature, be inversely proportional to P. Therefore P lis a constant, and at constant temperature, v ": <■'."''■ . . . ?•.,"- >•'.,"'= In — ~ , = C, and — — ' , = A" (a constant). (12) Vt ' C i » . . . Vi ' 0 ! ' . . . This equation is the familiar mass law of Guldberg and Waage, hut it is also, since it is not restricted to homogeneous systems, the law of the constancy of the ratio of distribution among different phases. This includes the law of Henry. That equation (12) does not represent a universally accurate law of nature is shown by comparison with equation (11") ; for it is only when I'. H, C —C, and P Fare constant that — " , is constant. If this fraction for convenience is denoted by A", which may he called, instead of the equilibrium constant, the equilibrium ratio, theu A is a function, not only of the temperature, but also of U, Jf, C^, CVJ, P V. The nature of this function may be shown from equation (11 a), R Thi K = P V- U -f T CT^~Sii d T- IIT-, . (1 3) i / p v t1 rT c — c \ LEWIS. — FREE ENERGY AND EQUILIBRIUM. 11 \(pv v rTcVl-cv \ in which e is the base of the natural system of logarithms. From this general equation of equilibrium may be easily deduced the expression for the change of the conditions of equilibrium with change of temperature. In equation (14) let, for convenience, /, t c — C 11 •* dT-H=F, (1G) equation (14) differentiated with respect to temperature then becomes d\*K_ ird\~~TJ *dUx U_ + dF\ dT ~ B\_ dT "TdT^T2 dT_\' { } Now 7^ is a function of T and also of In K. which is itself a function of T. According to the laws of partial derivatives, dF ZF ZF d\x\K. dT sr+0) T 5 where 8 signifies a partial differential. Since 77 is independent of the temperature, and pT c — C F=jT ' T x-dT-II, then, *F_cVi-cvt_ \au (orQ_c._dU Therefore, dF 1 dU ZF d\nK dT T dT ' 6luK dT ' and equation (17) becomes tfln K 1 f V T ) ldU U \dU IF d\nK~\ dT ' R\_ d~T~ TdT+~T- TdT + BlnJC dT J' and by transposition dT \ BnnKj"Rim d~T~~+T2J { } 12 ICEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. If v. ider the B] ial case of m whose volume is anchai by the reaction to which the equilibrium equation refers, then / : 0, and dT V A'"1" K) ' R r' l1'' ' il T — //. was Bhown to be con- t under the conditions which led to equations (1") and (12), when the conditions of equilibrium changed al constant temperature. In Bucb 8 F cases, therefore, — — =->- = 0, ami t h. ■ e«iiuit ion ln-comes 6 In A -/In A' U d T WT*' l"'" This equation applies to both homogeneous and heterogeneous equilib- rium. When applied to the former il is identical with the well known equation of van't Hoff, sometimes called the equation "isocbore." This equation, however, has been used to express the change of equilibrium with the temperature, m>t merely in those systems in which the reaction canses no change in volume, but in general. That this use is justifi- able in the cases for which equation (20) was developed may be readily shown. For, in systems subject to moderate pressure, the only consider- able isothermal changes in volume are those of the gaseous phase. The volume of the gases is, at a given pressure and temperature, proportional to the total number of gram-molecules of the various gases present. If, during the reaction to which the equation refers, there is a change of n gram-molecules iu the gaseous phase, thru the total change in volume is, „ nRT PV V= p , or -jr = nJi. 8F In the case under discussion, where r = 0, equation (18) may be written, rfl n A' (P 1 N sd\ \ 1 / \ '/' > ) r A ' y'2 /' V Since — ,_- = n Ii, a constant, Jin K U dT " 11 T-' LEWIS. — FREE ENERGY AND EQUILIBRIUM. 13 Similarly, for any system in general in which the pressure is not very FY great, cm ,., J will be negligible, and, for a very close approximation, equation (18) becomes dlnKf }_JZ\ JL /on dT \ EBhxKJ ~ HI'*' { > Comparing equations (20) and (21), we see that the conditions under which the above law of vau't IIolF holds true are practically the same as those under which the equation '•isotherm" of the mass law, equation (12), is true; namely, that F. and therefore Cv[ — Cv and H are, at constant temperature, independent of the volume conditions of the system. The various equations which have been here deduced from the general equations of free energy and equilibrium can be best studied further by their application to special cases of equilibrium, which we will proceed to discuss somewhat systematically. II. Application to Mono-molecular Systems. (.1.) Homogeneous Systems. 1. Gates. — The simplest conceivable case of physico-chemical equi- librium is offered by a single molecular species in a single phase in equilibrium with the external pressure. For this case the equation of condition has already been found, — equation (8), namely, RT r'\ dc d% dm p = - - + ' I r , d 1 — 1— — . v J TqJ- >' '" dv dv In the case of a perfect gas it has been shown that dcv n ''lb A dWi A . FT — ? = 0; p = 0; -j- = 0; and p = - - . (22) dv dv dv v The next case that deserves attention is that of a compressed gas. Here, also, the specific heat at constant volume is independent of the volume. This has been shown to be true up to pressures of several thousand atmospheres.* A recent work has questioned the absolute accuracy of this law. We will return to this point later. Meanwhile dc we mav consider , - = 0, and equation (8) then simplifies to (I v * Mallard and Le Chatelier, Wied.-Beibl., XIV. 364. 1-1 PBOCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. V P = T ;f- . . (28) il v a 1 From equation (9\ siuce -, " = 0, — . ... < =0, and therefore the il v a 1 term is independent of the temperature when rr is independent of the volume. Thia term represents the heal developed in the free expansion of a gas, and shows that when the internal energy of a gas increases witb increasing volume,- — -thai is, when there is a cooling effect on free expansion, — the gas will have lower than normal pressui Sine is a function of the volume alone, we may write equation (23) iu the form, '-(?-'<•>>-£■ And since is not a function of the temperature, the equation of a gas at constant volume, the " isochore," is, p = A T — B, where A and B arc constants. (25 This equation has been proved experimentally i>\ Ramsay and Young.* dUS, The values of ' for a few may be found from the por< plug experiments of Joule and Thomson. These experimenters d< mined directly, not , , hut - , , and found thai in all their ex peri- ay d ]> ments with a variety of gases and mixtures of gases that the latter quantity was independent of the actual pressure of the experim dtyi That is, at constant temperature —7— is a constant. "\\ e may write dp dv = - Jr/,1P from the gas law, neglecting the errors introdi d by the deviations from this law, which are of much smaller order than the errors of the. experi- mental results that we are using. Then, * Zdt. Phys. Chem., I. 483. LEWIS. FREE ENERGY AND EQUILIBRIUM. 15 dll RTdU do v* dp "We may now write for equation (21), ETdWL dp (2G) ,-(£-,(.,) r+*f Now, for reasons that will be obvious immediately, we will write with I' 7? perfect generality in place of F(t>), , where F(v) and f(o) are different functions of v. Then, TtT RTdWi p = - . + - . . (27) v —j(v) v2 dp v J 1 FT Now since the last term is independent of the temperature, — - — RT must be independent of the temperature. But since — — is constant dWi at constant temperature, R T — — is also independent of the volume. This quantity, therefore, is constant under all conditions to which the system is subjected. Let us write, — RT — = a, and we obtain, /■' T a ,__,, p = -. -- ... (28) v—J This equation, which is identical with the familiar formula that van der Waals has developed from purely kinetic considerations, is here shown to be directly deducible from a general thermodynamic equation, with the aid of two simple empirical observations, namely, the constancy of the specilic heat of gases at constant temperature, and the proportion- ality between the cooling effect and the fall in pressure in the free expansion of gases. Equation (28) does not define the nature of f(v), and in this respect is less explicit than the corresponding term in the equation of van der A\ aals, which is a constant, b. Nevertheless it must be borne in mind that b, the volume correction in the formula of van der Waals, may only be regarded as constant when the volume is large, and that it also is in reality an undetermined function of the volume. 1 i BEDINGS OP THK A.MEWCAN A.< A.DEMT. 'I In- constancy of the quantity, li I , or a. we have <>iilv proved 1 • ,1 p • l in the cases of th< which were experimented upon l>y Joule and Thomson, and through limited range of pressure. However, Bince the constancy of this term u iblished for nil the gases tried, we may assume that the same result would have been obtained with any other b through the same limits of pressure. It cannol be taken for ated that this constancy will hold at all pressures. In fact, the inter- pretation given by van der Wan)-- for the quantity ". as the iutermoleo- ular attraction, would lead to the idea that it must be a function of the volume. Otherwise the attraction between two molecules would lie independent of their distance apart. The variation of a with the vol- ume will be mentioned later. Van der Waals considered apriori that a would not depend upon the temperature. But it is evident from page II that it i- a constant onfy if dc — — - = 0. Although the change <>f specific heat with moderate change of dv & i & volume is negligible, the change through wide limits of volume is proba- bly always a measurable quantity, as will be shown later. dJS, Since the quantity a has been defined as equal to — II T , we should he able to determine its value from the data of Joule and Thomson. A calculation which is in effect the same as this has already been made by van der Waals,* who calculated from the values of a and b, given by experiment, the cooling effect that should be observed in free expansion. This cooling effect, in Centigrade degrees, for a change of one atmosphere in pressure is given below, as calculated by van der Waal-- and as determined by the averages of Joule and Thomson's results : — Temp. Ccls. Calculated. Obi Air 17 . 0.265 0.259 u 90 0.18 0.206 C02 18 0.9 1.15 .. 91.5 0.64 0.708 The agreement, although not close, is very satisfactory considering the Uncertainty of the experimental results. 2. Liquids. — The experimental proof of the continuity between the liquid and gaS60U8 state's BhoWS that we must regard them as identical, * Kontinuit&t der F. und <;. Zustand, p. L16. LEWIS. — FREE ENERGY AND EQUILIBRIUM. 17 and any formula that is universally applicable to one state must also be applicable to the other. Thus all the equations already developed for gases apply without change to simple liquids (having a constant molecu- lar weight) under the restrictions already mentioned, namely, that in the equations RT dW. a RT a V = tt^t ; — and p — v —/(<■) dv v — b ■2 » and — ; are independent of the temperature only when —-^ = 0, dv v'2 dv that a has not been proved to be a constant in all cases but may be a function of the volume, and that b is not necessarily a constant with changing volume, although it is in all cases independent of the temper- ature. Regarding the question of the variability of ev with the volume in the case of liquids we have no direct experimental evidence, but indirectly it can be shown that cv is practically constant, for Ramsay and Young (page 14) found that equation (25), p = A T — B, applies to liquids dcv as well as to gases, and this equation can only be true when -—■ = 0.* dc If — - is not equal to zero, then the general equation (8) must be dv used, * v dv dv J rQ 1 dv this, differentiated with respect to T, v constant, gives dp E d]% _dr*\ r^^ir.^v dT~ r dv dvdT+JToTdvl + dv' Since - — T7h= -r^- from equation (9), dv dl dv dp R d% fridc fTdcvdT df-'^~~dV + jTafdv~dT-C+jT0~dvr^> (2J} dp where C is a constant; while from equation (25) ~Trp= A. Notwithstanding this evidence for the approximate constancy of the specific heat, the experimental work of Joly f on this subject seems to * Compare Nernst, Theor. Chem.. p. 202. t Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc, 182A, 73; Proc. Roy. Soc, XLVII. 218; LV. 390. VOL. XXXV. — 2 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. v that the value of ct in a ira~ does change considerably through wide limits of volume. He baa been the first to Bucceed in measuring directly the Bpecific heal of g constant volume. The values were deter- mined by means of bis differential Bteam calorimeter, u method which us tn give ven accurate and consistent results. The results Bhowed that the Bpecific heat at constant volume could be ezp in the following formula?, For Air, c,. = .17151 -f .02788p, For CO . c .1650 • .2125 p - .3400 p\ where p is the density in grams per cubic centimeter. According to these formulae the specific heat at constant volume at atmospheric pres- sure differs from that at infinite volume by only two hundredths of one per cent in the case of air, and by three tenths of one per cent in the c of carbon dioxide. Between the Bpecific heats of the gasi - at atm pheric pressure and in a highly compressed or liquid condition the change is much greater. For example, the value given by the formula for '■ in the case of carbon dioxide is about twice as great at the critical volume and about three and one half times as great in the liquid at 0 I as the value for the gas at ordinary pressure. Further evidence of the change of r, between the liquid and gaseous condition will be given later. In these variations in the specific heat we find the probable cau many of the deviations from the equation of van der Waals that have Keen noticed. It may be found necessary, therefore, in order to obtain a more exact equation of condition, to return to the more general equation < E rt rn dCv d% dm p = - + J I ,,. -, dl — T— — . 1 ?( \ in which the value of ," ■ contains not only the function for volume ,1 v correction, but also a term depending upon the value chosen for the lower limit of integration, 7',. [f we write g-JW, twn 7'- /-v, r= -r_'-'M r-r.n r. where f{ v) denotes the Bame function of v that has been used in equations < 27 ) and { 28 I, namely . the quantity b in the \ an der \\ aals formula, and / another function of v. Now ' is practically independent of mperature and the equation may be written LEWIS. — FREE ENERGY AND EQUILIBRIUM. 19 Rt t dcv am P = v _/(0 ~ Tln Y0 77 ~ F {v) T--d~o' It is probable from the derivation of -^"(r) tna*; tms *s a function of the same general nature as the preceding term, and will vary with the volume d c„ ' . . .„ . „ d c„ IS in the same way that -r-^ does. Then, since the coefficient of J dv dv not a volume function, we may write, not as a complete expression, but as an approximation one step nearer the truth than the equations pre- viously obtained, the following isothermal equation of condition, RT rf® dcv p = - -rr\ — / — ^ c -j— ' (30 ") v —J (r) (i v d v or, after the type of the van der Waals equation, RT a dcv /OA7. J v — b v dv where c is a third constant to be determined by experiment, and which differs with different temperatures. Equation (29) gives the corresponding equation isochore, which may be written for moderate ranges of temperature, These equations, (30) and (31), should furnish a more exact statement of the behavior of j and liquids than the equation of van der Waals or the corresponding ones developed in this paper. Since the degree of d c accuracy is not known in the values of -7-^ at present determined, I d v have not yet attempted an application of these equations. Returning to the consideration of f(y) or b, it may be stated at once that this quantity is always h function of the volume and decreases with decreasing volume, for usually the total volume in the liquid state is less than b calculated for the gaseous state, and if b were constant then v — b would have a negative value, which would be meaningless, v — b must always have a positive value. The way in which the quantity a varies with the volume cannot be predicted. If it represents the attraction between the molecules, then it will vary inversely with the volume if the attraction between the molecules varies inversely with the distance. But since the attraction observed is probably the resultant of forces attractive and repulsive acting between 20 PROCEEDINGS OF Till: AMERICAN ACADEMY. the molecules, we cannot say a priori how it will change with the dis- tance between the molecules. In fad it i- not accessary to suppose that dWi a or must always bave a positive value. Joule and Thomson I r found in the case of hydrogen a rise of temperature instead of the usual cooling effect en free expansion. This would indicate a Bmall negative value of ''. corresponding to a preponderance «>t' repulsive Force between the molecules. The unreliability of the experimental data, however, pr< clu lea certainty <>u this point. Jn place of the equation RT dm RT a P ~v -/('•) " dv' P == v - b ~ ' the equation of van der Waals, can be applied to liquids with the under- standing that a and b are not constants hut volume functions to be deter- mined. In all liquids p is small compared with tlie other two terms. "When p = 0, if we represent the volume by r0) R T a A= : (82) but since the volume of liquids is only slightly changed by changing the external pressure, r0 — b will not differ materially from V — b at atmospheric pressure. We may write, then, as the equation for liquids at atmospheric pressure, RT _ a v — b f- ' From this equation may be found the values of a and h when the vol- ume of a liquid is known at two different temperatures. Prom the values thus found it should he theoretically possible to calculate the com- pressibility of the liquid at constant temperature. Thus by differentiating the van der Waals equation we obtain the reciprocal of the COmpressi- biHty' dP= RT o!L practically this method fails on account of the fact that the difference between the last two terms is very small compared with their total val- ues, and therefore any error in either of these terms is multiplied enor- mously in the determination of . ' dv The values of a and l> obtained from equation (33) will be of service LEWIS. FREE ENERGY AND EQUILIBRIUM. 21 later in discussing certain relations between the liquid and gaseous state. The way in which a and b change with varying conditions of a liquid is illustrated by the following values, calculated for fluor-benzol, from the data given by Young.* For the values at high pressures p is not negli- gible compared with ~x, equation (33) will not give exact results, and recourse must be had to the original equation of van der Waals. v represents molecular volume in litres, p is expressed in atmospheres, and b and a in units corresponding. V b a 097 .00075 11.6 111 .0007S 12.8 127 .00081 13.5 157 .00088 15.0 225 .00110 17.9 232 .00111 1.S.2 270 .00126 19.7 270 .00128 19.9 By extrapolation from these val- ues we find for v .270 the critical volume 270 From the critical data a and b are determined to be 270 It is evident that the values of a and b obtained from the data for the thermal expansion of a liquid are entirely consistent with those deter- mined from the critical data. The change of l> with the volume is well shown by the figures, and is typical. Regarding the variation in a, how- ever, it is not possible to say whether it is due to change in volume or change in temperature, or both. It must be emphasized that in all the preceding work on gases and liquids we are dealing with substances composed of a single molecular species. Gases and liquids in which dissociation or association occur are not within the scope of this section. (B.) Heterogeneous Systems. 1. Gases and Liquids. — The simplest case of heterogeneous equilib- rium in a system composed of a single molecular species is that between a simple liquid and its vapor. We may apply to this case the general equation of equilibrium (11 a). If we consider the specific heat at con- * Phil. Mag., XXXIII. 153. 22 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. st.nit volume the Bame in the 1 i < i » 1 1 « 1 and it- vapor, the equation assui the Bimpler form R Tin-'- =PY- T - 11 l\ (84) where vt and <•_ represent the molecular volumes in the liquid and gase- respectively. From the previous section we know that the term // will enter simply as a volume correction. The exact manner in which it so enters may be best Bhown by finding the free energj <>f the I icess of liquefaction from the work that might be done if the vapor were compressed isothermally and continuously until it reached the liquid condition. This work would be equal to J'/> dv, andjo can be found in terms of v from the equation of condition which holds good throughout tin- process. From equation (27) rt dm P" V-f{v) dv ' Therefore A = Jj'h-=£y-Ar)d>--f IX R T The integration of — dv is only possible when the form of J is known; but sincey(^) does not change greatly, and since it is only an important part of the expression when y is small, it may be regarded as a constant, and equal to the value of f{ v ) in the liquid state, or l>\. This value may be found from equation (33). Then the above equation becomes A = U T\u '±^ + u, < i — Ol and for equilibrium from equation "(11), A = P V. R Tin V*~\l = P V- U. (85) P] — ol Since hx is but small compared with va, we may replace va — 6j by Sine- /' represents the change of internal energy in vaporization, and /' V the externa] work, — /' + P V will be equal to the ordinary beat of vaporization per gram-molecule, including the external work. This whole quantity may be designated by L. Then BT\n— ZL-szL. (86) < i — h LEWIS. FREE ENERGY AND EQUILIBRIUM. 23 This equation of equilibrium, which is at the same time a simple for- mula for the heat of vaporization, has been deduced for all cases iu which there is no change in the molecular weight or in the specific heat at con- stant volume during vaporization. Let us, in the following table, com- pare for a few substances the experimentally determined values of L with those calculated from equation (36). R is in such units that L will be in gram-calories, and equals 1.98. The values of bx are obtained from the coefficient of thermal expansion of the liquid by equation (33). For the value of v2, the molecular volume of the vapor, in the cases in which they have not been experimentally determined, I have used the volume which a grain-molecule of a perfect gas would have under the same conditions. The error thus introduced will be negligible, for a large error in v2 or in i\ — bl will affect only slightly the value of L. Temp. C. 1 i\ '-, r? Z (cale.) L (obs.) Ether . . . . 35 .1062* .080 24.82 4,200 6,600 § Benzol . . 80 .0961 .065 28.87 4,800 7,200 || Methyl formiate . 40 .0627 1 .047 2-".. 02$ 4,500 6,900 f Methyl propiouat o 80 .1047$ .077 27.50 $ 4,800 7,400** The results are very interesting, the calculated values being in each case about two thirds of the observed. The explanation of the lack of agreement must lie in the failure of the substances to comply with the conditions named above. AVe have no reason to suspect, in the case of all these substances, the polymerization of the molecules in the liquid state; We are therefore again led to the belief that the specific heat at constant volume is, in general, different in the liquid and gaseous states. Moreover, I think that it is possible to show this in another, entirely independent way. The specific heat at constant pressure of a substance is the sum of two quantities, one representing the internal change in energy and the other the external, that is, %), + *(£)/ * Kopp: Jahresber. der Cliem., 1860. t Pisati, Paterno: Jahresber, 1874. % Young, Thomas: Phil. Mag, XXXIV. 508. § Brix : Pogg. Ann, LV. 341. || Wirtz: Wied. Ann, XL. 438. 1 For 32.9°, Andrews: Pogg. Ann, LXXV. 501. ** Schiff : Lieb. Ann, CCXXXIV. 338. 2-4 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. where f j and ( ] represent the change of internal energy and volume respectively, with a change of temperature at constant pres- sure, P. \•' that <>f the solid or ,• • , '/In '•' . . , ..... ... '/ In '• . liquid. , „ is entirely negligible compared with — --,., , and equa- tion (20 1 heroines ,/],, ,. jj d T '' ~~ R 7,J ' RT Since v = , where j> is t lie vapor pressure, V In r = — In p -f- In Ji + hi 1\ and dlu v = — d\u j> + T. „ , . . dlnp U 1 -U+ RT Substituting, j-^ = — -^yo + -y,= ^-ya — • As on page 22, let -U+ R T= L, then '/In /> _ L d T R '/'- ' which is the familiar expression for the vapor pressure curve. A c pleir expression for the vapor pressure in the case of liquids to which equation (36) applies, if the vapor approximates a perfect gas, may be derived as follows : l ^_ JL <■' -b'~ R T' R T Substitute - - for v. and V R T L R T (±\ ^-fiT^b'rRr or /M/-i';=e ' R T whence p = (y' - V) «(&) LEWIS. — FREE ENERGY AND EQUILIBRIUM. 27 III. Dimolecular Systems. Solutions. — The simplest case of a system composed of two molecular species is one in which the two species are chemically neutral, only acting on each other by the process of solution. Before taking up such systems it will be convenient to consider briefly, in the light of the results of the last section, a question concerning the general equation of equilibrium, namely, the nature of the function //. In equation (5), which expresses the free energy of a simple constituent of a system, the quantity %}x entered as an integration constant, and nothing was known regarding its nature except that it must be indepen- dent of the temperature. After differentiating equation (5), it was found / ill that — r — was a function which could represent in the later equations a vx l the volume correction corresponding to the quantity b in the equation of van der Waals. Since this was true in the widely differing states of gas aud liquid, it is probable that in any state in which the molecule itself is not changed - "' may be expressed as such a volume correction, rep- resenting the diminution of the space available for the free motion of the molecules, due to the space actually occupied by the molecules themselves. If, therefore, we subtract from It}, the term representing the volume correction, there will remain a quantity which will be constant under all conditions when the molecule itself does not change, and whose value will depend only on the nature of the substance considered. We will use ft hereafter to denote this quantity. The volume correction enters in the most general way in the consideration of a phase containing a number of molecular species. "When we consider each species, the volume must be corrected for the volume actually occupied by its own molecules and also for that occupied by the other molecules present. The volume with the first correction may be expressed as in the van der Waals equation bv v — b, where b is the correction due to the space occupied by its own molecules. The volume may be corrected for the space occupied by the other kinds of molecules by multiplying the actual volume by a factor, r, representing the fraction of any volume of the mixture which is left available for the free motion of the molecules of the particular species under consideration. The nature of this species should have no effect on the quantity r. We have, therefore, for the corrected volume of a sub- stance dissolved in any mixture the value r (v — b), where r depends solely on the nature of the solvent, b on that of the solute. *28 PROCKEDINGS OF the American academy. In taking up the subject <>f BolatioDB it will be necessary to consider their probable nature. Although there La Bome evidence that the phe- nomenoD of solution is accompanied by a molecular change, t ) j « - prepon- derance of evidence seems to 1"- in favor of the theory that the molecule <>i a Bubstanoe in Bolutiou is free, and not combined in any chemical way with the molecules of the solvent. If this is the case, certain proper) oi the Bolute Bhould remain unchanged regardless of the nature of the solvent In the following work we will assume that, for a dissolved substauce, the quantity h as defined above and the quantity c, will be the same in any solvent. If this supposition, which seems eminently proba- ble, proves to be not entirely correct, then the equations developed below will only be approximations to the truth. It is to be hoped that in any case their application will conversely give us information concerning the nature of Bolution. otic Pressure. — The simplest phenomenon of a homogeneous so- lution is that of osmotic pressure, which may be determined in the fol- lowing way. The change of free emrg\ on addition of an infinitesimal amount of solvent to a solution containing one BTam-moli rule of Bolufr equal to the sum of the changes of free energy in the two constituents of the system. From equation (5), if —2 = 0, and "' becomes the volume correction, which, as is shown by Nernst,* is lor each constituent, in the case of osmotic pressure, only the correction for the space occupied by the molecules of the constituent in question, d A = -^-r dvx - dll, + " - \ dva -,/U . where the Bubscripl 1 refers to the Bolute, subscript 2 to the solvent. dvl} the change in molecular volume of the solute, is also the change in volume of the system, and dA =pdvn where p is the osmotic pressure. Therefore irr ,in , » /rr ,i,-, where represents the heat produced by the addition of d '•, of the solvent. Except in cases of solution of such great concentration thai the molecular volume of the solute and that of the Bolvent are not greatly different, : is entirely negligible, and the equation for osmotic pres- sure becomes * Theor. (hem., p. 209. (References to thi6 book are to the first edition.) LEWIS. — FREE ENERGY AND EQUILIBRIUM. 29 RT dWi P = 1 + -r- • (42) v — b dv Except that v represents the heat of dilution instead of the heat of r dv free expansion, equation (42) is identical with the equation obtained for gases. The comparison of this formula with experiment is not possible with the experimental data at present available, since, as far as I know, the heat of dilution has been determined only in the case of electrolytes, and in these cases a complication is introduced, due to the heat of disso- ciation. An abstract * has just come to hand of a recent work by Kistiakovski,t in which he shows that the lowering of the freezing point, which is proportional to the osmotic pressure, is, in a concentrated solu- tion, equal to the lowering calculated for an ideal solution plus a term that is proportional to the heat of dilution. This is the result that would be given by equation (42). Kistiakovski shows that there is perfect agreement between the lowering of the freezing point calculated in this way and that found by experiment. It seems questionable, however, whether his application of the formula to electrolytes, neglecting the heat of dissociation, is justifiable. Unfortunately I have not access to his original paper. The osmotic work obtainable from the change of a gram-molecule of a solute from a solution of one concentration to one of another concentra- tion may be found by direct application of equation (6), or by integration of p dv, where p may be expressed in terms of v by means of equation (42). Then A = R Tin ^—, + U. (43) For all except very concentrated solutions b may be neglected, and A = R Tin ^ + U. (43a) Cady % has recently shown that in a galvanic cell in which the total result of the current is the passage of a certain amount of a metal from an amalgam of one concentration to one of another, RT. v2 ■k = In — h q , n e0 Vi * Chem. Centr. Blat., 1899, I. 89. t Jour. Russ. Phys. Chem. Ges., XXX. 576. t Jour, of Phys. Chem., II. 551, 1898. 30 PROCEEDINGS OF Till: AMERICAN ACADEMY. where - ie the electromotive for ind <-., are the molecular volui i>t' the metal in the two amalgams, and y is the heat <»i the process in trical units. From this, //»„- = A' Tin ''- + !\ ''1 hut ne0w is the electrical work per gram-molecule, which is equal to tlir change of free energy, Bince the cell is ;i reversible one. Therefore A = a < ., -, or A = R 7' In ''-' +• U. '■1 which is identical with (48 ")• When we consider solutions of all concentrations, varying from the state where oik' of the constituents of tin- phase i- in grea( excess to the Btate where tlie other constituent is in <_rr»:it exc . for < sample, when water is added continuously to a definite amount of alcohol, then tin- form which the osmotic pressure curve assumes i- very complicated. Here equation (41) must be used, and , - and will both be com- ii /-, 1/ /-, plex functions oi r,. may be looked upon as the sum of two quanti- ties, one due to the attraction of unlike, the other to the attraction of like molecules. Concerning the manner in which the former will change we are ignorant. The latter, however, according to reasoning exactly similar to that which led van der Waal 8 to the term -, may he shown to be inversely proportional to the square of the volume, or equal to 2 " . We see from this that equation < ! 1 > is at least of the third degree in »v Bredig ' and Noyesf have each proposed a general formula for osmotic pressure based upon kinetic reasoning. Both these equations are of the third degree in v. The osmotic pressure curve represented by equation 1 1 1 1 is not necessarily, therefore. Bingle valued. There maj be 1 v than one volume corresponding to one osmotic pres- sure. This is a further an logj between solutions and gases. In fact, a number of Cases are known in which the osmotic pre.-sure may he shown to he the same at two different concentrations, namely, the c of liquids that are mutually soluble to a limited extent, thus forming two phases in equilibrium with each other. It is evident that in order to * Zeit Phys. Chem., IV. Hi. 1 Zeit. Phys. Chem., V. CD. LEWIS. — FREE ENERGY .AND EQUILIBRIUM. 31 preserve the equilibrium the osmotic pressure, not only of one but of each of the constituents, must be the same in the two phases. No similar phe- nomena have ever been observed in the case of solids dissolved in liquids, but it seems not impossible that such may be found. Then a solid might have two different solubilities in a solvent at one temperature, correspond- in"' to two concentrations in which the osmotic pressure would be equal to the solution pressure. Distribution of a Solute bit ween tivo Solvents. — The equation of equi- librium when a substance is distributed between two solvents may be found directly from equation (llt/j, simplified by the considerations advanced on page 27, namely, PV=RT\n'Ari"-^-+ U. (44) r, i »j - b) In all cases of this sort P I 'is entirely negligible, and 7?n./V 1^+^=0, (45) where v2 and i\ are the molecular volumes of the solute in the two sol- vents ; b is the volume correction for the solute molecules; 1\ is the volume correction for the first solvent, and r2 that for the second. U is the heat given off when one grain-molecule of the solute passes from one solvent to the other. it equals the difference between the heats of solution of the solute in the two solvents. In all ordinary solutions b is negligible, and the equation becomes ir/'h/- ''- + U=0. (46) Since this is the general equation of distribution of a substance between two solvents, it will hold true in the special case in which the solutions are in equilibrium with the solute in the solid form. If we represent by Si and So the solubilities in gram-molecules of the solute in one litre of each of two solvents, then sx = - and s., = — , and equation (4 4) may be written RTlTi7jJ}+ U=0; (47) or if V is the heat of solution in the first solvent, U" in the second, 32 PROCEEDINGS OF T1IK AMERICAN ACADEMY. or /mn-+ uf = /rr\nS: i XT'. (48) This equation permits the calculation of the solubility of a substance in any solvent it the solubility in any other solvenl is known and the beat of solution in each Bolvent, or the difference between these hi ats of soln- tion, and if the ratio of the volume corrections for the two solvents is know ii. The heat of solution may he found from the change of solubility with change of temperature by the well known equation '/,M'^ r , (49) which maybe obtained by direct application of equation (20), since the conditions for which (20) was obtained arc all fulfilled in thi- case, and siuce the molecular volume, /'0, of the solid may be considered constant. K=v0S; In A'= lnr0 + Ins ; d\uK=d\us. Uniting equations (48) and (49), RTln i + R T* -?1 = R Tin - + R T^p- , r± a 1 r2 d J. rfln^ or ln-x+ r_^-ln^ = 0. (50) s2 a 1 r2 "When the values of r are known for the various solvents, if we know the solubility of a substance in two solvents and the temperature coefficient of the solubility in one, we may find the corresponding coefficient in the other solvent. I hope soon to verify these formulae experimentally, and to determine the values of r for some common solvents. It will be inter- esting to see how r compares with the value of v — b found for the solvents by equation (33). IV. Polymolecular Systems. (A.) Homogeneous Systems. In accordance with the considerations advanced on page 27, the general equation of equilibrium (1 1 a) may be put into the form LEWIS. — FREE ENERGY AND EQUILIBRIUM. 33 where h is the sum of all the ft terms, and ( Cvl — Cv2) and h have the same value regardless of the nature of the solvent. If the total change in the number of molecules be n, then the quantity r will occur to the power of n, and Only in the case of equilibrium between gases is P V considerable, for other cases P Fmay be neglected. For equilibrium in liquid phases, if we represent by k the equilibrium ratio with the volume corrections / may be re- placed by U -\- WLX. Then since &,, «HXi , crj, f)2, are constants at con- stant temperature, A = C + (BThirva) + IT, where C is a constant including the various terms mentioned above. If R T we replace r2 by — , where p is the osmotic pressure of the ions, we may write A = C + (R Tin RT)-R Tin t + U=c-RTlnP + U. r r If for convenience we write c = R 7' In l\ IP A = - RTln r £+ u, LEWIS. — FREE ENERGY AND EQUILIBRIUM. 35 or, since A = v e0 tt, where v is the valence of the ion, e0 the electricity carried by a grani-inolecule of a univalent ion, and tt the electromotive force, then RTlpU ■k — — In - — H , (oo) v eQ r P v e0 v ' in which P differs from the electrolytic solution pressure of Nernst in that it is at constant temperature the same, no matter what the solvent may be in which the ions are dissolved, while the value of the Nernst solution pressure holds good only for water solutions, r represents the particular volume correction of the solvent. An interesting type of cell is one in which two similar electrodes are in contact with solutions of an electrolyte containing the electrode ion in two different solvents ; as, for example, zinc, zinc sulphate in water, zinc sulphate in alcohol, zinc. "When a current passes through this cell, the total change consists in the transfer of zinc sulphate from one solvent to another. The free energy change in a cell of this type may be found from equation (G), modified as in equation (46), A = liTlnr\V*V\+ U, (56) rx vx vx v ' where i\ and vx are the molecular volumes of the positive and negative ions respectively, in the first solvent ; v2 and v./, in the second solvent. Now Vi = g i\ , where g is a whole number or a simple fraction ; also, c./ = gv2. Therefore, A = PT\nr-^\+ tf=2imn^+ U. (57) rx-i\- rxvx If m represents the number of gram-molecules transferred from one solvent to the other when the quantity of electricity, ve0, passes through the cell, then v e0 tt = 2 m ft Tin — 2 + m U. Let m U = q, then tt = ftTla-^-^ ^-f-— . (08) v e0 r± vx v e0 From the equation of Helmholtz, ^tlT+JL, (59) dT v e0 and comparing (58) and (59) it is evident that d -K 2»i„, r2 v2 dT ve0 txvx' 3G PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. In an investigation which I am now making on cells of the above tvj>o I have attempted a verification of these equation! in the following way. ('hoo.-ini: two solvents in which the value of In- maybe neglected. r nanu'lv, water and a mixture <>f alcohol ami water, then if /•._. be made equal to Pj, '., should equal zero. Unfortunately the dissociation in alcohol-water mixtures of the salt9 that are available for our purp has not hitherto been determined. If the two solutions are made up with equivalent amounts of the original salt, then the concentration of the ions in the alcohol-water solution will he less than that in the water solution on account of the greater dissociative power of water. In the following cell-, made up in tin- way. we should expect, therefore, a -mall temperature coefficient, and moreover, since the electrode in contact with the water solution is found to he negative, this temperature coefficient Bhould he negative. The following tahle gives the results ohtained for the cells : — (1) Zinc; zinc sulphate, tenth normal, in water and fifty per cent ethyl alcohol. (2) Zinc: zinc sulphate, tenth normal, in water and fifty per cent methyl alcohol. (3) Cadmium; cadmium sulphate, tenth normal, in water and sixty per cent ethyl alcohol. (4) Thallium; thallium sulphate, hundredth normal, in water and twenty-seven per cent ethyl alcohol. (5) Thallium; thallium sulphate, hundredth normal, in water and forty per cent methyl alcohol. (1) Temp. C 30 0 7T .013 .017 r/rr —.00018 (2) 23 0 .017") .0480 -.00002 (3) 28 0 .046 .049 -.00011 (4) A 23 0 .o-_> 12 .0212 .00000 B 24 0 .0216 .ni'18 -.00001 C 30 0 .0242 .0246 -.ooooi (5) 24 10 .03*0 .0380 .00000 LEWIS. — FREE ENERGY AND EQUILIBRIUM. 37 In order to determine the actual dissociation in the above cases con- ductivity determinations were made. I found in the case of zinc and cadmium sulphates that the degree of the dissociation could not be found from conductivity determinations on account of peculiarities which will be discussed in a later paper. It was found, however, that in the case of cadmium sulphate the dissociation is at least five or six times as great in water as in fifty per cent methyl alcohol. In the first three cases, therefore, the value of is undoubtedly great enough to account for the values of -77=, found. a 1 On the other hand, in the case of thallium sulphate it was found possi- ble to determine the degree of dissociation from the conductivity data. In dilute solutions the dissociation in water and in fifty per cent methyl alcohol was found to be practically the same. This is in complete agree- ment with the result in case (5), where the temperature coefficient was zero. In case (5), then, the only one in which all the data are available, equation (60) is thoroughly verified. I hope to publish soon more com- plete results on this subject. I wish to express my deep obligation to Professor Theodore W. Richards for his encouragement and friendly criticism of this work. Summary. I. (a) A general equation for change of free energy is developed. (b) From this is derived a general expression for physico-chemical equilibrium in homogeneous or heterogeneous systems, which includes as special cases the law of isothermal mass-action and the laws of constancy of distribution coefficients among several phases. (c) For change of equilibrium with change of temperature a formula is derived of which the equation of van't Hoff is a specialized form. II. (a) The application of the general equations to gases yields an equation of condition which with the aid of two familiar empirical obser- vations is shown to be identical with the equation of van der Waals. (b) This equation of condition is applied to liquids in detail and special cases are discussed. (e) A more complete equation is proposed, recognizing the variability of specific heat with changing volume. (d) From the general equation a formula is obtained for equilibrium -s PBOCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. between a liquid and it-; vapor. Heats of vaporization are calculated from this formula. (e) The formula is inapplicable in cases where the specific heat at constant volume differs in the liquid and gaseous Btate A method of calculating these specific heats is given. i i ) The formula applies perfectly in the case of mercury. The vapor pressure curve is discussed. III. (a) Application of the general equations to solutions leads to simple expressions for osmotic pressure and osmotic work in concentrated solutions. (b) Equations are given for the distribution of a solute between two solvents, and for the relation between the solubility curves of a Bubstance in different solvents. IV. The influence of the nature of thi' solvent upon general homoge- neous equilibrium is determined and formulas are given. V. (a) The general equation for free energy is applied to electro- chemistry. For the single potential difference between a metal and an electrolyte an equation is proposed which is an amplification of the equa- tion of Nernst. {I) Galvanic cells in which two solvents take part are discussed. Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Vol. XXXV. No. 2. — August, 1899. SHORT STUDIES OF NORTH AMERICAN TRYXALINJE. By Samtel H. Scudder. SHORT STUDIES OF NORTH AMERICAN TRYXALIN.E. By Samuel H. Scudder. Received June 6, 1899. Presented June 14, 1899. The review of a large series of Tryxalinoe collected on the Pacific coast in 1897 by Mr. A. P. Morse, and kindly placed unreservedly in my hands, has provoked a re-examination of the species in a number of genera scattered through the group. I have published elsewhere (Can. Ent., XXXI. 177) a review of our species of Orphulella, and here gather together other miscellaneous studies, all referring to the Tryxalinas. 1. The United States Speciks of Mermiria. A recent study of our Mermiria} has brought to light a couple of new species of Mermiria, and some slight extension of the known range of some of the other species, so that I venture to publish the following notes and descriptions, with a new table of the species, based primarily on that published by McNeill. Table of the United States Species of Mermiria. a1. Head shorter than pronotum, or, if (rarely) as long, then the greatest width of the fastigium is greater than its length beyond narrowest part of vertex; last ventral segment of male bluntly acuminate. b1. Fastigium less prominent and blunter, its greatest hreadth being consider- ably greater than its length beyond narrowest part of vertex, especially in the female. c1. Stouter, the hind femora shorter, not reaching the tips of the tegmina in the female ; disk of pronotum, in female, hardly or not more than twice as long as greatest breadth ; head with a broad occipital fuscous band. texana Brun. c.2 Slenderer, the hind femora longer, reaching the tips of the tegmina in the female ; disk of pronotum distinctly, generally much, more than twice as long a° greatest breadth ; head with a narrow occipital band or none. bivittata Serv. t2. Fastigium of vertex more prominent and angulate, its greatest breadth being scarcely greater, even in the female, than its length beyond narrowest part of vertex ; disk of pronotum considerably more than twice as long as greatest breadth intertexta sp. nov. 1- PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. «-. Head as long ae pronotum; fastigium at least a* long beyond narrowest part of *erti reme breadth; last ventral segment of male more produced uixl Bomewbal acutely acuminate. Bead with a relatively narrow or no occipital median fuscous stripe, which never nearly equals the width of the fastigium. <■'. Fastigium triangular, tbi converging in a nearly straight or only Blightly curved line, the tip narrowly rounded a Scudd, t'-'. Fastigium semielliptical, the Bides converging with a well rounded curve, the tip very broadly and bluntly rounded neomexicana Thorn. /.-'. Head with a broad fuscous occipital stripe, almost or quite as broad as tlie greatest width of the fastigium. <•>. Fastigium Bemielliptical and Btrongly rounded apically, tlie sides curved • . vigilant Bp. nov. <•'-. Fastigium acutely triangular, with the sides straight and the tip hardly blunt vustraln McNeill. Mermiria texana Brun. I have seen no male of this species. My specimens come from Col- orado, 7000', Morrison, and Coahuila, Mex., Palmer. It was originally described from Texas and the State of Durango, Mex. McNeill i credits it to Arizona. Mermiria bivittata (Sen-.). I am inclined to think that Brunei- \s M. maculipi nnia must he regarded as at most only a variety of this species ; I have seen it from Texas and Colorado only, and all are females. McNeill accepted it with doubt, and my maculate specimens, including one named by Brunei-, vary in the breadth and arcuation of the fastigium to the same extent as do those undoubtedly to be referred to bivittata. Tins is our commonest species, and is wide spread. From east of the Mississippi I have specimens from Georgia only, but numerous speci- mens from Nebraska, Kansas, Colorado, Utah, Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas, and some immature specimens, which may belong here, from Iowa, collected by Allen. McNeill also credits it to Virginia, Illinois, and Nevada. Morse found it common in New Mexico on bunch grass, but it was rather shy and flew freely. Mermiria intertexta sp- nov. In color, markings, and size this species exactly resembles the preced- ing ; in all specimens seen, however, there is a slender niediodorsal fuscous -trip i head and pronotum. The head is distinctly shorter than the pronotum, and the fastigium in both sexes is BCarcely broader SCUDDER. — NORTH AMERICAN TRYXALIN^E. 43 than its length beyond the narrowest part of the vertex, being triangular (<£ ) or subtriangular ( 9 )> with straight (J1) or arcuate (9) sides and blunt apex, the margins slightly ascending, and with faint or no median carina. The median carina of the pronotum is pronounced throughout, the lateral carinas feeble, and the disk of the pronotum considerably more than twice as long as broad, especially in the male, the transverse snlci rather feebly impressed. The tegmina reach about to the tip of the abdomen and are immaculate, with the base of the median area iu- fuscated and bordered by a submarginal costal flavous streak, as fre- quently in M. bivittata. The hind femora are slender, and reach as far back as the tegmina in both sexes. Last ventral segment of male a little more elongate and gradually acuminate than in 31. bivittata. Length of body, g, 38 mm., 9 56 mm.; pronotum, g, G mm., 9, 8.0 mm. ; tegmina, g, 27 mm., 9, 39 mm. ; hind femora, <* , 21.5 mm., 9,31 mm. 2 J , 2 9 • Georgia, Morrison ; Eagle Pass, Tex., Schott. Mermiria alacris Scudd. I have seen specimens only from Georgia, Morrison ; Sandford, Fla., Frazer ; and Dallas, Tex., Boll. Mermiria neomexicana (Thom.). My specimens come only from Pueblo, Col., Aug. 30, 31 ; Dallas, Boll, and Bosque Co., Tex., Belfrage. McNeill says it occurs from Wyoming to New Mexico and eastward to Georgia. I suspect his Georgia reference may be due to my remarks in describing M. alacris, where I speak of the present species as occurring in Georgia, but I now think that was a mistake. Mermiria vigilans sp. nov. Dull olivaceous with purplish and flavous markings, particularly the former. The head has a broad mediodorsal purplish fuscous stripe, broadening a little in passing backward, and as broad, at least poste- riorly, as the fastigium ; this is separated by a narrow flavous stripe from a broad and equal light purplish postocular stripe which continues over the upper part of the lateral lobes of the pronotum ; below this the geme are olivaceous clouded with flavous, while the face is infuscated. The pronotum is dull flavo-olivaceous, the disk often with a faint pur- plish median stripe, and the lateral lobes narrowly margined below with 44 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. purplish, the latter color in the male often suffusing the whole; tegmina green, the median area, especially near bane, more or less ferruginous ; hind femora Savons, infuscated above; bind til »i;i • dull red. Fastigium distinctly longer beyond the narrowest part of the vertex than the extreme breadth, semielliptical, the sides straighter in the male than in tin- female, very bluntly rounded at tip, especially in the female, the margins scarcely ascending but plane, while the centre is rotundate with no Bign of median carina. Disk of pronotum about twice .a- i a> broad, the median carina Bbarp throughout, the lateral carina' distinct but not elevated, the posterior margin very broadly rounded. Tegmina reaching the tip of the abdomen. Hind femora very Blender, reaching the tip of the tegmina. Last ventral segment of male short but unusually acuminate. Length of body, £ , 3G mm., 9, 48 mm. ; pronotum, g , 5 mm., 9, 7 "_'•"> mm. ; tegmina, £ , 2o nun., 9i 36 mm. ; hind femora. 1 20 mm., 9 , 26 mm. 2 £ , i 9 . Smithville, N. C, Nov. 22. In markings this species seems to hear a close resemblance to M. ros- trata, which I have not seen, but differs from it as it does from -'/. alacris in the form of the fastigium. It is most closelv allied structurally to M. neomexicana, but has a longer pronotum and a more pointed genital segment in the male, while it differs to a considerable decree in color and markings ; these, however, are variable in both species. Mermiria rostrata McNeill. This species, known only from Indian Territory, I have not seen. 2. ACENTETIS AM) TTS SpECIKS. Thisgenus was founded by McNeill (Proc. Dav. Acad. Nat. So.. VI. 225) on Acentetw unicolor, a species described by him in the same paper from a single male without antenna', taken in Colorado. I have a Bingle male of the same species, taken by me at Lakin. Kansas, on Sept 1. which agrees with McNeill's figures and description except that the whole upper surface of the head and pronotum is blackish fuscous, the gensB are nar- rowly striped with pale tlavous or luteous and pale fuscous, and the lateral lobes have similar luteous stripes on a pale fuscous ground J the contrast of the dark disk and lighter lateral lobes does not well suit the name unicolor. The antenna', the description of which had of course to he omitted from the generic characters, are depressed Bubfiliform, not SCUDDER. — NORTH AMERICAN TRYXALIN^E. 45 tapering, and distinctly longer than head and pronotum together. The scapular area of the tegmina, as represented in McNeill's figure, is too narrow ; at its widest, opposite the nexus of veins in the median area, it is nearly one third the total width of the tegmina at this point. I have a second species of Acentetus, also represented by a single male and also without antennae, taken by me at Florissant, Col., Aug. 17-22. It is testaceous, marked with griseous and fuscous ; the head is testa- ceous, with a pair of narrow, arcuate, diverging, fuscous occipital stripes, and on each side a pair of similar but straight postocular stripes ; the disk of the pronotum is griseous and the lateral lobes testaceous below, passing rather rapidly into blackish fuscous above ; the hind femora are testaceous, more or less infuscated but not at all banded, and rufous beneath, the hind tibia: dull red. Length of body, 16.5 mm.; tegmina, 10.5 mm. ; hind femora, 10.5 mm. It differs from A. unicolor not only in color and markings, but also in several structural peculiarities : The median carina of the fastigium is less pronounced and indeed rather feeble ; the lateral carinas of the pro- notum, though having much the same divergence, are continuous and equal throughout, thus requiring a modification of the generic definition as given by McNeill ; the metazona is much more coarsely and deeply punctate ; and the tegmina (in the male of course) have a very different form, the costa being very strongly arched in the distal half and the distal portion of the tegmina being much abbreviated, so that the tegmina as a whole are less than three times longer than broad, instead of five times as long as broad, as in A. unicolor ; the relative breadth of the scapular area is even greater than in that species. It may be called Acentetus carinatus. 3. A Second Species of Opeia. Opeia was founded by McNeill in 1897 (Proc. Dav. Acad. Nat. Sc., VI. 214) upon a single species, Oxycoryphus obscurus Thom. I have seen numerous specimens of this species coming from the Yellowstone valley in Montana, Nebraska, Lakin, Ivans., Sept. 1 (Scudder), Colorado, 5500', 7000' (Morrison), Ft. Collins, Col., Aug. 12, 25, " on Bouteloua oligo- stachya" (Baker), Garden of the Gods, Col. (Scudder), Silver City, N. Mex. (Bruner), and Bosque Co., Tex., "on prairies" (Belfrage), as well as from Ft. "Whipple, Arizona (Palmer). According to McNeill it is "a species peculiar to the Great Plains." In 1897, Mr. A. P. Morse brought a second species from California. 46 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. — Lancaster, Aug. 1, Kith City, Aug. 4, Tulare, Aug. 5, and Lathrop, Ang. 17 (25 (J, 17 9 ), which may be called Opeia tetlacea. Ii is a Blenderer insect with longer tegmina, which equal (9) or but* pass ( $ ) l 1 1 » - abdomen and reach the base of the geniculation of the bind femora, and with a paler, nearly uniform coloring with Bcarcely any gre< d in it. and immaculate tegmina in the female, where at most they merely have an obscure unbroken fuscous streak in the proximal half of the median area, while in 0. obscura the female tegmina have the median i nearly always distinctly marked with fuscous, broken into quad- rangular spots ; in the latter species the upper half of the lateral lo is generally marked with a broad or narrow fuscous (rarely greenish) stripe, ill both sexes, extendi Ii',' ill extreme Cases UpOU the head as a pOStOCular hand; this 18 extremely rare in 0. testacea and obscure at best, though the lateral lobes are occasionally infuscated as a whole; generally the whole pronotnm is uniform pale testaceous; the hind tibial spurs are more slender in the new species, and the face a little more oblique in both sexes. Measurements of average .specimens are as fol- lows. Length of body, <£, 14 mm., 9, 25.5 mm. ; antenna'. J . ~>.7~>, 9, 8.9 mm.; tegmina, $, 0.5 mm., 9, 15.5 mm.; hind femora, £, 9.4 mm., 9, 15.6 mm. Other species occur in Northern Mexico, which appear to be undescribed. 4. A New Genus of Orphuue. Among the Orthoptera brought by Mr. Morse from the Pacific ci is a new form of Orphulae nearly allied to Chloealtis. Our g< uera of Orphulae may be thus separated. Table of the United States Genera of Orphulae. a1. Antenna: relatively short, at most but little longer than bead anil pronotnm together; scapular area of tegmina not specially dilated. /<>. Foveolaeof rertea inure or less evident ; prozona not much longer than meta- zona; lateral lobes of pronotnm transverse, thai is, deeper than long; upper ulnar vein of tegmina, at least in male, apically joining the lower ulnar vein at a long distance beyond the end of the basodiscoidal field . . . OrphtdeQa Stal. /<-. Foveolffi of vertex wauling; prozona very much longer than metazona ; lateral lobes of pronotum longitudinal, longer than or fully as long as deep; upper ulnar vein (if tegmina, at least in male, apically strongly arched, joining the lower ulnar vein not tar beyond the end of the basodi8COidal field. c1. I. aural lobes of pronotnm plane above, meeting the disk at nearly right angles; lateral carina' parallel throughout; tegmina usually much shorter than the abdomen in both sexes Dichromorpha Morse. SCUDDER. — NORTH AMERICAN TRYXALTN2E. 47 c2. Lateral lobes of pronotum convex above, except for the carina; passing rather gradually into the disk ; lateral carina; divergent on metazona ; tegniina nearly or quite as long as the abdomen, at least in the male. Clinocephalus Morse. a2. Antenna; long, about or more than half as long again as head and pronotum together ; fastigium of vertex with a median carina; scapular area of tegmina dis- tinctly dilated, at least in the male. b1. Antenna; basally depressed but not expanded, subcqual to near the tip ; face moderately oblique, the frontal costa subobsolete below the ocellus; lateral foveohe of vertex obsolete; pronotum posteriorly truncate, the lateral lobes as deep as long Chloealtis Harr. l>-. Antennae basally depressed and expanded, tapering in the proximal half; face strongly oblique, the frontal costa percurrent and sulcate below the ocellus; lateral foveolaeof vertex distinct, linear; pronotum posteriorly obtusangulate, the lateral lobes longer than deep (Eonomus gen. nov. (EononiUS (olovSfios) gen. nov. Of slender form. Head somewhat prominent, subconical, the face strongly oblique ; fastigium of vertex triangular with rounded subrec- tangulate apex, plane above with feebly raised blunt margins and a median carina, the lateral foveolae distinct, linear, invisible from above; frontal eosta percurrent or almost percurrent, sulcate except in the uppermost subvertical portion ; eyes long-oval, oblique, not distant above; anteniuv half as long again as head and pronotum together in the male, nearly as long as that in the female, the proximal half beyond the second joint depressed, expanded and tapering, in the male broader, at broadest, than the interspace between the eyes, at extreme tip again tapering slightly, at least in the male. Pronotum compressed, the disk nearly plaue, faintly tectate, with parallel sides, the lateral and median carina? similar and parallel, the front margin gently convex, the hind margin broadly obtusangulate, the lateral lobes vertical but gently rounded, longer than deep. Tegmina shorter than the body, apically subangulate, the scapular area expanded and scalariibrni in the male; wings aborted. Hind legs slender, the femora surpassing the abdomen, the inner spurs of hind tibiae equal. (Eonomus altus sp. nov. Testaceous with a lateral blackish fuscous stripe of variable width, but generally broad and deepest in color above, extending from behind the eyes across the pronotum, limited above by the lateral carinas and con- tinued upon the closed tegmina ; otherwise devoid of markings except usually for a pair of feeble and obscure diverging fuscous stripes on the 48 PROCEEDINGS OF Tin: amkrtcan ACADEMY. vertex, and that the antenna are generally much infuscated. Vertex well rounded, Blightly ascending; frontal coata sparsely and irregularly punctate a little Bhorter, especially in the female, than the infra- ocular portion of the genes. Pronotum with sharp and k BUbrectangU- lar ; presternum tuberculate, especially in the male; tegmina shorter than the abdomen Napaia McNeill il-. Antenna- feebly expanded basally, subfiliform, much shorter than the hind femora; lateral carina; of pronotum Btrongly sinuate, the disk elepsydral ; presternum not tuberculate; tegmina longer than the abdomen, //<■ , sidoti a gen. now c-. FaBtigiom with no median carina, but at most a colored line, except some- times in extreme anterior portion ; antenna' filiform, the basal joints neither expanded nor greatly depressed in either sex ; disk of pronotum elepsydral. thrut Fi.-ch. b-. Face little oblique, strongly rounded; lateral foveolae of vertex moderately broad, never more than twice as long as broad ; lateral lobes of pronotum deeper than long. • SCUDDER. — NORTH AMERICAN TRYXALIN2B. 49 c1. Hind margin of pronotum more angulate than front margin ; posterior margin of lateral lobes straight ; tegmina and wings fully developed. Plat ybothrus Scudd. c2. Fore and hind margins of pronotum equally (and slightly) angulate; pos- terior margin of lateral lobes sinuate ; tegmina abbreviate and wings aborted. Bruneria McNeill. a2. Antenna) apically clavate Gomphocerus Thunb. Horesidotes (wpeai^dr-ns) gen. nov. Allied to Napaia McNeill (which I have not seen) and separable from it in the points mentioned in the above table. Head subpyramidal, the face considerably oblique and straight; occiput with a median carina extending to and invading the fastigium of the vertex and throughout accompanied proximately by a pair of similar supplementary carina? ; foveola? visible from above, elongate, shallow; eyes rather elongate; antennae subfiliform, a little depressed but only feebly expanded basally, moderately slender, a little longer than head and pronotum together in both sexes but especially in the male, and much shorter than the hind femora. Pronotum rather small, the disk markedly clepsydra], the lateral carina; being strongly arcuate and as distinct as the median carina ; prozona and metazona of subequal length, the hind margin rounded obtusangulate ; lateral lobes slightly longer than deep; proster- num not tuberculate. Tegmina extending beyond the abdomen, without intercalary vein, the apical portion of the scapular held expanded in the male. Inner calcaria of hind tibia; subequal. Horesidotes cinereus sp. nov. Varying greatly from light testaceous with a slight olivaceous tinge and very feeble markings to dark cinereous with heavy markings, which in some females includes a broad median testaceous stripe on head and pronotum, bordered on the latter by a velvety black stripe cut by the lnteous lateral carina? ; but in others these markings are wholly wanting, the disk and tegmina are dark cinereous flecked with griseous, and the lateral lobes are marked with a broad postocular blackish fuscous stripe extending to the eyes and separated sharply and angularly from the clay- yellow of the lower portion of the lobes. Similar differences occur in the males, and there are also some of each sex in which all markings are but faintly indicated. The antenna? are light castaneous, the wings are feebly infumate apically with black veins, and the hind femora are of the color of the upper surface, but where this is light, the upper outer carina is often .marked with black ; hind tibia? glauco-luteous. vol. xxxv. — 4 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. Length of body, ;. l L5 nun.. 9i 24.5 mm.; antennae, ,'. 6.25 mm., 9,8.75 mm.; tegmina, ;. L2 mm., 9.1'.' nun.; hind femora, ;. LOmm., 9 . 1 5.5 nun. 19 , Si-son, Aug. 29, Baden, Aug. 24, Berkeley, Aug. 21, and San Francisco, Aug. 19), numerous specimens of a closely allied hut more heavily marked spei which seems to he distinct and may hear the name Stenobothrus oreg As compared with S. curtipennis the antenna of the male are shorter than, instead of as long as, the hind femora, the middle joints narrower than the narrowest part of the frontal costa, instead of being at least as broad as it; the fastigium of the vertex has a distinct median carina in the anterior portion wanting or hardly discernible in S. curtipennis ; the disk <>f the metazona is marked distinctly and generally broadly at the sides with black, instead of being generally immaculate or narrowly mar- SCUDDER. NORTH AMERICAN TRYXALTNiE. 51 gined with black laterally ; the male tegniina are shorter, generally much shorter than the abdomen, with rare exceptions as long as the abdomen, instead of being at least as long as, in macropterous forms considerably longer tbau the abdomen, the vena plicata joining the vena dividens before the middle or fading at some distance before the middle, instead of running free past the middle of the tegmina. In general it is more heavily marked, has shorter tegmina and slenderer antennae. In the female the tegmiua are but little longer than the head and pronotum together, sometimes no longer. It should at least be distinguished as a race; future collections in the intermediate regions will probably show more clearly whether it should be regarded as wholly distinct. 7. PSOLOESSA AND STIRAPLEURA. In his Revision of the North American Tryxalinze (Proc. Dav. Acad. Sc, VI.), McNeill placed these two genera side by side at the end of his series. Later, in my Preliminary Classification of the same subfamily (Psyche, VIII.), I placed them at some distance apart, Psoloessa among the Phlibostromae and Stirapleura in the Scyllinae. This change of mine was wrong and came from incorrect observation of the foveola? of the vertex (a distinction on which I placed a wider reliance than McNeill), for in Psoloessa they are partially visible from above, their plane being twisted feebly in relation to that of the margin of the vertex, so that while they are visible from above on their inner half, they are not so on their outer half. The other features of Psoloessa show that it belongs to the Scyllinae, and I would restore it to the immediate vicinity of Stirapleura, to which it is very closely allied. The table given by me for the separation of the genera of Scyllinre may be altered by substituting the following for the final paragraph relating to Stirapleura (Psyche, VIII. l'.JI): — Pronotum constricted in the middle, the prozona slightly the shorter; lateral carina? percurrent, more or less divergent in front and strongly divergent behind. Foveolse of vertex visible from above only on the inner half; lateral carinas of pronotum anteriorly but little or at least not strongly divergent, being gently arcuate on the prozona ; lateral lobes of prozona feebly or not marked above the middle with obliquely disposed short lunate carinules . . . Psoloessa Scudd. Foveolae of vertex visible from above throughout their length ; lateral carina? of pronotum very strongly divergent in front as well as behind, being strongly bent- arcuate on the prozona; lateral lobes of prozona more or less conspicuously rugose-carinate obliquely above the middle Stirapleura Scudd. 52 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. This definition will have P. texana Scndd. in Psoloessa, instead of transferring it to Stirapleura, :i> was done by McNeill, doubtless on account of the .dightly more marked oblique carina of the lateral lolx-s of the pronotum. The face is generally a little more obliijue in lVoloessa than in Stirapleura, but the distinctions drawn by McNeill from the fnmtal costs bold in Psoloessa only for P. buddiana Bran. As to the species of Stirapleura, I am inclined to look on the form from southern California, heretofore regarded as identical with & delica- tula (Scudd.) of Colorado to be distinct from though closely allied to it. I have before me a considerable series (more than a hundred) of each, and 1 find the Californhiu species to have a slenderer form, longer teg- inina and wings, and the upper inner angle of the lateral foveols of the vertex distinctly more rounded so as to make them less distinctly rhom- boidal than in S. delicatida. I describe it herewith, together with another new species from Texas, remarkable for the delicacy of the lateral carina of the pronotum and approaching Psulucs.sa in the feeble- ness of the oblique carina; of the lateral lobes. Stirapleura pusilla sp. nov. Head moderately prominent, subasceuding, the fastigium of the vertex rather deeply 6uleate with elevated, anteriorly acutangulate margins ; lateral foveolae nearly or quite half as long again as greatest breadth, sub- rhomboidal, but narrower interiorly than exteriorly, with the inner upper angle distinctly rounded; frontal costa much contracted at summit, more or less gradually broadening, sulcate throughout but only feebly at base, punctate within the raised and smooth margins; antennas distinctly bat not greatly longer than head and pronotum together, especially in the male. Pronotum considerably constricted mesially. the posterior margin obtusangulate, the median carina moderately prominent, equal, cut barely in advance of the middle, the lateral carinas equally prominent, bent- arcuate and strongly divergent, especially behind, so that the disk of the pronotum is about twice as broad posteriorly as near the middle, the lateral lobes more or less corrugated at the shoulder just below the lateral carina*. Color cinereous, generally much marked with fuscous and black, paler l>eneath than above, but very variable; face generally testaceous, the frontal costa more or less iufuscated, the geiuc generally dotted with fuscous or iufuscated, sometimes with the exception of a broad arcuate oblique subocular stripe ; the occiput may or may not be striped with testaceous and fuscous, but there is usually a broad postocular fuscous stripe extending across the lateral lobes, where it is often followed below SCUDDER. — NORTH AMERICAN TRYXALINJE. 53 by a testaceous stripe, below whicb the lateral lobes are again infuscated, but often euliveued below the middle posteriorly by a more or less con- spicuous oblique flavo-testaceous bar, sometimes merged in the lighter color of the lowest portion ; disk of pronotum testaceous more or less infuscated, the carinas usually flavous and the metazona with a triangular black patch on either side. Tegmiua surpassing the hind femora in both Bexes, more or less heavily flecked with fuscous, ranging from a nearly uniform sprinkling throughout with fuscous dots to a regular series of six or more quadrate fuscous blocks in the median area ; wings hyaline with black veins. Hind femora considerably surpassing the abdomen, cinere- ous or cinereo-testaceous, generally marked above with a median trian- gular black-edged brown spot and often also with less conspicuous basal and postmedian fuscous patches, the geuiculation more or less infuscated ; hind tibia? pallid with a glaucous tinge and generally flecked more or less conspicuously with fuscous, the base with a postgenicular infumated anuulus, the spines black-tipped. Length of body, $, 10.5 mm., ?, 18 mm.; antennas, cf, 5.2 mm., $, 6.5 mm. ; tegmiua, alli mm.; tegmina, 19.5 mm.; hind femora, 1 ." J . 7 -"> nun. 19- Sierra Blanca, El Paso Co., Tex., June 2G, A. P. Morse. 8. The Species or Aulocara. Aulocara Scudd. has as synonyms CEdocara Scudd. and Coloradella Brunn. (See Can. Ent., XXIX. 7"), and Psyche, VII. 71.) No spi have been referred to the last named, but to the others live uomiual spe- cies have been referred; eUiotti Thorn., cceruleipes Scudd.. decern Scudd., strangulatum Scudd., and scudderi Brun. Scudderi, as ha- been Bhown by McNeill, belongs to Ageneotettix (Eremnus). The other four all represent a single species, which must bear the oldest name, elliotti. Nevertheless we possess four species which may lie separated by the fol- lowing table : — Table of the Species of Aulocara. a1. Fastigium of vertex broader than long, its front margin obtusangnlate ; meta- zona feebly tumescent, its bind margin not very broadly obtusangulate ; bind tibia1 roil rufum sp. nov, a-. Fa8tigium of vertex at least as long as broad, its front margin rectangulate or acutangnlate ; metazona plane or nearly plane, its bind margin broadly obtus- angnlate ; bind tibiae purple,* or glaucous. i1. Pronotum Btrongly constricted mesially, the disk with more or less conspicu- ously decus-ate markings, the lateral carina) strongly divergent in front and behind. c1. Male antenna' as long as tliorax and abdomen combined ; lower margin of lateral foveolae of vertex obsolete or obsolescent ; tegmina generally immacu- late, much shorter than the long hind femora / moratum Bp. nov. * The hind tibia- of A. paraUelum are not known, but are presumably purple. SCUDDER. — NORTH AMERICAN TRYXALINiE. 55 c'2. Male antennas shorter than thorax and abdomen combined ; lower margin of lateral foveola? of vertex distinct; tegmina generally maculate, generally fully as long as the relatively shorter hind femora elliotti Thorn. b2. Pronotum but feebly constricted mesially, the disk of subequal width and uni- colorous, the lateral carinae divergent only, and but little, behind. parallelum sp. nov. Aulocara rufum sp. nov. Head well rounded, rather large, ferrugineo-cinereous, paler on face, with a pair of obscure fuscous stripes on summit and more or less flecked with fuscous or ferruginous on upper part of gena; ; summit tumid, the fastigium much broader than long, with slightly raised, parallel lateral margins, the front margin distinctly obtusangulate ; lateral foveoloe obso- lescent, scarcely impressed, subtriangular, longer than broad; frontal costa of moderate breadth, subequal but feebly narrowed above, obsoles- cent below with slightly and narrowly elevated margins ; antennas fer- ruginous, more or less infuscated, in the male as long as the hind femora. Pronotum nearly uniform rufous, more or less infuscated on disk, espe- cially on metazona, not greatly constricted mesially, the metazona feebly tumescent, the hind margin a little obtusangulate, the angle sometimes much rounded, the median carina slight and confined to the metazona. Tegmina broad and well rounded, rufous, minutely sprinkled with fuscous, hardly surpassing the hind femora; wings hyaline, the veins glaucous, sometimes infuscated. Hind femora cinereo-testaceous, often more or less ferruginous, generally very obscurely (but occasionally in male distinctly) bifasciate with fuscous ; hind tibiae light red, pallescent basally. Length of body, ^, 14 mm., 9, 19 mm.; antenna?, £, 8 mm., 9. 8.75 mm.; tegmina, g, 11.5 mm., 9> 15.5 mm.; hind femora, J, 8 mm., 9 ■> 1- mm- 5^,49. Pueblo, Col., July 8-9, Aug. 30-31. This species is very distinct from all the others, not only in the color- ing of the body, tegmina, and hind tibiae, but in the breadth of the fastigium of the vertex, the obscurity of the foveoloe, the absence of a median carina on the prozona, and the lesser obtuseness of the hind margin of the metazona. Aulocara femoratum sp. nov. Of minor size, the head well rounded and rather prominent, cinereo- testaceous, a little infuscated above; summit tumid, the fastigium deeply excavate, considerably longer thf>n broad, the margins rather sharply elevated, the lateral parallel, the It/ont acutangulate ; lateral foveolae tri- angular, of moderate size, distinctly impressed, but with obsolescent or no PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. inferior margin ; frontal costa rather Darrow, Bubequal but slightly com- pressed above, obsolete below, more <>r less bat generally feebly sulcate ; antennae testaceous, infuscated except near base, of unusual length though not quite bo long as the long liin2 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. conditions ; henoe the method finally adopted was the ignition of care- fully pur i tied parpureo-cobaltic chloride, which may l>e dried before it d( compi A considerable quantity of this compound was prepared by passing air through a Btrongly ammoniacal solution of cobaltoua chloride and subse- quently acidifying the mixture with hydrochloric acid. The precipil was then recrystallized ?-ix. times by solution in pure redistilled ammonia in a platinum dish ami precipitation with redistilled hydrochloric acid in a Jena glass fiask. This latter operation could not be performed in platinum, because of the liberation of small quantities of chlorine. The final precipitate was collected on a pure wash d filter and dried. In order to convert the amine into CObaltOUS chloride it was heated ill an ait- bath to about 200°, until it was entirely decomposed without fusing. Owing to tli*- fact that the dried salt melts a! a temperature very slightly above that at which it breaks up. tin; heat was applied vi iy gradually. Here again the liberation of traces of chlorine prevented the use of platinum, a porcelain crucible being used to contain the salt. The cor- responding purpureo-bromide oi cobalt melts at a temperature too near its decomposing point to have allowed the use of a similar method for preparing cobaltous bromide in the earlier part of this research. The cobaltous chloride thus prepared, still containing a large amount of amnionic chloride, was now heated in the platinum boat in a rapid current of dry nitrogen and hydrochloric acid gas until amnionic chloride ceased to lie expelled. The drying apparatus used in the work upon the bromide was refilled, and easily altered for this purpose by substituting a strong solution of hydrochloric acid tor the bromine and red phosphorus. The hydrochloric acid gas was displaced by pure nitrogen, and this in turn by pure air ; and finally the dry cobaltous chloride was transferred to the weighing bottle by means of the usual bottling apparatus. After having been weighed, the chloride was reduced in hydrogen in the manner already described under the analysis of cobaltous bromide. During the reduction no trace of cobaltous chloride sublimed from the boat, but a slight sublimate of iiir chloride appeared in the tube. The amount of this sublimate was determined by washing out the tube with pure water and ,\r.v ilerizing the solution, and this amount was sub- tracted from the original weight of cobaltous chloride. Probably the correction was somewhat too great, for traces of ammonic bromide appeared in every reduction of cobaltous bromide, when no ammonia could have been present in the salt ; but the error arising from this source must have been small. RICHARDS AND BAXTER. — ATOMIC WEIGHT OF COBALT. 63 A small quantity of alkaline chloride was found in the residual cobalt, and was determined in the usual way by lixiviating the metal and evaporating the solution. This correction was of course subtracted from the original weight of the cobaltous chloride, as well as from that of the metal. In the following table of results the specific gravity of cobaltous chlo- ride is Assumed to be 2.94, the value given by Joule and Playfair.* This necessitates a correction to the vacuum standard of +.000262 gram per gram of chloride. Cobalt itself has a specific gravity too near that of brass to need any correction of this kind. CI = 35.455. Observed Weight of Cobaltous Chloride in Vacuum. Observed Weight of Cobalt in Vacuum. Weight of Kesidue. Weight of Amnionic Chloride. Corrected Weight of Cobaltous Chloride. Corrected Weight of Cobalt. Atomic Weight of Cobalt. 4.16702 1.89304 .00061 .00158 4.16483 1.89243 59.053 2.30588 1.04771 .00048 .00028 2.30512 1.04723 59.035 59.044 As the alkali had not been completely removed by the process of crystallization to which the cobaltamine had been subjected, it is highly probable that some silica also remained which was not removed from the metal by leaching. This probability, together with the fact that the ammonic chloride correction is undoubtedly somewhat too large, seems sufficient to account for the fact that these results are slightly higher than those obtained in the bromide series (58.995). At any rate the evidence of this method is that the atomic weight of cobalt cannot be greater than 59.05, for none of the probable errors would tend to make this result too low. II. The Reduction of Cobaltous Oxide. At this point experimental difficulties in the preparation of the chlo- ride, together with the belief that silica could not be completely removed from the salt without introducing platinum, led to a search for a more satisfactory method. In the hands of the early experimenters upon the atomic weights of nickel and cobalt, reduction of the monoxide yielded good results, — results less satisfactory in the case of cobalt than in that of nickel, however, on account of the greater difficulty in preparing the monoxide in a pure state. Russell, f the first investigator to work with cobaltous oxide, found that the higher oxides of cobalt were reduced to the monoxide hy heating to * Landolt and Bornstein, Tabellen (1894), p. 134. t Jour. Chem. Soc. (2.), I. 51 (1863). 64 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. a high temperature in air, but that reoxidation of the mom place while it v ling. He showed tin* by igniting in air a crucible containing the black < » x i . 1« - and cooling ihe crucible suddenly by plunging it into cold wain-. Under these conditions a film of black oxide was formed on the surface only, while the lower portions remained in the form of brown monoxide. Evidently, to prevent reoxidation i I was only necessary to keep the oxide away from contact with oxygen. '1 he tn< thod adopted by Russell was to heat the oxide in a current of an inerl gas until constant weight was established, and then to reduce the compound in hydrogen, thus obtaining an indirect ratio between oxygen and cobalt. This method of procedure, which was adopted by all subsequent experi- menters on the oxide, seemed open to two Berious disadvantages. I Erst, the difficulty of preparing nitrogen or carl dioxide free from traces of oxygen, is our which can be surmounted, although not easilv. The possibility that small quantities of liberated oxygen may become mechanically entangled i'1 the oxide, in Buch a way as not to !»■ Bpeedily removed by the current of gas, is a danger even less easily avoided. This oxygen would of course reunite with the monoxide upon cooling, thus making it- weight too great. As an alternative to heating in a current of inert nition in a vacuum suggested itself as offering distinct advantages, since neither of the dangers just mentioned would be incurred. For thi> purpose a ed porcelain tube, of twenty-eight millimeters internal diamel similar to that used for [using silver in a vacuum, was employed.* The tube was closed as usual with Hernpel hollow brass stoppers and heated in a perforated Fletcher furnace by means of a large Mast lamp, while an ordinary Sprengel air-pump served to exhaust thi from the tube. Very pure cobalt, which had been prepared by various methods during the previous work, was converted into the oxide as follow-. From the solution of the metal in pure nitric acid the pink granular coball hydrate was precipitated by adding an excess of pure freshly redistilled ammonia, and subsequently digesting the mixture upon the -team bath in a platinum bowl. This precipitate was collected upon a Gooch cru- cible in which a circular piece of hardened filter paper was used instead of an asbestos mat. After drying and converting the ma>s into the Mack oxide bj ignition with an alcohol lamp this material was used directly Eor analysis. The metal which Berved as the source of this oxide was known to be free from alkalis and -ilica.t and as neither the nitric acid * Richards and Parker, These Proceedings, XXXI] 16). t These Proceedings, XXXIII. 120 (1897). RICHARDS AND BAXTER. — ATOMIC WEIGHT OF COBALT. G5 nor the ammonia could have introduced either of these impurities, the oxide must have been as pure as possible. It has already been shown that specimens of cobalt prepared by any of the methods described in the preceding parts of this paper are essentially identical.* A weighed platinum boat, containing several grams of cobaltic oxide, was placed in the porcelain tube, and, after the air had been exhausted, the portion of the tube containing the boat was heated to full redness. The expelled oxygen was removed with the air-pump; and the tension of the gases in the tube was finally reduced to a small fraction of a millimeter of mercury. The tube was then cooled while the vacuum was still maintained, air was admitted, and the boat was transferred to the weighing bottle and weighed. Successive ignition for periods of about two hours each reduced the weight of the cobaltous oxide slowly by amounts varying from two to five tenths of a milligram, until constant weight within one tenth of a milligram was obtained. Durincr this process the cobaltous oxide, which was light brown at first, gradually assumed a darker tint. Since complete reduction of tins oxide by hydrogen at a temperature which could be borne by hard ".lass is very slow, the reduction was con- ducted in a porcelain tube heated by the furnace. The metallic cobalt, which sintered together in such a fashion as to occupy not more than one fifth the original volume of the oxide, was cooled in a vacuum, and then transferred to the weighing bottle and weighed. Constant weight was obtained without difficulty ."j" In the following table are given the results obtained by this method of procedure. The correction to a vacuum standard of +.0000G9 gram per gram of cobaltous oxide was applied, the specific gravity of the oxide being taken as 5.68 (Joule and Playfair)4 0 = 16.000. Number of Analysis. Weight of Cobaltous i ixi'ie in Vacuum. Weight of Cobalt in Vacuum. Atomic Weight of Cobalt. 1 grains. 7.04053 grams. 5.53779 58.962 2 6.69104 5.26312 58.974 3 7.83211 6.159G3 58.927 58.954 * These Proceedings, XXXIII. 120 (1897). t Sintered cobalt does not occlude important amounts of hydrogen, even when cooled in this gas. A paper showing this fact will soon be published. | Landolt and Bornstein, Tabellen (1894), p. 134. vol. xxxv. — 5 CO PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. From the fact that the above results agree neither among themselves nor with the results obtained from the bromide (58.995), it seemed highly probable that all excess of oxygen bad nut been removed from the cobaltons oxide. It has been Bhown that oxides made by ignition of nitrates give off their extra "included " oxygen only upon long continued beating, the gas gradually working its way out by a process of dissocia- tion and recombination.* Here also the oxygen combined with the innermost parts of the monoxide, too tightly enclosed to escape easily, must have required time to force its way out by the same process. Accordingly, in the next analysis the oxide was heated for much longer periods in the highest vacuum obtainable. Under these conditions the loss of weight between each two ignitions increased very materially, amounting to more than a milligram in each case, and culminated in a loss of three milligrams accompanied by a decided darkening of the oxide. This called to mind an experiment made by Dr. Cushman in his work upon the atomic weight of nickel. | In this experiment 1m- ignited nickelous oxide to bright redness in a current of nitrogen. Upon removal from the ignition tube the oxide was found to have been partially converted into metallic nickel, owing doubtless to the dissociation of the oxide into metal and oxygen, and the subsequent carrying away of the oxygen by the current of nitrogen. Cupric oxide, when heated only to 700°-800°, is known to dissociate perceptibly into cuprous oxide and oxygen. t As a matter of fact, when the cobaltons oxide was n movi d from the boat, it was found to have been reduced to such an extent that enough metallic cobalt had been formed to alloy with the platinum; thus cobaltous oxide also, at about 800°, dissociates very considerably into cobalt and oxygen. In the zeal to obviate oxidation, the opposite error had been encountered. Obviously the only method of obtaining the monoxide free from the metal was to determine the tension of the oxygen evolved from it at the temperature to which the oxide was heated, and always to keep the tension above this point during the ignition. In the earlier experiments, an exceedingly slight known leakage of water through the brass stoppers into the tube may explain why the reduction of the monoxide did not occur, for metallic cobalt decomposes water at a high temperature. Some of the brown monoxide which had suffered partial reduction in the experiment described above, and which consequently must have been * T. W. Richards, These Proceedings, XXXIII. 899. t These Proceedings, XXXIII. 424. J Ibid., 421. RICHARDS AND BAXTER. — ATOMIC WEIGHT OF COBALT. 67 free from higher oxides, was now heated in a hard glass tube sealed at one end ; and the tube was exhausted to within two tenths of a milli- meter of mercury by means of the Sprengel pump. When the pump was stopped the tension of the gas slowly increased from four tenths of a millimeter at 400° to one and five tenths millimeters at full redness, the highest temperature obtainable with a Bunsen lamp. The pressure of the oxygen resulting from the dissociation of the black oxide of cobalt was determined to be in the neighborhood of six hundred and thirty millimeters at the same temperature. Evidently, if the tension of the oxygen remains below six hundred and thirty millimeters of mercury, the higher oxides of cobalt cannot exist (except in an imprisoned state) ; and, on the other hand, if the tension of the oxygen does not fall below one and five tenths millimeters there can be no reduction of the mon- oxide. In the next analysis the oxygen was removed from the tube as fast as it was evolved until the tension of the gas remaining was about one and five tenths millimeters. The pressure inside the tube was kept at this point until heating ceased, when the tube was exhausted as com- pletely as possible. In subsequent ignitions of this boat-load the tube necessarily contained air, not oxygen, and allowance was made for this fact by increasing the pressure five times. In this case also constant weight was obtained only after many ignitions, although the differences in the weight of the oxide were small. 7.74242 grains (in vacuum) of cobaltous oxide yielded G. 09219 grams of cobalt, corresponding to an atomic weight 59.0G8. Evidently even here traces of metal had been found during the heating of the monoxide. This undesired reduction could have taken place only during the cooling, for at all other times the tension of the oxygen was greater than the dissociation pressure of the monoxide. Measures were then taken to make this error impossible. On account of the size of both tube and furnace, the cooling was necessarily very slow ; this fact is indeed an advantage, because other- wise the life of a tube would be short. Assuming that the tube cooled always at the same rate, the tension of the oxygen from the dissociated oxide after any given interval of time from the cessation of ignition should always be the same. A table embodying such tensions was pre- pared by repeatedly exhausting the tube to a tension slightly below the supposed point, and allowing the pressure inside the tube to reach a maximum. This table, which was obtained by averaging three different series of observations, is given below. The readings were obtained by means of a McLeod gauge. OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. Tim. ion. ion 15 .56 15 .28 .21 .11 90 .i»7 values have no meaning except for the particular process by which they were obtained, but ili.\ Bhow plainly how great :i chance for error existed when the tube was exhausted completed as bi as isruition ceased. In the next analysis the procedure was exactly similar to that in Analysis 4, except that during cooling the values indicated in the table were maintained. No essential loss of weight took place after the third heating, although Beveral additional ignitions were carried out for the sake of certainty . 1 0.58678 grams (in vacuum) of cobaltous oxide yielded 8.3261 1 grams of cobalt, corresponding to an atomic weight 58.929. In tlie face of this unsatisfactory result, there sei med nothing furtl to do except to attempt the detection of the presence of impurities. Three possibilities were open : the oxide might contain moisture, enough nitrate might have been carried down l>y the cobaltous hydrate to cause a small amount of nitrogen and oxygen to be occluded by the oxide, or some higher oxide of cobalt might be present. It was easily shown that cobaltous oxide is as a matter of fact slightly hygroscopic. Several grams exposed for twenty-four hours to an atmos- phere saturated with moisture gained five milligrams in w< ight, most i ; which was lost in a short time in a desiccator. It was satisfactorily proved, however, by suitable experiments which need not be recounted, that not enough moisture could have crept in during anj of the procei used to cause any important error. In order t<> prove the absence of included gases, a specimen of oxide which had been treated in the same manner as the material used in Analysis 5 was dissolved in hydrochloric acid in an apparatus for measur- ing the gases evolved during the solution.* No gas was given off; but upon treating the solution with potassic iodide and starch, an unmistak- able liberation of iodine was detected. This Bhowed conclusively that Borne higher oxide of cobalt had remained undecomposed, for pure cobalt- * These Proceedings, \ Will 103, and Jour. Chem. Soc. Trana . I. XXI. I RICHARDS AND BAXTER. ATOMIC WEIGHT OF COBALT. 69 ous chloride has no immediate effect on hydriodic acid. The presence of the imprisoned higher oxide is undoubtedly the reason for the low value for the atomic weight of cobalt obtained in this way. The cobalt itself obtained from the pure oxide by reduction at a high temperature is very permanent in the air, and occludes only traces of hydrogen. With great reluctance the work upon the monoxide was abandoned at this point; for a substance whose composition varies so widely under conditions which vary so slightly is obviously unfitted for work of the highest accuracy. As in the case of cobaltous bromide, the preparation of this substance even in a reasonably pure state appears to be an impos- sibility. Unfortunately the accurate estimation of the worst impurity in this case, cobaltic oxide, is a very difficult matter. An attempt to use pure cobaltic oxide itself as the basis of the determination proved to be equally unsatisfactory. The results of this part of the investigation are nevertheless of con- siderable import in the light they throw upon previous analyses of the monoxides of both nickel and cobalt as well as upon the accuracy of the results obtained in the analyses of cobaltous halides described in this paper. The material which gave the lowest result contained oxides of cobalt higher than the monoxide, henee, these results are too low. On the other hand, the material which gave the highest result was heated under conditions which theoretically should have caused, and evidently did cause, partial reduction of the oxide to metal. The true value of the atomic weight of cobalt, must lie between these two extreme*, 58.93 and 59.07 ; and until trustworthy evidence to the contrary has been produced, the most probable value seems to be the meau 58.995, obtaiued from the analysis of the bromide. Critical Review of Eaklter Work. In the light of the information gained during the protracted investiga- tion which has just been described, it is possible to discover the reasons for many of the unusual discrepancies in the older work upon the atomic weight of cobalt. Following is a chronological list of this work, with references to the original articles. The atomic weight of oxygen, upon which the appended values are based, is taken as 1G.000. Pogg. Ann., VIII. 184. 59 Pogg. Ann., CI. 387. 60.0 Bibl. Univ. de Geneve. I. 372. 58.8 Ann. Chern. Pharm., CXIII. 25. - 59.1 Rothhoff 1826 Schneider 1857 Marignac 1858 Dumas 1860 70 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. Russell 1868 Bommaruga [866 Winkler 1867 Russell sky 1868 Lee 1871 Zimmermann 1886 Kriiss and Schmidt 1889 Winkler 1889 Remmler 1891 Schiitzenberger 1892 Winkler 1898 Winkler 1894 Winkler 1896 Winkler 1896 Hempel and Tliicle 1896 Richards and Baxter 1897 Winkler 1898 Richards and Baxter 1899 Richards and Baxter 1899 Jour. Chem. B !), 1. 61. .~s.7 BitZ. Wii-n. Akad , I.IV. (II.), 50. 60. Zeit Anal Clun... VI 1- I Jour. Chem. Boc. ^.), VII. 294. 59.1 ? Ber. d. d Chem, Qeaell . II. 692. Am. Jour. Bel ,<: Art-, (8, . II 14. 69.2 Ann. der Chem., CCXXXIL 821 Ber. d. d. Chem. GeselL, XXII. n. XXII. 891. Zeit Anorg. Chem., II. 221. 58.8 Compt. Rend < XIV. n r.». G0.1 Zeit. Anorg. Chem., IV. 10. 59.8 .. 1V ,,.._, " VIII. 1. " VIII 291. " XI. 73. " XVI. 8 " XVIL 236. Proc. Amer. Acad., X X X 1 V. 851. The present paper. 69.0 All except four of these investigations were accompanied by similar ones upon tin- atomic weight <<( nickel, ami in general the criticisms made by Richards ami Cnshman in a recent paper upon this Bubject ma\ applied unchanged to the present argument. It is only aecessary to call attention here to the features in which ditl'erences existed. The favorite method for the determination of both constants lias been the reduction of the oxides. It is evident from our work upon this method that Russell's cohaltous oxide (1863) must have been contami- nated with a higher oxide; that Ximmermann's material (1886), treated with greater care in more perfect apparatus, was more nearly normal, although still impure; and that Schiitzenberger i 1892) must have driven off some of the oxygen, which should have been weighed, by his employ- ment of a high temperature. It was reserved For Hempel and Thiele (1895) to discover by varying the conditions of work that cohaltous oxide was incapable of giving constant results, although they did not attempt to find the reason of the inconstancy. Their irregular observa- tions were really a proof of the thoroughness and care of their work, while the wonderful constancy of Zimtnermaun's results simply show - a constancy of imperfect conditions. The far greater dissociation tension of the higher oxide of nickel makes the method much less dangerous in this case ; hence the similar results for the atomic weight of nickel are both more concordant and more uearly correct thau those for the atomic weight of cobalt. RICHARDS AND BAXTER. — ATOMIC WEIGHT OP COBALT. 71 The four investigations which had no parallel in the case of nickel were those of Soinrnaruga, Weselsky, Remruler, and Hempel and Thiele. The first of these need not claim serious attention, for there can be no doubt that the result (60.) is far too high. Weselsky's contribution was very similar to Lee's, which has been treated in Richard and Cushman's criticism. Since the work was obviously crude and incomplete, we must ascribe its accurate average result (58.96) to a compensation of errors. Two more investigations remain to be considered. In 1891, when the " Gnomium " dispute was at its height, Remmler entered the fray. He fractionated cobaltous hydrate by treating a large quantity of this precipi- tate with strong ammouia. Each fraction was subjected to a protracted purification, which, although effective in removing heavy metals, intro- duced more impurity than it removed. His final solution of cubaltous nitrate, from which he formed the oxide by ignition, contained the alkali and silica taken up by at least six successive evaporations to dryness in glass or porcelain, in three of which the solution was ammoniacal. With such hopelessly contaminated material, it is no wonder that the results from twenty-four fractious varied between limits which were nearly one per cent apart. As his method of igniting the monoxide to constant weight in an inert gas was subject to the same errors which have been discussed in the case of Russell and Zimmermann, no further comment is necessary. The average of twenty-four determinations was 58.80. Hempel and Thiele, in 1895, at first attempted to find the ratio CoO : Co from analyses of the monoxide. This part of their research has been already discussed. The remainder of their work consisted in the quantitative preparation and analysis of cobaltous chloride. They were unable to prepare it in a wholly anhydrous condition, and realized this fact; hence the part of their calculation depending upon the weight of the chloride was unsatis- factory. The final step of their investigation was the weighing of the argentic chloride obtainable from the chloride combined with a known weight of cobalt. Although not wholly satisfactory, this part of their research far excelled the earlier work of a similar kind (Dumas) and yielded one of the most trustworthy values for the atomic weight of cobalt (59.91 to 59.9-1) which had been obtained at that time. It is clear, from a careful consideration of the details just referred to, that all the wide variations in the older results are explicable. Hence no serious argument exists against the atomic weight of cobalt (58.995, if 0 = 16) determined by our analyses of cobaltous bromide. Since moreover the still more recent results with the chloride (less than 59.05) 72 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. and oxide (58.9S to 59.07) confirm this value, one may assume that it is not greatly in error. In any case, tin* Harvard analj a - of the bromides of nickel and cobalt must Btand and tall together, for they were made l>y method^ essentially similar; and they must at least give the ratio of the atomic- weights (58.706 : 58.995) with Borne approach to accuracy. Each of these numbers has found < ^ u i t « * independent Bupport for its actus well as the relative value, bo thai for the present the Btudy of tb atomic weights will not be pursued further in this Laboratory. I ' LHBRIDGB, .Iuiil' 28, 1 Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Vol. XXXV. No. 4. — October, 1899. ON THE THERMAL CONDUCTIVITY OF VULCANITE. . By B. 0. Pkikce. ON THE THERMAL CONDUCTIVITY OF VULCANITE. By B. O. Peirce. Presented May 10, 1809. Received August 19, 1§99. Last year Dr. R. "W. Willson and I published in these Proceedings an account of some determinations of the thermal conductivities of differ- ent kinds of marble, made by the so called " Wall Method." A relatively thin, square, plane-faced slab of the material to be exam- ined, enclosed between two other slabs of the same material, formed a rectangular parallelopiped or prism, which was clamped, and left for many hours, between the steam chest, A, and the ice box, Z, of the apparatus* represented by Figure 1. The final temperatures at the Figure 1. centres of the faces of the slab to be tested were determined by the aid of thermal elements, and the flux of heat through a definite central por- tion of the colder base of the prism was measured. Figure 2 represents the revolving ice holder, which was kept in motion by the motor, M\ and Figure 3 shows the ice pot used in measuring the heat flux. * This was partly constructed with the help of an appropriation from the Rumford Fund of the Academy. 76 PROCKKIUNi;- OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. The present paper describes :i Beries of experiments on the thermal conductivities of differenl specimens of hard rubber,* or " vulcanite," made by tin- method which we described at length last year. I had at in v disposal fourteen different pieces of hard rubber thick enough to he used conveniently in the apparatus, ami much of this \\ ras in sheets about L20 cm. by 50 cm. So much of it as was bought for the purposes of this investigation came from three well known makers. Besides this new rubber, however, there were a number ol pieces from Figure 2. unknown sources, which had been lying in the laboratory for indefinite periods. The specific gravities of the different specimens examined differed slightly from each other, hut by not nearly so much as one per cent in the extreme cases. The specific gravity of the rubber used as a standard is about L.202, and its average specific heat hetweeu •_'"» ('. and 100° C. is 0.339. The specific heat of sheet ruhher usually increases with the temperature, as may be inferred from the subjoined table, in * Stefan, Sitzungsberichte corresponds to a conductivity for euch slab of 0. 31 1. Experiment (6). — Plate A with two thermal elements, enclosed liv two other Bheets of hard rubber, was made into a prism with three plat - of glass. In the final state the temperatures of the elements on the faces of A were 60 .1 and :_' I .9 respectively. In 11,220 set Is 1"»4.8 grams of ice were melted. This again corresponds to a conductivity between GO0 and 25° of 0.000311. Two other experiments in which the final gradients on the axes of prisms built up of disks about Jo cm. in diameter made of this ruhber wen determined, failed to Bhow any sensible variation of the conductivity with the temperature between 65 and 1G°. Experiment (<•>. — A compound slab made of A and a plate, ( '. of the same dimensions as A, hut purporting to come from another maker, with their thermal elements and "guard plates" of rubber, were used to form a prism for the large apparatus. In the final Btate the indica- tions of the elements on the warm Bide of A, between A and ('. and on the cool side of C, were respectively 69 .8, 11°. 1, and 13°. 1, so that the conductivity of C between 41° and \o° appears to he 0.000019. After this a number of disks 20 cm. in diameter, which seemed alike in their physical properties, were" cut from the standard rubber and used with other disks to form prisms for the -mailer apparatus. Experiments (i-k of pronotara generally unicolorons, Bometimea longitudinally -tripe.]. rarely irregularly and rather obscurely mottled; ovipositor not narrower in the middle than beyond, and broader than the frontal fastigium. st> indachm n /<-. Prozona broadest scarcely behind the middle of the metazona, at [east in the female; ovipositor rather Btrongly curved, not narrowed in the middle; hind femora basally stouter than in the other Bpeciea diabol Tropizaspis ovata *i> nov. Bead rather large, testaceous, the fastigium narrower than the de- pressed basal joint of the antennae, anteriorly truncate, sulcate. Pro- uotum nearly half as long again as broad, broadest posteriorly, ovate, anteriorly truncate, the prozona plane, the metazona gently tumid, the whole disk glistening testaceous longitudinally Btreaked with black, espe- cially down the middle and at the sides; lateral carinas rather sharp and somewhat prominent laterally but scarcely elevated, diverging continu- ously from the very base, the hind holder strongly rounded and margined ; median carina >harp but feeble, equal, percurrent ; lat< ral lobes uniform testaceous. Legs testaceous, feebly clouded with fuscousj the hind femora less than half as long again as the prouotum. Abdomen uniform testa- ceous ; supraanal plate of male triangular, apically rectangulate but rounded, the sides with a slight basal tooth ; anal cerci stout, brief, coni- cal, scarcely longer than basal breadth; supragenital plates large, tumid, superiorly carinate, overlapping each other and surpassing laterally the subgenital plate, together apically rounded ; Bubgenital plate with dia- tinct styles. Length of body, 21.5 mm.; pronotum 11.5 nun.; breadth of same, 8 min. ; length of hind femora, 1G.5 mm. 1 g. California, D. A. Saunders. Tropizaspis castanea ?p nov Head rather large, testaceous, irregularly marked with fuscous in slender stripes, the fastigium dotted with hiteous, a little narrower than the lirst antenna] joint, apically truncate, plane; antenna' long enough to reach a little beyond the hind femora, testaceous broadly banded with fuscous. Pronotum with asymmetrically clepsydra] disk, about half as long again a> broad, broadest posteriorly, very gently tumid, faintly pec- tinate transversely and posteriorly faintly rugulose, CastanOOUS, the lateral carinas distinct but rather blunt, feeble and converging on the prozona, on the metazona diverging and with the bluntly margined hind border forming a rather short ovoid ; median carina faint, equal, percurrent ; lat- SCUDDER. — NORTH AMERICAN DECTICIN.E. 85 eral lobes castaneous, passing below into luteous. Legs castaneous, the femora flecked above with fuscous, the hind pair only half as long again as the pronotum. Abdomen castaneous, faintly clouded and obscurely flecked irregularly with fuscous ; supraanal plate of male quadrangular, apically squarely truncate, the lateral angles slightly prominent ; cerci rather short, but very much longer than basal breadth, subcorneal ; supra- genital plates attingeut, together triangular, apically acutangulate, lying well within the margins of the subgenital plate ; the latter slightly com- pressed, so as to be V-shaped as seen apically, the styles minute, scarcely noticeable. Length of body, 24 mm.; pronotum, 12 mm.; breadth of same, 7.5 mm. ; length of hind femora, 18 mm. 1 . 181. O. (xqualii may be regarded as the type. Table of iin. Species oi Cacopteris. u]. Male with no spines on inner margin of fore tibiae above, and rarely with any black spot at outer apex of tegmina. Female also with no spines on inner margin of fore tibiae above, or rarely with a Bingle one. bl. Pronotum relatively Bhort, being but little longer than broad; apical denta- tions of Bupraanal plate <>f male blunt, at least as broad a* long. c1. Tegmina of male fusco-testaceous, unicolorous ; Bupraanal plate of male broadly and roundly emarginate at apex inermis. .-. Tegmina of male light testaceous, with a distincl Mack apical spot ; supraanal plate of male deeply and angularly emarginate apically. Juscopunctata. //-. Pronotum relatively long, being about half as long again as broad; apical dentations of supraanal plate of male acuminate, at least twice as 1 < » 1 1 »_c as broad. C1. Lateral lobes of pronotum with a Blight inferior flange anteriorly ; fore femora as long as pronotum: cerci of male prolonged apically beyond the inner median tooth to a bluntly acuminate spine reaching well beyond the subgenital plate sinuata. c-. Lateral lobes of pronotum with a pronounced inferior flange anteriorly; fore femora shorter than pronotum ; cerci of male with a short blunt conical extension beyond the inner median tooth, not reaching the tip of the bud- genital plate ephippiata, a2. Male with one or two, generally two, spines cm inner margin of fore tibial above, and a distinct black spot at outer apex of tegmina.* Female generally spined on fore tibia' as much as male, rarely without spines. /.'. Ovipositor almost or quite as long as hind femora, which are little if any longer than the body. C1. Ovipositor much longer than hind femora ; apical dentations of supraanal plate of male triangular, somewhat brief, separated by a V-shaped cleft ; apical hook of cerci comparatively Btout, apically bent .... ntvadensis. c-. Ovipositor about as long as hind femora; apical dentations <>f Bupraanal plate of male Blender, acuminate, separated by a U shaped sinus; apical hook of cerci comparatively slender, feebly incurved at tip .... eequalis. /--. Ovipositor only three fourths as long as hind femora, which are much longer than the body jemorata. * The male of C.femorata is unknown, but as the female has two or three Bpil on tin' inner margin of the fore tibia- above, it evidently belongs in tin- category. SCUDDER. — NORTH AMERICAN DECTICINiE. 89 Cacopteris inermis sp. nov. Blackish fuscous, the whole dorsum of the female testaceous, often flecked or clouded with fuscous, the sides of the abdomen of same sex often sprinkled with testaceous. Head testaceous below the lower level of the eyes, often more or less flecked inconspicuously with fuscous; antennae rufo-fuscous, rufous basally, rather longer than the body. Fro- notum with the lower and posterior margin edged with luteous, the lateral lobes deep, with scarcely perceptible posterior sinus, strongly bent-arcuate below, the whole but little longer than broad. Tegmina of male fusco-testaceous, unicolorous, of female testaceous. Legs rather short, fusco-testaceous, the lower half of hind femora testaceous ; fore femora much shorter than the pronotum ; fore tibiae normally with no spines on inner margin above (a single female has one) ; hind femora very much shorter than the body. Supraanal plate of male strongly transverse, the apical lobes broad, short, and rounded, the intervening sinus broad and arcuate ; cerci stout, strongly incurved, both the stout in- ner median tooth and the depressed apical projection triangular, strongly incurved and decurved, and sharply pointed ; subgenital plate with acutangulate apical emargination, the styles as long as apical breadth of plate ; ovipositor castaneous, marked with black at base, straight, much longer than hind femora, though shorter than body. Length of body. J\ 1 7 mm., 9 , '-1 mm. ; pronotum, 5 mm., 9 > G mm. ; fore femora, $, 3.7") mm., 9, 4mm. ; hind femora, £, 14mm., 9, 14.5 mm.; ovipositor, 18.5 mm. 2 ^, 3 9- Vicinity of Lake Tahoe, Nevada, Sept., H. W. Henshaw, Li. Wheeler's exploration of 1876. The supraanal plate and cerci of the male are quite different from those of any other species. It also has shorter legs. Cacopteris fuscopunctata sp. nov. Dark fusco-testaceous, the face blackish fuscous and behind the eye a narrow piceous stripe crossing the pronotum but broadly interrupted on the prozona; the legs dark fusco-testaceous, the tegmina light testaceous with a distinct black apical spot, the antennas half as long again as the body, rufo-testaceous, narrowly ringed with fuscous at the apex of the joints. Pronotum but little longer than broad, the lateral lobes deep with no posterior sinus, bent-arcuate below, the disk with a faint median carina. Legs of moderate length, the fore femora slightly shorter than the pronotum, the fore tibiie without spines on the inner margin above, '.'" PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. the hind femora about as long as the body. Supraanal plate broad tri- angular with a very deep apical Binus, separating two dentiform triangular lobes not bo long as broad and apically acute, not reaching bo tar Lack as the Bubgenital plate: ccrci fairly stout with similar ami Bubequal, conical, indirected, median ami apical Bpines of no great Bize, blunt tipped; suh- genital plate Bubtruncate apically, with a feeble median emargination, tin- styles Blight, less tliuii half :is lorn: as the apical breadth of the plate. Length of body, 11 mm.; pronotum, 1.5 mm. ; fore femora, 4 mm.; hind femora, 1 1 mm. 1 g. Tehachapi, Cal., Aug. 2, A. P. Morse. This species hears a close general resemblance to 0. ctqualit, from which it is distinguished hy its unarmed fore tibia?, slightly shorter hind femora, aud the male genitalia. Cacopteris sinuata ?p. nov. Light olivaceo-testaceous, the inferior margin of the lateral lohes of pronotum broadly bordered with luteous, and faint luteous Btripes in place of lateral carinas. Face yellow testaceous, narrowly edged below next clypeus with rufous. Pronotum about half as long again as broad, the lower margin of lateral lohes sinuate, the lohes being but little deeper on anterior than on posterior half of pronotum. the sinus rather slight. Tegmina dark fuscous, with luteous veins. Legs long, the fore femora slightly longer than the pronotum, the fore tibiae with no spines on the inner margin ahove. Abdomen with a pair of narrow, luteous, latero-dorsal stripes fading basally ; supraanal plate developing an apical pair of long, triangular, uniformly tapering and acuminate lohes, separated by a deep and narrow fissure, the lohes reaching as far as the Bubgenital plate; cerci cylindrical, long, sinuate, with a brief postmedian, interior, conical, pointed tooth, beyond which the cerci taper to a blunt point, this whole apical portion surpassing the Bubgenital plate; the latter with a Bubrectangulate apical emargination, the styles slender, less than half as long as the apical breadth of the plate. Length of body. "_''». •"» mm. ; pronotum, C> mm.; fore femora, G.5 mm. 2 $ . Fort Whipple, Arizona, E. Palmer. The colors are probably allected by immersion in alcohol. Unfortu- nately neither specimen has hind legs preserved. SCUDDER. — NORTH AMERICAN DECTICIN.E. 91 Cacopteris ephippiata sp. nov. Luteo-testaceous, the lower anterior margin of lateral lobes bordered with luteous, the outer face of the stouter part of the hind femora with a slender median and broader and longer inferior fuscous streaks, the teg- mina blackish, with the main lateral veins luteous. Pronotum about half as long again as broad, the lateral lobes twice as deep in the anterioi as in the posterior half, the sinus deep, the lower margin of deeper por- tion of pronotum strongly arcuate. Fore femora considerably shorter than pronotum, the fore tibia; with no spines above on inner margin, the hind femora long, as long as the body. Supraanal plate with a pair of subattingent, long and slender, tapering, depressed and pointed dentiform lobes, nearly reaching the tip of the subgenital plate, separated by a deep and narrow fissure ; cerci similar to those of G. sinuata but stouter and shorter, the tip not reaching so far back as the subgenital plate ; the lat- ter rather narrow apically with rectangulatc emargination. Length of body, 20 mm. ; pronotum, 7.1 mm. ; fore femora, 6 mm. ; hind femora, 20 mm. 1 $ . Sonora, Schott, Emory's Mexican boundary survey. Cacopteris nevadensis sp. nov. Fusco-griseous, the lateral lobes of pronotum more or less marked with piceous especially above, with a luteous patch bordering the infero- posterior margin ; head somewhat lighter below the lower level of the eyes, the legs concolorous, the tegmiua of the male dull testaceous, with an apical black spot outwardly ; antenna; much longer than the body, rufo-testaceous. Pronotum but little longer than broad, the lateral lobes deep, the lower margin strongly bent-arcuate with no sinus posteriorly. Legs rather long, the fore femora as long as (J ) or shorter than ( 9 ) the pronotum, the fore tibiae with one or two (<$ ) or no (9) spines on the inner margin above, the hind femora as long as ( '■•"' nun.; hind femora, £ , 17 nun .9. 18 nun.; ovipositor, 20 nun. _' /. 19. Ruby Valley, Nevada, Ridgway; mountains near Lake Tahoe, Nevada, Oct. l 1, Eienshaw, Lt. Wheeler's explorations of L876. The female, which alone comes from the last named . may pi bly belong to a distinct Bpecies; it differs in having a darker and more uniform coloring, with nearly uniformly fuscous lateral lobes (except the lnteons patch) as well as in the points brought out in the description. Cacopteris aequalis .sp. nov. Fusco-testaceous, often clouded with fuscous, generally hut not always with a fuscous patch on the lateral lobes of the pronotum, posteriorly overhanging a crescentic luteous bordering to the lower margin ; face gen- • rally a little lighter colored helow the lower level of the eyes; antennas nearly twice as long as the body, luteo-testaceous ; tegmina of male testa- ceous, with a distinct black spot at the apex; bind femora testaceous, generally more or less infuscated, occasionally streaked longitudinally with blackish fuscous externally. Pronotum scarcely longer than inferior breadth, with deep lateral lobes, the lower margin Btrongly bent-arcuate, with a slight posterior sinus. Legs long, the lore femora nearly or quite as long as the pronotum, the fore tibise with a pair of spines on the upper inner margin, the hind femora slightly longer than the body. Supraanal plate of male with an apical pair of rather widely separated, slender, acuminate denticulations, as long as the body of the plate, reach- ing nearly as far as the tip of the subgenital plate, and separated by a wide U-shaped sinus ; cerci stout and cylindrical in basal half, the apical half forming an inlient, apically incurved. Blender, tapering hook, spring- ing from the inner apical part of basal portion ; BubgenitaJ plate apically rectangularly emarginate, the styles moderate, neatly as long as the apical breadth of the plate; ovipositor faintly upeurved, about as long as the hind femora. Ij ngth of body, /, 19.75 mm , 9. '21 mm.: pronotum, c£, 5.25 nun.. 9,5.5 mm.; fore femora, J . 5 mm., 9, 5.75 mm.; hind femora, g , 20.5 nun., 9' 22 111111.; ovipositor, 22 nun. 9 ,'. 5 9. Los Angel.-. Cal., July 26, A. P. Morse, D. W. Coquil- lett; Cahon Pass, Cal., July 19, A. P. Morse. Two immature 9 from Mt. Wilson, Altadena, Cal., duly 27. A. 1'. Morse, may also belong here. Other Bpecimens are in the U. S. National Museum. SCUDDER. — NORTH AMERICAN DECTIClNiE. 93 Cacopteris femorata sp. nov. Nearly uniform very dark fusco-testaceous, the hind femora lighter testaceous except for a black median stripe on the outer and inner sides, larger without, the head fusco-castaneous ; antennas nearly twice as long as the body, rufo-testaceous. Pronotum but little longer than inferior breadth, the lateral lobes angularly separated from the disk posteriorly, forming slight blunt lateral carina3, the lobes deep, a little lighter colored below, the inferior margin strongly bent-arcuate, with a slight posterior sinus. Legs unusually long, the fore femora slightly longer than the pronotum, the fore tibiae with two or three spines on the inner margin above, the hind femora much longer than the body. Ovipositor concol- orous, feebly upturned, almost as long as the body. Length of body, 20.5 mm. ; pronotum, 5.5 mm. ; fore femora, 6 mm. ; hind femora, 25 mm.; ovipositor, 19 mm. 1 9 . South Santa Monica, Cab, July 80, J. J. Rivers through A. P. Morse. Easily distinguished by the carinas of the pronotum, the long hind legs, and relatively short ovipositor. Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Vol. XXXV. No. 6. — November, 1S99. NOTE ON THE FINITE CONTINUOUS GROUPS OF THE PLANE. By F. B. Williams. NOTE ON THE FINITE CONTINUOUS GROUPS OF THE PLANE. By F. B. Williams, Clark University, Mass. Presented by Henry Taber, October 11, 1899. Since Professor Study * made the important discovery that the special linear homogeneous group contains singular transformations, i. e. transfor- mations that cannot be generated by an infinitesimal transformation of this group (in consequence of which the group is not continuous except in the neighborhood of the identical transformation), such singular trans- formations have been found by Professor Taber f and others, in many other sub-groups of the general projective group. Thus, e.g., Mr. Rettger has shown that of the 76 two and three term sub-groups of the projective group in two variables, and of the general linear homogeneous group in three variables, 21 contain singular transformations.! It was therefore to be expected that, for example, among the groups of the plane given by Lie on pages 360 and 361 of his Continuierliche Gruppen, some, not sub-groups of the projective group, would be found to contain singular transformations. This I find to be the case, as the second group consid- ered below will show. The first group considered is projective for the value of r taken ; and, in connection with the consideration of this group, there is given a method by means of which we are able to ascertain whether a group contains singular transformations or not. Throughout this paper p = -= — and a = ■=— . ° l ' t 9x 3y Example I. If in the case of the group q, xq, x2q . . . xr~3q, p, xp + ayq, 3) * Leipziger Berichte, 1892. t Bull. N. Y. Math. Soc, July, 1894; Math. Ann., Vol. XL VI. p. 561; Math. Review, Vol. I. p. 154. See also Newson, Kansas Univ. Quart., 1896. t See These Proceedings, Vol. XXXIII. VOL. XXXV. — 7 98 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. we juit /• -- 1, we have the group q, xq, ;>, Xp + ltyq, which is a Bub-group of the general projective group. Tlie symbol of the general infinitesimal transformation is CT= (a, + thx + atay)q + u/, + <>ix)p. Hence, Ux = as -f a4 x, U-x = a:ia4 + a4s x, U"x = Wa^"-1 + a4"x, where U"x denotes U(Ux), etc. Similarly, Uy = ax + a2 x + aAuy, 1 Z 'J = al ai « + a2 ai <*X + «■»"' ""# + «S r/4 ^ + «2 «3 » Vsy = a1«42«'2 + rt2«4s«'-x + a4*a*y + a3a?(a + l)x+ o,a3at(a + 1 |, Efy = a^-V"1 + a„a4"-1«"-,x+ a4Vty + a2a4»-1(oB-*+ «n-3 + ...a + l)x + o2a3a4"-2(«»-2 + «^-8 + . . . + „ + 1). Therefore,* the transformation of the group geuerated by the general infinitesimal transformation of the group is defined by the equations x = x e + - (c — 1), «4 , rt3 , nt (1) a4(« — 1) + —-T7 TT (e - « <" - ] +") + —- (e — !)• a or4 (« — 1 ) « a± Let this transformation be denoted by T,,. It transforms the point /* with coordinates (x, y) into the poinl P' with coordinates (.>•'. ;/). Lei the transformation 7^ of our group (gei erated by the infinitesimal trans- formation {hx 4- /a.t -f b4 ay) 7 + {hi -f />, x)p) transform /' into P" with coordinates (x", y"). 7), is then defined by the equations * Lie, Differentialgleichungen, chap. 3, § 3. WILLIAMS. — FINITE CONTINUOUS GROUPS. 99 a/'^/' + rV-i). (2) *■ . bnb3 a b 6 Jj „ J u 04 (« — 1) a o4 Substituting in (2) the values of x' and y' from (1), we get the transfor- mation Tb Ta which carries the point P into the point P" . The equa- tions defining Tb Ta are then x" = x e«* + b* + aJi (J* + &< _ M + *? (/, _ 1} (3) "* bi y" = ye« ('h + *> + -^- J ^ (e° (ai + *j) - e* + ' *4) + £ («' '* - e"1) I ct — 1 / (-l± t>4 i . 100 PROCE OF nil: AMERICAN ACADEMY. where k and it are integers. From Aese equations it follows that an is an integer. Th< refore, if a is irratioual, k = 0. Ou the other hand, it a is rational and equal to , where /x and v are integers relatively V prime, K = A. r. where A is an arbitrary integer. V\ e also derive from (8) and ( I) °i + ^4 + 2 K 7T I C a, V #- ) #/, + ft, + "J K 77 I j O, « (ff4 + fc4) n< + a 64 6- , a 6, 64 ) = (a, &), _ fl4 + Q4 + 2 K ff t / ^ a (fl. + bt) 1_ e«(«4 + *«)_1 l"(a4 + 64 + 2kit09(«- !) "4+^4 1 , \ , "- " ■ / a(a4 + ^4) "4 + afc4 o/»4 — ae —l + u)-\ Y7~ ~^T\ \e — ue — e + „ e'»«) + 2 (.-«* + *> - ea6«) + - ^^ (ea&« - „e6< -1 + .) + £(."* -1)}. ft' for finite values of the o's and />'s. while some of the c's. may remain finite, one (or more) becomes infinite in all branches, there is no infinitesimal transformation of the group that will generate '/' /' . i.e. T,, T . i- a singular transformation. Let a be irrational. Then k = 0 ; and for all finite values of the a 'a and 6's, c4 is finite. But, if «4 + 64 = 2 m it i for some integer m ={= 0, c3 is infinite, provided *> p + *4 _ ^ + £ (/4 _ 1} = (+ _ bj\ ^ > Q Similarly, if (« — 1) ("., + 1\) = 2miri ^ 0, c2 is in general infinite; and, if « (n{ + &4) = 2/»7ri ^ 0, c{ is in general infinite. Let now a = ; then e. is, as before, finite. In this case, as stated v above, k = Ar, where X is an arbitrary integer; and if a, -f bt = 2 wi 7ri :£ 0, c3, and therefore c,, are in general infinite unless 2 7r i (wj + A v) = a4 + ft4 + 2 k it i = o, — WILLIAMS. — FINITE CONTINUOUS GROUPS. 101 that is, unless m contains v. Therefore, if a4 + bt = 2 m tt i ^ 0 and v 4= 1. we can always so choose m that c3 shall, in general, be infinite and Tb Ta singular. On the other hand, if aA + 64 = 2 m tt i, and if v = 1 (i. e. if « is an integer), one branch of c3 is always finite, and the same is true for cx and c2 : so in this case Tb Ta can be generated by an infiuitesimal transformation of our group. When a is rational there are, however, always singular transforma- tions of the group. For let . 2nnri 2 mviri «4 + h - a— 1 fi — v Then in general (i. e. provided the function of the a's and b's found in the second factor in the expression for c.2 is not zero), c2 is infinite unless 2 v 7T i ( — h A. j = a4 + \ + 2 k ir i = 0 ; which is impossible if m is so chosen that it shall not contain jx — v. Therefore, whether a is rational or irrational, if a. + b, = - — ± 0 « — 1 (where m is an integer which if « is rational and equal to - does not con- V tain /a — v), c2 is in general * infinite, and consequently Th Ta cannot be generated by an infinitesimal transformation of our group; i.e. Th Ta is then singular. Among the singular transformations of our group obtained by putting , 2 miri .. . . . , , m, a , + o4 = - — — 41 0 (where it « is rational and equal to -, the integer a — 1 v m does not contain /x — v), let us consider those for which, further, a3 = b,, = 0. These singular transformations are defined by the equations 2mni x' = xe"-1, lam-ni y = ye*~x + Mx + N (5) 2amiri (Jf*0)- The singular transformations T defined by equations (5) leave invariant, as a whole, the system of lines x = const., but change each line into * I. e. provided "? {ea(a* + bJ - ea* + ab*) + f (eab* - e6*), which in this case «4 "4 becomes ( — ea* — ■— ) (e6* — eabi), is not zero. L02 DINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. some other line of th m. A \ with T is a one-term group whose path carves, x c, are as a whole unchanged by /'. The path curves oi our group are given by the equation dx dy a^ + a^x ax + aax + a^uy' the solution of which gives " •• , N "i "i - " " . y=V(i-«)(a8 + g'*)- T* y(«» + a«*)a. where y is the constant of integration. If in the symbol of the general infinitesimal transformation D we put a4 0, ". 0, and ay and a* finite, we get the one-term group whose symbol of infinitesimal transformation i- f\ = (ai + "■:■')'/. and whose path curves are x = const.; which is thru the one-term group associated with the singular transformations /'. Example II. aK x pK aK i e (7, X e q, . . . x <■ y. j> k=1, 2, . . . m, uK = const.. %p„ + /// /■ — 1, 7- > 2. f Put r = 3, - 1) 1 + eaX ill (ea"> - 1) a eta r + «, ^ + «; ! Z L 3 as (,,_(1+t„,+^))T t- a2 a3 ) J J r jj j Hence the oo3 of non-singular transformations Ta have the form x' = x + «3, (1) where e"0* — 1 (a) = a2 , a u ■ y' =y + xeax4>(a) + eaX (b) + e">(i)- And, therefore, Ti, T„ is defined by the equations x" = x + o3 + b, . (3) y" = y + xea*[cl>(a) + ea^(S)) + eaX ty (a) + «3e°"^(i) + *•**(*)! If now 7fc y„ = 7",. , we have also (4) Therefore, ^ (c) = C (a) + a3 ea"* 0 (4) + e°"3 ^ (i). 104 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. Whence we derive ^ = aa + *' • w-iL«t +«&/ J „ K + a.) r ck*) 5 / in + t \,-w(a%+M?+^a)+^aa^(^)+ea"v(&)T a ( o8 + 63) 2 5 J Krom these ('([nations it follows thai <\ is Unite for finite values of the tt\ and 6's ; but if a„ + b:i = r}= 0, where « is an integer not /.< r<> a (u being cither rational or irrational), then Cj and cs are, in general, both infinite in all branches (and, indeed, cx is infinite to the second order), that is, unless (5) -^- (ea"> _ 1) + A (e«<«., + W _ e«<%) - 0, and + ^(«) + a.en"^(h) + ean'i(,(b) = 0. If (/)) is satisfied and (6) is not, we have c9 finite and r, infinite to the "^ K' T ? ** /\" 71 J first order for ofi + />.,= - 4= 0. Therefore, if o. + 5. = - - :£ 0? where « is an integer, T/t T„ is, in general, singular. Among the singular transformations of our group obtained by putting a f i3 = - - 41 0 (* an integer), Jet us consider those for which, « further, a., = b2 = 0. Equation (">) is then satisfied ; and these singular transformations are defined by the equations I- If 71 £ a;' = a; H (k an integer ^ 0), (7) / = y + J/ea* (J/i 0). WILLIAMS. — FINITE CONTINUOUS GROUPS. 105 The singular transformations 71 defined by equations (7) leave invariant, as a whole, the system of lines x = const., but change each line into some other line of the system. Associated with T is a one-term group whose path curves, x = c, are as a whole unchanged by T. The path curves generated by the general infinitesimal transformation of this group are defined by the equation dx dy a3 eaX (at + a2x) * the solution of which gives eaX (ax a + a2 a x — cto) = «3 a2y + c. (c = const.) If, now, in the symbol of the general infinitesimal transformation U, we put a3 = 0, a2 = 0, and ax finite, we get the one-term group, whose symbol of infinitesimal transformation is UY == aleaxq, and whose path curves are x = const. ; which is then the one-term group associated with the singular transformation T. ■&■ The following groups do not contain singular transformations, and are properly continuous groups. Example III. 7> <£2 (x) q, . ■ . 0r - 1 O) q, r > 2 yq Put r = 3 ; we then have the group q, (x)q, yq; and Therefore, U=z arq + a2(j) (x) q + a^yq. Ux = 0; Uy = «! + «2 0 (*) + «:iy< U2y = a1a3 + a2 a3 <£ (ar) + a32y, Uny = ax oz" ~ i + a2 a8»- i 0 (ar) + a8"y. Hence the transformation 7^ of this group is defined by 106 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. (1) and the transformation Tb by (2) Therefore, if Th Ta — Te, «, + ^ + 2k^« C e„ fl3 _ a, e«3 + 6. _ 1 ( ->»■ cz = a8 -f bB + 2 k n i. For finite values of the o's and //>, every branch >>t c is finite, and at least one branch both of ct and of c, is finite. For r, and c, can only be infinite for aa + ba = 2 m n i {m an integer) ; but if • • • ^r-i(-r)7» yy> i< likewise continuous for values of r > 3; i. e. for values of r > 3, it dors not contain singular transformations. For, if >• = p > 3 the trans- • irmations 7], are defined by = x WILLIAMS. — FINITE CONTINUOUS GROUPS. 10' Example IV. a X ax pax e K q, xeKq, ...,xKeKq, >/ q, p K = 1, 2, . . . , m, aK = const., 2pK + m = t — 2, r >3 Put pK = 1, k = m = 1, and r =■ 4. We then have the group and Therefore, eaxq, xeaxq, y q, p ; U = (a1eax + a.2xeax + a33/) ^ + a4/> . {7a; = a4, U'2x — 0, . . . Z7"x = 0, x' = x + ai ; 60 that and £7y = ax eaZ + a2x eax + a3 y, U'2y = aia3eax + a„a3xeax + a-.1 y -f eaT(a1a4« + a2a4) + xeax a.,ailt, U*y = «i afe** + a2 a^ze"* + «33^ + ear («x a4 a a8 + «2 a4 a8) + xen the glass surfaces, — in Bpite of the greatest possible precaution, — it is practical!} impossible to insure a perfect contact, or e\en constancy, in the distances between surfaci " [f now instead of the retardation by reflection we make use of the retardation by transmission through tin- glass, tin- difficulty disappears almost completely. In particular the air-films are compensated 1>.\ equivalent i i thicknesses of air outside, so that it is no longer necessarj that their thickness should In- constant. Besides, the ac- curacy uf parallelism and of thickness of the gla■>, and whose theoretical resolving powers are therefore of the order of 210000, 540000, and 900000, respectively. In other words, they can resolve lines whose distances apart is the two-hundredth, the five-hundredth, and the nine-hundredth of* the distance between the I) lines. Consequently the smallest of these echelons surpasses the resolving power of the best gratings, and what is even more important, it concen- trates all the light in a single spectrum. The law of the distrihution of intensities in the successive spectra is readily deduced from the integral Hence = / c cos pxdx. where p = — 6. alt * I=A2 = sin- TV - u A (*) This expression vanishes for 6 = t A / s, which is also the value of dOl , the distance between the spectra. Hence in general there are two spectra visible as indicated in Figure 4. w 1 0 FlOl i:i. 1. i* P>v slightly inclining the echelon, one of the spectra is readily brought to the centre of the field, while the adjacent ones are at the minima, and disappear. The remaining spectra are practically invisible, except for very bright lines. As has just been indicated, the proximity of the successive spectra of one and the same line is a serious objection, and as this proximity depends MICHELSON. — THE ECHELON SPECTROSCOPE. 117 on the thickness of the plates — which for mechanical reasons cannot well be reduced below 5 or G mm. — it is desirable to look to other means for obviating the difficulty, among which may be mentioned the use of a liquid instead of air. In this case Formula II. becomes d$ /|~1 . . d(n — mi)~I t = c 'P ( \ \ d^ ~ ^1 dX/X s L/i,! d X J s and Formula IV. becomes d$_ _ _X^ dm [il s Repeating the same operations as in the former case, we find : X n c t and E — —. ct The limit of resolution is still the n'th part of the distance between the spectra, but both are increased in the ratio bjc. Suppose for instance the liquid is water. Neglecting dispersion the factor would be 8.55. Hence the distance between the spectra will be increased in this proportion, but the limit of resolution will also be multiplied by this factor. But as there is now a surface water-glass which reflects the light, the loss due to this reflection will be very much less, so that it will be possible to employ a greater number of elements, thus restoring the resolving power. At the same time the degree of accuracy necessary in working the plates is 3.55 times less than before. For many radiations the absorption due to thicknesses of the order of 50 cm. of glass would be a very serious objection to the employ- ment of the transmission echelon. I have attempted, therefore, to carry out the original idea of a reflecting echelon, and it may be of interest to indicate in a general way how it is hoped the problem may be solved. Among the various processes which have suggested themselves the following appear the most promising. In the first a number of plates (20 to 30), of equal thickness, are fastened together as in Figure 5, and the surfaces A and B are ground and polished plane and parallel. They are then separated and placed on an inclined plane surface, as indicated in Figure G. lis PROCEEDINGS OK THK AMERICAN ACAIH'.MY. If there are differences in thickness of the air-films, the resulting differences in the heighl of the plates will be Leas In the ratio tan «. B FlOUBB 5. An error of \/n may be admitted f<>r each plate, — even in the most unfavorable case in which the errors all add ; and consequently the admissible errors in the thickness of the air-films may be of the order \/?itt. For instance, for 20 plates the average error maybe n whole wave-length if the inclination « is J,,. As there is always a more or Figure 6. less perfect compensation of the errors, the number of plates or the inclination may be correspondingly greater. Accordingly, it may be possible to make use of 50 elements, and the plane may be inclined at an angle of 20° to 30°. It would be necessary in this case, however, to use a rather large objective. Possibly this may be avoided by cutting the surface A to a spherical curvature, thus forming a sort of concave echelon. MICHELSON. — THE ECHELON SPECTROSCOPE. 119 Figure 7. The second process differs from the first only in that each plate is cut independently to the necessary height to give the required retardation. The first approximation being made, the plates are placed on a plane surface, as in Figure 7. The projections a and h (Fig. 8) are then ground and polished until the up- per surfaces are all parallel, and the successive retardations equal. The parallelism as well as the height is verified by means of the interferom- eter. These processes are, it is freely conceded, rather delicate, but prelim- inary experiments have shown that with patience they may be suc- cessful. Figure 8. Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Vol. XXXV. Xo. S. — December, 1899. THE ELECTROCHEMICAL EQUIVALENTS OF COPPER AND SILVER. By Theodore W. Richards, Edward Collins, and Geoloe \V. Heimrod. CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE CHEMICAL LABORATORY OF HARVARD COLLEGE. THE ELECTROCHEMICAL EQUIVALENTS OF COPPER AND SILVER. By Theodore William Richards, Edward Collins, and George W. Heimrod. Presented June 14, 1899. Received October 30, 1899. Four years ago we began an investigation which had as its object the careful study of the well known irregularities of the "copper voltameter" from the point of view of the modern theories of electrochemistry. One reason for this study was the fact that the atomic weight of copper com- puted from the relation of its electrochemical equivalent to that of silver was noticeably smaller than the atomic weight obtained in this Labora- tory by purely chemical methods.* Owing to circumstances beyond our control the completion of the work was postponed far beyond its proper time ; but at last it is in a condition suitable for partial publication. The matter was complicated by the discovery of an error in the "silver volta- meter," as well as in the " copper voltameter." In the mean time an extremely interesting paper by Foerster and Seidel, and several other valuable contributions by Kahle, Patterson and Guthe, and others, upon allied subjects, have appeared. f These cover a part of the ground occu- pied by our work, and thereby shorten the present account. The work naturally falls under two headings, because each metal needed its special investigation ; and this natural division will be retained in the following description. I. The Copper Voltameter. The work of Gore, Lord Rayleigh and Mrs. Sidgwick, Gray, Shaw, Vanni, and Gannon, $ showed long ago that a side reaction, varying in * T. W. Richards, These Proceeding, 26, 240 (1801). t Foerster and Seidel, Zeitschr. anorg. Chem., 14. 106-140 ; K. Kahle, Wied. Ann., 67, 1 (1890) ; Patterson and Guthe, Physical Review, 7, 257 (1898) ; E. II. Griffiths, Nature, 56, 258 (1807), etc. t Gore, Nature, 25, 473 (1882) ; Lord Rayleigh and Mrs. Sidgwick, Phil. Trans., 175, 458 (1884) ; Gray, Phil. Mag., (5), 22, 380 (1886). also 25, 170(1888) ; Shaw, Brit. Ass. Rep. 1886, p. 318 [Phil. Mag., (5), 23, 138] ; Vanni, Wied. Ann., 44, 214 (1801) : Gannon, Proc. Roy. Soc, 55, 06 (1894). 1-1 PROCEEDINGS OP l Hi: AMERICAN ACADEMY. prominence with circumstances, vitiates the electrochemical equivalent of copper as it is ordinarily determined. Even :t cursor} Btudj ol th careful investigations shows that the complication arises at the point contact of the copper cathode with the solution, and that the Bid Lion has the effect of lessening the amount of copper deposited l>y the current With this in mind, we made a systematic investigation of the behavior •pper plates in cupric solutions, which led us to precisely the Batne conclusions as those attained by Foerster and Seidel in 1 1 » « - paper already mentioned. Since these gentlemen have described their work in great detail, an abbreviated statement of our results will Buffice. 1. Metallic copper Blowly dissolves in an acid solution of cupric sulphate, even when the Bolution has been freed from air and has been p i by an atmosphere of hydrogen. This conclusion was tested many times, and the losses >>! weight of the plates were found to he roughly proportional t<> the respective area- of the plates, if the volume of solution was large. ■_'. A strongly acid solution does not differ materially in its action from a weakly acid Bolution J hence neither hydrogen nor S< >, ions can he responsible for the phenomei 3. Other things being equal, the action is proportional to the concen- tration df the cupric Bulphate, being u-n slight when this is abs< at, i een it much sulphuric acid is present. Hence the cupric ions must he the active agents, and they can only dissolve the copper according to tin/ reaction Cu + Cu++[-f S04"] ±; 2 Cu+[+S04"]. in a word, cuprous Bulphate must be formed. ■1. In contact with the air this action naturally takes place more rapidly than in the absence of oxygen. Instead of losing only about 0.004 milligram per square centimeter per hour in a normal solution of cupric sulphate at 20 . us before, the I oss was nearly doubled. Evi- dently the cuprous becomes cupric sulphate in the oxidizing environment, and thus opportunity lor further reduction is otfered. 5. ( )n the other hand, plates of copper immersed in neutral solutions of cupric Bulphate always gain in weight, becoming coated with a film of cuprous oxide. This is a wholly separate phenomenon, due to the hydrolysis of the cuprous sulphate. Of course this hydrolysis cannot happen in an acid solution ; hence copper deposited electrolytically from an acid solution is free from cuprous oxide. Obviously, too. the method of Vanni, which consists in adjusting the amount of acid so thai the plates neither gain nor h>y Gray in the paper just cited. Gray's resul is are so interesting thai it Beems worth while to repeat a part of the plate which depicts his observations. The abscissas register the numbei i BOUare centimeters area per ampere, while the onlinates give the values proportional to the amount of copper deposited by a given current in a given time. The solution of cuprie sulphate had a Bpecific gravity vary- ing from 1.15 to 1.18, or contained perhaps 250 grams <>t' crystallized salt to the litre. Area per ampere .3 '1.996 Figure 2. — Diagram hbawn proh thb Ni hbstcai Table given bt Gray. (Phil. Mag., [6], 25, 182 [1888].) It is evident that with large areas of cathode (small current densities) the fairly straight lines tend to converge at a point somewhat above the top of the table. On the other band, when the current density becomi - great, the curves fail of their mark and bend sharply to the left. Gray dismisses this remarkable tendency with the assumption of the "pro- tective action" of strong currents already mentioned, and takes as the true value the results obtained at "2° Centigrade with current densities higher than 0.01 ampere per square centimeter. RICHARDS, COLLINS, AND HEIMROD. — COPPER AND SILVER. 129 Since it is precisely this variation of the highest values for copper which interests us, — for we know that the lower values are certainly too low, — it seemed desirable to obtain further light upon this question. We therefore carried out a similar series to Gray's, using weaker solu- tions, with which the point of inflection in the curve would naturally come at a lower current density. Cathodes and anodes of copper of different sizes were placed in separate portions of a solution of cupric sulphate containing 100 grams to the litre, and the same current was run through the series of cells. The amounts of copper thus deposited are given in the following table. No. of Analysis. Strength of Current. Area of Cathode 50 sq. cm. Area of Cathode 25 sq. cm. Area of Cathode 121 Sq. cm. Am pere. Grams. Grams. Grams. a 0.12 0.07325 0.07341 0.07345 b 0.19 0.60856 0.66909 0.66921 c 0.21 0.44460 0.44469 0.44462 d 0.22 0.31212 0.31225 0.31204 e 0.25 0.45869 0.45918 0.45007 The first fact which is at once apparent is the interesting phenomenon of a decrease in the deposit on the smallest plate in experiments c, d, and e. This corresponds to a downward turn in Gray's curve; and if these results are plotted upon his scale, the following diagram is obtained. (See Figure 3, on the next page.) Such a curve as this is only to be produced by the appearance with high current densities of another cause, independent of the cuprous-cupric reaction, but also tending to lower the observed weight of copper. It is not difficult to suggest what this cause may be. When the current increases in strength, the copper ions in the neighborhood of the cathode are no longer able to carry all of the current, and a portion of the load is taken by the only other positive ion present. But the hydrogen which thus plays the electrical role of the copper weighs far less than the equiv- alent weight of the red metal. A small amount of hydrogen, capable of being occluded by the copper without change in the appearance of the surface, would cause an immense deficiency in the gain in weight. When the current strength increases only a little above 0.02 ampere per square centimeter the deposit of the copper becomes powdery, probably because vol. xxxv. — 9 l::n EEDING8 OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. l H I I I l-l I I I I | 4-M 1 I I I I I 1 1 I 1 I ! ) H ■ 1 1 1 Itt trrH I I II 1 1 I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 Area per ai Figure •'• — Diagram showing Dbcri isi is Copper with bmau Cathodi i (di i: TO Ih DBOGI S ) The table above is here plotted by taking the highest freight <>t copper in each determination aa unity. Great exactness could not be expected from this method, but it ia sufficiently definite to show a marked deflection of the line when the 100 sq. cm. line is approached, and a sudden downward tendency when the current density approaches 0.02 ampere per square centimeter. of the action of the occluded hydrogen, and the deficiency assumes gigantic proportions. Indeed it has been well known for a 1 < » 1 1 ^_r time that this current density is the limit if one makes any pretence to accuracy ; our results merely show that the action of the hydrogen begins to affect the deposit long before it becomes manifest to crude observation. Thus it seems probable that the left-handed tendency of Gray's curves, instead of being due to the approach to the true value' and a lessening of the corrosion, was really due to the beginning of a new source of inaccuracy. From a theoretical standpoint Buch a phenome- non appears only natural : with more dilute solutions the deficiency would of course appear at lower current densities. Probably the fact that in analytical work the amount, of the deposited metal never corresponds to the quantity of electricity may often be due to the same cause, in addition to the oxidizing action pointed out by Danneel.* Returning now to weaker currents in fairly strong solutions t Experi- ments a and />), it is evident both from Cray's results and from our own that the weight of the deposit in this case is approximately a linear function of the area of the cathode; in other words, the dissolving oi copper in cupric sulphate is approximately proportional to the sin of copper exposed, oven while the current is running. Since this is the Case, the Obvious method of obtaining the true weight of COpper would be to extrapolate for a surface of zero area, — or to add to the weight deposited upon a medium-sized ana the difference between its gain and • Zeitschr. Electrochem., 4, 163 (1898). RICHARDS, COLLINS, AND HEIMROD. — COPPER AND SILVER. 131 the gain on an area of twice the size. This method of correction would certainly give a correction which is too large, for during the electrolysis the solution is steadily approaching saturation with cuprous ions, which are deposited but not accounted for by the correction. Nevertheless it was decided to carry out a series of observations with plates of two sizes, calculating the results according to this method of correction, and comparing both corrected and uncorrected values with the results of an included silver voltameter. In this way an upper and a lower limit for the electrochemical equivalent of copper might be fixed ; and by using a low temperature, it seemed probable that the two limits might be brought near together. Agitation would of course increase the amount of corro- sion * and diminish the error due to hydrogen ; but we preferred to use low current densities and rely upon the natural convection of the elec- trolyte, which is then sufficient if the error is kept low by cold. Experimental Details. The cupric sulphate used for the following experiments, after having been purified in usual ways, was allowed to stand for some time, first with floccnlent cupric hydroxide and then with pure copper, in order to free it from possible trace9 of bismuth, silver, etc. Subsequently it was recrystallized from the purest water. Metallic copper for the anodes was prepared by electrolysis from this material, after strongly acidifying its solution with pure sulphuric and nitric acids. The silver used for the anodes was prepared according to the well known chloride-milk-sugar method of Stas, and was amply pure enough for its purpose. The argentic nit rate used as an electrolyte was made from this silver by the action of pure nitric acid. This salt was recrys- tallized. dried, and fused in order to insure its neutrality. For particulars concerning these and other precautions, the reader is referred to recent papers upon the atomic weight of copper and other atomic weights.f In any given experiment, the galvanic current was sent through two silver and at least two copper cells, all being arranged in series in such a way as to avoid liability to leakage. Every point of contact with the desk was amply insulated by glass plates, and the wires were arranged as much as possible in air-lines. The copper cells were contained in wide-mouthed bottles with a ca- pacity of 500 cubic centimeters each, provided with well cleaned rubber * Compare Foerster's results. t These Proceedings, 22, 342 (1887), 23, 177 (1887), 25, 95 (1890), 26, 240 (1891), etc. 1 ■'.") 1 •>_ IEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. •8. Through tl toppers ran tbe tubes for supplying the hydrogen used to exclude oxygen from the process, as well as the sup- FlGURE 4. ports for (ho electrodes. Two anodes | B and C) were used in each cell, and in all except the earliest experiments t lie cathodes (A) were of platinum. A diagram, Figure 4, while illustrating a later modification, RICHARDS, COLLINS, AND HEIMROD. — COPPER AND SILVER. 133 sufficiently explains the arrangement. At the close of an experiment the cathodes were immediately immersed in water, and after a thorough washing in pure water and alcohol were dried as usual. The electrolyte contained 100 grams of crystallized cupric sulphate in a litre. The silver cells were essen- tially similar to those used by Lord Rayleigh, except that the cathodes consisted of large light platinum crucibles instead of bowls. These crucibles weighed only 60 grams, although they were capable of holding 120 cubic centimeters ; they were provided with lips. A crucible exposes a smaller surface to the impurities of the atmosphere and gave in our experiments a more evenly distributed deposit than a bowl. The anode con- sisted of a lump of pure silver, wrapped in pure filter paper, and the electrolyte contained ten per cent of argentic nitrate. When the current was stopped the argentic nitrate was decant- ed through a weighed Gooch crucible, and, after standing main' hours with several lilliiiirs of pure water, the crucibles were washed with pure water and alcohol, and dried at 130°. The decantates were filtered, in order to be sure that no silver had been lost; if the Gooch crucible was found to contain any of the deposit, its weight was added to that of the greater part clinging to the cathode. In one or two of the earlier determinations, plates were used instead of crucibles as cathodes ; but since the results thus obtained showed no sys- tematic variation from those with the crucibles, the table is not compli- cated by calling attention to this inessential fact. The danger of losing silver mechanically from the corners of a plate is so great that this form of cathode was soon abandoned. Figure 5. — Common Silver Volta- meter (| natural size; section). A, >ilver anode. B, filter paper covering. C, lip of platinum vessel forming cathode. 134 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. In the table <>n page 185, each horizontal line reports a complel erimeut, which usually required a day for preparation and another for accomplishment. At firsl the copper cells were multiplied ; bul later when the silver Beemed to be quite as uncertain as the copper, the nobler metal received its full share of representation. Some of the earlier experiments failed for one reason <>r another, and these failures are not included in the table. The last Bis determinations were consecutive; and in these the conditions ol experiment were much more satisfactory than in the earlier ones ; for much practice was naturally acquired in the course of the work. In all the experiments < xcepting Nos. 1 and 2 the cupric electrolyte was boiled and cooled to zero in an inert atmosphere before the electrolysis; and in all excepting Nos. 1, 2, 8, and 6 the cop- per electrolysis was conducted in an atmosphere of hydrogen. Attention is again called to the fact that each corrected value for the copper deposit is computed from two deposits, one on a large and one on a small electrode. The exposed area of the large electrode was always about 50 square centimeters; and in all cases, except those indicated by the signs ft below, the area of the smaller plate was half that of the larger. The current densities varied slightly, but were always less than 0.<>1 ampere per square centimeter on the .-mailer plate, the total current strength usually being about 0.12 ampere for the system. "When the total current strength was kept below this limit, no svstematic variation due to its changes could be detected in the re- sults; hence the individual figures are omitted in this published account. In order to prevent saturation with cuprous salt, the volume of the electrolyte used in each cell was fairly large, being usually about 200 cubic centimeters. The corrected average value from the table for the atomic weight of copper, 63.563, has a '■ probable error " of 0.004 as far as the accidental inaccuracies of manipulation are concerned. It has already been shown, however, that a value obtained in this way must correspond to a de- posit of copper slightly too great; for the mode of correction does not take account of the growing, although Blight, presence of cuprous Baits. On the other band, the values computed from the directly observed quantities of copper must be too small. The average observed values, calculated from the sums at the bottoms of the respective columns, are Cu = 63.525 from the larger plates, and C'u - 63.547 from the smaller plates. It is evident then, that the true electrochemical atomic weight of Copper, when compared with the sil\er deposited in the ordinary silver voltameter, must lie between the limits 63.568 and ( > •' '>.."» 17. It RICHARDS, COLLINS, AND HEIMROD. — COPPER AND SILVER. 135 Comparison of the Silver with the Copper Voltameter. Temperature of Silver Voltameter = 15° to 25°. Temperature of Copper Voltameter = —2° to 0°. Large Copper 50 sq. cm. Small ( lopper usually 25 sq. cm. First Silver (in air). Second Silver (iu air). Corrected Copper. Average Silver. (cor. to vac.) Atomic Weight of Copper, Ag = lU7.93. 1 2 3 0.44460 0.31555* 0.24965* 0.44469 0.31623*1 0.24907*t 1.51039 1.07476 0.84780 1.51098 0.84808 0.44478 0.31645 0.24968 1.51064 1.07473 0.84792 63.56 63.56 63.56 4 5 6 1.02182* 0.60090* 0.62902* 1.02189 0.66128* 0.03018! 3.47066 2.24545 2.14008 2.14105 1.02186 0.66166 0.63027 3.47050 2.24538 2.14050 63 56 63.61 63.56 7 8 D 0. 15869 0.39140 1.11054 0.45907t 0.391651 1.11042 1.56000 1.33075 3.76996 3.77003 0.45919 0.39177 1.11030 1.55995 L.33071 3.76990 63.54 63.55 63.57 10 11 12 0.67592 0.48238 0.83036 0.67578 0.48235 0.83064 2.29667 1.63731 2.82200 2.291 1.03810 2 82222 0.67564 0.48232 0.83092 2.29655 1.63768 2.82203 6351 63.58 63.51 ; 13 14 15 0.63407 0.69956 0.84311 0.631 19 0.70029 0.84375 2.15780 2.37916 2.80580 2.15701 2.37840 2.86654 0.G3491 0.70102 0.84409 2.15735 2.37868 2.86608 63.53 63.61 63.57 16 17 0.87448 0.69379 0.87455 0.69392 2.97121 2.35652 2.97120 2.35729 0.87462 0.694D5 2. '.17114 2 35683 63.54 63.57 11.01704 11.02085 11.02363 37.43593 63.563 * These determinations were made in duplicate. Thus, in Experiments 2, 3, and 5, four copper cells were in the current at once. The pairs agreed within themselves remarkahly well, the average deviation from the mean being only 0.03 milligram. t In these experiments, the smaller copper was ^ as large as the larger one. t In this determination the smaller copper was £ as large as the larger one. L36 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. U to be noticed that the value (68.54) obtained from Gray's observa- tions I >\ our method oi correction is near these figui It' the absolute accuracy of Faraday's law is assumed, these results show either that the Bilver voltameter must yield nearly 0.1 per cent too mucb Bilver, or else that the value of the atomic weight of copper found chemically in this Laboratory (63.604) must be ".1 percent too high. Convincing as these conclusions seemed, the attempt was made to ob- tain yet further light upon the copper voltameter by varying the conditions. For example, several experiments were made with a mercury cathode, in the hope that the amalgam of copper might be less easily influenced by side reactions than the metal itself; but the difficulties in the waj of determining accurately the weight of the large volume of metal which was needed to contain the copper, soon led to the abandonment of this attempt. Moreover other chemical difficulties, due to the po sible dis- solving of mercury, added complications. It seemed now worth while to make a few determinations of the amount ol copper deposited from a solution saturated with cuprous salt, in order to fix the highest possible limit for the electrochemical equiva- lent in a fashion wholly free from any correction, as well as to test experimentally our criticism of Foerster and Seidel's remarks about such a Bolution. In order to saturate the liquid with cuprous ions, the weighed platinum cathode was raised above the solution by means of its sliding BUpport, and the current was run backward and forward for an hour or more between the two coils of copper (wrapped in 61ter paper, B and C, Fig. 4) which were to serve as anodes. Instead of the large bottle of the earlier experiments, a test tube just large enough to contain the electrodes was used, so that the small amount of necessary solution could be more easily saturated. In due time the cathode was lowered, and the quantitative electrolysis commenced. Of course the Bolution had been boiled, and was protected by a current of hydrogen throughout the experiment. The silver voltameter used was an improved arrai meiit. but its results are reduced to the standard used in the earlier experiments for the sake of ready comparison. This matter will be fully explained in the sequel. This value of the atomic weight, 63.573, is 0.06 per cent higher * Gray in his first paper reports that with plates of 240 Bq. cm. ares bi 0.29803 gram of copper for every gram of silver, while with plates ol 50 sq. cm. area he obtained 0.29 107 L:ram. Hence with plates of zero ana lie W ould ha\ . obtained 0.29434, corn sponding to the atomic weight given above. (Phil. Mag., [5], 22, J07 [IbbGJ. Last three determinations in table.) PJCIIARDS, COLLINS, AND HEIMROD. COPPER AND SILVER. 187 Comparison of the ordinary Silver Voltameter with the Copper Voltameter saturated with Cuprous Salt at 0°. Weight of Copper (in Vacuum). Weight of Silver (in Vacuum). Atomic Weight of Copper. 24 25 0.71847 0.71861 2.43935 2.43940 63.578 63.585 26 27 a 28 29 a 0.72019 0.97193 0.50916 0.70188 2.44603 3.30100 1.72859 2 58664 63.550 63.558 63.582 580 Average 63.573 than the average of the forty observed results in cupric solutions, and 0.01 G per cent higher than these results after correction. As far us the copper deposit is concerned, this result is certainly the upper limit of the electrochemical value, although it is still below the chemical atomic weight. No experimental proof has yet been given that too much copper was deposited, however. If the cuprous salt really carries a part of the current, it is obvious that higher temperatures, involving the presence of more cuprous salt, should raise the observed value still higher. This matter is tested in the results which follow. Comparison of Silver Voltameter with Copper Voltameter saturated with Cuprous Salt at higher Temperatures. No of Experiment. Temperature. Weight ofCopper (.Vacuum). V> , ighl of Silver (Vacuum). Atomic Weight ofCopper. 276 296 61° 55° 0.97295 0.76214 3.30100 2.58664 63.62 63.61 This gain in the apparent atomic weight, from 63.573 to 63.015, is conclusive. Even without further knowledge of the silver voltameter one is able to predict with reasonable certainty that higher temperatures 138 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. should yield yet higher values, and hence that the pi of < uprous Ball really causes the deposit to be too heavy. The results of all these varied operations assign a wide range of apparent values to the atomic weight of copper. In order to present the matter in a nutshell, a table is given below. | 68.80 Uncorrected results of Rayleigh, Gray, Shaw, Vanni, etc. . to ( 50 63.47 525 63.547 63.573 63.615 Large plates in cupric solutions, 20° (present research, i . . . . .. Q° . . ( . Small - " " " " .Mnliiun plates, in cuprous solutions, 0° " " 4t >. ». IS QQ° (( (t Corrected results from cupric solutions Atomic weight of copper by chemical processes, . Discrepancy . 63.563 0.041 Tt has already been stated that the corrected value is probably a little too high, although it is still nearly 0.07 of one per cent below the chem- ical value. This discrepancy, taken in connection with the inexpli- cable variations in the results of parallel determinations with the silver voltameter (see page 135), led us to suspect this instrument long before the results given above were completed. Accordingly, many of the electrolyses which we have been discussing were also used as a means of testing the accuracy of the silver voltameter. The overlapping inves- tigations have been separated in the description only in order to make a very complex matter less obscure to the reader. Tin- outcome of the experiments upon the silver voltameter is explained below. II. Tiik Silver Voltameter. The inference to be drawn from the preceding work is that the amount of silver deposited in the silver voltameter, as described by Lord Rayleigh and Mrs. Sidgwick* in their classical paper, may be too great by nearly 0.1 per cent. In spite of the great care taken by these investigators, such a deviation from the exact value is not impossible ; and indeed Lord Rayleigh does not claim for this work an accuracy over 0.1 per cent. The first possible cause of error to be investigated was the possible occlu>ion (or rather inclusion) of electrolyte by the crystalline deposit. * Phil. Trans., 2. Ill (1884). RICHARDS, COLLINS, AND HEIMROD. — COPPER AND SILVER. 139 Lord Rayleigh did not neglect this source of error, and by some very ingenious qualitative experiments showed that it could not be large. It seemed to us worth while, however, to analyze quantitatively the precip- itated silver, and the following table recounts this series of trials, in which the silver was dissolved, and precipitated by the purest hydrobromic acid with great care.* No. Silver taken (Vacuum). Argentic Bromide obtained (Vacuum). Silver calculated from AgBr. Deficiency in Silver. Percentage Deficiency. 30 31 32 33 34 35 30 0.71585 5.43807 3.76993 2.29649 2.15701 2.37893 2.97120 1.245(37 9.46557 6216 3.99820 3.75173 4.14187 5.17218 0.71573 5.43747 5.7G9G1 2.29G74 2.15689 2.37928 2.97114 +0.00012 +0.00060 +0.00052 -0.00025 +0.00012 +0.00035 +0.00008 +0.017 +0.011 +0.008 -0.011 +0.006 +0.015 +0.003 +0.007 The result of this table somewhat surprised us; for few crystalline precipitates contain so little included mother liquor as 0.01 per cent. While the analytical work is not perfect, (for the result of Experiment 33 can only be ascribed to accident,) one is forced to conclude that the pre- cipitate is very nearly pure silver. Evidently the electrical method of precipitation insures a more compact structure than is possible when the precipitation does not involve outside electromotive force. One of us found three times as much water in crystallized silver prepared at 0° in another way.f The source of error in the voltameter is apparently more subtle than such a merely mechanical cause as inclusion. Further experimentation upon such silver deposits showed that, after having been properly washed, they neither gained nor lost in weight upon continued digestion with water or with neutral solutions of ar- * For the method, consult recent papers on atomic weights from this Labo- ratory. t These Proceedings, 23, 177 (1887). 140 PROCEEDINGS OP Till: AMERICAN ACADEMY. nitrate, hence any possible error must have crept in during the i The of flaws in the working of tin' silver voltameter is no new idea, and a brief resume of earlier an< ry in oi to indicate oar own train of thought. Lord Rayleigh and Mrs. Sidgwick found that large cathodes yielded higher results than small ones, and warm solutions yielded higher thau cold ones. In Borne cases the deviations am.innt.-il to ".1 per cent Schuster and Crossley* state that deposits made in a vacuum arc Blightlj heavier than those produced by the same current in air, and these in turn arc heavier than those produced in an atmosphere of oxygen. Myersf verified these statements. Schuster and Crossley bin. wed also that with great current density argentic peroxide may form at the anode, ami in sum., unexplained fashion the result is a diminution of the weight of the silver deposited ; moreover, they pointed out the tact that the discrepancies observed l>\ Lord Rayleigh and .Mr.-. Sidgw between large and small howls disappear when the anodes arc of the same size. Apparently "the anode gives /'/*<■ /<> secondary reactu Rodger and Watson $ observed that on continued use of the electroh:.- the deposits grow heavier; and they also found that, when a wry strung slightly acidified solution of argentic nitrate was electrolyzed by a powerful current, the acid was removed, and the deposit was much tOO heavy. They venture to say that a subsalt of silver is formed " havii silver ion heavier than the argentic salt." Again, Kahle § has found that after boiling the electrolyte with oxide of silver, the deposit is increased ~> parts in 10,000. In a later and \. ry important paper || he calls attention tor the fit-; time to the fact that in a dilute electrolyte an acid is formed during tic electrolysis. Further- more, he shows again that old solutions give too high resnlts. an error which was sometimes removed by treatment with argentic oxide. Colored -pots sometimes appeared upon the silver in old acid solutions. apparently caused by the liquid descending from the anode; the.-,' did not form in a neutralized Bolution, or in one which had been allowed to remain in contact with silver. Kahle's hypothetical explanation of li phenomena essentially agrees with Rodger and Watson's. i'r.w. i;,,v. Soc, 50. ::lt (1892). t Wied. Ann., 55, 288 (1896 } Phil. Trans., 186 A, 631 (1895). § Brit. A.88. A U Sc. Edinb. ( 1892), ]>. 1 18. Wied. Ann., 67, 1 (1899), or Zeitscb. f. [nstrkunde, 18. 229, 267 (1898). RICHARDS, COLLINS, AND HEIMROD. — COPPER AND SILVER. 141 The latest work which has come to our notice is that of Patterson and Guthe.* In this paper the authors give the lion's share of their attention to an admirably worked out treatment of the physical methods necessary for fixing the electrical units, and pay little heed to the chemical side of the question. Since they obtained constant results by treating their electrolyte with argentic oxide, they recommend this method for general use, in spite of the fact that both Rodger and Watson and Kahle have shown that such treatment probably yields too high results. The esseuce of all these investigations, as far as they concern the irregularities of the silver voltameter, may be summed up in the follow- ing words. A substance which causes the deposition of too much silver seems to be formed around a large anode. Oxygen tends to eliminate this sub- stance, hence the substance must be a reducing agent. All the phenom- ena agree with this interpretation. A very small anode (which causes another irregularity, namely, the formation of argentic peroxide) may result in the appearance of a lower weight of silver; perhaps argentic peroxide may oxidize the reducing substance and thus remove it. The formation of the reducing substance is accompanied by the liberation of hydrogen ions in dilute solutions of argentic nitrate; but in stronger solutions small amounts of acid may be neutralized. In warm solutions the reducing agent is somewhat more active than in cold. An important point is left in doubt: — Does the acid appear at the anode or the cathode ? Nothing could be easier than to answer this question; and a large number of trials in which the anode was enclosed in a porous cup showed conclusively that the acid was always formed at the positive pole. The solution around the cathode remained wholly neutral to methyl orange, while the liquid within the cup gave a strongly acid reaction. In marked contrast with the case of copper, the chief disturbing re- actions seem then to exist at the point at which the positive electricity enters the solution ; and the obvious remedy for the irregularity is to enclose this positive electrode in a cell which will permit conductivity but will shut out convection. Experimental Details. Small cylinders of Pukal's porous ware (Berlin), such as are used for osmotic pressure experiments, were found to serve admirably as the * Physical Review, 7, 251 (1898). 142 PROCEEDINGS OP TIIK AMKRKWN ACADEMY. permeable septum desired. These vessels were 50 millimeters high and 20 in diameter; their walls were uol much over one millimeter in thicl Their impurities were removed 1>\ boiling with nitric ai 'i and thorough washing with water. They were bus] ended in the solution 1>\ means of a platinum wire hung upon a glass hook, which insulated the win- from ill'- electric con- nections. In four experi- ments two concentric porous CUDS were used, the annular space between them being charged with argentic oxide, since Kalilr found this BUD- Btance t<> diminish the re- ducing action in old solutions. This last arrangement was soon abandoned, however. By means of a siphon the liquid within the cup was alwa\ s kepi at a lower level than that without, bo as to prevent outward filtration. The cathodes consisted of the large lipped crucibles al- ready described ; the anodes were bars 5x1x1 centi- meters of the purest silver, supported by silver u ires and not enclosed in Biter paper; and the electrolyte usually contained 1<> per cent of pure freshly prepared argentic nitrate. The temperature of the cell under investigation was kept constant by means of suitable baths. For a low temperature a mixture of pure ice and a solution of amnionic nitrate answered well, and for the higher tem- peratures a large beaker containing pure water was warmed from the outside by enough encircling leaden steam-pipe to cause the ill sired intensity of heat. -«V_ l'n. I i:i. 6.— POBOUS CUP VoLTAMKTER (| actual size). A. glass hook for supporting anode. B, glass ring for supporting porous cup. C, silver anode. 1), porous cup. E, platinum cathode. RICHARDS, COLLTNS, AND HEIMROD. — COPPER AND SILVER. 143 The manipulation was simple. The platinum crucibles were cleaned, dried at 160°, and weighed after two or three hours' cooling in a large desiccator kept in the balance-room. In order to prevent leakage during the electrolysis, the several stands were insulated by separate glass plates, and all the connections were air lines. The apparatus was protected, as in the earlier experiments with copper, by a miniature house with walls of fine cotton cloth, which helped to exclude dust. When the current was broken, the electrolyte was removed, the silver was rinsed twice with water, a third filling with water was allowed to stand in the crucible for two or three hours, aud a fourth one remained in it over night. The wash-waters were collected and filtered if the silver showed any tendency to break off. In such cases a Gooch crucible was employed to collect the particles ; and a very small filter, afterwards burned, served to catch the minute flakes of asbestos detached from the mat. On the next morn- ing, the crucibles were washed once more, rinsed twice with pure alcohol, and finally dried and weighed as before. This method of treatment gave opportunity for the diffusion of mother liquor from the intricate recesses of the crystallized mass, while it did not run the risk of dissolving silver which may attend the use of boiling water for washing. It is probable that traces of water remained even after drying at 1G0°, but the experi- ments on page 109 show that these traces were less than one part in ten thousand. Weighings were made upon the balance which served for the weigh- ings in the earlier work upon copper, — one which has served also for many determinations of atomic weights. Its results with small objects may be depended upon to within -]lT milligram. All weighings were made by double substitution, a similar vessel being used as a tare, and the weights were of course carefully standardized. Since the question concerned merely the comparison of silver with silver, the results were not corrected to the vacuum standard. The object of the work described below was to determine the relative values given by the silver voltameter under different conditions, and to interpret the results in such a way as to point out the true value. For such a purpose it is convenient to select some one method as a standard of reference ; and because the porous cup method, conducted at 20°, soon showed itself to be capable of giving the most constant results of all the various modes of procedure, it was chosen as this standard. For example, in one case a given current caused depositions of 2.43744 and 2.43749 grams of silver in two cells placed in series, — a difference of only 2 parts in 100,000. 1 !l PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. The Silveb Voltameteb under Vabting Condh Sui 1 pi ri- .it. It of ret :■ ill \ Itameter to ! Differ ■ in- dard SUVer to Ii.m\ ier SUvi 1 hi d in \ o tameter tn i 37 89 Grams, L.94124 1 7' 3.04 Oral L94267 L.76426 3.05270 Milligram! i.i.; 1.42 2 7 I 1.00074 l.iiii,i-ii 1 90 Cathode ;. lipped cru- in filter paper ; i iv like tlif ll- od. Cathode » bowl : anode .-i plate in filter paper j at £0°^. Average = 1.00083 42 2.53256 2.53357 1.01 1.00040 'I'll.- -inn- :ir .. . [1.0012] 43 11 2.55012 1.89800 2.65460 1.90238 4.48 4.38 1.0017G 1.00230 •i and Qui 1 method : old el< rtn>- lyte saturated «itli 0 Average = 1.00203 45 40 2.44412 3.29842 2. 1 ' 3.30036 1.87 1.94 1.00077 l -V.' Cathode n crocil Anode enclosed in porous cup like >t:m- dard,but temperature Average = L.00 47 48 19 50 2.63668 1.72724 2.58463 3.09G29 2.63822 1.72724 2.68663 3.09988 1.64 0 2.00 3.59 1.00058 1.00000 l.OOuTs 1.00116 Like tin above, ex- cept thai i wo porous cups packed with \ ii Isolated the in. mil- (80 ). Average = 1.00063 61 52 2.65012 1.89800 2.66029 1.89845 0.17 0.46 1.00007 l 00024 Cathode a crucible. Anode enclosed in porous oup like tin1 standard. Tempera- ture 0°. Average L.00016 * From Lor.l Rayleigh'a figure.-. RICHARDS, COLLINS, AND HEIMROD. — COPPER AND SILVER. 145 With this cell were compared the following modifications of the silver voltameter: first, the large crucible voltameter at 20°, with the anode wrapped in filter paper, such as was used in the preceding experiments upon copper ; secondly, a voltameter at 20° prepared according to Lord Rayleigh's standard prescription (a platinum bowl, 10 centimeters in diameter, containing a 15 per cent solution of argentic nitrate and a large silver plate enclosed in filter paper) ; thirdly, the same arrangement at 0° ; fourthly, an exact imitation of Patterson and Guthe's method, for which the electrolytes used in Lord Rayleigh's method were digested with argentic oxide and filtered ; fifthly, the " porous cup method " at 60° instead of at 20° ; sixthly, the same with a double porous cup enclosing argentic oxide in the annular space ; and finally, the " porous cup method " at 0°. The table opposite explains itself. Discussion of Results. The comparison of these results is highly instructive. The most noticeable fact is that our "standard porous cup method" gives the low- est result of any of the methods tried, since all the figures in the fifth column are greater than unity. In the next place, we find that Patter- son and Guthe's method gives a result 0.12 per cent higher than Lord Rayleigh's; a figure which corresponds closely with their own estimate, 0.11 per cent, while Lord Rayleigh's method gives results 0.082 per cent higher than ours. Evidently the method used in the first three ex- periments is essentially similar to Lord Rayleigh's, and may be averaged with it. Again, it is apparent that the interposition of argentic oxide in the hot determinations had a varying and unsatisfactory effect, as if it introduced a new source of error. Finally, it appears that change of temperature causes a somewhat smaller variation in the results from the " porous cup method " than in those from Lord Rayleigh's old standard : — Lord Rayleigh's Voltameter. Porous Cup Voltameter. 60° 1.0012 (?) 1.000G8 20° 1.00083 1.00000 0° 1.00040 1.00016 The obvious inference from these facts is that the porous cup is really effectual in protecting the cathode from a part at least of the disturbing influences under consideration, especially at low temperatures. The apparent gain of 0.016 per cent exhibited by the method at 0° was un- doubtedly due to the difficulty in washing the very finely divided spongy metal which is deposited from a freezing solution ; but Lord Rayleigh's vol. xxxv. — 10 1 16 PROCEEDINGS OF Till: AMERICAN ACADEMY. hod at 0 La affected by the Bame Boarce of error, bo that the com- parisoD i- a fair one. The only alternative to tin- inference, — the supposition that the po- rous cup introduces a new complication causing tot) low a weight, — is difficult to disprove ; but, on the other hand, the possible nature ol Buch :i complication is not easil) conceivable. Recurring to the Bret inference, an hypothesis supported by many facts, we admil it to be probable that the porous cup does not wholly prevent the admixture of the hypothetical complex ions with the liquid around the cathode; for even it' ditl'usion were wholly prevented, Borne of tlnse ions might migrate with the current. Both diffusion and migration are increased in rapidity by a rise in temperature, hence even with the porous cup the hot solution gives a somewhat higher value. It is a matter of great interest to study the effect of the low value obtained by the new method upon the electrical atomic weight of copper, upon the electrolytic value assigned to the ampere, and upon the elec- trical result for Joule's equivalent We concluded, at the close of the section devoted to copper, that the atomic weight of this metal must lie en the limits 63.547 and G3.oG3, if the common silver voltameter is correct in its verdicts. We have now ,-liown that the results of this voltameter are in all probability too high l>y 0.081 per cent; hence the conclusion is that the true atomic weight of copper must lie between C3.598 and 63.615. Since the elaborate chemical investigation of copper carried out some year- ago in this Laboratory yielded the value 63.604, we have here a remarkable con- firmation of the results of the "porous cup voltameter." In this connection, it is worth while to call attention to the reasons why copper placed in an ice-cold solution of argentic nitrate causes the deposition of the true amount of silver.* Of this automatic voltaic cell the anode is copper; hence the complications which arise around a silver anode do not exist. On the other hand, the cathode is silver; hence the complications which take place around a copper cathode do not exist. The trace of cuprous salt undoubtedly formed at the anode does not de- compose the very cold ions of nitric acid, but sooner or later deposits its equivalent of silver. The action is so slow at the low temperature that the current density where the silver is deposited is very small, hence there is no danger of the deposition of a weighahle amount of copper » Richards, These Proceedings, 22, 342, 23, 177 [1981). RICHARDS, COLLINS, AND HEIMROD. — COPPER AND SILVER. 147 with the silver; * and the concentration effect prevents the deposition of silver in any place where the silver has become nearly exhausted from the solution. It is possible to apply a correction to the various values which have been assigned to the electrochemical equivalents of copj)erand silver with the help of the tables given above. This computation is made below ; it does not pretend to be precise, but will show iu a general way the effect of the complications under consideration. (Grams per Ampere-second.) Lord Rayleigh and Mrs. Sidgwick . . . 0-oom'9 _ 0.0011170 t J s ° 1.00082 ' Fr. and W. Kohlrausch ^J"®? = 0.0011174 1.00Ub2(Y) Kahle (fresh solutions) -———^ = 0.0011173 v } 1.00082 Patterson and Guthe ' ' - = 0.0011174 1 .UU— Uo The average of these results is about 0.0011173, but perhaps 0.001 1172 (the mean between the two extremes) is a safer value to choose. From this value of the electrochemical number for silver, that for copper may be calculated simply by multiplication with the ratio of the chemical equivalents ; for we have shown that its true value corresponds to Faraday's law within one part in five thousand. Hence it may be taken as 0.0011172 X ,.-^-57; = 0.0003292 grams per ampere-second. + 2 1 0.0 o * Lord Rayleigh and Mrs. Sidgwick, Phil. Trans., 175, 470 (1884). t The probable reason for the lowness of this result is the fact that Lord Rayleigh washed and ignited the silver at high temperatures. All the other values, including our own, may he a trifle high because of traces of occluded mother liquor. No attempt is made at present to correct the results for this pos- sible error. The results of Masquart (J. de Phys., [2], 3, 283 [1884]), Pellat and Potier (Ibid, [2], 9, 381 [1890]), Kopsel, Heydweiller, and others are omitted from this table, since they throw no further light chemically. Some are too low and others too high, hence they would not have much effect on the average. Compare Patterson and Guthe's paper. % The value 0.0003294 found by F. E. Beach from a solution containing chlorine is probably affected by the presence of cuprous salts. (Am. J. Sc. [3], 46, 81 [1893].) All the other directly determined values for this quantity are lower than our value. i IS PROCEEDINGS OP THE A iDEMT. Thus 96,610 coulombs correspond to one grain equivalent ol itrolyte. Th( se numbers are of interest from a theoretical standpoint, but their practical value as means of determining current Btrength must depend upon thi of their application. The value for copper is a mean tween two limits, and is not easy to reproduce with exactness; but for most purposes the weight deposited by current densities between 0.008 and 0.012 amperes per square centimeter, from ten percent solutions of cupric sulphate cooled below zero and protected by an inert atmosph is sufficiently close to the real value. Neverthel mpirical ta like those of Gray will probably remain the most convenient method of computing current strength from the deposition of copper. On the other band, the intricacy added by the porous cup in the silver determination is not Berious, and the results obtained seem trustworthy. Obviously any method capable ofbeing repeated with constant result • standardized with accuracy by mean- of known currents, would Berve all practical purposes; and a method which i< constant because the sou of error have been at least partially removed is certainly worthy of attention. This point Buggests a discussion which has recently arisen concern- ing the electrical determination of -Ionic's equivalent, which depend- upon measuring the heat corresponding to a known amount of electrical energy. Griffiths, in an appendix* to an elaborate paperf upon this Bubject, calls attention to the fact that an error in the electrochemical equivalent of silver of 0.1 per cent would explain the difference between his value of the mechanical equivalent of heat and Rowland's. The equation of Griffiths for the calculation of his value is ./ /■:- fal cell bearing four to eight branches arranged antero-posteriorly in a more or less deiinitely double row, their insertions forming a continuous deeply blackened area, their cells inflated, with blackened septa, successively je to three times branched antero-posteriorly. The inner append- age consisting of a much smaller basal cell producing from one to two branches similar to those of the outer, one on either side. The antheridia solitary or from two to four, borne rather regularly on Bhorl branchlets. Perithecium 1)0-175 X 28-3o it. On Acrogenys liir.«'tp. Pale amber-yellow, perithecium slightly darker, about two thirds free, the inner lip-cells suffused below with blackish brown, an external prominence involves the upper portion of the subbasal and lower portions of the Bubterminal wall-cells, forming, in the specimens from .1. sub- teneiu, an abruptly defined hunch. Receptacle normal, the basal and subbasal cells usually slender and somewhat darker, the Bubbasal more distinctly marked with fine transverse Btriations which are less distinct ou the cells above it. Appendages concolorous, the outer Bimple (always?), the inner consisting of a basal cell similar to thai of the outer, about twice as long as broad, giving rise on either side to a single branch ■which may be once branched above its basal cell; all the branches Bome- wh.it flexed. Insertion-cell red-brown or purplish, more or less oblique through the upgrowth of cell V. Spores about 45— 48 ft. Perithecia (larger) 185 x 48ft, average 125 < 48 ft. Total length to tip of peri- thecium 275 500 fi (longesl 535 ft). Appendages about 200 ft. ( )n Anchonoderut subeeneiu Reiche, San Felix, Panama, and . I. binotatus Reiche, Guatemala City, Brit. .Mus. (Biologia coll.), Is'os. 706 and 7-300 'jx; greatest width about -l.s /x. Appends L50/lu On Cata8copu8? sp., Brit Mus. No. 668, Assam, India. Infi surface. Laboulbenia barbata nov. sp. Perithecium large, pale yellowish or brownish becoming slightly tinged with amber-brown, often symmetrically inflated and tapering gradually to the tip, which is brownish below becoming black on the inner Bide, the lips subhyaline, turned Blightly outward. Receptacle concol us with the perithecium, normal except that cell V is greatly enlarged and extends upward covering nearly one half of the inner margin of the perithecium, bulging strongly outward and carrying out the insertion- cell which is thus made lateral in position. Insertion-cell externally con- cave or indented. The outer appendage consisting of a small roundish basal cell giving rise to two, rarely more, branches antero-posteriorly, which are usually once branched near the base, the branchlets very elongate, Blender, attenuated, curved outward and downward : the inner appendage consisting of a similar basal cell from which arise usually two branches, one on either side, similar to those of the outer appendage, the whole forming a hanging beard-like tuft. Perithecia 190-200 ■ 55-60 /t. Total length to tip of perithecium, average 400 /i; to insertion-cell, aver- age 190 200 p. Appendages, longest 450-650 p. Spores 100 • 6 it. On Morio Georgii Pal., Brit. Mus. No. <;;)() (Hiolo^ia Collection), El Zambador, Mexico ; on M, simplex, Dej., Brit. Mus. No. 581, Cayenne; on M. monilieornis, Latr., Hope Collection, No. 289, "North America.'* On the elytra. Laboulbenia bicornis nov. sp. Perithecium wholly free, dark brown tinged with olive becoming opaque, lighter at the base; very elongate, nearly Btraight, Blightly and gradually inflated from the neck-like base to about the middle, thence tapering very Blightly to the tip, which is distinctly though not abruptly differentiated: the two inner lip-cells symmetrical each terminating in a small rounded prominence which bears a Becond smaller rounded terminal THAXTER. NEW LABOULBENIACE.E. 161 prominence ; from the base of the lower prominence a long slender brown or olive-brown horn-like process grows downward, inward, and upward, the two symmetrical and similar and resembling the horns of an ox ; though formed from the inner lip-cells, a slight twist in the wall- cells usually makes them appear lateral or even external. The two outer lip-cells grow beyond the inner and are closely united forming a large bluntly pointed nose-like projection, its inner margin slightly cou- vex while externally it is nearly straight and slightly oblique. Recep- tacle short and stout, evenly dark olive-brown ; cell I short, slender, cell II abruptly larger, broad and short. The basal cells of the appendages opaque and indistinguishable, giving rise as in allied aquatic species to cladophorous prominences, the branches once or twice branched, hyaline, the lower three or four septa dark, the cells between them slightly inflated, the distal portion elongate, cylindrical, thin-walled, blunt-tipped, without dark septa, the whole forming a dense tuft. Spores 125-140 X 7-8 n- Perithecia 340-750 X GO-75 p. Total length to tip of perithe- cium, longest 1150 p; to insertion-cell 340-400 p ; greatest width 120- 130^. On Dtnc.nles aereus Klug., Brit. Mus. No. 4G1, Hadramaut, Arabia; on Dineutes sp., Brit. Mus. No. 463, Ambaca, Angola, W. Africa. On abdomen, elytra, thorax, and head. Laboulbenia bidentata nov. sp. Wholly suffused with pale dirty brown. Perithecium rather darker, free except at its base, somewhat inflated below, tapering symmetrically from the extremity of the basal wall-cells to the rather narrow apex ; the two inner lip-cells suffused with blackish brown and projecting beyond the others to form two blunt prominences, their tips hyaline, contrasting. Receptacle rather short and stout, uniform pale dirty brown, incon- spicuously flecked with minute somewhat darker points, the lower part of the small basal cell mostly hyaline. Outer appendage consisting of a basal cell several times as large as that of the inner, bearing a single branch, the basal cell of which is somewhat rounded and gives rise dis- tally to an outer and an inner branchlet, each commonly once branched, the outer deeply blackened at the base (usually broken) : the inner appendage consisting of a basal cell which bears a branch on either side which may be twice branched, bearing solitary antheridia laterally. Spores 50 x 4 p. Perithecia 115-130 X 45 p. Total length to tip of perithecium 220-270 ju ; to insertion-cell 135-150/*. Greatest breadth 70 fl. VOL. XXXV. — 11 162 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. On Hbmothit .-]>.. St George's Sound, Australia, Hope Coll., No. 309. On elj Lnboulbenia Brachionychi nor. sp. Perithecium wholly free, rather deeply suffused with Bmokyor reddish brown, subclavate or almost symmetrically inflated, tapering from the middle t<> the oearly symmetrical, or externally Blightly oblique blunt tip, the basal wall-cells contracted to form a long slender neck-like Bub- li\ aline stalk. Receptacle abnormally developed, cells I and II nearly equal, cells III and V forming a stalk whicb is deeply suffused with blackish brown especially externally, and rather coarsely punctate in the darker areas, of equal diameter throughout and quite free, except at its very base, from the rest of the receptacle: cell IV larger than cell III, cell V small and separated by an ohliipie septum : cell VII ami ill ■ basal cells of the perithecium small. Outer appendage consisting "f a basal cell deeply blackened externally, and bearing a long slender simple branch, distally hyaline, more or less Buffused with Bmoky brown towards the base : the inner appendage consisting of a basal cell about hah as long as that of the outer, producing a single branch on either side which ma\ be once or twice branched, the antheridia borne usually in twos or threes on short branchlets near the base. Spore 110 X 7 fi. Perithecia exclusive of stalk, 270-340 X 65 /j ; including stalk 340-430//. Total length to tip of perithecium 650-800^; to insertion-cell 400-50<>u. Stalkdike portion of receptacle 138 X 38//. Appendages 400— 470 //. On Brachionychw sp., Nos. 99 and «22, Cochin China ; on Epis- cosoma laticoUis, No. 85, Cochin China; on Episcosoma sp.. No. 86, Java. All in Paris Coll. Usually on inferior surface of thorax. Laboulbenia Cafii nov. sp. Perithecium almost wholly free, pale amber-colored or straw-yellow, transparent, stout, the tip blunt, with blackish basal Suffusions, well dis- tinguished, especially on the inner side. Receptacle short and stout, pale amber-colored, normal in form. Insertion-cell broad, often not deeply blackened. The appendages consisting of an outer and an inner Beries of from four to six superposed cells which, through a twist of the insertion- cell, become lateral instead of antero-posterior in position : each cell of these series produces externally a single simple short branch usually three-celled, the two lower cells short and inflated, the upper loug< r tapering to a blunt apex. Perithecia 140- 165 X 60— 70 p. Total length to tip of perithecium 310-350 fx, to insertion-cell about 170^. Append- ages, lougest 85 p. THAXTER. — NEW LABOULBENIACE^E. 163 On Cciftus seminitens Horn, and C. canescens Mann, U. S. National Museum, Los Angeles, California. On C. sericeus Holme, Brit. Mus. No. 437, Great Britain. On Cafins sp., Brit. Mus. No. 425, " Europe," No. 395, Hong Kong ; C. bisulcatus Sol., Chili. On elytra and legs. Laboulbenia celestialis nov. sp. Perithecia almost wholly free, rather deeply suffused with dark red- dish brown except the almost hyaline basal wall-cells ; tapering slightly to the well distinguished rather large tip, which is turned slightly out- ward, the lip-cells blackened except around the pore. Receptacle uniformly pale dirty brown, rather short and stout, somewhat abruptly expanded below the perithecium ; cell IV broader than insertion-cell. Outer appendage consisting of a somewhat rounded basal cell deep brown externally and bearing usually two branches placed antero-posteriorly, the basal cell of the outer nearly round, deep brown externally and bearing two branches placed antero-posteriorly which are very long and slender, remotely septate and more or less suffused with dirty brown : the inner appendage consisting of a smaller basal cell producing a branch on either side, the basal cells of which are short with suffused septa and bear solitary antheridia or short sterile branches which are blunt and shorter than the perithecium. Perithecia 110 X 35 it. Total length to tip of perithecium 2 hyaline, distinguished from the opaque black lower half by a clean cut line of demarcation : the basal cells forming a Bhort Btout hyaline neck narrower than the body of the perithecium. Receptacle elongate, of nearly the same diameter throughout, the basal cell nearly hyaline, the cells above it more or less deeply suffused with Bmokj In-own. cell V and the upper portion of cells IV and VII hyaline, the distal Buffused portion obscurely punctate. Outer appendage consisting of a basal cell deeply blackened externally (the hlackened area continuous with the black insertion-cell and involving also the external walls of the two cells immediately above it) producing from one to three branches arrange,! antero-posteriorly, which may he once or twice branched in a similar fashion, the branch! long, slender, drooping, hyaline, some of the lower cell-; suffused with I dish In-own: the inner appendage consisting of a basal cell about hall' as large as that of the outer, producing in the types a Bingle branch whi h may lie once branched as in the outer. Perithecium 105 ■ 82 p. Total length io tip of perithecium 445 /ij to insertion-cell 320 /u. Greatest breadth 12 u. Appendage-, :; 10 p. On Hexagonia?, Ceylon, II. »11. No. 288. On elytra, Laboulbenia Chiriquensis nov. sp. Perithecium yellowish brown, straight, the inner margin convex, the outer slightly Concave, tapering distally to the broad short hlackened tip, THAXTER. NEW LABOULBENIACE^E. 165 which is bent abruptly inward almost at right angles. Receptacle yellow- ish brown, deeper in the region of cell. Ill, the basal cell slightly curved, its upper half rather abruptly expanded; a more or less distinct bulge below the perithecium. Outer appendage usually simple, stout, the basal cell of the inner usually much smaller bearing a branch on either side usually once branched above the basal cell; all the branches stout and constricted at the lower septa. Spores GO X 4^. Perithecium 100-125 X 37,1*. Total length to tip of perithecium 200-270^; to insertion-cell 135-1 GO /.i. Greatest width 55 p. On Calleida scintillans Bates, Brit. Mus. (Biologia Coll.), No. 735, Vale de Chiriqui, Panama. On margin of elytron. Laboulbenia Clivinalis nov. sp. Usually rather slender. Perithecium three fourths or more free, more or less deeply tinged with blackish olive-brown, distally curved slightly outward, the tip black with hyaline lip-edges. Receptacle wholly hya- line, or cells III and IV becoming more or less suffused with blackish brown, the suffused areas punctate : bulging distally below the perithe- cium. Insertion-cell well differentiated, black. Appendages consisting of an inner and an outer basal cell, which may remain simple or become longitudinally divided, sometimes also transversely or even obliquely: the outer basal cell hyaline, often several times as long as broad, its dis- tal septum blackened ; when simple, bearing a single branch, if divided, several ; the basal cell of the outer branch usually rather short and some- what suffused, commonly bearing two branchlets. The basal cell of the inner appendage usually smaller than that of the outer, sometimes equal, and like it simple or divided; when simple, bearing a branch on either side, or more if it is divided. All the branches of both appendages hya- line or nearly so, mostly once branched above their basal cells. Spores about 55 x 4.5 /x. Perithecia 120-150 X 35-50 ft. Total length to tip of perithecium 275-400^; to insertion-cell 200-340^. Appendages, longest 300-400^. On Clivina collaris Ilerbst, Hope Coll. No. 348, and Brit. Mus. No. 456, both from England. On Clivina fossor Linn., Hope Coll. Nos. 353, 275 and 475, England; No. 295, '-Europe"; Florence Mus., Italy. Usually on elytra and superior prothorax, but occurring elsewhere. Laboulbenia coarctata nov. sp. Perithecium short and stout, dark brown and opaque, its upper half free, its contour evenly rounded, the small papillate translucent tip turned 166 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. Blightly inward and abruptly differentiated, the lips will deliued. ReecjH tacle dirty brown finely and obscurely punctate, of the tj pica! Conn, Lighter below, >lmi i . Btout cell I mucb narrowed below, cell 11 very broad, Blightly inflated. Basal cells of appendages well developed bearing about eight erecl short Btout simple branches with broad basal constricted blackened septa, their rounded tips Blightly exceeding the tip of the perithecium. Spun- 70x7/1. Perithecia II'1 L70 ■ 62p. Total Length to tip of perithecium 325—400 /< ; to insertion-eel] -■i0-300 fi; greatest width 100 p. On Orectochihcs?, Hope Coll. Nos. 233 and 234 ; Brit Mus. No. 4GG, Bengal, India. Along median depression of elytra. Laboulbenia Colpodis nov. Bp. Perithecium wholly free, very large, uniform clear translucent brown, slightly inflated or the margin.- straight, the basal wall-fill- forming a well marked hyaline neck as broad as the base of the ascigeroua portion from whi6h it is not abruptly distinguished ; the tip rather narrow and well distinguished, darker, the distinct lip-edges hyaline or translucent lleccptaele very small, cell I hyaline or yellowish, the rest nunc or less deeply suffused with blackish brown becoming nearly opaque, especially cells 111 and IV. which lie side by side and are about equal in size, cell III forming a rounded prominence just below the miter edge of the inser- tion-cell, cell V triangular, about as large as cells 111 and V combined. Insertion-cell not at first deeply blackened, but becoming indistinguishable in the general blackish brown suffusion of the adjacent cells. Outer ap- pendage consisting of a nearly erect series of obliquely Buperposed small cells (sometimes as many as thirteen) at first hyaline, the basal cell and sometimes several of the cells above it becoming deeply suffused, which produce externally a single simple branch curved upward, its basal por- tion consisting of two cells, sometimes three, longer than broad and more or less deeply suffused with brown, constricted at the dark septa; its distal portion elongate, reaching nearly to the tip of the peri- thecium, strongly tapering hyaline except at its base where it is in- volved by the brown suffusion of the basal part; the inner appem consisting of a basal cell surmounted on either side by a Beriea of cells similar to that of the outer appendage, but fewer in number, similarly branched except that the two or three lowest cells of each Beries bear single large Btout straight brown antheridia, the basal cells of the si pies, as in the outer appendage, becoming suffused with blackish brown. Peri- thecia 190-220 X LO-45/u. Total length to tip of perithecium 800- THAXTER. NEW LABOULBENIACE^E. 1G7 375 /t; to insertion-cell 75-80^; greatest width 55^. Appendages, longest 220 p. On Oolpodes Chiriquinus Bates, Brit. Mus. No. 735 (Biologia Coll.), Vale de Chiriqui, Panama. On elytra. Laboulbenia constricta nov. sp. Perithecium more than one half free, short, stout, inflated, somewhat olive-brown, the tip not differentiated, one of the lip-edges becoming modi- fied to form a rlattish or roundish brown prominence which lies usually in a median position between two rather ill defined prominences on either side of it. Receptacle usually with a double curvature, its basal cell very large, somewhat inflated distally, the base and posterior margin paler, cell II shorter, suffused below, strongly constricted distally, the constricted portion paler or hyaline : the distal portion of the receptacle short, deeply suffused, bulging strongly anteriorly below the insertion of the appendages. Insertion-cell not blackened, the appendages arising much as in L. Orectochlli and L. strangulata, the branches hyaline, the basal portion closely septate, simple, without persistent blackened basal por- tions. Spores 70 X 6^. Perithecia, average 130 X 60 /x. Total length to tip of perithecium, average 400 /.t ; to insertion-cell 340 p. Appendages 70 /x (or more ?). On Orectogyrus glaucus Klug., Brit. Mus. No. 4G5, Coast Castle, Egypt. On elytra. Laboulbenia Copteae nov. sp. Very slender. Perithecium free except the base, nearly straight, curved outward slightly at the tip, which is blackish with hyaline lip- edges ; dull translucent olive-brown, concolorous with the receptacle, or with the basal wall-cells nearly hyaline. Receptacle slender, bulging slightly at the base of the perithecium, cell II narrower distally than cell I, the base of which is hyaline. Outer appendage consisting of a basal cell several times as Long as broad, hyaline, usually curved strongly outward, constricted distally where the septum is suffused with dark brown below the single straight branch, which is more slender, elongate, tapering, hyaline, simple or once branched above its basal cell. Inner appendage consisting of a small basal cell bearing a short branch on either side, simple or once branched, usually not longer than the perithe- cium. Perithecium 120-140 X 35 u. Total length to tip of perithecium 340-470^; to insertion-cell 220-300 p. Appendages (longest) 400^. 1G8 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. ( )n Coptea armata Lap., Brit Mu-. No. 595, Santarem, Amazon River, Brazil. On elytra and Buperior prothoraz, Laboulbenia corethropsis nov. sp. I' rithecinm relatively large, translucent brown or yellowish brown, generally larger distally through a subterminal external bulge, the i i j • moderately well differentiated, often ben! rather abruptly inward, wholly blackish In-own or hyaline in the median line, the inner lip-cells smaller and usually more prominent than the outer, Bometimes overlapping them, the whole perithecium free from the receptacle. Receptacle Bhorl and rather stout, cells I I-IV becoming externally blackish brown, the rest concolorous with the perithecium; cells III and I V rather prominent. Outer appendage wholly opaque, its successive cells indistinguishable as are the basal and insertion-cells, consisting of a blackened axis erect or bent outward, from the inner side of which arise several more or less blackened branches, the basal portion of the appendage only, a^ a rub-. remaining. The inner appendage, consisting of a basal cell which is in- distinguishable from the insertion-cell, being quite opaque, producing a branch on either side, the axis of the branches erect, becoming blackened and opaque, except the inner margins of the distal cells, bear- ing externally from six to ten or even more branchlets which are more or less deeply suffused. The general habit suggesting a Bpecies of Corethromyces. Perithecium 130-150 X 30-33 /x. Total length to tip of perithecium 190-240/* ; to insertion-cell 90-130 ll. Greatest width In ;"iOu. Appendages, longest (broken) 185 li. On Mtscelus Javanus King., Hope Collection, No. 804, Java; on Mt- scelus sp., Paiis Museum, No. 114, New Guinea. On inferior surface of abdomen, and on elytra. Laboulbenia corrugata nov. sp. Perithecium rather small, irregular, free from the receptacle except at the base, blackish brown, darker and almost opaque below, a rounded distal elevation extending completely round the perithecium. broader externally, forming a nearly opaque broad collar above which the tip is very abruptly distinguished ; the latter subhyaline bi-ally. a dark median external and internal suffusion, the lips translucent, faintly brownish, the two outer rounded and curved inward between the two inner, which form two free slightly unequal divergent blunt-pointed projections. Re- ceptacle rather long and slender, pale brownish yellow with deeper THAXTER. NEW LABOULBENIACEiE. 169 brown suffusions about the distal region of cell I and the basal region of cell II ; the basal cells of the peritheciurn opaque and cell IV and V more deeply suffused ; a series of prominent blackish brown tuberculate ridges extend more than half way across the receptacle from the anterior margin, beginning below the insertion cell and present as far as the base of cell II; cell IV bulging distally outside the insertion-cell. Outer appendage simple, erect, tapering, yellowish, perhaps once branched above the basal cell ; inner appendage consisting of a smaller basal cell with a similar and shorter branch on either side. Peritliecia 120x37-40/;. Total length to tip of peritheciurn .'540 a ; to insertion-cell 200 fx ; greatest width GO fx. Appendage3 185 fi. On Serrimargo gnttiger Schaum., Hope Collection, No. 300, Sarawak, Borneo. On base of elytra. Laboulbenia Cubensis nov. sp. Peritheciurn short and stout, free except at the base, slightly curved toward the appendages, blackish olive, the lip-cells prominent but flat- tened backward and outward. Receptacle elongate, cells I and II dirty olive, cell III hyaline, long, contrasting with cells IV and V, which, together with the basal cells of the peritheciurn, are deeply suffused with blackish olive; cell VI as long as cell III and lying beside it, becoming tinged with dirty olive ; basal cells of appendages dark olive, indistin- guishable, producing concolorous prominences which give rise to a number of hyaline branches, the basal cells of which are large, swollen distally, and bear numerous terminal and subterminal branchlets exter- nally; the branchlets once or twice branched, the septa olive. Peritlie- cia 155-1'JO X 75-85 //.. Total length to tip of peritheciurn 480-800 fx. Appendages, longest 140/u.. On Dineutes longimanus Oliv., Paris Museum, No. 101, Cuba. On tip of abdomen. Laboulbenia dactylophora nov. sp. Peritheciurn relatively small, its upper third only free from the recep- tacle, translucent smoky brown, the tip prominent, not abruptly differen- tiated, its upper half hyaline, black-tipped, symmetrical or irregularly sulcate, the lower half blackened. Receptacle very elongate, concolorous with the peritheciurn or paler, finely punctate, tapering below, its curved base hyaline, the basal cell expanding distally to the very broad upper septum, which forms the middle of a somewhat one-sided enlargement involving the adjacent extremities of cells I and II, cell II more dis- 170 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. tinctly punctate, very long, tapering very slightly nearly to its distal emity, cell V producing two outgrowths, one on either Bide, erect, usually similar, brown, distally somewhat enlarged, the rounded tips often bent Blightly outward, extending to or beyond the tip of the peri- thecium. Appendages consisting of two (or more?) basal cells from which several protrusions arise bearing groups of branches which are Beveral times branched, forming a dense tuft not as Long as the outgrowths from cell V, the lower septa brown or blackish, between the short cells. Perithecia L70-1 90 X 48-50 /a. Total length to tip of perithecium 750- 880/ij to insertion-cell cso-siu^ : cell II about 125ji long. Out- growths from cell V, 58 /x. Appendages .}<> ^. On Orectogyrw specularis Aube, Paris Museum, iS'o. 100, Gold Coast, W. Africa. Margin of elytra. Laboulbenia Darwinii dov. sp. Perithecium hyaline becoming pale straw or amber-yellow, sometimes with a shade of brown, relatively small, its upper third or less free from the receptacle, the tip black, abruptly distinguished, the broad lip-ed_ translucent purplish brown. Receptacle relatively stout, indistinctly punctate with short, lines or dots of darker yellowish color, cells II. III. and IV often unusually broad. Insertion-cell well developed, deep purplish brown or black. Outer appendage consisting of a short angular brownish basal cell, which bears an outer and an inner branch distally, the outer simple or once branched above its basal cell, the inner mostly simple: the outer branchlet mostly shorter, divergent, often deeply suffused with reddish brown, the rest less deeply colored, rigid, erect. The inner appendage consisting of a smaller basal cell which may pro- duce a single branch, or two placed laterally or antero-posteriorly, short, simple with lateral antheridia or once branched. Perithecia 100 X 30-.*;jm. Total length to tip of perithecium 150—275 /*; to insertion-cell 13-") 250/*. Appendages, longest 200-250 /x. On Oezena parallela W., lb-it. Mus. No. .">72, Rio de Janeiro (legit C. Darwin), on Pachyteles Bpp., I'm-is Rfus. No. 187, South America. Hope Collection. Nos. 284 and 285, Brazil. Occurring usually at the base of the posterior legs. Laboulbenia denticulata nov. sp. Perithecium free, olivaceous with blackish shades below the paler tip, rather narrow, straight ; the tip broad, one of the inner lip-cells forming a short brown conical terminal prominence which is straight or bent THAXTER. — NEW LABOULBENIACEyE. 171 toward the pore contrasting with the nearly colorless lip-edges below it. Receptacle pale brown or dirty olivaceous, elongate, normal. The in- sertion-cell nearly horizontal external to cell V, unmodified. The outer basal cell of the appendages giving rise to a single subcorneal brown prominence bearing branches terminally and externally and protruding beyond the inner basal cell, which is indistinguishable from the very numerous branches arising from it in all directions ; all the branches hyaline, their basal cells bearing distally several branchlets which may again be branched, the four to eight lower septa dark. Perithecia, average 175x44/x; the spine-like apex 10-12 p. Total length to tip of perithecium 400-575 p • to insertion-cell 275-400 p ; greatest width 55-70 fi. Appendages about 70 p. On Dineutes ?, Brit. Mus. No. 482, Adelaide River, Australia. Laboulbenia Dineutis nov. sp. Perithecium free except at the base, dark brown, the inner margin straight, the outer curved from the base to the tip, which is not well differentiated, the lip-cells inconspicuously modified to form an inner tooth-like brown prominence curved inward, and a median small brown rounded elevation, which is covered by an outer hyaline externally brown broad irregular elevation. Receptacle elongate or rather short, dark brown inconspicuously punctate. Appendages much as in L. hete- rocheila, the branchlets closely septate with dark septa near the base and (in unbroken specimens) with long hyaline aseptate or remotely septate terminations three to four times as long as the basal part. Measurements very variable. Perithecium, (Ceylon) 275X72/1, (India) 140 X 40 p. Total length to tip of perithecium, (Ceylon) 1 mm., (India) 400 p, (Madagascar) 350 p. Appendages, (Ceylon) 200 p. Spores, (Ceylon) 75 xC/i. On Dineutes subspinosus King., Paris, Nos. 33 and 34, Madagascar and Isle de France; Hope Collection, No. 236, no locality. On Dineutes spp., Hope Collection, Nos. 230, 231, 232, and 235, Bengal, "Pondich Guera," Asia, Ceylon, Mauritius. On Dineutes, Brit. Mus. No. 483, Nilgiri Hills, India. On margin of elytra and tip of abdomen. Laboulbenia Dercyli nov. sp. Perithecia free except at the base, short, stout, becoming tinged with brown, straight or the usually very broad tip turned slightly outward, the latter black, contrasting with the hyaline lip-edges. Receptacle elongate, 172 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. faintly and uniformly tinned with smoky brown, normal except that cell V is pushed up ••veil beyond the hyaline unmodified insertion-cell which becomes thus external to it. Appendages recalling those of A. variabilis, typically consisting of an inner and an outer basal cell, the outer bearing ugle oblique or nearly vertical more or less irregular row of branches arising antero-posteriorly ; the inner basal cell bearing a similar row on either Bide, ;ill tin- branches hyaline or yellowish brown, more or copiously branched; the lower cells somewhat inflated, the septa black- ened, often oblique, 1 1 1 « - basal cells of the branches bearing distally and externally from one to three obliquely Buperposed branchlets with blackened septa, which may branch again; the ultimate branchlets taper- ing slightly, the septa transverse and hyaline, usually cohering in an erect mass. A third group of branches similar to the rest Bometimes ari between these and the perithecium, apparently from the distal portion of cell V. Perithecia L40-200 X 55-60 n either side: the branches of 1 »< >t li appendages Bobhyaline, mostly thin-walled, erect in a compact small tuft, tapering slightly, hardly exceeding the tip of the perithecium. Perithecium 190- 225 • 84/*. Total length to tip <>!' perithecium 540-680 65 n , to insertion-cell 875-470^. Appendages 175— 200/*. On Ega sp., Paris Mus. No. 151, Acapulco, Mexico. On Ega SaUei Chew. Brit. .Mus. Xo. lob, Biologia Coll., 1'aso Antonio and Champerico, Guatemala. On elytra. Laboulbenia equatorialis nov. sp. Perithecium free, hyaline becoming tinged with brown, slender and elongate; the basal wall-cells forming a well marked though not clearly differentiated hyaline stalk; a median and snbterminal external promi- nence; the rather broad tip more or less deeply tinged with blackish brown, rather abruptly differentiated and bent outward, the Lip-edges hyaline, the inner Lip-cells prominent, more deeply suffused. Receptacle very long and slender, cell I short, cell II greatly elongated, cells III and VI about equal. Insertion-cell broad, deeply blackened. Outer appendage consisting of a somewhat rounded basal cell, which is hyaline externally, distally suffused with blackish brown, and bear- two branches antero-posteriorly ; the outer of which consists of a nearly isodiametric basal cell, opaque except its upper inner angle from which arise two branches, the inner simple, becoming red-brown, its two lower edls in- flated inward, the outer consisting of a small basal cell, opaque, except its inner upper hyaline angle and bearing two branches, an inner dark red-biown and slender, an outer curved outward and upward, more slen- der, deep red-brown, opaque toward the base, usually broken : the inner branch from the basal cell of the outer appendage consists of a basal cell like that of the outer branch, which bears distally two branches red-brown, about equal, the lower two cells inflated inward. The inner appendage consists of a slightly smaller basal cell bearing a branch on either Bide, the basal cell of each branch shorter, and giving rise typicallj to two branchlets from the basal cells of which the large. Long, slender dei )> red-brown antheridia are produced in pairs. Perithecia 400— 760 n. Total length to tip of perithecium, average 550 p; Longest over l nun.; average breadth 50 ft. Appendages, longest 3~~>p. <> i Casnonia sp., Brit. .Mus. No. 502, Amazon River. On upper Burface of prothorax, at base of elytra and on leg . THAXTER. — NEW LABODLBENIACE^J. 175 Laboulbenia erecta nov. sp. Perithecium pale yellowish brown, slightly and evenly rounded, united to the receptacle as far as its subterminal cells, the nearly symmetrical tip rather broad, often flattened distally, becoming deeply suffused with blackish, except the narrow translucent margins of the lips. Receptacle pale yellowish, cell I short and stout, distally suffused with blackish In-own ; cell VI very small, cell V free from the perithecium, sometimes lateral as in L. paupercula. Insertion-cell thick and black, sometimes carried forward opposite the apex of the perithecium through the elonga- tion of cells IV and V. Outer appendage consisting of a large basal cell several times longer than broad, which may bear terminally one or two branches, the outer sometimes once branched, the branchlets very long, slender, tapering, hyaline or pale yellowish, more or less flexuous : the inner appendage sometimes laterally placed, usually single, simple, con- sisting of two or three short cells with one or two lateral antheridia and sometimes producing longer branchlets, the basal cell much smaller than that of the outer appendage. Perithecia 110-120 X 35-40 p. Total length to tip of perithecium 200-275 /x ; to insertion-cell 200-250/*. Appendages, longest G75 p. On " Culpodes agilis Chd.," Jalapa, Mexico, Brit. Mus. (Biologia Coll.), No. 69G; on O. evanescens Bates, U. S. National Museum, Bio- logia Coll., Mexico. Elytra. Laboulbenia falcata nov. sp. Perithecium free or nearly so, mostly very large, pale yellowish, the inner half or more suffused with smoky brown, darker toward the margin, the base more or less strongly curved so that the perithecium is directed outward nearly at right angles to the axis of the receptacle or even re- curved, basally inflated along the inner margin, tapering gradually from about the lower third to the apex; the tip not differentiated from the body of the perithecium, the lip-cells with darker longitudinal brown shades. Receptacle short, straight or nearly so, the basal cell broad, sometimes slightly inflated, a slight constriction often present between cells II and III, all the remaining cells unusually small in proportion. Outer append- age consisting of a small rounded basal cell bearing a single branch sepa- rated from it by a blackened septum and consisting of a hyaline externally blackened basal cell bearing two branchlets ; an outer (usually broken) externally blackened and bearing several vertical branchlets ; an inner usually simple, hyaline or yellowish. Inner appendage consisting of a 176 I IMCEEDINGS OF Till: AMEBIC AN ACADEMY. basal eel] Bimilar to that of the outer or Bbghtly smaller, producing a branch on either Bide, each usually once branched, all the branches pale yellowish with occasional brown Buffusions, the longest not greath i \- ceeding the tip of the perithecium. Spores 85 x :> M. Perithecium 150- 200 • 35-55 n. Total length to tip of perithecium 275-880fi; to inser- tion-cell 140-190 (i. Width 84-40 /*. Appendages 175 l'7.">/x. on Casnonia sp., Paris Mus. No. 11G Us, Bahia, Brazil. At ba elytra and on superior prothorax. Laboulbenia fallax nor. sp. Perithecium becoming .lark dirty olive-brown, the tip blackened, bent outward, the lips hyaline. Receptacle becoming concolorous with the perithecium except the hyaline slender basal cell, the remaining cells usually short and stout except cell V, which extends up along the inner margin of the perithecium nearly to its tip. its inner margin continuing the curvature of the tip down to the insertion of the appendages, so that the perithecium seems at first sight twice its actual size. Insertion-cell unmodified, forming a slight rounded external prominence within which the basal cells of the appendages form an evenly curved base from which arises a single antero-posterior row of branches about twelve in number, their lower cells slightly inflated, hyaline with dark septa, usually twice branched ; the ultimate branchlets above the third or fourth septum slen- der without dark septa, scarcely exceeding the tip of the perithecium. Perithecium 100-120x35-40/1. Total length to tip of perithecium 190 -325 /t; to insertion-cell 120-250/t. Greatest width 85/a. Appendages 50 fi. (The larger measurements are from the Amazon specimens. ) On Gyretes acutangulus Sharp, Brit Mus. No. 771 (Biologia Coll.), Bugaba, Panama; on Gyretes sp., Brit. Mus. No. 177. Amazon River; on Gyretes sp., Hope Coll. No. 229, Rio de Janeiro. At tips of dura. Laboulbenia finitima nov. sp. Perithecium one half to two thirds or more free, olivaceous brown. lighter distally, becoming wholly dark brown, Btraight or curved outward rarely inward; the tip broad, rounded, generally not well differentiated, blackish. Receptacle relatively small, the basal cell hyaline or yellowish, the rest concolorous with the perithecium: cells [II-V lighter, cell VI extending down almost to cell I. Appendages brownish or pale oliva- ceous, the outer simple, its basal cell twice as long as hi'oad. externally more deeply tinged with brown; the basal cell of the inner appendage THAXTER. — NEW LABOULBENIACE.E. 177 half as large, bearing a branch like the outer appendage on either side : all the branches erect, closely associated, and often bent terminally across the tip of the perithecium which they scarcely exceed. Perithecia, aver- age 125 X 45 [i. Total length to tip of perithecium, average 240 p ; to insertion-cell 145-150 ^; greatest width 48-50 fi. Appendages 30 /z. On PericaUus guttatus Chev., Paris Museum, No. 78, Brit. Mus. No. 571, Java; on P. cceruleowir ens Tat., Brit. Mus. No. 570, Singapore. On the legs. o Laboulbenia fissa nov. sp. Perithecium three fourths or more free, short and stout, slightly bent toward the appendages, dirty olive-brown becoming deeply suffused with blackish brown except distally just below the tip, which is abruptly dis- tinguished, long, narrow, hyaline below its black distal portion, furcate, the inner fork formed by the upgrowth of one of the inner (right) lip- cells which grows outward and abruptly upward beside the deep black blunt-tipped projection formed by the other three which it may equal in length, though narrower and somewhat paler. Receptacle short, the basal cell largest, pale yellowish or hyaline, of about the same diameter throughout, broader than cell II, which is short, narrow, of equal diameter throughout, hyaline or yellowish at the very base, the rest opaque and indistinguishable from the remainder of the receptacle, which expands abruptly above, becoming opaque except the upper part of cell IV and cell V. Insertion-cell much narrower than cells IV- V. Outer append- age consisting of several superposed cells, which form a black opaque axis, usually broken off, curved outward, each cell producing a short hya- line or brown edged branchlet distally on the inner side ; the inner ap- pendage consists of a smaller basal cell, which gives rise on either side to a branch much like the outer appendage, its main axis less deeply black- ened, curving outward on either side of the perithecium, the hyaline branchlets arising from its convex side mostly once branched. Perithe- cia, average 150 X 48^, including the tip, which is about 45 X 18-20/*. Total length to tip of perithecium 290-300 /* ; to insertion-cell 185 fi ; greatest width 70 p. Appendages about 110^. On PericaUus gutattus Chev., Paris Museum, No. 78; Brit. Mu No. 571 ; Hope Collection, No. 301, Java. On P. flavoguttulus Dej E. Indies. On elytra. VOL. XXXV. — 12 s. L78 PROCEKIiINi;^ OP TIIK AMERICAN ACADEMY. Laboulbenia forflculata dot. sp. Perithecinm free, Btraight or somewhat curved, slightly inflated, brown except the basal wall-cells which form a mostly hyaline well developed narrow neck-like Btalk less than one third as long as the ascigerous portion, the latter tapering rather abruptly at the tip, two of the lip-cells proloi to form a pair of erect pointed hyaline symmetrical apposed outgrowths which resemble the tips of a pair of shears. Receptacle Bhort, Btout, Bub- triangular, cell I hyaline below, forming a short slender usually curved pedicel ; the body of the receptacle suffused deeply below with blackish brown, the more deeply suffused portions coarsely punctate with darker spots. Appendages arising much as in L. palmeUa, the outer consisting of a basal cell from the blackened upper and outer margin of which arise u-ually three branches in an antero-posterior Beries, which are curved slightly outward and give rise from their convex Bide to Becoudary branches which in turn may bear branchlets in a similar fashion: of the primary branches the inmost is more copiously branched, the outmost being .-mall, usually broken ; all the branches black externally and brown on the inner margins or wholly opaque, usually constricted on the inner Bide at the blackened septa, the terminal cells of some of the ultimate branchlets abruptly inflated at the base: the basal cell of the inner ap- pendage gives rise to a branch on either Bide, the two divergent and very similar in character and mode of 1. ranching to those of the outer append- age. Perithecinm exclusive of neck. 150-200 X 28-38 p ; the neck I 50 ft long. Total length to tip of perithecium 300— I5()M ; to insertion- cell 100-1 50 /x ; greatest width 50-70 /x. Appendages 175-200 /*. On Tbjreopterus striatus Guer., Hope Collection, No. 802, Madagas- car. On elytra. Laboulbenia geniculata nov. sp. Perithecium free, long and narrow, translucent olive-brown except the shorl somewhat constricted hyaline neck, the tip well distinguished blackish brown bent out ward, the lips coarse subhvaline oblique outward. Receptacle nearly hyaline, except cell II and sometimes the upper part of cell I, long and slender geniculate above cell II. Insertion-cell broad, black, close to base of perithecial neck. Outer appendage con- sisting of a larger basal subtrian«.nilar cell becoming more or lesssuffusi d with olive-brown, surmounted by a Beries of five or six obliquely Buper- posed hyaline cells which curves inward toward the perithecium; each cell of the series bearing externally a simple branch consisting of two short faintly brownish basal cells constricted at the blackish sepia, and a THAXTER. — NEW LABOULBENIACE.E. 179 terminal hyaline tapering portion about twice as long : the inner append- age consisting of a basal cell blackened below, from which arises on either side a series of superposed cells like that of the outer appendage and similarly branched except that one or two of the lower cells of the series bear antheridia, single, sessile or on a one-celled stalk. Perithecia 200-285 X 37 it (the neck, 18-20 ft, included). Total length to tip of perithecium 500-670 it ; to insertion-cell 275-370/*; greatest width 55 it. Spores 65-70 X 5 it. Appendages 150-175 it. On Gahrita sp., Paris Museum, No. 160, Rosario, Argentine Republic. On left side of inferior prothorax. Laboulbenia gibbifera nov. sp. Perithecium free or nearly so, somewhat narrower than in L. Der- cyli, the apex narrower and more abruptly distinguished, the lips distinct, turned slightly inward; an external outgrowth just below the blackened tip, which it may exceed in length, forming a free protuberance straight or bent sidewise or4 inward, its apex evenly rounded or slightly inflated, its outer margin continuous with the nearly straight margin of the peri- thecium. Receptacle much as in L. Dercyli, more slender and shorter, the appendages pushed outward by the enlargement of cell V. Appendages much as in L. Dercyli, the basal cells projecting upward more prominently, a group of branches in almost all cases arising apparently from cell V or from a small cell separated from it, the lower segments of the branches clearly differentiated and bearing externally three to six external and ter- minal branchlets. Perithecium 150-167 X 50 it. Total length to tip of perithecium 400-450 it; to insertion-cell 275-340/x. Appendages 150 it. On Dercylus tenebriosits Laf. (Eurysoma tenebrioides?), Hope Coll. No. 32S. Para; Brit. Mus. No. 586, " S. America." Inferior surface of thorax and prothorax near base of two anterior pairs of legs. Possibly a variety of L. Dercyli. Laboulbenia heterocheila nov. sp. Perithecium olive-brown united to cell IV nearly to its base, rather short, inflated below, tapering distally, the tip not abruptly differentiated, blackened below, the four lip-cells all differently modified : of the two inner lips one produces an erect rather slender brown finger-like terminal out- growth, the other a shorter much broader paler outgrowth turned inward nearly at right angles : of the two outer lips one forms merely a rounded 1 v" PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. prominence wliil. • the other grows nut into ;i large prominent brown blunt- tipped tooth-like projection which becomes bent Blightly outward and Bideways. Receptacle rather long and Blender, Buffused with brown, the darker distal portion marked 1>\ fine transverse indistinct striatic] The basal cells of the appendages more or less indistinguishable and giving rise to indistinct promiuences bearing numerous branches, the basal cells of which are Bhort, inflated distally, and bear a terminal and external scries of closely Beptate branchlets; the latter once or twice branched, the Bepta dark, the whole forming a dense tuft about half as long as the perithecium. Spores GO x 6 p. Perithecium 200 < 70 ft. Total length to tip of perithecium 550 » ; to insertion-cell 1(||>^. Longest lip-prominence 35 /*. On Dineutest sp., Brit. Mus. No. 486, Timor, E. Indies. Elytra. Laboulbenia imitans nov. sp. Perithecium free, long, rather slender, curved slightly outward, Buffused with dark smoky brown, tapering rather abruptly to a Bomewhat trun- cate tip, the inner lip-cells darker, the basal cells forming a hyaline well developed neck. Receptacle short, stout, subtriangular, usually abruptly bent above the basal cell, becoming deeply suffused with blackish brown, coarsely and conspicuously punctate, except where quite opaque, the opacity first involving the anterior and lower portions above the hyaline basal cell: cells IV and V nearly equal, cell IV bulging outward more than half its upper surface, being tree from and external to the black insertion-cell. Appendages not reaching the tip of the perithecium; the outer consisting of a hyaline basal cell which gives rise to an antero-posterior series of rigid rather slender slightly incurved branches about six in number, arising from a deeply blackened ridge of insertion ; the branches becoming deeply suffused with blackish brown, except along their inner margins, closely septate, the lower cells giving rise distally and inwardly to secondary branches similar to the primary ones and often developing short hyaline branchlets in a similar fashion, The inner appendage consisting of a basal cell which gives rise on either side to a series of from two to three branches similar in character to those of the outer appendage: the whole forming a somewhat crest-like dense tuft. Spores 42^ long. Perithecium (exclusive of neck) 150- 1.55 x 28 M; the neck 20-30 x 20 /*. Total length to tip of perithecium 270-340/*; to insertion-cell 100 ti; greatest width 50t». Appendages, average 45 /i long. THAXTER. — NEW LABOULBENIACE.E. 181 On Nycteis sp., Paris Museum, No. 29, Madagascar. On legs, elytra, and abdomen. Resembling a species of Corethromyces in general appear- ance. Laboulbenia insularis nov. sp. Perithecium one third or more free, inflated, dark brown, becoming almost opaque, tapering to the rather pointed apex, the lip-edges hyaline. Receptacle elongate, the distal portion concolorous with the peritbe- cium ; cell I suffused with brown above and below, cell II hyaline except for a brown suffusion at its base and distal end. Outer appendage consisting of a large subcorneal basal cell becoming dark brown and bearing terminally a single short erect slender branch, the two basal cells of which are dark blackish brown, the septa usually oblique ; the distal cell somewhat longer than the rest of the appendage, hyaline and soon broken. The inner appendage consisting of a very small basal cell, usually producing a single short hyaline branch about as long as that of the outer appendage. Perithecium 85-95 x 40 ft. Total length to tip of peritbecium 215-275 fi; to insertion-cell 200-250 /z. Appendages, longest 100 fx. On Bembidium sublimatum Woll., and B. Grayanum "Woll., Brit. Mus. No. 409, Island of St. Helena. Laboulbenia intermedia nov. sp. Perithecium about three fourths free, suffused with yellowish brown deeper below the apex, rather stout, slightly inflated, the apex very broad, rounded, often almost flat, short, wholly blackened, the lips indistinguish- able, the wall-cells with a slight spiral twist. Receptacle short and stout, at first hyaline below, becoming concolorous with the perithecium. Outer appendage consisting of a rather large subisodiametric cell bearing distally two or three antero-posterior branches, once or twice branched, the external branchlets brown, basally deeply blackened. Inner append- age consisting of a basal cell similar to that of the outer and producing usually two simple or once branched branches placed antero-posteriorly, the ultimate branchlets in both appendages elongate, tapering slightly distally, hyaline. Perithecia 95-105 X 35-40 li. Total length to tip of perithecium, average 190 fi ; to insertion-cell 120 p. Appendages, longest 300^. On Anisodactylus tricuspidatus A. Mor., Paris Museum, No. 199, Mon-Pin, (China?). Margin of the elytra. 182 ICEEDING8 OP Till: AMERICAN ACADEMY. Laboulbenia Italica nov. sp. ithecium free except at it- base, rather short and Btoot, the upper half or third curved strongly outward, the tip large, Bulcate, blackened, the lips coarse, nearly equal, subbyaline. Receptacle concoloroua with the perithecium, the base nearlj hyaline, usually bent between cells I and II. short, abruptly expanded above cell II, the anterior margin Btraig above cell I. Appendages arranged very much as in L. orientalis, the basal cells subtriangular, the miter producing externally an oblique row of about four superposed branches from a blackened area of insertion, the branches erect mostly twice subdichotomously branched, all the lower septa blackened and constricted, the inner appendage similar to the outer ; the insertion-cell normally placed, broad, Bubhyaline, close to base oi perithecium. Antheridia brown, the vente much inflated, the neck becoming pointed, 23 x 8u. Perithecia 100 x 42 p. Total length to tip of perithecium 275 u ; to insertion-cell 17.". /(. Appendages 140 ft. On Braehinus explodens Duft., Florence Museum, Florence, Italy. Laboulbenia Javana nov. sp. l'.ritbecium about two thirds or less free, sessile, tinged with brown, paler in the middle, the distal portion hyaline and tapering considerably to the greatly modified tip, which is deeply suffused with blackish brown and bears two often symmetrically placed divergent outgrowths, the inner broader at the base and much shorter than the outer which is finger-like, with a hyaline area above, close beside the subterminal pore: the outer of these two projections appears, through a twist in the perithe- cium, to lie on the inner side. Receptacle pale yellowish with brownish shades, the deeply suffused base of the perithecium opposite the upper half of cell III or lower; the distal portion usually so twisted and bent in conjunction with the perithecium that it crosses the latter and the appendages at a considerable angle. Insertion-cell higher than the middle of the perithecium. Appendages concolorous with the receptacle, consist- ing of an outer basal cell which hears a single simple branch, slightly nodulose above and below the septa, the basal cell of the inner appendage smaller, bearing a single branch on either side which may be once branched. Perithecia about 100 p long exclusive of outgrowth, 27 /i broad. Total length to tip of perithecium L90 ft : to insertion-cell 1 10 u. Appendages 130 /*. Distance from tip to tip of perithe.ial outgrowths 45-48,1. ():| PericaEus cicindehides MacLeary, Paris Museum, No 113, Ton- f»ou, Java. On inferior surface of thorax. THAXTER. — NEW LABOULBENIACE.E. 183 Laboulbenia leucopheea nov. sp. Perithecium dark brown, almost opaque, rather small, hardly more than the tip free from the receptacle ; the tip relatively large and long, bent slightly outward, not abruptly differentiated, black except around the pore, the right inner lip forming a hyaline nearly median blunt out- growth which is bent slightly outward. Receptacle sometimes twisted at the distal end of and above cell II; cell I hyaline; cell II suffused with brown, in some cases with deeper brown tranverse elevations on one side; the lower half of cell III and cell VI hyaline, the rest of the receptacle concolorous with the perithecium. The outer appendage simple, its basal cell four or more times as long as broad, curved toward the perithecium ; tin; basal cell of the inner appendage very small, bearing in general a single short branch, both appendages pale yellowish. Perithecium to tip of outgrowth 1M0-150 X 35-40 fx. Total length to tip of perithecium 325-375 fi; to insertion-cell 250-290 /a; greatest width 55— 65 ju.. Appendages about 200 /a. On Serrimargo t/n/fi>/er Schaum., Hope Collection, No. 300, Sumatra. Mid-elytron and hase of legs. Laboulbenia Loxandri nov. sp. Perithecium about three fourths free, suffused with brownish, translu- cent, the distal half narrow and strongly curved inward, especially at the tip, the latter externally and distally blackened, the lip-edges hyaline. Receptacle rather stout, pale dirty brownish ; cell II basally and distally and cell VI externally more deeply suffused. Cells IV and V elongated so that they become parallel and carry the insertion-cell upward and out- ward free from the perithecium. Outer appendage consisting of a rounded basal cell bearing a single terminal branch, the basal cell and one or two cells above it rounded, constricted at the mostly blackened septa, simple or each of the lower cells producing distally on the inner side a branchlet, the branchlets and the terminal portion of the main branch hyaline, slender, thin-walled, tapering. Inner appendage con- sisting of a basal cell like the outer and like it producing a branch on either side. Spores about 45 X 4 ft. Perithecium 140 X 40 p. Total length to tip of perithecium 340 /x ; to insertion-cell 275 p.. Appendages, longest 120 p. On Loxandrus tmistigma Bates, Brit. Mus. No. 659 (Biologia Coll.), Paso Antonio, Guatemala. Elytra. 184 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. Laboulbenia maculata nov. sp. Perithecium free, dark brown becoming nearly opaque, the outer margin more convex than the inner; Bomewhat constricted at the b the tip rather abruptly distinguished externally, the margins nearly Btraight, the inner Lips Bmall and prominent, the outer broad, Btraight, oblique. Receptacle abnormal, cell I Bhort, slender, curved, opaque ; cell II nearly hyaline in the middle, brownish above, coarsely spotted with blackish brown In-low, Incoming darker and indistinguishable from cell I at its base; cell VI distally nearly hyaline and narrow, extending down beside cell II nearly if not quite to cell I, its base spotted as in cell II; cell VII (the "secondary stalk-cell") external to it, the margin blackish brown especially distally, extending down ln-side cell VI to within a short distance of its base where it is similarly punctate towards its base or throughout; cell III narrow, external to the upper two thirds of cell II, punctate below, its distal end close beside the cor- responding termination of cell II ; the base of cell IV overlapping cell III so that across section in this region would cut cells II, III. I V. VI. and VII: distal portion of the receptacle concolorous with the perithecium or somewhat paler. The perithecium bent toward and partly or wholly overlapping the insertion-cell. Appendages directed across the lower half of the perithecium sometimes at right angles : consisting of a lar. Total length to tip of perithecium 560/*; to insertion-cell 375 /x: greatest width 1 10/i. Appendages about 200-2">0ii. On Serrimargo guttiger Schaum., Brit. Mus. No. 559, Penang, East Indies. On anterior legs. Laboulbenia Madagascarensis nov. sp. Perithecium free, mostly Btraight, the inner margin more convex, uni- formly clear dark brown or blackish except just below the black tip, abruptly distinguished from and contrasting with the receptacle; the tip rather abruptly distinguished, Btraight or bent Blightly inward, with hyaline lip-margins, the wall-cells with a slight spiral turn. Receptacle THAXTER. — NEW LABOULBENIACEiE. 185 hyaline or finally yellowish, cells III and VI about equal. Insertion cell opposite base of perithecium. Outer appendage consisting of a rather small basal cell, its outer wall blackened, the blackening con- tinuous with the insertion cell, producing distally usually two branches, an outer blackened externally or suffused with brown at its base and once branched, and an inner usually simple and hyaline. The inner appendage consists of a basal cell like that of the outer, and produces a single branch on either side which may be once branched, all the branch- lets of both appendages rather stout and stiff, tapering, slightly curved outward, hyaline or becoming dirty yellowish. Perithecia 100-120 X 40-4.") /x. Total length to tip of perithecium 240-270 it; to insertion-cell 140-155 it. Appendages, longest 250 /x. On a Carabid allied to Harpalus, Paris Museum, No. 3, Madagascar. On margins of both elvtra. Laboulbenia Madeirse now sp. Perithecium united to receptacle for about two thirds of its length, pale straw-yellow becoming brownish yellow, the whole tip clear con- trasting black or blackish brown, the h valine lip-edges turned outward. Receptacle concolorous with perithecium, rather short, normal. Cell V relatively large, its upper margin free between the perithecium and the insertion-cell, die latter oblique, clear black, contrasting. Outer append- age often simple, elongate, sometimes once branched above its subbasal cell ; the branches divergent : inner appendage consisting of a basal cell smaller than that of the outer, and bearing one or two short branches commonly three-celled. Spores 75 X G it. Perithecia 100-130 X 35- 40 it. Total length to tip of perithecium 225-250 it; to insertion-cell 175-210 it. Appendages, longer 350 it. On Calathus complanatus Dej., Paris Museum, No. 211, Madeira. On elytra. Laboulbenia Malayensis nov. sp. Perithecium clear translucent brown with a slight olive tinge, becom- ing almost opaque ; united to the receptacle except the abruptly dis- tinguished tip which is hyaline, except the blackened lips ; the latter turned abruptly usually to the right, forming a lateral somewhat irregu- larly four-lobed papilla in which the hyaline pore is central. Cells I and II of the receptacle about equal in length, nearly hyaline, often dis- tally olivaceous; cells III and IV relatively large, translucent olive- brown, cell IV bulging distally so that the dark but not opaque inser- 1 >'> PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. tion-cell is turned obliquely toward the tip of the perithecium ; cells VI and the basal cells of the receptacle more or less tinged with olive- brown forming an elevation bo that the perithecium appears indented below, all 1 1 » « - cells except cell 1 marked by fine transverse Btriations. Outer appendage simple, the basal cell rather large, often externally indented near the base, the second and third cells nearly equal, narrower than the basal cell and the cells immediately above them: the rest of the appendage tapering to the hyaline attenuated elongate distal portion ; the inner appendage consisting of a basal cell one third as large us that of the outer and bearing a Bingle branch on either side, one or both of which may he elongate much like the outer appendage, bearing one or two Bhorl Blender antheridial branches near the base which are bent rather abruptly upward from their point of origin; the branches all distally hyaline and attenuated; the basal cells faintly reddish. Perithecia, average 110 x .'!7 fx. Total length to tip of perithecium 260 280 p; to insertiou-cell 250-:.,75 /i ; greatest width 75 /i. Appendages, longest .">7o p. On Pericallus ctsruleovirens Tat., Brit. Mus. No. 570, Singapore. At base of posterior legs. Laboulbenia melanaria nov. sp. Perithecium nearly free, uniformly suffused with clear blackish brown, Btraight or bent slightly outward; the tip more deeply colored, the lip- edges hyaline, contrasting, externally oblique. Receptacle hyaline becoming yellowish, often suffused with blackish brown except the lower portions of cells I, III. and VI, and usually cell V. Outer appendage consisting of a basal cell mostly free, bearing terminally a single branch typically once branched above its basal cell, the branchlets elongate, thick-walled, rigid, more or less tinged with brown. The inner append- age consisting of a much smaller basal cell, producing either a short two-celled branch with one or two terminal antheridia, or two longer branches which may be once branched; the branches like those of the outer appendage but shorter. Perithecium 120 X 85 p. Total length to tip of perithecium 275 p ; to insertion-cell 15<>^. Appendages, longest, 550 p. On Diachromut germanus Linn., Florence Museum. Florence, Hope Coll. No. ■Ml1,, 819, Prance, Portugal ; on Anisodactylu* militaris, No. 315, Sardinia; on A. heros Fabr., No. 316, "Europe." THAXTER. — NEW LABOULBENIACE.E. 187 Laboulbenia melanopus nov. sp. Peritheciuui free except at the base, large, rather deeply suffused with smoky brown, translucent, not contrasting ; the subdistal wall-cells lighter, tapering abruptly to the narrow somewhat incurved tip, the inner lip-cells only deeply blackened. Receptacle somewhat curved, tapering below to the short slender basal cell which is smoky black except at its base, the distal cells gradually suffused with yellowish brown. Insertion-cell opaque only externally, the basal cells of the appendages becoming apparently divided into several cells which are opaque or nearly so and indistinguishable in the mature plant, giving rise to numerous branches the basal cells of which are distally inflated and bear terminally numerous brauchlets (about six to ten), the latter very slender, flexuous, not as long as the peritheciuui. Spores about 60 X 4.5 fx. Perithecium 290 X 70 /x. Total length to tip of perithe- cium 675 /x ; to insertion-cell 400 /x. Appendages, longer 140 /x. On Carabid (allied to ITarpalus?), Paris Mus. No. 115, Africa. On tip of abdomen. Laboulbenia microscopica nov. sp. Perithecium one half or wholly free, pale olivaceous, somewhat inflated, tapering to the relatively long narrow subtruncate blackened tip which is bent slightly inward. Lower half of receptacle greatly reduced in size, the basal cell hyaline or nearly so, the rest suffused with dark brown, cell III paler, cell II broader than long, cells III to V relatively large, bulging prominently outward beyond and below the insertion-cell. Outer appendage consisting of a basal cell which becomes sub-triangular through the protrusion of its upper outer angle which renders its distal margin twice as broad as the basal cell of the single branch which rises from its upper inner half. The inner appendage arising from a much smaller basal cell which produces two branches. Spores about 35 X 3 ii. Peri- thecia 75-93 X 27-34 /x. Total length to tip of perithecium 120-140 n ; to insertion-cell 75-90 /x. Greatest width 45-60 ti. Appendages about 70 jx. On Pelmatellus nitescens Bates, Brit. Mus. (Biologia Coll.), No. G83, Vera Paz, Guatemala. On elytra. Laboulbenia microsoma nov. sp. Perithecium free, several times as large as the receptacle, smoky brown darker basally and distally, the longitudinal septa subhyaline, the outer margin concave, the inner convex ; a subterminal external small rounded 188 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. elevation; the tip very broad, Bhort, almost flat-topped, the outer at ._ almost a right angle, the inner rounded. Receptacle consisting of a basal cell which is nearly hyaline, above which cells II. III. and VI form an almost transverse row; cell II median, triangular, lying between the other two, the receptacle abruptly expanded in this region; cells III and I V Bmall and flattened; cell V hardly distinguishable, [nsertion-cell and basal cells of the appendagi - nearly opaque and indistinguishable from one another, the outer basal cell apparently producing two brand antero-posteriorly ; the inner a branch on either Bide, all the branches (broken) brown, still', erect or slightly divergent. Perithecium 185 X 66/t. Total length to tip of perithecium 295 p.; to insertion-cell 90/ij greatest width 65 u. On Serrimargo guttiger Schaum., Brit. Mus. No. 500, Penang, Bast Indies. At base of posterior legs. Laboulbenia minimalis nov. sp. Perithecium five, becoming olivaceous brown, mostly Btraight, the basal wall-cells forming a very short stalk, the tip rather abruptly distin- guished, mostly straight symmetrical black, distally hyaline. Receptacle olivaceous yellow with brown sutl'usious ; cell I slightly Buffused with brown, somewhat longer than cell II, both rather narrow ; the receptacle expanding rather abruptly above cell II; cells III, IV, and V nearly equal becoming rather deeply suffused with brown. Insertion-cell broad, blackened. Outer appendage consisting of a large triangular basal cell becoming deep blackish brown, above which four to six small nearly hyaline cells obliquely superposed, or with their long axes nearly vertical, form a series which runs obliquely toward the perithecium, each cell pro- ducing externally a single branch ; the branches either simple and mostly three-celled or branched above their basal cells; the branchlets two in number, mostly four-celled, their basal and terminal cells very small, all the >epta somewhat dark, slightly constricted: the inner appendage con- sisting of a basal cell bearing on either side a short series of cells like that of the outer appendage and similarly branched, except that the three or four lower branches consist of a Bingle cell bearing terminally a pair of rather stout long-necked antheridia ; the three series closely apposed or united. Perithecia 100 •; 30ft. Total length to tip of perithecium 200 235 /ij to insertion-cell 110/a; greatest width 15 /*. Appendages 60-75 a. Ou Galerita sp., Paris .Museum, No. 71. Venezuela. Ou mid-elytron. THAXTER. — NEW LABOULBENIACE^E. 189 Laboulbenia Misceii nov. sp. Peritbeciura free, long aud slender, translucent, pale brownish olive, narrowed at the base to form a short paler stalk which lies opposite the insertion-cell; the tip long, not very abruptly distinguished, paler below, straight or turned slightly outward, distally blackened on the inner side ; the lips variable, rather prominent. Receptacle rather short and stout, darker olive-brown ; the basal cell pale yellowish. Insertion-cell nearly as broad as cells IV-V. Basal cell of outer appendage blackish brown externally, bearing a single terminal branch of less diameter externally suffused with blackish brown, slightly curved outward and bearing two or three branchlets from the inner side which are hyaline, the basal cells somewhat suffused with brown ; the basal cell of the inner appendage smaller than that of the outer, nearly hyaline and bearing a branch on either side similar to the outer appendage. Perithecia including base 145-180 jx. Total length to tip of perithecium 210-300 ft ; to insertion- cell 90-130 /x ; greatest width 35-40 ft. Appendages, longer 150 it. On Miscelus sp., Paris Museum, No. 114, Isles des Mohupies. At base of posterior legs. Laboulbenia obtusa nov. sp. Perithecium about three fourths free, becoming opaque, black-brown, very stout, the outer margin slightly and more or less symmetrically convex, the inner bulging prominently distally aud curved abruptly to the brown blunt rounded hardly differentiated apex, the pore external. Receptacle short, cell VI together with the basal cells of the perithecium concolorous with the latter, becoming indistinguishable; cell VI ex- tending to or towards the base of cell II, which is mostly suffused above, hyaline and contrasting below as is cell I ; cells III and IV with median brown shades. Insertion-cell black-brown. Appendages hyaline becoming tinged with brown, the outer basal cell twice as long as the inner, each bearing one to two branches which form a compact group curved toward and against the perithecium. Perithecium 120 X 65 /i. Total length to tip of perithecium, average 260 /x ; to insertion-cell 175 /x. Appendages, broken, 35 a/. On Aerogenidion Bedeli Tsch., Paris Museum, No. 198, Mon-Pin, (China?). On left inferior margin of prothorax. Laboulbenia CEdodactyli nov. sp. Perithecium free except at the base, pale transparent amber-yellow, somewhat inflated at the base and tapering gradually thence to the 190 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. Blender tip, a blackish shade below tin- nearly hyaline lipa which are turned slightly outward. Receptacle amber-colored, deeper anteriorly, cell II Bometimes elongate, cell \'I very Bhort, bo that the base oi the perithecium comes opposite cell III. Insertion-cell and the inner margin of cell V usually free from the perithecium. The outer append -implc divergent, tlie basal cell very targe; the basal cell of the inner appendage much Bmaller, bearing one to two Bhort branchlets. Spores 85 10 ■ II ft. Perithecia 120 X 35 ft. Total length to tip of perithe- cium L75 380 /i (longest); t<> insertion-cell 115-275 //. ( )n il (Edodactylus fuscobrunneus" Brit. Mus. No. 397, Chili. On el\ tra. Laboulbenia Oopteri nov. bo. Perithecium three fourths or more free, translucent blackish brown, the inner margin evenly curved outward, the outer margin with slight elevation- at the septa ami curved abruptly inward to form the well differentiated tip which is pale brownish, with dark inferior Buffusions. Receptacle concolorous with perithecium, except that cells I and II are usually hyaline, the suffused portion- Bparsely and rather coarselj and distinctly punctate. Iusertiou-cell broad and black. Basal cell of the outer appendage for the most part very long, bearing distally an outer and an inner branch, the former with blackened basal septum, Bimple, or once branched in which case the basal septum of the outer branchlet is also blackened. Inner appendage consisting of a very small basal cell hearing a short branch on either side. Perithecia 95-110 • 30-35 ,,. Total length to tip of perithecium 17o 275 n ; to insertion-cell 85-160 ft. Appendage broken. 200 ft, probably much longer. On Oopterus rotundicollis White, Brit. Mus. Xo. 613, New Zealand. On elytra. Laboulbenia Ophoni nov. sp. Perithecium free except at the base, short and stout, pale straw-colored or nearly hyaline, somewhat inflated ; the inner margin more convex, the black tip abruptly differentiated on its inner side. Mack, contrasting, the lip-edges hyaline turned slightly outward. Receptacle Bhort, -tout, nor- mal, concolorous with the perithecium. Insertion-cell black, contrasting. The outer appendage divergent, simple or once to three times branched, the ultimate branchlets distally attenuated ; the inner appendage consist- ing of a basal cell half as large as that of th iter, bearing a short branch on either side which may he several times branched, the antheridia borne i;i small groups. Spores 28x3^. Perithecia 70x30-3-1./. Total THAXTER. — NEW LABOULBENIACE.E. 191 leDgth to tip of perithecium 165 ^ ; to insertion-cell 85—100 ^ ; width 40 (i. Appendages, longest 200 ,u. On Ophonus obscurus Fabr., 0. brevicollis Dej., O. azureus Fabr., Harpalus neglectus Dej., H. serripes Quensel, H. sulpkuripes Germ., // tardus Fanz., in Florence Museum collection of Italian Coleoptera. On Ophonus sp.?, Iuterlaken, Switzerland. On Ophonus sp., Paris Mu- seum, No. 37, Algeria. On elytra, inferior thorax aud prothorax, and abdomen. Laboulbenia Orectochili nov. sp. Perithecium free except at the base, more or less evenly suffused with smoky brown, with a subtermiual external blackish patch, nearly sym- metrical and straight, slightly inflated, tapering gradually to the hyaline tip which is surmounted by a median straight pointed purplish tooth-like pro- jection formed by the outgrowth of one of the lip-cells; the inner lip-cells forming a small hyaline or partly purplish lateral papilla. Receptacle elon- gate, cells I and II stout, the latter slightly if at all narrower distally, cells IV and V and the basal cells of the perithecium darker brown, the rest very pale yellowish or purplish brown, finely punctate, the dots scarcely visible except in the more deeply suffused areas. The insertion-cell broad, blackened, extending completely across the distal margins of cells IV and V. Appendages consisting of an inner and outer basal cell, giving rise in all to from five to ten erect subcorneal prominences, ench of which becomes separated as the basal cell of a very short two-celled branch of which only a blackened basal portion remains in mature speci- mens, the rounded purplish slightly inflated terminal portion of the upper cell usually breaking off above its blackened slightly constricted basal half. Of the branches that borne by the protuberance first formed from the outer basal cell is always somewhat larger and more prominent than the rest. Perithecia 190 x 59 /.i. Total length to tip of perithecium 475-680 fi ; to insertion-cell 400-550 u. On Orectochilus cordatus Reg., Paris No. 99, " Asia." On elytra. Laboulbenia orientalis nov. sp. Perithecium straight, its base free from and higher than the insertion of the appendages, straight to strongly recurved, becoming suffused with pale brownish ; the tip blackish brown in normal specimens, well dis- tinguished, with prominent lips (when curved, not abruptly distinguished, somewhat pointed, with ill defined lips), the translucent edges dirty brown. Receptacle hyaline or concolorous with the perithecium, sometimes be- 102 OP Till: AMERICAN ACADEMY. coming dark smoky brown ; cell V often as large as cell IV. poshing small Bubtriangular unmodified insertion-eel] outward so that it may become lateral, with its transverse diameter vertical, cell VII unusually large. Appendages consisting of an outer and an inner basal cell, the two tree from one another except al the base, mostlj Beveral times as long as broad and overlapping Blightly; the outer bearing an external row of superposed branches, usually Beven or eight in number, formed by the successive prob'feration of the tip of the basal cell, and separated from it by broadly blackened septa; the branches successively Bubdichoto- mously branched several to eight or more times, the basal and sometimes the Bubbasal cell often producing more than two branchlets (two to tour) superposed in a Bingle row. The inner appendage like the outer, the basal cell producing a single .similar row of branches fewer (usually two to four) in number, overlapping those of the outer appendage and bear- ing antheridiain groups of from one to eight not characteristically grouped, the venter rather abruptly distinguished from the straight cylindrical purplish neck : the branches of both appendages directed outward, hyaline or distally reddish or purplish, constricted at the lower purplish septa. Perithecia (largest) 230 x 55 ^ ; average 170 x 40 /t. Total length to tip of perithecium very variable, from 275 p to 1 mm. Appendages 200- 350 u. Antheridia 1G X 4//. On Brachinus Chinensis Chaud., Paris Museum, Nos. 58, 59, Manila, Philippine Islands, and Macao, China. Brit Mus. Nos. 536 (bis), China, Hope Coll. No. 244, China. On Brachinus spp., Brit. Mus. Nos. 5.I7. 539, 540, China and Philippine Islands. Usually ou interior surface of thorax and protbora\. Laboulbenia Orthomi nov. sp. Perithecium free, long and straight, slender, sometimes slightly inflated distally, deep clear brown; the tip broad, prominent, not abruptly differ- entiated; the lips rather large and prominent, the lower wall-cell as a rule elongated to form a hyaline neck, usually well marked and contrast with the body of the perithecium. Receptacle shorter than the perithe- cium, olive-brown, except the hyaline or slightly yellowish basal cell. Insei-tion-e.ll not as broad as cell IV. The outer appendage consisting of a basal cell longer than broad, blackened externally, producing usually a single simple terminal branch, the two lower cells of which arc black- ened externally and sometimes give rise to erect simple branchlets. '1 be inner appendage consisting of a basal cell similar to that of the outer, and producing ou either side a straight hyaline erect branch. Spores 50 X THAXTER. — NEW LABOULBENIACE^E. 193 4:fi. Perithecia 130-140 X 30-35^ exclusive of the variably developed neck, which may be 18 /x long. Total length to tip of perithecium 2G0 /.i ; to insertion-cell 100 n; width 40^. Longer appendages 200-270^. On Orthomus aquilus Coquer, Algeria?, Paris "Museum, No. 41. On margin of elytra. Laboulbenia pallida nov. sp. Perithecium almost wholly free from the receptacle, colorless becoming faintly yellowish, bent outward ; the prominent tip abruptly distinguished, coarse lipped, hyaline except for an inner blackish patch. Receptacle concolorous with the perithecium, the basal cell large and broad, longer than cell II, the cells of the distal portion relatively small, cell III roundish, about as large as cells IV and V together. Insertion-cell thick, contrasting purplish black. Outer appendage consisting of a basal cell, rectangular or distally enlarged and producing usually two, sometimes but one branch, the branches once or even twice branched, the ultimate branchlets sometimes very elongate and attenuated : the inner appendage consisting of a basal cell much smaller than that of the outer and some- times lateral in position, bearing one or two branches which may be short or elongate like those of the outer appendage. Perithecia 70 X 25 fi. Total length to tip of perithecium 110-175 /x; to insertion-cell 85-120 u. Appendages, longest 285 (i. On a Carabid allied to Harpalus, Paris Museum, No. 94, Java. On elytra. Laboulbenia Papuana nov. sp. Perithecium nearly two thirds free, straight or curved slightly outward, the inner margin convex ; pale brownish yellow, the tip rather well dif- ferentiated, blackish ; the hyaline irregularly prominent lip-edges turned inward. Receptacle elongate, cell II. and cell I except at its base, con- spicuously tinged with blackish and faintly marked by fine transverse ^ striations, the rest of the receptacle concolorous with the perithecium ; i cell IV externally concave, the whole receptacle more or less prominently bent anteriorly in the region of cells III and VI. Insertion-cell broad, horizontal, black, narrower than cells IV-V. The basal cells of the appendages simple and distinct, the outer producing a single branch which may branch once; the branchlets short ; the basal cell of the inner appendage producing two small branches which may be once branched. Spores about 65 X 5.5 /<. Perithecium 160-200 X 55-65 p. Total length to tip of perithecium 650-880 p ; to insertion-cell 544-700 (i. Appendages, longest seen, 1 40 (i. vol. xxxv. — 13 I1.1 I PROCEEDINGS OP Till: AMERICAN ACADEMY. ( )n Mono sp., Paris Museum, No. 112, New Guinea. On anterior inferior surface of tborai on right side. Laboulbenia Pericalli nov. sp. Perithecium becoming almosl opaque, its upper fourth, sometimes only the tip, free from the receptacle, relatively small, the tip more or less prominent, Bometimes Bubconical, Bhort, and wholly black (often more prominent, abruptly distinguished, the rounded lips well defined with hyaline edges). Receptacle normal, culls III and IV large and broad, concolorous with the perithecium; cells I and 11 together with the lower end of cell VI pale yellowish. Outer appendage mostly Bimple, stout, the lower cells slightly inflated ; inner appendage consisting oi a much -mailer basal cell, bearing a usually simple branch on either side very similar to the outer appendage ; all the branches yellowish or becon tinged with brown, especially toward the base. Perithecia 110-180 X 37-45//. Total length to tip of perithecium 200-300 /*; greatest breadth about 75 /u. On Pericallus guttatus Chew. Paris Museum, No. 78, Java; on Misce- lus sp., l'aris Museum, IS'os. 113, 11 1, 1 15, New Guinea. Laboulbenia platystoma nov. sp. Perithecium free except at the very base, straight, rather long and narrow, pale amber-yellow becoming slightly tinged with In-own. slightly and symmetrically inflated; the tip black, opaque, the lip-cells forming an abruptly spreading almost flat symmetrical termination with a Blight median indentation, two of the lips forming a small median hyaline truncate cone, the other two arching over them from the outer and inner side, wholly opaque except their inner margins, the blackened part not quite meeting in the median line, the whole resembling the end of a pair of horizontal cut plyers. Receptacle medium, pale amber-vellow becoming tinged with brown distally. Outer appendage mostly simple, the basal cell about twice as long as broad, often slightly inflated, the rest of the appendage much narrower, straight, rigid, tinged with brown tapering somewhat distally; the inner appendage consisting of a basal cell about half as long as that of the outer, producing a branch on either side : the branch usually bearing an antheridia] branchlet near it- base, the branches and the outer appendage similar, often Curved slightly out- ward, becoming tinged with In-own. Perithecia 175 < 40/t; the tip 87/* broad. Total length to tip of perithecium 825-400/*; to insertion-cell 185-230/*; greatest width 55 63/*. Appendages about 175/* (longest). THAXTER. NEW LABOTJLBENIACEiE. 195 On Catoscopus sp., Paris Museum, No. 119, New Guinea. On in- ferior surface. Laboulbenia Polyhirmae nov. sp. Perithecium rather slender, almost wholly free, nearly hyaline or faintly brownish yellow ; tapering slightly toward the moderately well differentiated tip which is usually bent slightly outward, more or less blackened on the inner side, sometimes wholly black, the inner lips often prominently rounded and terminal. Receptacle concolorous with the perithecium, marked by faint transverse striations, long and slender; cell II usually greatly elongated; the distal portion small and normal. Outer appendage consisting of a small basal cell more or less rounded and producing distally from two to four branches, usually four ; an outer and an inner, the two others placed between them one on either side, the branches simple or usually not more than once branched above the basal cell ; the branchlets slender, often flexed, rather closely septate, hardly tapering: the inner appendage consisting of a smaller rounded ba- sal cell which produces on either side a single branch, which may branch several times and bears hyaline lateral or terminal antheridia singly or in pairs; all the branches nearly hyaline. Perithecia 130-190 X 30-40 /x. Total length to tip of perithecium 400-700 /u, average 500 ft, to insertion-cell 275-450^. Appendages, longest 350-400/*. Greatest width 40-50,(1. On Polyhirma sp., Paris Museum, Nos. 5, 6, and 1G8, Tangar, Algeria. On inferior surface of abdomen and thorax especially in depressions at base of posterior legs. Laboulbenia prominens nov. sp. Perithecium short and stout, less than half free from the receptacle, nearly opaque blackish brown lighter distally, the short broad blunt black tip rather abruptly distinguished on the inner side. Receptacle rather stout, cells I and II dirty yellowish or subhvaline, the rest more or less deeply suffused with blackish brown ; all the cells except cell I marked by fine transverse striations more distinct on the suffused por- tions ; cells III and IV large and prominent, the insertion-cell broad but narrower than cells IV- V. Outer appendage consisting of a short irregular cell abruptly narrowed distally and bearing two branches an- tero-posteriorly, the outer externally deep blackish brown, once branched; the outer branchlet also branched, the inner consisting of a short basal cell which bears an inner and an outer branchlet, the branchlets pale 196 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. brown, curved outward: the inner appendage og of a basal cell Bmaller tbau that of the outer, irregular and bearing :i branch on either side : each once branched, the branchleta like those of the outer append- Perithecia 150 52ft. Total length to dp of perithecium 310- 830 ft; to insertion-cell 275 (u Greatest width 95-100 p. On Pericolitis guttatus Chev., Brit. Mus. No. 571, -lava. On legs. Laboulbenia protrudens nov. Bp. Perithecium smoky brown with a tinge of oli\<-, the outer margin con- cave, relatively small ; the tip only free from the receptacle, Bhort, rounded, not abruptly differentiated, bent slightly outward, black excepl around ti,,. pore. Receptacle dirty olivaceous ; cell I, except at the base, con- colorous with perithecium ; cells IV and V forming a Bomewhal angular protrusion which carries the insertion-cell out free from and beyond the tip of the perithecium. Insertion-cell less than half as broad as the ad- jacent distal margins of cells IV and V, which form a flat Burface in which the insertion-cell is mostly central. Outer appendage arising from a small roundi.-h basal cell, simple or omv branched, the branches Bhort, tapering nearly hyaline; the basal cell of the inner appendage verj Bmall hearing one or two short tapering hyaline branches. Perithecia 95- 110x34/1. Total length to tip of perithecium 280/*; to insertion-cell about the same measurement; greatest width 66 ju. On Pericolitis cicit ideloides MacLeary, Taris Museum, No. 144, Ton- gou, Java. On mid-elytron. Laboulbenia Pseudomasci nov. pp. Perithecia dark rich brown, slightly and rather evenly inflated, diver- gent, free from the receptacle except at the very base, the broad opaque tip hardly differentiated 5 the lip-edges nearly hyaline, not prominent. turned slightly outward. Receptacle colorless or yellowish below, dis- tally brownish, slender, its axis coincident with that of the appendagi -. cell I usually larger and longer than cell II, the rest of the receptacle relatively unusually small, the inner margin of cell V partly free from the perithecium. Insertion-cell free, black. Outer appendage con- ting of a basal cell several times longer than it is broad, which may branch above its basal or subbasal cell oue to three times Buccessively, the branchlets divergent; the inner appendage consisting of a much shorter basal cell bearing one or rarely two branches. BOmetimes simple. mostly one to three times branched, all the branches becoming more or THAXTER. NEW LABOULBENIACE.E. 197 less suffused with brown. Spores about 65 X 45 fx. Perithecia 120-165 X 60^. Total length to tip of perithecium 225-300 jx; to insertion-cell 170-240 u. Appendages, longest 100 li. On Pseudomascus nigrita, Fab., Paris Museum, No. 201, Mongolia. Near upper inferior margin of prothorax on left side. Laboulbenia punctata nov. sp. Perithecium free, straight, translucent brown becoming almost opaque, except the broad short neck formed by the basal wall-cells, which is nearly hyaline and as broad as the ascigerous portion; the lower half or more of the suffused body of the perithecium covered with irregular more or less rounded dark spots, irregularly distributed, the lower larger ; the tip rather abruptly distinguished, narrow, black, distally translucent. Receptacle rather short and stout, the basal cell rather narrow and hyaline or yellowish, contrasting; the rest of the recep- tacle subtriangular and deeply suffused ; cell VI paler, cells III and IV side by side, nearly vertical, almost opaque, except the upper edge ; cell V very large, subhemispherical, becoming opaque ; all the suffused cells where not opaque, more or less conspicuously and rather coarsely punctate. Insertion-cell very broad, black, close beside the base of the perithecial stalk. Outer appendage consisting of a large triangular basal cell externally blackish brown, forming the base of a series of (eight or less) much smaller cells obliquely superposed, which curves toward the perithecium ; each cell producing externally a single simple erect branch, rather closely septate, the (usually six) septa dark, constricted, the terminal cell short with rounded apex. The inner appendage con- sisting of a basal cell giving rise to a series of cells on either side like that of the outer aj^pendage, but shorter, one to three of the lower branches consisting of a single cell bearing terminally a long slender flask-shaped brown antheridiura. Perithecia 200-220 X 40 jx ; smaller 130 X 48 [x (including the neck about 35 /x). Total length to tip of perithecium, average 350 /a; to insertion-cell 145^; greatest width 75 /x. Appendages 110-1 30 ii. On Galerita sp., Paris Museum, No. 74, Venezuela, No. 136, " South America." On head. Laboulbenia punctulata nov. sp. Perithecium about three fourths free, dark brown translucent, curved toward the appendages which cross it obliquely, the broad short flat- 10s PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. topped Bnout-like tip Blightlj upcurved. Receptacle Bbort and -tout. the basal cell Bmall, Bhort, hyaline, contrasting, the real cone ilo witli the perithecium, but darker and distinctly punctate with dark brown Bpots. Outer appendage consisting of a series of from three to about sii successively smaller Buperposed cells, from each of which a Bimple tapering brown branch arises, blackened about its Bubbasal septum, the successive branches superposed in a vertical external row a> in A. Pachytelis, the basal cell of the inner appendage produc _r usually a Bhort one-celled antheridial branch. Perithecia 120 • l"> u. Total length to tip of perithecium 200 220 /*; to insertion-cell 125/*. Appendages l|l(,-l 20 /x. On Pachy teles par allelw, ('hand., Brit. Mus. No. 575, Para: on /'. par- rectus Chaud., I>rit. Mus. No. 670 (Biologia Coll.), Pantaleon, Gui - mala. On legs. Laboulbenia pygniaea now sp. Perithecium dark brown becoming almost opaque, coarsely punctate throughout or only toward the base, the basal wall-cells forming a well defined hyaline contrasting short neck slightly narrower than the bodv of the perithecium, the tip usually not very abruptly distinguished and beut very slightly outward, or straight, rather blunt, the lip-edges trans* lucent, the lip-cells blackened below, especially on the inner side. Receptacle veiy short and subtriangular, cell I short, slender, curved, hyaline at the base, distal 1 y becoming opaipie blackish and indistinguish- able from cell II, which is wholly opaque. Cells III and IV elongated and lying obliquely side by side, cell III forming a more or less prominent rounded projection a little below the insertion-cell, both cells becoming opaque; cell V rather large, at first hyaline, becoming later Buffused with brown ; all the other suffused parts rather coarsely punctate. In- sertion-cell black, very broad, often becoming indistinguishable from the basal cells of the appendage. Outer appendage consisting of a Bub- triangular basal cell distally rounded, becoming deeply Buffused with blackish brown, prominent externally ; surmounted by 8 series of obliquely superposed cells close set, their long (transverse) axes some- times almost perpendicular, each bearing externally a single simple branch, the two lower cells of which are longer than broad, tinged with brown, the septa dark and often obliijuc; the distal portion hyaline, twice as long, blunt-tipped: the inner appendage consisting of a smaller basal cell also becoming almost entirely suffused, surmounted on either side by a series of cells like that of the outer appendage aud similarly branched, THAXTER. — NEW LABOULBENIACE.E. 199 except that the two or three lowest cells of the series bear a short one- celled branch terminated by usually three slightly curved brown anthe- ridia. Spores 52 x 4 /x. Perithecia 110 X 22-150 X 33 ti, exclusive of neck which is 20-30 /x. Total length to tip of perithecium 175-300 //,; to insertion-cell about 90-110 /x ; greatest width 40-55 p. Appendages 90-130 ix. On Trichognatkus sp., Paris Museum, No. 72, Venezuela. On " T. marginatus" Brit. Mus. No. 526, Brazil; on T. marginipennis Latr., Brit. Mus. No. 525. Tamaz, S. America; on Galerita occidentalis Oliv., Brit. Mus. No. 515, Bolivia; on Galerita sp., Hope Coll., No. 258, Bahia, Brazil. On all parts of host. Laboulbenia rhinophora nov. sp. Perithecium large and stout, dirty smoky brown, the lower half much deeper and united to the receptacle, the base nearly opaque, one of the subterminal wall-cells forming a terminal blunt finder-like brown out- growth, close beside the rather small internally blackened tip, which it exceeds in length. Receptacle stout, the basal cell small hyaline ; a blackish brown suffusion becoming opaque involves the upper part of cell II, cells III, VI, and VII, as well as the basal cells of the perithe- cium; cells IV and V very large and nearly parallel, translucent ; the suffused parts, when not opaque, marked by darker transverse dots and stria?. Iusertion-cell very large, triangular, quite unmodified. Append- ages consisting of two basal cells concolorous with insertion-cell, the outer usually somewhat larger, both protruding upward and slightly over- lapping, producing directly uumerous branches (four to eight from each cell) which arise in more than one row from their outer surfaces; all the branches once to twice branched, the lower segments deeply constricted at the purplish septa, the distal cells without constrictions at the hyaline septa. Spores 75 x a /x. Perithecia to tip of protuberance 275-300 X 85 [i; to insertion-cell 300-340 ll. Appendages about 200 y. On Brachlnus sp., Hope Coll. No. 252, Madagascar. On legs. Laboulbenia rostellata nov. sp. Perithecium about one half free, becoming more or less deeply suffused with blackish brown, relatively small, narrow and curved toward the appendages, the tip monstrously developed, bulging terminally and externally to form a rounded prominence from the inner side of which a blunt blackened outgrowth is developed, the hyaline contrasting tip of 200 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. which is hfiit Blightly upward. Receptacle more or lees Buffused, some- times deeply colored with blackish brown, cells I and II paler, Blender, of nearly equal width, cell II longer; cells IV and V very broad, carrying out the insertion-cell free from the receptacle bo that it becomes oblique or even vertical and lateral. Outer and inner appendages similar, benl :iw:i\ from the perithecium, their bases overlapping ; consisting of a Beries of superposed cells which are sucessively smaller from below up. each bearing dis tally and externally a short tapering branch ; :ill ihe branches brown, the Bubbasal Bepta blackened, all simple except the lower branch of the outer appendage which bears two to three Bhorl branchlets ; the basal cell of the inner appendage hears a short antheridial branch from its inner side; the outer appendage somewhat longer than the inner, the superposed cells usually eight in number. Perithecia 140-190 X 40-45 a. Total length to tip of perithecium 400-550 /x; to insertion-cell 270- •150 fx. Appendages, 140-170 fx. Tip of perithecium, including out- growth, oil CO p. < >n Braehinus lateralis Dej., Hope Coll. No. 246, - North America"; on Braehinus sp., Eustis, Florida. October. At base of anterior legs. Laboulbenia separata nov. sp. Perithecium pale olivaceous, the inner margin convex, the outer nearly straight; the tip rather abruptly distinguished, blackened, but not uni- formly, below the inner lip-<or-\ ellow. becoming tinged with brown especially distally, Strongly curved throughout, the concave side anterior. Insertion-cell black and thick, narrower than cells IV-V. Appendages as iii L. platystoma, the basal cell of the outer appendage blackened externally, all the branches erect and lying across the tip of the perithe- cium which is bent toward them. The material on CatOSCOpui much larger and darker than that on Mscelus. Perithecia 90-130 • 22 26/x. Total length to tip of perithecium 250-500 ft ; to insertion-cell 425-185/*. Greatest width 37-55 p. Appendages more than 200 a (broki THAXTER. — NEW LAB0ULBENIACEJ3. 205 On Miscelus Javanus Klug., Hope Collection, No. 308, Java ; on Miscelus sp., Paris Museum, Nos. 114 and 115, New Guinea; on Catoseopus ? sp. Brit. Mus. No. 6G3, Assam, India. On the elytra and inferior surface. Laboulbenia Thyreopteri nov. sp. Perithecium nearly free, proportionately large, dull amber-brown, straight, narrower at the base, the inner margin slightly convex, the outer concave through the presence of a prominent subterminal hump, which is suffused with blackish brown, the suffusion often involving a fainter discoloration of the subbasal wall-cell below it ; the tip small, prominent, and abruptly differentiated, blackish with broad hyaline lips. Receptacle slender, the basal cell black, opaque, mostly curved below, very slender ; the subbasal cell broader, suffused with blackish, mostly verrucose or coarsely punctate, the remaining cells normal and concolorous with the perithecium. Insertion-cell thick and narrow. The outer appendage simple, its basal cell long, undifferentiated ; the basal cell of the inner appendage shorter bearing a branch distally on either side, all the branches similar crowded, concolorous with the perithecium, erect, straight or bent slightly toward the perithecium, the inmost in contact with it. Spores 55 x 4^<. Perithecia 140-175 x 14-25 ft. Total length to tip of perithecium 340-400 /x ; to insertion-cell 250-270 /x. Appendages 120-140 [x. On Thyreopterus flavosignatus Dej., Brit. Mus. No. 561, Port Natal, Africa. On Thyreopterus sp., Paris Museum, No. 125, Africa. On elytra. Laboulbenia tibialis nov. sp. Perithecium deeply suffused with blackish brown, somewhat inflated, the small tip rather abruptly distinguished. Receptacle stout, deeply suffused with blackish brown except cell I and the lower part of cell II, which are hyaline or nearly so, abruptly contrasting, and cell V which is yellowish; cells IV and V broad, the insertion-cell broad and in con- tact with the base of the perithecium. Appendages as in L. rostellata except that the inner is larger and longer than the outer without over- lapping it at the base and the lower branch of the outer is simple. Perithecia 150-175 X 60-70^. Total length to tip of perithecium 300-325 /x; to insertion-cell 200-2-25 p. Appendages exclusive of the branches, inner 100-120^, outer 85 /x. On Brachinus sp., Eustis, Florida, October. On the legs. 206 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. Laboulbenia tortuosa nov. sp. thecium with hardly more than the tip free, relatively Bmall, ex- ternally suffused with Bmoky brown and concave through the presence of a well defined subtermioal hunch, above which the somewhat pointed well defined outwardly oblique blackish-brown tip is abruptly differen- d, the lip-edges pale brown translucent. Receptacle verj pale red- dish or yellowish, variously bent, sometimes ut right angles or at an i forty-five d< grees al cell II ; cells I and II Btraighl or more frequently cell II curved .strongly, while there is often :i less pronounced curvature in the opposite direction immediately above it. In6ertion-cel] horizontal, about opposite the external hunch of the perithelium. Outer appendage consisting of a very large basal and somewhat broader Bub- basal cell, the two commonly as broad as or broader than any portion of the receptacle with which they are concolorous ; the upper outer ai of both cells marked by the black insertion of a Bhorl simple branch, usu- ally broken off, the Bubbasal cell surmounted by a Bmall flatfish cell which bears a simple terminal branch with blackened base like those developed laterally below it: the inner appendage consists of a very Bmall basal cell which usually produces directly a pair of relatively large antheridia with inflated venters and In-own necks. Perithecia 85 27 p. Total length to tip of perithecium about 275 p. Appendage, to upper blackened septum 50 /i, by 28 y. wide. On Pachyteh-s tvslitcvnx Horn. V. S. National Museum, Arizona. Along the adjacent inferior margins of the thorax and prothorax, on left side. Laboulbenia Trichognathi nov. Bp. Perithecium free, generally straight, long, narrow and of nearly equal diameter throughout to the base of the rather abruptly differentiated tip, (sometimes however shorter, stout and slightly inflated,) pale yellowish or becoming rather deep, evenly translucent smoky brown ; the basal wall- cells forming a very Bhort scarcely noticeable stalk ; the tip obliquely black below the rather coarse and prominent hyaline lips. Receptacle gener- ally very long and Blender, pale yellowish, the basal cell tinged with brown ; cells I V and V amber or of ten becoming wholly amber-brown or Bmoky brown; cells IV and V large, prominently marked by Bhorl transverse lines or patches which are less numerous and distinct on the other cells. Insertion-cell carried out free from the perithecium by the enlargement of cell V. well differentiated, Mack. Outer appendage con- sisting of a series of obliquely superposed cells three to ten in number THAXTER. — NEW LABOULBENIACE/E. 207 the basal one subtriangular and blackish, the rest hyaline or yellowish, each producing distally and externally a single simple straight branch, slio-htly constricted at the three to four lower black septa; the distal por- tion without black septa, sometimes short, sometimes elongate and tapering. The inner appendage consists of a basal cell usually giving rise on either side to a series of superposed cells similar to those of the outer append- age, but mostly shorter and similarly branched ; the three series in general partly united at least at the base, the basal cell in some cases bearing more than two such series so that a very dense tuft of branchlets results. Perithecia 1G5 X 55-350 X 90^, average 275 x 60^. Receptacle very variable. Total length to tip of perithecium 425-1480 /z ; to insertion-cell 275-1 2G0/n. Appendages, longest G00/^, average about 400 p. On Trichognathus marginipennis Latr., Hope Collection, No. 2G7, Columbia, Brit. Mus. No. 525, " Tamaz," S. America ; on " T. marginatus Latr." Brit. Mus. No. 526, Brazil, Hope Collection, No. 2GG, " S. America"; on Trichognathus sp. indet., Paris Museum, Nos. 70, 71, and 135, Venezuela and " S. America." On all parts of host. Laboulbenia triordinata nov. sp. Perithecium usually wholly free from the receptacle, very variable, amber-brown or usually becoming almost black, generally elongate, often with the wall-cells showing a distinct spiral twist, the basal wall-cells forming a hyaline or less deeply suffused neck; the tip wholly black except the lip-edges, which may be translucent and more or less distinctly differentiated. Receptacle elongate or rather short, pate amber-brown or amber-yellow, gradually tapering from the base to the very broad distal portion, or more commonly cells I and II forming a slender stalk above which the rest of the receptacle expands abruptly, the unmodified tri- angular insertion-cell carried up and out free from the receptacle through the enlargement of cell V, the inner margin of which is mostly free. Outer appendage consisting of a series of about seven to ten obliquely superposed cells, each bearing distally and externally a single simple branch ; the branches constricted at the first, second, and third septa, which are deeply blackened; the second less broadly, the first and second cells variably suffused with clear brown especially near the septa, the distal portion of the branch hyaline, tapering, its cells longer, the lower swollen below the septum : inner appendage consisting of a basal cell which gives rise on either side to a branch resembling the outer append- age often with fewer cells (sometimes only 3-celled) similarly branched, PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. except that the lower branchlet of each branch bean a single lanre terminal antheridium which becomes brown ; the outer appendage and the two branches of the inner erect and close together or more or Btronglj and irregularly divergent Perithecia, average 200 < .".l'/i illn 260 < 45-60p) including stalk. Total length to tip of perithe- cium 260 600/»; to insertion-. vll L85-370/i; greatest width 65-100 /t. Appendages 220-330 p. On Oalophoma bi/asciata Oliv., Brit. Bins. No. 509, South America; on Calopkcena sp., Brit Mus. No. 512, Nanta, Amazon ; on Cordiste* bicinctus Dej., Hope Collection, No. 268, Columbia; on Cordistes? Bp., U. S. National Museum, Central America; on Helluomorpha melanaria Reich., Brit. .Mus. No. 527, Ega, Amazon. Laboulbenia tuberculifera nov. sp. Perithecium deeply suffused with smoky brown, free except the lower fifth; the tip not abruptly distinguished, nearly black, the distal margin somewhat oblique, mostly straight with an outer more or less ill defined tooth-like promiuence ; in genera] variable, the lip-cells not prominent. Receptacle rather long and slender, cell 1 quite hyaline below, distally tinged with deep brown and coarsely punctate ; cell II tinged with brown and punctate below, otherwise nearly hyaline, except for the presence of a series of deep brown short tubercular transverse ridges on one side of cell IV and the basal cells of the perithelium which are deep brown, the rest subhyaline, cell IV bulging. Outer appendage simple, slender, the basal cell sometimes long and somewhat inflated : the inner appendage consisting of a small basal cell with a short branch on either side. Perithecia about 140 X 50 yu. Total length to tip of perithe- cium, average 340 M ; to insertion-cell, average 225 ^ ; greatest width t',iiM. Appendages 225 p (longest). On Serrimargo rjuttiger Schaum., Brit. Mus. No. 558, Penang, East Indies. On base of elytra. Laboulbenia uncinata nov. sp. Pale yellowish, becoming tinged with pale reddish yellow. IVrithe- rinm more than one half free, stout, nearly oblong, the blackened lip-cells recurved externally through the rounded upgrowth of the inner distal portion of the perithecium which makes them almost lateral in position, the outer lip-cell often twice as long as the others and more prominently recurved, its projecting portion translucent, rounded. Receptacle THAXTER. — NEW LABOULBENIACE^E. 209 medium, normal. Appendages normal, rather short, several times branched, the cells rather short and somewhat rounded. Spores 50 X 3.5 fi. Perithecium (not including lip-cells) 120 X 62 p. Total length to tip of perithecium 100-120 /x; to insertion-cell 72-92 p. Appendages (longest) 40 p. On Harpalus eeneus Fabr., Selenga, Siberia, Paris Mus. No. 12. At base of anterior legs. Laboulbenia verrucosa nov. sp. Perithecium becoming deeply suffused with smoky brown, straight, the line of demarcation between the subterminal and subbasal wall-cells indi- cated by a more or less well defined ridge forming a rather prominent external hunch in this region, above which the perithecium is abruptly contracted, almost at right angles in the type, below the rather narrow nearly erect tip, the lip-cells black below, with the broadly hyaline edges turned obliquely outward. Receptacle dirty yellow-brown, becoming more or less suffused with smoky brown, especially the two basal cells, and covered with irregular wartdike prominences which are more or less definitely arranged in transverse rows. Appendages of the " L.Jlagellata" type, the outer once to twice branched, the inner consisting of a smaller basal cell giving rise on either side to single branches which may be from once to three times branched ; all the branches pale dirty yellowish with brown shades above the lower septa. Perithecia 150-170 X 45-50 (i. Total length to tip of perithecium 550-610 p; to insertion-cell 430-480 /*. Appendages (longest) 400 p. On a Carabid allied to Platynus, Hope Coll. No. 342 (without label) and U. S. Nat. Museum, No. 7, Mt. Coffee, Liberia, Africa. Elytra. VOL. XXXV. — 14 Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Vol. XXXV. No. 10. — December, 1899. CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE CHEMICAL LABORATORY OF HARVARD COLLEGE. FERROUS IODIDE. By C. Loring Jackson and 1. II. Derby. CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE CHEMICAL LABORATORY OF HARVARD COLLEGE. FERROUS IODIDE. By C. Loring Jackson and I. H. Derby. Presented May 10, 1899. Received November 24, 1899. The accounts of anhydrous ferrous iodide which we have been able to find in the chemical literature are very contradictory. Serullas * seems to have been the first to obtain it by the rather strange method of passing iodine and steam through a red-hot iron tube filled with charcoal. He describes it as shining yellow crystals looking like gold filings. Gay Lussac and Davy * say it is a brown mass which fuses at a red heat and sublimes at a higher temperature. A. T. Thomson f treated one part of iron with two of iodine suspended in water, and after evaporating off the water in a flask containing some free iron, obtained a steel gray lam- inated mass melting at 177° and possessing a sharp puckery taste. When heated in air it left a residue of ferric oxide. In 1861 Carius and Wank- lyn I prepared it as a gray laminated mass by heating iron filings and iodine in a porcelain crucible. In 1863 De Luca § states that Faville had made it under his direction, and that it is a pure white amorphous powder. He gives no statement of the method of preparation in any of the journals which are accessible to us. Finally Erdmann || in his Lehr- buch (1898) describes it as a reddish brown body, also without giving the method of preparation. The color of ferrous iodide, therefore, is not by any means settled, the balance of evidence in the chemical literature being in favor of gray or white ; but as no analyses of the anhydrous salt have been published, so far as we cau find, none of the statements quoted above can be considered to rest on a solid foundation. Under * Gmelin-Kraut, Handbuch, III. 350, 6th edition. t Pharmaceut. Journ., I. 44 (1842). J Ann. Chem, CXX. 69. § Comptes-Rendus, LV. 615. || Lehrbuch der anorganischen Chemie, 62. 214 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. these circumstances it seemed worth while to take up the study of the fer- rous iodide, and the results of our wurk in this field are contained in the following paper. Preparation of Ferrous Iodide. The method adopted consisted in passing the vapor of iodine over heated iron. In the first experiments a combustion tube was used with a stream of carbonic dioxide to carry the iodine, but as we found a tem- perature above the softening point of hard glass was necessary, we re- placed the glass tube with one of iron, which we heated with a Fletcher's tube furnace. At the high temperature thus obtained the iron was oxi- dized by the carbonic dioxide, and the film of oxide thus formed protected the metal from the action of the iodine ; accordingly the carbonic dioxide was replaced by nitrogen, after which good results were obtained. The apparatus in its final form consisted of two large bottles, which served as gas holders for the nitrogen, and were united by glass tubes and rubber connectors in such a way that, by letting in water from the water works, the gas could be forced out of one of them at a regulated rate through the purifiers and the iron tube to the other bottle, in which it was collected. "When this was full of gas, by a simple rearrangement of the pinch-cocks the nitrogen could be forced back through the appara- tus again in the same direction as before into the first bottle. By means of this device the same nitrogen could be used over and over again, thus causing a great saving in time and labor. The uitrogeu was made by the excellent method of Dr. Gibbs,* — equal parts of sodic nitrite, am- nionic nitrate, and potassic dichromate were pulverized, and mixed with three parts of water in a flask with a wide delivery tube. The gas came off when the mixture was gently warmed. Twenty-four grams of the mixture gave about 1200 cc. of nitrogen. The nitrogen, after leaving the gas holder, was purified by passing through a solution of sodic hydrate, sulphuric acid, and a long column of calcic chloride, after which the oxy- gen was removed by means of a layer of finely divided copper heated in a tube of hard glass by means of a kerosene stove. This precaution was necessary, as the nitrogen was contaminated with air introduced when the tubes were opened, or from the water in the gas holders. We tried at first an alkaline solution of pyrogallol for the removal of the oxygen, but as we found this was not efficient, we resorted to the layer of finely divided copper, which was prepared by reducing cupric oxide. * Ber. d. chem. Ges., 1877, p. 1387. JACKSON AND DERBY. — FERROUS IODIDE. 215 The reaction took place in three steel bicycle tubes, the largest of which was one inch (2.54 cm.) in outside diameter and about one six- teenth of an inch (1.59 mm.) thick. The other tubes were somewhat thinner and small enough to slip tightly into the larger tube. The larger tube contained the iron, which was used in the form of wire clippings (card teeth), as it was found by experiment that these gave a better yield of iodide thau turnings, filings, or iron by hydrogen. The iron was freed from organic matter by heating it in a stream of hydrogen before using it. The layer of iron in the tube was about 23 cm. long, and this por- tion of the tube was heated directly by the Fletcher furnace to a bright red heat. One of the smaller tubes was slipped into the larger one at its end nearest the gas holder containing the nitrogen, in this was placed the iodiue, which was slowly volatilized by the heat conducted along the iron tube, and the vapor thus formed was swept over the hot iron in the fur- nace by the stream of nitrogen ; this tube was connected with the purifiers by a perforated cork and glass tube far enough from the heat to avoid danger of burning. It was found wise to protect this cork from the iodine vapor, some of which crept back even against the current, by an asbestos or iron diaphragm. The second smaller iron tube was slipped into the further end of the larger tube, and reached the heated portion of it, so that the vapor of ferrous iodide formed in the larger tube condensed in the smaller one, from which it could be easily collected by withdraw- ing this smaller tube after it had cooled in the atmosphere of nitrogen. The joints of the iron tubes were rendered air tight by means of large rubber connectors, which were kept cool by winding them with lamp- wicking that dipped into a beaker of water. The receiving tube just described was connected with some bottles of strong sulphuric acid to prevent the creeping back of any aqueous vapor into the tube. The delivery tube from these bottles conveyed the nitrogen to one of the gas holders already described. In carrying on the process it was observed that a considerable amount of iodine was taken up by the iron before any iodide distilled over ; but after it began to appear, it continued to collect for several hours, so that the yield was a good one, and when the apparatus has been once set up the ferrous iodide can be obtained in quantity with little trouble. As the product of the reaction just described had a deep red color in thin plates, and looked almost black when the mass was even moderately thick, we supposed at first that it could not be a ferrous salt, and accord- ingly applied the following tests. A little of it treated with water, in which it dissolved completely and with great ease, gave no color with a 21G PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. solution of potassic sulphocyanate, l>ut a strong test for a ferrous Ball with potassic ferricyanide. As it was possible thai it might be a ferric iodide which whs decomposed by water into the ferrous salt and free iodine, we next toted for iodine both with starch paste and with carbonic disulphide, hut with negative results. These qualitative experiments indicated that the substance, in spite of its red color, was ferrous iodide; and that this is the case was proved by the following analyses. 1 he substances used in l.-V. and in IX. and X. were the direct product of the reaction. In VI., VII., and VIII. this product had been purified by sublimation before it was analyzed. I. 0.G717 gram of substance gave 1.0202 gram of argentic iodide and 0.1720 gram of oxide of iron. II. 1.0400 gram of substance gave 1.5736 gram of argentic iodide. III. 0.9658 gram of substance gave 1.4G01 gram of argentic iodide. IV. 0.7493 gram of substance pave 1.1471 gram of argentic iodide and 0.1934 gram of ferric oxide. V. 0.8327 gram of substance gave 1.2586 gram of argentic iodide and 0.2209 gram of ferric oxide. VI. 1.2675 gram of substance gave 1.9232 gram of argentic iodide and 0.3261 "ram of ferric oxide. VII. 0.7396 gram of substance gave 1.1192 gram of argentic iodide and 0.1932 gram of ferric oxide. VIII. 0.5944 gram of substance pave 0.8978 gram of argentic iodide. IX. 0.3831 gram of substance gave by ignition 0.0982 gram of ferric oxide. X. 1.7526 gram of substance gave by ignition 0.4658 gram of ferric oxide. Percentages. Iodine. Iron. Calculated for FeT2 81.92 18.08 Fouud I. 82.10 17.92 II. 81.77 III. 81.74 IV. 82.71 18.07 V. 81.66 18.56 VI. 82.00 L8.01 VII. 81.76 18.28 VIII. 81.64 IX. 17-94 X. 18.00 JACKSON AND DERBY. FERROUS IODIDE. 217 Of these analyses I. -VIII. were made by passing sulphurous anhy- dride into the aqueous solution to convert any free iodine (formed by the action of air on the solution) into hydriodic acid, and to dissolve the ferric hydrate, if any, formed at the same time as the free iodine ; then, after driving off the excess of the sulphurous anhydride, the iodine was precip- itated as argentic iodide and the iron as ferric hydrate in the usual way. Analyses IX. and X. were made by simple ignition of the ferrous iodide in a porcelain crucible, when it loses all its iodine and is converted into ferric oxide. Properties of Ferrous Iodide. The anhydrous salt prepared as described above forms plates of a deep full red color with a slight brownish tint. This color is a much more pro- nounced red than any appearing among the ferric salts with the exception of ferric sulphocyanate. In thicker masses it is nearly or quite black ; when melted and allowed to solidify, it forms a blackish red crystalline mass, which looks brown on a surface of fracture.* When the plates are examined under the polarizing microscope, they give evidence that they belong to one of the uniaxial systems, but the outlines of these crystals are so ragged that they furnish no means of deciding to which system they belong. Accordingly some of the plates immersed in ether, in which they dissolve very slowly, were observed under the microscope, when the formation of regular hexagonal holes was observed ; there is no doubt, therefore, that the crystals belong to the hexagonal system. If the salt is resublimed slowly, it can be obtained in broad thin plates with a bril- liant vitreous lustre ; but on one occasion very small yellow plates were formed which called to mind the "gold filings " of Serullas. The melt- ing point of the substance is given by Thomson as 177° ; we have not attempted to determine this point anew, as it seemed to us of little prac- tical value on account of the very deliquescent nature of the salt. If heated to about the fusing point of soft glass in an inert gas it sublimes essentially unaltered. When sublimed in a stream of nitrogen, part of the iodide is deposited in the red plates already described, the rest is carried on further in the tube as a yellowish cloud, which deposits a dark reddish brown amorphous powder ; this is found to be much more susceptible to the action of atmospheric moisture than the red plates, but we think this difference in behavior is due only to the difference in the size of the par- * The dark color of the ferrous iodide is not without analogy, as G. P. Baxter has found in this Laboratory that ferrous bromide has a dark yellow color with a greenish brown tinge. lMs PBOCESDINGS OF THE AMKUIC.VN ACADKMY. ticlea in the two specimens. The sublimation may take place in nitrogen, carbonic dioxide, or even hydrogen, but oxygen most be carefully ex- cluded, m i lii> decomposes the iodide rapidly at not very high temperatures, so that on gently beating a sample of it in a porcelain crucible in a few minutes all the iodine has passed oil in violet fumes, and there is left a reddisb brown residue of ferric oxide, which retains the shape of the crystals of the ferrous iodide, and is magnetic. That this latter property was nnt due to the presence of -nine magnetic oxide or metallic iron in the residue was proved In dissolving it in hydrochloric acid, when a strong test for ferric chloride, but none whatever for ferrous chloride, was ob- tained. The iodine is so completely removed by this ignition in air that the process was used as a method of analyzing the ferrous iodide (Anal- yses IX. and X.). l)e Luca observed a similar decomposition of his (white) ferrous iodide. The same decomposition of the ferrous iodide by the oxygen of the air takes place slowly at ordinary temperatures; a specimen of it kept in a good desiccator gives off enough iodine vapor in time to color the air within the desiccator a distinct purple. A sample of the salt was kept in a desiccator over potassic hydrate, to absorb the iodine, for thirteen months, and the decomposition followed by occasional weighings, when it was found that about seven eighths of the total loss of iodine was given off in the first six months, but that even at the end of thirteen months the decomposition was not complete, as the residue still contained a little iodine, and gave tests for both ferrous and ferric compounds. It follows from these observations that the salt should not be allowed to stand even in a desiccator before analysis, but should be analvzed as soon as possible after its preparation. If the salt is exposed to the atmosphere, it deliquesces quickly to a brown solution. The thinner plates, when kept in a corked flask or a desiccator, behaved in a very striking way ; the red plate showed at fust a white border around its edge, which gradually spread inward, until the whole plate became white; this change was soon followed by a liberation of iodine, which imparted a gray or even black appearance to the mass. The appearance of the iodine is undoubtedly due to the decomposition by air just described, but the cause of the whitening of the crystals was not so evident. The most obvious theories were, that the white substance was a second modification of the ferrous iodide, or that it was produced by the absorption of water, which might either form enough of the green ferrous iodide containing four molecules of water of crystallization to neutralize optically the red color of the anhydrous salt, or might give B definite compound containing less water of crystallization than the green salt. JACKSON AND DERBY. — FERROUS IODIDE. 219 The idea that the white substance was a second modification gained some support from the observations of Thomson, Carius and Wanklyn, and De Luca, who describe ferrous iodide as white or gray, and also from the fact that the white compound was formed in atmospheres containing very little water, although in none of these cases had moisture been rigorously excluded. We, therefore, tried a number of experiments to settle this point. In all of these it was necessary to select specimens of the salt which show this change from red to white, such as rather thin red plates or the brown amorphous powder obtained by sublimation, since thicker plates or masses of the iodide show the phenomenon with difficulty or not at all. We see no reason, however, to ascribe these differences in behav- ior to anything except the size of the crystals. Two similar portions of the ferrous iodide were exposed, the one to dry carbonic dioxide, the other to moist carbonic dioxide, the experiments being carried on at the same time and under parallel conditions. The specimen in the moist gas turned white quickly, while that in the dry gas remained unaltered. Other similar experiments showed that the change of color took place much more slowly in a gas containing little moisture than in one contain- ing more. In all these experiments the amount of moisture must be kept small, as, if too much aqueous vapor is used, the salt deliquesces so rapidly that the formation of the white body cannot be observed. A sam- ple of ferrous iodide was immersed in absolute ether (dried with sodium), and underwent no change of color even after long standing ; when, how- ever, a minute fraction of a drop of water was added, it rapidly turned white. Upon heating a specimen of the white body in a tube filled with dry carbonic dioxide a cloud appeared which looked like moisture and condensed in the cold part of the tube, the substance turning red at the same time. As the tube cooled this moisture was quickly reabsorbed, and the white body was formed again. This experiment was repeated several times with the same specimen. These experiments leave no doubt that the white substance is not a second isomeric modification of the ferrous iodide, but is formed by the action of water on the red anhy- drous salt. The question next arises, Is the white body a mixture of the red anhy- drous and the green hydrous ferrous iodide, or is it a crystallized salt with a definite amount of water ? Our experiments are not sufficiently conclusive to answer this questiou with certainty, but we would present the following argument in favor of the second view with all necessary reserve. A sample of ferrous iodide was exposed at ordinary temper- atures (in this case about 22°) to an atmosphere of hydrogen kept moist 220 PROCEEDINGS OF Till. AMERICAN ACADEMY. by contact with dilate Bulpharic acid containing 33 per cent of add, and the absorption of water followed by successive weighings at intervale of about :i day. Upon plotting these results a curve was obtained, which Bhowed a change in the rate KD aniline addition product analogous to the ammonia compound described later. Benzol, benzyl- chloride, ether, phenol, or hydroquinone gave no perceptible action with ferrous iodide. Otheb Methods <>f Preparing l'i uuocs Iodidk. In this section of the paper we shall describe a revision of the methods used by our predecessors, and also Bome new methods of our own. Tlie revision of the older methods was •necessary, because in three cases the ferrous iodide formed was described as gray or white j and although we have proved that the white Bamples formed from the red salt owed their change of color to absorption of water, it did not follow that those described by our predecessors were not anhvdrous ferrous iodide in a second isomeric form. De Luca,* who states that ferrous iodide when pure is white, gives no method of preparation in any <>t the journals to which we have access, so that it was impossible for us to repeat his work. A. T. Thomson f prepared his gray ferrous iodide by evaporating an aqueous solution in a llask containing some free iron. On repeating this experiment we had so much difficulty from oxidation that we carried on our later attempts in an atmosphere of carbonic diox- ide. Under these conditions, when the water of crystallization began to come off, the liquid became black and opaquedooking as if it contained a suspended black precipitate. Later the surface of the boiling mass became grayish white with a silvery lustre, but when all the water hail been driven off, the residue was brownish red like the ferrous iodide prepared by our method. This experiment makes it probable that the gray ferrous iodide of Thomson owed its color to the presence of water, for in the absence of analyses he would undoubtedly have ascribed the brownish red color of the final residue to the formation of a ferric salt by oxidation. As the method of Carius and Wanklyn t consisted in heating iron and iodine in a porcelain crucible, it seemed at first sight that the gray color of the product could hardly be due to the presence of water, and therefore we repeated their work, following their directions as carefully as possible. One gram of rather coarse iron filings, § mixed with a little * Coniptes-Rendus, I.N'. 615. f Gmelin-Kraut, Bandbuch, III. 3o0, Oth edition. | Ann. Chem., (XX. 69. § The success of the process depends on using filings of the right degree of coarseness. With too fine or too coarse filings unsatisfactory results are obtained. JACKSON AND DERBY. — FERROUS IODTDE. 223 iodine to drive out the air, was heated in a covered porcelain crucible to redness as quickly as possible ; four grams of iodine were then added in two portions, and the heating continued until comparatively little iodine vapor escaped around the edges of the cover. When cool, the product was found to be a fused mass, consisting, after it had been broken out of the crucible, of red scales exactly like those described earlier in this paper. These scales upon exposure to the air soon turned grayish white, and then deliquesced to a brown solution. We have repeated this process of Carius and Wanklyn many times, and in every case the ferrous iodide formed has appeared in red scales, before it had been exposed to the air long enough to absorb moisture. We, therefore, are compelled to ascribe the gray color mentioned by Carius and Wanklyn to the absorption of water from the air, since they, like Thomson, would in the absence of analyses have supposed that the red color was due to oxidation. Our present knowledge, therefore, gives no reason for supposing that an- hydrous ferrous iodide has any other color than red. Another method of preparation may be described here, as it was tried to see whether a white form might not be obtained at comparatively low temperatures. A small quantity of iron by hydrogen was placed in the middle of a small glass tube, and secured by two plugs of asbestos; an excess of iodine was inserted in one end of the tube, which was then filled with nitrogen and sealed at both ends. The end containing: the iodine and iron was then heated to 120° by means of an air bath, and after most of the iodine had sublimed into the cold upper part of the tube, it was reversed so that this end and the iron were heated to 120°. After repeating this distillation of the iodine through the iron several times, all the metal was converted into the red ferrous iodide. This is a good method for preparing a specimen to be kept to show the color. Ferrous iodide was also made by passing hydrogen and iodine vapor over heated ferric oxide. Of these methods of preparation, that of Carius and Wanklyn is the easiest, but it gives a product apt to be contaminated with metallic iron and oxide of iron. Thomson's method is tedious, and does not give a pure product, as we observed evolution of hydriodic acid toward the end of the evaporation even in an atmosphere of carbonic dioxide. The sealed tube method is also slow and imperfect, so that the best method, if the pure salt is desired, is the heating of iron and iodine in nitrogen given in the first part of this paper. •22i PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. Action of FebbOUS Iodide with Ammonia. When anhydrous ferrous iodide was exposed to a stream of ammonia gas at any temperature between 0 and 100 , a large amount of the gas was absorbed^ and the iodide was converted into ;i voluminous white pow- der. The composition of this substance was determined by finding the increase in weight during the treatment with ammonia. I. 8.5507 grams of ferrous iodide gaiued 1.1701 grams of ammonia. II. 2.0-111 grams gained 0.844(J gram of ammonia. Calculnteil f..r K.l liMl Found. I. II. Ammonia 24.76 24.78 24.1)5 The substance therefore corresponds in formula to the compound FeCls- 6NII3 made from ferrous chloride under the same conditions. Properties of the Hexammonia Fi rkoi s Iodide. It forms a pure white amorphous powder, which occupies many times the volume of the ferrous iodide from which it is made, ami has a very low specific gravity. "Water decomposes it at once with a considerable rise of temperature; the products are ferrous hydrate, amnionic iodide, and ammonia. We did not succeed in finding an organic solvent for it. When exposed to the air it gives off ammonia rapidly and turns brown; in an atmosphere of ammonia it remains unaltered even at 100°; heated in an indifferent gas it loses ammonia, and is converted into a dark brown powder, which seems to be stable in the air. Two analyses indi- cated that this brown substance contained between two ami three mole- cules of ammonia to each molecule of ferrous iodide. Its stability in air leads us to think that it is a new compound, but evidently it was not pure. as the analyses differed by three per cent. Unfortunately we could find no way of purifying it. Action of Bromine on Hexammonia Ferrous Iodide. When the compound FeI/>XII , was exposed to the vapor of bromine, it absorbed a large quantity, so that the product in one case contained 71.03 and in another 70.41 per cent of bromine. This apparent constancy in the amount of bromine absorbed led us to examine the product more care- fully iu the hope that it might be a definite compound, but onr exper- iments have convinced us that it is only a mixture essentially made up of ferric bromide, ammonic bromide, and an amnionic bromiodobromide JACKSON AND DERBY. — FERROUS IODIDE. 225 NH4BrIBr. The product had a reddish brown color, aud gave off bro- mine when exposed to the air. It was investigated by treating it with ether, in which a portion dissolved with considerable evolution of heat. The residue insoluble in ether had a yellowish color, and seemed to be a mixture of ferric bromide and amnionic bromide in varying proportions. These two substances were recognized by the usual tests. The ether extract on evaporation left a residue which was green with a brilliant metallic lustre by reflected light, deep blood red by transmitted light ; it resembled rosauiline, therefore, but the red color was less purplish than in that body. Examined with the microscope, crystals which looked like amnionic bromide were observed. It had a strong odor similar to that of bromide of iodine, and, although not really stable, could be kept for some time without much decomposition. Upon treating it again with ether a fresh quantity of the insoluble yellowish residue was left behind. The residue obtained by evaporating one of our first ether extracts was analyzed with the following results : 0.7149 gram of the substance gave 0.0216 gram of ferric oxide, 0.0405 gram of ammonia, 1.4289 grams of mixed silver salts which yielded 0.7G52 gram of silver. In calculating these results, as the iron from its small amount was evidently an impurity, the amouut of ferric bromide corresponding to it has been subtracted from the amount of substance taken, and the bromine contained in this ferric bromide from the bromine found. As the sub- stance gave a test for a ferrous salt, it would have perhaps been more correct to consider the iron present as ferroferric bromide, and this would have given numbers agreeing better with those calculated from the form- ula; but we think it wiser to give the results on the assumption that ferric bromide was present, as we cannot believe that the amount of ferrous bromide was more than a trace, since the substance had been exposed to an excess of bromine. Calculated for NH4BrIBr. Found* Ammonium 5.90 6.38 Iodine 41.64 40.96 Bromine 52.46 53.32 These numbers would seem conclusive if it were not for the presence of the small amount of ferric bromide (considered in calculating them) * If tlie ferric bromide was not subtracted, the numbers were, NH4 5.67, iodine 36.39, bromine 56.41. VOL. XXXV. — 15 226 PROCEEDINGS oh THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. and the appearance under the microscope of crystals resembling amnionic bromide; bnt with these sources of error, we thought it neoessary to support our analysis with evidence of some other sort, and therefore undertook the preparation of NH«BrIBr direct in order to compare its properties with tlio.se of our compound. Dpon treating amnionic bromide with :m ethereal Bolution of bromide of iodine, the salt dissolved, iri \ imz a red solution, and on evaporation of the ether a residue was obtained tin- propertied of which were identical with those of the amnionic l.r..m- iodobromide described above. Further, upon exposing amnionic iodide to the vapor of bromine an amount was absorbed corresponding very nearly to that required by the formula. 1.0487 grams of ammonie iodide absorbed 1.7804 grams of bromine. Calculated for Pit cent of Bromine Nll4Hrll(r. In the Product Bromine 52.46 51.92 During the action of the bromine the amnionic iodide at first turned black, but as the absorption went on it finally became .scarlet, and this product proved to be identical with the amnionic bromiodobromide. A curve constructed from the increase of weight of the amnionic iodide showed that there was a marked diminution in the speed of the absorption after the first atom of bromine had been added. This decrease in the speed of absorption is undoubtedly connected with the conversion of the black substance into the red NH^BrlBr, but we are enable to decide whether this black intermediate product is another compound NH4BrI, or only a mixture of amnionic bromide and free iodine. It is a curious fact, in view of the absorption of free bromine by ammonie iodide, that, so far as we could find, an ethereal solution of bromine had no action ou this salt. We have not continued our experiments in this direction for fear of intruding on the field of work occupied by Wheeler, who with Pratt and Barnes has prepared the ammonie triiodide.* We have adopted provisionally the name amnionic bromiodobromide and the formula NH4BrIBr for this substance, because it is made by the action of bromide of iodine on amnionic bromide, and when it decomposes bromide of iodine is given off and amnionic bromide left behind; but we do not feel that these observations settle its constitution finally, although they certainly are Btrong arguments in favor of the formula adopted. If this is correct, the formation from amnionic iodide and bromine must be * Am. Clicm. Joum., XIX. G75 (1897). JACKSON AND DERBY. — FERROUS IODIDE, 227 preceded by the replacement of the iodine in the salt by bromine, and this may account for the fact noted above, that an ethereal solution of bromine does not act on amnionic iodide. Properties of Ammonic Bromiodobromide NH4BrIBr. The salt has a blood-red color in transmitted light, but is a brilliant green with a metallic lustre by reflected light. The specimens examined by us contained very elaborately twinned crystals with the branches at right angles, but we are inclined to think that these consisted of ammonic bromide, which is easily formed by the decomposition of our salt ; on this account it smells of bromide of iodine, and on long standing leaves a white residue of ammonic bromide ; the same decomposition takes place to a limited extent when it is dissolved in ether ; the ethereal solution is dark red. When treated with water, bromine and iodine are set free, and a solution is formed. Hydrochloric acid sets free iodine. Sodic hydrate or ammonic hydrate gives a black precipitate of iodide of nitro- gen; upon adding hydrochloric acid to the filtrate from this iodide of nitrogen, bromine is set free. Sulphurous acid gives hydrobromic acid and hydriodic acid. Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Vol. XXXV. No. 11. — December, 1899. CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE CHEMICAL LABORATORY OF HARVARD COLLEGE. NOTE ON THE CONSTITUTION OF DIPARABROM- BENZTL CYAN AMIDE. By C. Lorixg Jackson and R. W. Fuller. CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE CHEMICAL LABORATORY OF HARVARD COLLEGE. NOTE ON THE CONSTITUTION OF DIPARABROMBEN- ZYLCYANAMIDE. By C. Lorixg Jackson and R. VV. Fuller. Received November 24, 1899. Presented December 13, 1899. The work described in this paper consists of the conversion of the silver salt of cyanamide iuto a dialkylcyanamide, and the determination of the constitution of this body. Last summer (after this work was finished) a paper appeared in the " Berichte der deutschen chemischen Gesellschaft," in which Wallach * described a number of substituted cyanamides obtained by the action of bromide of cyanogen on secondary amines. For fear of approaching too near the field thus reserved by Wallach we shall abandon the further study of dialkylcyanamides, but the study of alkyl compounds of dicyandiamide and dicyanimide will be taken up in this Laboratory ; in fact work on this latter substance is already in progress. Theoretically a dialkylcyanamide derived from the silver salt of cyanamide might have either of the following formulas R-N=C-N-R or R./NCN, and it is easy to determine by experiment which of these two formulas is correct. So far as we can find, but a single experiment of this sort has been tried ; this was published some years ago by Fileti and Robert Schiff,t who prepared diethylcyanamide by the action of ethyl- iodide on argentic cyanamide at 100° for some hours. The product was extracted with ether, and divided into two portions ; one was distilled, and gave a boiling point of 186°, whereas Cloez and Cannizzaro, t who prepared it by the decomposition of ethyl cyanamide, found a boiling point of 190°. Fileti and R. Schiff analyzed their distillate, and ob- tained carbon 60.66 instead of 61.22 and hydrogen 10.11 instead of 10.30. * Ber. d. chem. Ges., XXXII. 1872. t Id., X. 425 (1877). t Ann. Chem., XC. 95. 232 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY". The other portion of their product (which had not been distilled) was deconi|M.M-il by means of hydrochloric acid on the water bath; the chlorides obtained by evaporating the hydrochloric acid Bolntion were converted into chlorplatinates and crystallized fractionally, when they obtained two end tractions in which the platinum was determined with the following results: — Found. Ml, PtOl, I. M ((C,H Ml .I'tCI, Platinum 44.04* 42.51 3G.3 35.80* (C2H6NII3)oPtCl6 requires 39.24* per cent of platinum. In considering these results of Fileti and R. Schiff, it is to be observed that the diethylcyanamide was not purified, and that no very sharp cri- terion of purity was given (YVallach states that these substances are decomposed hy distillation under ordinary pressure, so that the boiling point is not of much value in this respect), further that their analyses of the platinum salts did not give numbers very near to those calculated. It seemed to us, therefore, worth while to try similar experiments with, if possible, a crystalline disuhstituted cyanamide, which could therefore be obtained in a state of undoubted purity, and also with one which would yield amines more easily separated than ammonia and diethyl- amine. We selected for this purpose the diparabrombenzylcyanamide, since the parabrombenzyl compounds show a great tendency to crystallize, and the diparabrombenzylamine, if formed, could be recognized by its melting point, 50° (dibenzylamine is a liquid), while the parabromben- zvlamine, if that were the product, gives a carbonate with a definite melting point, and both these amines could be separated without difficulty from ammonia. The diparabrombenzylcyanamide proved to be a well crystallized solid, melting at 133°. On decomposition with dilute sulphuric acid it gave diparabrombenzylamine, ammonia, and carbonic dioxide by the following reaction : — (CcII4BrCHo)2NCN + 211,0 = (CeH4BrCH,)8NH + NH8 + CO., . Our results, therefore, confirm those of Filed ami EL Schiff, and leave no doubt that the dialkyl derivatives from argentic cyanamide are cyan- amides and not carbodiimides. If they are formed by direct replace- ment of the silver in argentic cyanamide by the alky] radicals, the same * These arc the numbers given by Fileti and K. Schiff. They would be some- what altered by using modern atomic weights. \ JACKSON AND FULLER. DIPARABROMBENZYLCYANAMIDE. 283 constitution (Ag2NCN) must be ascribed to this substance and to cyan- amide. If, on the other hand, these compounds are formed by successive additions of the alkyl bromide with splitting off of argentic bromide, the disubstituted cyanamides could be formed from a silver salt with a carbodiimide formula, as is shown by the following reactions: — R NAg Br NAg NR C +RBr 1 / // = C = AgBr + C NAg NAg NAg R NR Br NR NR2 // \ / / C + RBr = C = C + AgBr. NAg NAg N Our results, therefore, prove nothing in regard to the true formula of cyanamide. Preparation of Diparabrombenzylcyanamide, (CGH4BrCH2)2NCN. The yellow silver salt of cyanamide, Ag.,NCN, prepared according to Walther,* was mixed with a benzol solution of parabrombenzylbromide in the proportion of two molecules of the bromide to one of the salt, which should be finely powdered. The mixture was heated in a flask with a return-condenser on the steam-bath, until after four or five hours the full yellow color of the argentic cyanamide had been completely replaced by the yellowish white color of argentic bromide. The precipi- tate was then filtered out and washed thoroughly with hot benzol, and the filtrate and washings evaporated to dryness, when a thick reddish yellow oil was left. To purify this it was dissolved in hot alcohol, and the strong solution allowed to cool slowly ; a yellow oil was deposited at first followed by a white crystalline substance, which was obtained by pouring the solution off from the oil as soon as the crystals began to appear. By repeated recrystallizations of this sort the melting-point of the substance was raised to 133°, where it remained constant. It was dried in vacuo and analyzed with the following results : — * Journ. prakt. Chem., 1896, 510. 234 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. I. 0.1508 gram <>f the Btibstance gave by the method of C'arius 0.1494 gram of argentic bromide. II. 0.3041 gram of the substance gave 20.2 c.c. of nitrogen at a tem- perature of 18°. G and a pressure of 760. 1 una. iiiit.il for I mi 1. \> \ I. II. Bromine 12.11 42.18 Nitrogen 7.37 7.04 In view of the great tendency of cyanamides to polymerize, it was thought safer to determine the molecular weight of tin- body * by the method of freezing a benzol solution, which gave the following results: — 0.375 gram of the substance dissolved in 16. "Jo grams of benzol produced a depression of UJ.28 in the freezing point. Calculated for (C.|I,llr..N< N Found. .Molecular weight 380 837 There can be no doubt, therefore, that the substance is really (C6H4BrCH8)3NCN. PROPERTIES OF DlPAKABROMr.KNZYI.C VAN AMIDE. The substance crystallizes from benzol in sheave- of white crystals Bhaped like the blade of a lancet, sometimes united laterally into group- with comb ends. It melts at 133°. It is freely soluble in benzol, chlo- roform, acetone, or acetic ester; soluble in toluol; slightly Boluble in cold ethyl or methyl alcohol or glacial acetic acid, freely soluble in tin ae solvents when they are hot ; slightly soluble in ether, carbonic disulphide, or in hot or cold water; essentially insoluble in Iigroine. It is slowly decomposed by cold strong sulphuric acid: apparently unaffected by hydrochloric acid or nitric acid in the cold. The best solvent for it is hot alcohol. In order to see if it could form a chloride, a portion of the dipara- brombenzylcyanamide was dissolved in anhydrous benzol and saturated with <\ry hydrochloric acid gas. No precipitate was formed even after the mixture had stood for two week-, and on evaporating off the benzol the original substance was recovered unaltered. It would seem from this experiment that the diparabrombenzylcyanamide cannot unite with hydrochloric acid. * Thia work was done before the appearance of Wallach'a statement thai ks were evaporated to dryness on the steam bath, and the white residue dissolved in a little water and converted into the chlorplatinate ; this was a yellow precipitate crystallizing in OCtahedra, which was washed with water and alcohol, dried in vacuo, and analyzed with the following result-,: — 0.2061 gram of the chlorplatinate gave on ignition 0.0U03 gram of platinum. Calculated for (NII4)3PtCl«. Fouud. Platinum 43.91 43.81 It is evident from the experiment described above that the products of the decomposition of diparabromben/ylcyanainide, when boiled with di- lute sulphuric acid, are carbonic dioxide, diparabrombenzylamine, and ammonia. The reaction, therefore, runs as follows: — (C6H4BrCH2)2NCN + 2II„0 = (C(,IIJ>..(Ilj,NII + NH, + CO,. * Jackson, These Proceedings, XVI 264. Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Vol. XXXV. No. 12. — January, 1900. NOTE ON THE CHIEF THEOREM OF LIE'S THEORY OF CONTINUOUS GROUPS. By Stephen Elmer Slocum. NOTE ON THE CHIEF THEOREM OF LIE'S THEORY OF CONTINUOUS GROUPS. By Stephen Elmer Slocum, Clark University, Worcester, Mass. Presented by Henry Taber, November 8, 1899. Received December 1, 1899. The chief (Jiaupt) theorem of Lie's theory of finite continuous groups is that a system of r independent infinitesimal transformations X\, X.2, . . . Xr} such that r (Xj, Xk) = 2S cjks X* (j, k = 1, 2 . . . r), for constant coefficients cjks, generates a continuous group with r param- eters, that is, a group with r parameters in which each transformation can be generated by an infinitesimal transformation of the group.f Professor Study, however, has shown that, notwithstanding the infini- tesimal transformations of the special linear homogeneous group satisfy Lie's criterion, nevertheless not every transformation can be generated by an infinitesimal transformation of this group. % CoDsequently Lie's theorem is subject to certain limitations. The precise nature of the error in the demonstration of Lie's theorem has, so far as I know, not been pointed out ; and to show wherein it consists is the object of this paper. For this purpose I shall carry out, for the case of a particular group, the successive steps (as given in the " Continuierliche Gruppen," pp. 368- 377) in Lie's demonstration of the first fundamental theorem of his the- ory, upon which the chief theorem (the second fundamental theorem) depends. At a certain point in this demonstration an assumption is made in which Lie's error consists. 1 0 * A's denotes |sl (xt . . . x„)~- + • • ■ + Imfo • • • *n) « — • d x\ cl xn t Lie: Continuierliche Gruppen, pp. 211, 390. t Engel : Leipziger Berichte, 1892, p. 279. See also Taber: Am. Jour. Maths., XVI. ; Bull. N. Y. Math. Soc, July, 1894, April, 1896, Jan., 1897 ; Math. Ann., XLVI. ; Rettger: Proc. Am. Acad., XXXIII. ; Newson: Kansas Univ. Quarterly, 1896 ; and These Proceedings, p. 97. 240 PROCEEDINGS OF TI1K A.MEBICAN A.CADEMT. I shall anmber the equations the same, and shall use the Bame Dota- tion for the special group considered as employed by Lie in bis general demonstration. Lie first shows that if the n equations (0 J'i —Si fan • • • J'> "i • • • O (* = 1, 2, . . . «) represent a group with r parameters, the a/'s as functions of the x's and a's Batisfy certain differential equations of the form (9) ^- = %^k(al...ar)$Ji(xl' ...xnf) c nk i (t = 1, 2, . ..»; *=1, 2, ... r), in which the determinant of the tffJt ^ 0; — that, consequently, these equations may be written in the form r 3 . ' (10) iji ;(x/ . . . a:,') = 2* «,* (ai . . . a, I ■=- ' i c ", (t== 1, 2, . . .»;/ =1, 2, .. . r), where the determinant of the ajk i 0 ; and that, further, no linear rela- tion of the form e^u(x') + ... + er$ri(x') = 0, with constant coefficients e} persists, simultaneously, for i'= 1, 2, . . . n. "We shall consider a case for which both n and r are equal to two. The equations Xx — an + (i-i =/i (a:, «), 0) a:2 = e"iar., + aY ■=./» (x, a), define ex2 of transformations Ta which constitute a group. For, by the elimination of x/, x./ from (1) and xx" = x( + b, EE./KV, b), (2) x3" = eh*xJ + bx=f,{x', b), we derive »i" = an + ca =/j (z, c), (3) ./•/' = c'lj. + rt =^ (.r, c), where C, = a, e''* + ij = 0, (fl, b), (4) Ca = «o -f b.. = <£„ (rr, i). SLOCUM. — FINITE CONTINUOUS GROUPS. 241 That is, functional equations persist of the form (5) fi (f(& «), ft) =ft (?, 4> (a, ft)) (." = 1, 2). Therefore, the composition of two transformations Ta and Tb of the fam- ily is equivalent to a single transformation of the family. It is to be observed, as noted by Lie, § 1 in the demonstration of the general case, that the functions c£x and <£2 are independent of each other with respect to fti and ft2. For 9bj 1, ax eb 0, is not identically zero. We may, therefore, regard xL, x2, a1} a», cu c.2, as independent variables, and x{ , x2, x", x»", bu ft2, as dependent variables. Then the differen- tiation of the functional equations (5), or of (5') i. e., of (D'«) /aC^, *) =/*(*> 0 (X=l,2), Xi + ft2 = X\ + c1i b1 -f- eb2x/ = cx + gc^x2, with respect to the a's gives 9xi 9 ft2 _ 0 5«i 3«i (7) 5 a:/ 5 ft2 __ 0 5 a2 9 a2 ebz 9x2' 9 fti + ^ -h ar/e 6 5 ax 5 «! 5ft, 5«i 0, da:/ . 9bx , 9b2 -« h ~ h a:2 eV— = 0. c/ a2 x2 = e"jx2 + "i, they become equations between the independent quantities ./-,. r.:, au a*, bu b,; and must, therefore, be satisfied identically. Hence, equations (Si/) will still persist identically, in virtue of equations (1), if we assign definite values to the b's. For this purpose let e6« = 1. We then have ,n N 9rx' „ 5x/ , 3xay , 3a / / 9i\<;s OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. ;.<-/ C ''1 C ''. (i=l,2;j=l, 2), \\ lure the £'s and a*8 are defined as follows : in (aO = 0, in (*') = - 1, £si &) = - 1, £„ (aO = - *./, «ii («) = — lj "12 («) = 0, a21 (a) = — 0lf a2.j (a) = — 1. Moreover, if we put a/01 = a2'"' = 0, then a, = at 0|, a2 = a.,'01 gives the identical transformation; and the determinant of the ajt(a(0)), namely, -1, 0 "11 , "12 (°) n (0) '•J I ) Q"« -fl. - 1 is neither zero nor infinite. In order to prove that this family constitutes a group, we proceed to integrate equations (10). For this purpose, introduce a new auxiliary variable t by means of the equations (11) day dt da — ^1 "11 (°1> a«) + ^2 "21 (aU a2) = — Xx — «1 A-2, -j— = \i a12 (a1? ct2) -f- X2 a22 (#n Q2) = — ^2 Let now where Xj and X2 are any arbitrary but definite constants. To determine the constants of integration, we assume that au a„ take the values ax, 2 (^i, a). It is to be observed that the a's are independent functions of the fx's : for SLOCUM. — FINITE CONTINUOUS GROUPS. 245 9ak _ 1 />! — 1\ is not identically zero. By means of equations (12) we can introduce in equations (1) the new parameters ju,l5 /x2 instead of au a2. Solving (12) for {jlx, |U2, we have (cio — a.,) [ «i — - — ) e"2 — a2 V ^ 1 ea2-a2J _ >*i = T^. ««,-«, - = Mt(a,a)f (13) _ _x Hz = a2 — a2 — M2 (a, a). If we introduce these new parameters [xx, /x2 in equations (1), the x"s become definite functions of xu x2, ^l5 fi2, ax, a2 ', and, since the //,'s contain £, the x"s will also be functions of the auxiliary variable t. Multiplying equations (10) by Al5 A2, and adding, we get 2 2 3x1 da, jw^^ki (i=1,2)' "1 fell ("''l J ■'-S / T Ao f2l (Xj^ , Xo ) Ao, or dx\ dt (u) **,< —t^ = Ax £i2 (x/, x2') + A2 £2a (x/, x2') — — Ax — A2 x2', which define the x"s as functions of t. Since a1} a2 reduce to a1} a2 for * = t, we see that x/, x/, for £ = 7, take the initial values Xi = xx + a2 =fi (x, a), 05) x2' = ca2X2 + ax z=f2 (x, a). Further, the integrals of equations (14) contain the A's only in the combination [iu /x2 ; and, therefore, can be expressed in the form XX = Fx (x/, X2, [XX, [X2) = x/ — fl2, (16) - «! / 1 \ X2' x./ = ^ (x/, x/, H, fl2) = £{— - 1 J + -• Inserting therein the values as/ =/< (x, a), x/ = /, (x, a), oA. = t (jx, a) (i = l,2; i=l, 2), 246 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY the totality of equations (1) to (12), we obtain the functional equations (17) Fti/fra), /*)=/,(*, *0*,o)) (» = 1, 2 We have already denoted by T„ the transformation defined by (1), in which the parameters arc • /'■, l'.\ /'.. Then the functional equations (17) may he expressed in the single formula (18) TaE.= r„. For T& transforms xt into j;'=f(x, a), and E^ transforms xi into ^i (x'> /*)» while, in virtue of (12), T„ can also he written in the form xt'=ft(x, (/x, a)) (t=l, 2). The relation (18) persists, therefore, provided the three parameter systems (au a,), (^ ^2), (av a2) are connected by relations (12). Therein a„ a2 denote definitely chosen general values of r/„ Oj. We now make use of the assumption that the transformation 7',, de- fined hy (1), shall hecome the identical transformation for ay — a «2 = a2(0). Namely, for the moment, let ax = a^0*, u2 = a2" ; whereupon Tr, becomes the identical transformation 7^(0). Then, because the deter- minant of the ajk(a'0') is, according to assumption, neither zero nor in- finite, and, therefore, the former considerations are also valid fur a = a!0), — the av a., in virtue of (12) assume the values (19) ak = *k (n, to, <> a.n (k = 1, 2) ; that is to say, since we take ax(0) = er2'n' = 0, ax and a2 assume the values (19,«) «i Hi e"2 M2 ' Hence, (18) becomes and, therefore, a2 Ta»)E» = ra; (20) ^M = T^. Whence it follows that each transformation E^ belongs to the family of transformations T,,, defined b;/ equations \\). If now, conversely, we could establish that each transformation 7], belonged to the family of SLOCUM. — FINITE CONTINUOUS GROUPS. 247 transformations E^, the first fundamental theorem would then be proved. For taking the a's arbitrarily, we could then find a system of parameters ll such that E^ = Ta; and, the a's being also an arbitrarily chosen sys- tem of values of the parameters a of equations (1), we should have, symbolically, Ta Ta = Ta Eu. = J a j or where (*' = 1, 2), «* = $* 0*, «) = <£* (^"(a, «(0,)> «) ; that is to say, the composition of two arbitrary transformations Ta and Ta of the family gives again a transformation Ta of the family. This is precisely the step taken by Lie, who assumes that because, — as men- tioned above, page 244, — the t's are independent functions of the /a's, each transformation of (1) belongs to the family E^. But, although the functions al5 a2, as defined by (10 a), are independent of the ps, since the Jacobian is not identically zero, nevertheless, for certain values of the a's, the /x's are infinite, [n finite values of the lis, however, are expressly excluded from consideration. For Lik = \k(t — t), and since t and t cannot be infinite, if fxk is infinite Xk is infinite ; and, by supposition, the A's are arbitrary but definite constants in the integration on page 244. So we cannot assume that every transformation Ta of the family (1) belongs to the family E^. Thus, solving equations (19, a), we have hi 1 — ea"- ' (19, J) /Xo = — do. For ax =}r 0, and u2 an even multiple of W, /xj becomes infinite. More- over, this transformation of the family (1) is distinct from any transfor- mation of this family Ta for which the lis are finite. On page 375 of the " Continuierliche Gruppen " Lie points out that every transformation of the family E^ is generated by an infinitesimal transformation. The infinitesimal transformation in question is repre- sented by the symbol Ll 1 S PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. VvVMrA ' •' J£ and adds to an arbitrary function /(a-/ . . . x,'\ the increment and, therefore, to r, adds the increment This shows its relation to the simultaneous Bystem on page 245, namely, ^■' = 2, A^, (a/ . . . xj) (i = 1, 2 . . . n). If the theorem stated by Lie, page 37o, " Continuierliche Gruppen," was true without exception, namely, that every transformation of the family T„ belonged to the family A,,, it would then follow that every transformation of the family Tn could be generated by an infinitesimal transformation ; for then taking the as arbitrarily, we diould have En = Ta. But, for a system of values of the a's for which one or both of the func- tions M\ (a, a(0)), i)/2 (a, a(01) are infinite, there is no equivalent transforma- tion of the family jfi^; and, consequently, such a transformation cannot be generated by an infinitesimal transformation of the group. E. g., the transformation T„ considered above, for which ax ± 0 and a2 is an even multiple of -n-i, cannot be generated by an infinitesimal transformation of the group. In demonstrating the second fundamental theorem (the chief theorem) Lie assumes the results of the first fundamental theorem. He shows that a system of r independent infinitesimal transformations* f XJ= >•, U (xx... O^f- (t = 1, 2 . . . r) l c xt generate a family of transformations 27„. with r essential parameters, which contains the identical transformation, and is defined by the equations * Lie terms the infinitesimal transformations or symbols of infinitesimal transformations A',, A'.:, . . . A'- independent if tliey satisfy no linear relation ' i -^i/+ • • ■ + er A',/EE 0, with cunstant coefficients c. SLOCUM. — FINITE CONTINUOUS GROUPS. 249 (A) x( =x<+ 2fc ak Xkxt + i 2A 2t ak a, Xk Xtxt + . . . = $ (x, a) 1 11 (i = 1, 2 . . . r) ; further, that, if and only if r (Xj Xk) = 2S cjks Xsf, will this family satisfy differential equations of the form required by the first fundamental theorem. Consequently, only if this criterion is satis- fied by the infinitesimal transformations can they generate a group. Proceeding now, as in the demonstration of the first fundamental theorem, we introduce certain new parameters ju., and, finally, obtain the equation where ak =■ t (/x, a) (h == 1, 2, . . . r). As before, since the family of transformations &,t, defined now by equations (A), contains the identical transformation, we have 3EM = Ea, where ak = tl\ (jx, a,0)), and fj.k = ffi[k (a, a(0)) (k =1,2,... r)* and thus E& &« = 5T„. In the former case we saw, page 247, that, if the a's were chosen arbitra- rily, one or more of the /a's might be infinite. In the present case the tt's are numerical multiples of the a's f ; and, consequently, the ti's are finite whenever the a's are finite. E.g. (n =. r = 2), f L (x, a) = X! + ct2, fen* — 1 \ f2 (x, a) = ea»- x.2 + ax ( 1, o.2es2 (e«2 — m2 — 1) ^2e^a (gs2- m2 _ 1) Mi ("2 — M2) ^2(^2-^2 — 1)' a2 = yet no satisfactory method for the purpose has been de- vised. Ferric oxide, on the other hand, can he obtained in a variety of ways, hence the choice of the early experimenters seems to have been a wise one. The first step in a systematic treatment of the suhjecl is obviously a repetition of the discordant work of half acenturj ago, with especial reference to the possible errors noted above. Owing to the fact that most oxides formed from nitrates are known to include considerable quantities of 0x3 gen and nitrogen, t ignition of ferric nitrate as a means of obtaining ferric oxide was at first rejected, and ferric hydroxide was used instead. Very pure iron ribbon was dissolved! in sulphuric acid, and the metal was then deposited electroly tically from an amnionic oxalate solution. After the film had been dissolved in the pur- est nitric acid, the carbon was removed by filtration, and the iron ivaa precipitated as ferric hydrate hy the addition of an excess of ammonia which had been distilled into pure water contained in a platinum dish. The precipitate was washed thoroughly, collected upon a pure washed tiller paper, separated from the filter paper while moist, and finally dried in a platinum dish upon the steam hath. The lumps of dried hydrate were crushed in an agate mortar and finally ignited tor Beveral hours in a current of pure dry air. During the latter operation the weighed platinum boal with the oxide was contained in a large porcelain tube * These Proceedings, 26. ^V2 (1891). : Richards, These Proceedings, 26, ^si (1891). Kichanls and lingers, ibid., 28, 200. RICHARDS AND BAXTER. ATOMIC WETGHT OF IRON. 255 heated by a Fletcher furnace to about 900°. Constant weight within a few hundredths of a milligram was obtained without difficulty. The weighed oxide was then reduced in a current of electrolytic hydrogen which had been dried by means of fused potassic hydroxide. Ferric oxide is only very slowly reduced at the highest temperature which can be used with glass tubes, so that this reduction also was of necessity carried on in porcelain tubes. Even at about 900°,* long continued heating was needed to complete the reduction, the total period of ignition amounting sometimes to twenty hours. The progress of the reaction was slightly accelerated by alternate oxidation and reduction. Two analyses, carried out in the fashion described, are tabulated be- low. Corrections to a vacuum standard have been applied by adding 0.00009 gram to every apparent gram of ferric oxide, and 0.00001 gram to every apparent gram of metallic iron, the specific gravities of these two substances being assumed to be 5.2 and 7.9 respectively, t SERIES I. Number of Analysis. Weight of Ferric Oxide in Vacuum. Weight of Iron in Vacuum. Atomic Weight of Iron. 1 2 ;i. 17485 3.61235 2.22096 2.52750 55.885 55.916 The fact that both of these results are considerably lower than the accepted value of the atomic weight of iron (5G.0) seemed to confirm a suspicion which had already arisen that ferric hydrate might not be completely converted into the oxide by ignition at a high temperature. That the oxide upon ignition easily reached constant weight is, however, evidence in the other direction. Since no direct method of proving the presence or absence of retained water was at hand, it seemed best to make use of another method of preparing ferric oxide. Although, as has been already stated, oxides formed from nitrates occlude nitrogen and oxygen, yet these gases are evolved upon solution of the oxides and * At the temperature to which the porcelain tubes were heated pure silver did not melt, while sodic chloride was easily fused. t Landolt und Bornstein Tabellen, 118, 133 (1894). vol. xxxv. — 17 256 PROCEEDINGS OP 1 II i: AMERICAN ACADEMY. can be determined. [gnition of ferric nitrate was therefore chosen as the next method of obtaining ferric oxide. The material used in the following work was purified with great can'. In the firs( place a solution of a so-called "chemically pore" chloride of iron was treated with an excess of sulphuretted hydrogen and the result- ing sulphides and sulphur were removed l»y liltration. From the filtrate, after oxidation with nitric acid,, the iron was precipitated with an excess of amnionic hydrate and the precipitate was thoroughly washed by de- cantation. In this process traces of a r of metals which might have been present must have been removed. The precipitate was dis- solved in sulphuric aeid. and by cautious addition of amnionic hydrate basic ferric sulphate was thrown down : a precipitate which is much more easily washed than ferric hydrate but which was redissolved in sulphuric acid with considerable difficulty. In order to reduce to the ferrous state the ferric sulphate thus formed, the solution was next sub- jected to the action of a galvanic current of several amperes. The solu- tion was contained in a large platinum dish which served as the negative electrode, the positive electrode being a flat spiral of platinum wire. Since the solution was verj concentrated and contained a considerable excess of sulphuric acid, the greater part of the ferrous sulphate crystal- lized out when the solution was allowed to cool. By alternately elec- trolyzing and cooling, almost all of the iron was eventually obtained as ferrous sulphate. The next process in the purification was to deposit the iron electrolyti- cally from a solution of its oxalate. By means of this separation, the aluminum and manganese could be eliminated, since the first, together with alkaline and other impurities, is not deposited by electrolysis, while the second is deposited upon the anode. The amnionic oxalate needed was prepared with great care. Oxalic acid which had been repeatedly crystallized with hydrochloric acid, and then until free from chlorine, was Baturated with pure redistilled ammonia, and the resulting amnionic oxa- late was subjected to several crystallizations. To a hot concentrated so- lution of this amnionic oxalate, the ferrous sulphate was added as long as no permanent precipitate resulted, and the solution was then electrolyzed until the greater part of the iron had been deposited. A slight deposit of hydrated manganese peroxide appeared upon the positive pole, which, however, presented enough surface to prevent the deposit from becoming detached. The film of iron was carefully washed and dissolved in pure dilute nitric acid. When all of the ferrous sulphate had been thus con- verted into ferric nitrate, the solution of the nitrate was filtered and RICHARDS AND BAXTER. — ATOMIC WEIGHT OF IRON. 257 evaporated, and the salt was three times recrystallized from a large amount of nitric acid. This acid had been distilled in a platinum still and condenser and collected in a platinum receiver. The mother liquor of the first crystallization was analyzed for impurities as follows : After precipitation of the iron as ferric hydrate by the addition of an excess of pure ammonia and filtration, the filtrate was evaporated to dryness and the residue was ignited. Since only a negligible amount of alkaline solid remained, it can fairly be assumed that the final preparation of ferric nitrate must have been free from such impurity. Duriug the latter part of this purification platinum vessels only were employed, and the water and reagents were the purest obtainable. The next step, that of converting the nitrate into oxide, was carried out in part by gentle heating in an electric oven at about 150°.* The resulting cake of basic nitrate, after removal from the platinum dish in which it was contained during the above operation, was •rushed in an agate mortar, and the reaction was completed by ignition in an open porcelain tube at a temperature of about 900° for several hours. The oxide, which was now contained in a large platinum boat, was carefully weighed and again heated. The loss of weight during this second igni- tion amounted to one tenth of a milligram, while a third prolonged heating caused a further loss of three-tenths of a milligram. This differ- ence must have been caused by the escape of iucluded gases, and was so> small in comparison with the weight of the oxide (seventeen grams), that further heating was deemed unnecessary. The determination of the gases contained in this oxide proved to be a matter of considerable difficulty. At first the method used was that of dissolving the oxide in a Sprengel vacuum in fused acid potassic sulphate. Owing to the fact that the sulphuric acid, which was evolved from the fused sulphate, attacked both the rubber connections used for joining the apparatus, and also the stick potash used as a drying agent, it was uncer- tain whether the small quantity of gas which was collected in the air pump was originally included in the oxide. A more successful method was eventually found by dissolving the oxide in hot hydrochloric acid con- taining stannous chloride. The operation was carried on in an apparatus for determining the eases evolved during the solution of a substance, which has been already described in papers from this laboratory. f In two experiments half a gram of ferric oxide yielded a mere trace of gas. Cupric oxide treated in the same way evolved considerable gas, less, how- * Richards, Am. Chem. Jour., 22, 45 (1899). t These Proceedings, 28, 200. - PROCEEDINGS OP IIIK A.MI.KK \\ ACADEMY. ever, than tint evolved when the same capric oxide was dissolved in >ul- pliiir.i" acid. It \\;i> shown, however, that the gas which resulted upon solution in hydrochloric acid and Btannous chloride consisted wholly ol nitrogen, and thai the volume of this nitrogen corresponded t<» the uitro- in the . ■ I free by Bolutii i the same oxide in Bulphuric acid. Although ii was evident that the oxygen waa absorbed by the stannous chloride, yet, Bince in the case of all oxides heretofore examined the in- cluded gases consisted chiefly of nitrogen, it is fair to conclude that this so in the case of ferric oxide. Only a trace even of nitrogen was evolved from the ferric oxide, hence this preparation must have been practically free from included In order to avoid any error due to hygroscopicity, the oxide u-<< i for each analysis was bottled in dry air in the bottling apparatus, which lias already been described elsewhere.* The platinum boat containing the oxide was heated in the hard glass tube while the air was exhausted from the apparatus by means of a Sprengel ail- pump. Dry air was then admitted, and the boat was pushed into the* weighing bottle which was then Btoppered and weighed with the usual precautions. Since in two instances repetition of the bottling failed to change the weight of the oxide, subsequently this precaution was omitted. The oxide was then reduced in the manner already described, constant weight of the metal bein\i|. in \ a. mini. Weight "f irnn in \ acuam. Atomic Weight ii!' Iron. 3 8.97667 115 55»:; 1 I 39655 :; 12668 55.891 5 1.35955 3.0 1!'1, hi 65 B91 6 7.1 1115 4.99688 -To 7 6.42021 I 19180 --'J Average . . . . . 65.888 * These Proceedings, 32, 50 (1890). RICHARDS AND BAXTER. — ATOMIC WEIGHT OP IRON. 259 In order to determine if the reduction had been complete in the last two analyses of this series, the resulting metal was dissolved in cold dilute sulphuric acid. In each case a few tenths of a milligram of black insolu- ble matter remained, which contained platinum. This impurity probably came from the alloving of the boat with the iron during the reduction, and hence introduced no error. A trace of ferric oxide also was found. Even if the platinum had been originally present, the combined weight of the two impurities could not have raised the final result more than 0.01 per cent; hence no correction was applied. One of us* has recently shown that iron when ignited at a high tem- perature, has practically no tendency to occlude hydrogen, so that in the present case this possible source of error is excluded. On comparing these results with the two determinations of the first series, one is forced to conclude that the oxide made from the nitrate has essentially the same (•(imposition as the oxide made from the hydroxide. The higher value, indicated by Experiment 2, was probably caused by incomplete reduction, and the first experiment agrees with the average of* the second series. It is interesting to review the older determinations f in the light of the experience gained in these analyses. Evidently the occlusion (or better, * Baxter, Am. Chem. Journ., 22, 363 (1899). t A complete list of these determinations is given below : — Fe = 1814. Wollaston, from Thenard's Results, Phil. Trans., 104, 21 (1814) . . 5-3.2 1826. Stromeyer, Pogg. Ann, 6, 471 (1826). Reduction Fe2 03 : Fe . . . 5-3.5 1826. Berzelius, Pogg. Ann., 8, 185 (1826). Oxidation Fe2 : Fe2 03 . . . 54.3 1830±. Wackenroder, Archive Pharm., 35, 279; 36, 22 (1813). Reduction Fe2 l ';. : Fe2 55.9 1844. Svanberg and Norlin, Liebig's Ann. Chem. Pharm., 50, 432 (1844), also Berzelius Jahresbericht, 24, 121 (1845), and 25, 42 (1846). Oxidation Fe2 : Fe., 03 55.87 Reduction Fe2 03 : Fe2 50.09 1844. Berzelius (the same references). Oxidation Fe2 : Fe2 Oa .... 50.02 1844. Erdmann and Marchand, J. Pr. Ch., 33, 1; Lieb. Ann., 52, 212 (1845). Reduction of oxide from oxalate Fe2 03 : Fe._> 56.02 1846. Mauraene', Ann. Chim. Phys. [3], 30, 380 (1850). Oxidation Fe2 : Fe2 Os 56.00 1850. Rivot, Ann. Chim. Phys. [3], 30, 192, (1850). Reduction Fe,, 03 : Fe 54.2 18c9. Dumas, Ann. Chim. Phys. [3], 55, 157 (1859). Lieb. Ann.. 113. 26 (1860). Analysis of Chlorides 56 2 [The results of Magnus, Dobereiner, Capitaine (1841), and Torrey (1888), alluded to by Clarke, are not worthy of serious consideration. See Smithson. Misc. Coll. ; Constants of Nature, 5, 287 (1897) : also 4, 65 (Becker, 1880)]. From some of these values Clarke (1807) computed the value 56.021, while Messrs. Landolt, Ostwald, and Seubert [1898] chose the number 56.0. 260 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. inclusion) of gases by the oxide is a less serious cause of error in the case of iron than in mosl other cases, if the temperatare of ignition is reason- ably high. This is the chief probable error which would tend to make the results too low. The three most probable errors having the opposite effect are: — first, the possible presence of magnetic oxide in the ferric oxide; second, the possibility of incomplete reduction daring the analysis of this Bubstance; and third, the possible presence of alkaline, siliceous, <>r other non-reducible material. Wackenroder seems to have been tin- only experimenter who thought seriously of the first two of these errors; and none of the early experiin I irs paid any attention to the last, for until recently glass was suppose/ , . most chemists to lie wholly insoluble. Waekenroder's work was perhaps the most intelligently carried out of all the older determinations, althougl hi- individual analyses did not agree among themselves quite sow. • some of the others. His greatest omission was the recognized lack of purity in his hydrogen, although be could not observe an error due to this cause. It is interesting to note that the average of his six results gives the value ~>~>.>i'2 lor the atomic weight in question, while a corrected average obtained by rejecting the two most discordant values gives the value 55.92. Tin- result of the present work indicates a value midway between the two averages. Waekenroder's valuable work does not enter into Clarke's average for the atomic weight of iron, for Clarke was unable to find the original paper. In order to prepare pure iron for his later work, Berzelius fused his metal with ferrous oxide, but gave no proof of the effectiveness of his treatment. It is not impossible that traces of the oxide may have been held by the iron, as copper dissolves cuprous oxide. Erdmann and Mar- chand made the ferric oxide, which they reduced quantitatively, by the ignition of ferrous oxalate, — a method which invites the presence of magnetic oxide. Maumene's method was the process of filtration Used in common analysis, in which the possible errors in both directions are plentiful. These detailed criticisms, taken in connection with the general lack of accuracy which is to be observed in the quantitative work of half a cen- tury ago, seem to show that there is nothing improbable in the present result, 55.88. Of course the analysis of a single compound is never con- clusive, so that this result is announced only as a preliminary one, which ■\c -hall hope to support or disprove in the near future. Hau\ \i;i> University, Cambridge, Mass., October, L899 Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Vol. XXXV. No. 11. — January, 1900. CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE CHEMICAL LABORATORY OF HARVARD COLLEGE. ON CERTAIN COLORED SUBSTANCES DERIVED FROM NITR O COMPO UNDS. THIRD PAPER. By C. Loring Jackson and F. II. Gazzolo. CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE CHEMICAL LABORATORY OF HARVARD COLLEGE. ON CERTAIN COLORED SUBSTANCES DERIVED FROM NITRO COMPOUNDS. — THIRD PAPER. By C. Loring Jackson and F. H. Gazzolo. Presented December 13, 1899. Received December 30, 1899. The colored substances formed by the action of sodic alcoholates and certain nitro compounds have been studied by Victor Meyer,* Lobry de Bruyn,f and in this Laboratory, t but as yet no satisfactory constitutional formula has been assigned to them. In continuing this investigation, we tried first to replace the sodic alcoholates by other similar reagents, and succeeded in obtaining colored products from trinitranisol or trinitrobenzol by the action of sodic malo- nic ester, sodic acetacetic ester, sodic phenvlate, the sodium compound of benzylcyanide, and perhaps the sodium compound of phloroglucine, al- though in this last case the action was not well marked. As it has been shown already that similar compounds are formed with various sodic alcoholates, § and even with sodic hydrate, || it appears that this behavior with nitro compounds is a very general reaction of alkaline substances. Of these new colored products only those with sodic malonic ester or sodic acetacetic ester were stable enough to be prepared for analysis, but they were unusually stable for bodies of this class. All four of the sub- stances formed from trinitranisol or trinitrobenzol and these two sodium esters were analyzed, and were proved to consist of three molecules of the sodium ester combined with one of the trinitro compound ; for in- stance, the malonic ester trinitrobenzol compound has this formula, * Ber. d. chem. Ges., XXVII. 3153; XXIX. 848. t Rec. Trav. Chim. Pays-Bas, XIV. 89, 150; XV. 848. t Jackson and Ittner, Am. Chem. Journ., XIX. 199, where a historical account of the previous work is given ; Jackson and Boos, These Proceedings, XXXIII. 173. § These Proceedings, XXXIII. 173. II Hepp, Ann. Chem. (Liebig), CCXV. 359. 264 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. (II NO ) [CHNa(( OOC It. \, The formation of compounds with three molecules of the sodium constituent is noteworthy, since all the compounds analyzed heretofore have contained the two constituents in the proportion of out- molecule of each. Similar experiments with sodic methylate, etbylate, or amylate and trinitro benzol also l«'il to products apparently containing three molecules of the alcoholate to each molecule of the nitrocompound* — a surprising result, since Lohrp de Bruyn and \':ni Leent t obtained from trinitrobenzol a substance with the following formula, ( ,,I I;;< N( ),. I ,K< )('I I,.1I I,( ). The difference in the results is on- questionably due to differences in the method of preparation. Lobry de Bruyn and Van Leent's compound was obtained b) crystallization, whereas all our products with three molecules of the alkaline material were precipitated from an alcoholic solution with benzol. Experiments are now in progress to test this explanation of the phenomena. The discovery of these sodic malonic or acetacetic compounds would furnish a strong argument, if that were needed, against the only theory for these colored substances as yet published, — thai of Victor Meyer, t who supposed they were formed by the replacement of atoms of hydro- gen on the benzol ring by atoms of sodium. This theory has been dis- proved by the observations of Lobry de Bruyn, § supported by those made in this Laboratory ; || and among other arguments the point was made that Victor Meyer's theory necessitated the assumption of alcohol of crystallization in every compound of this class which had been ana- lyzed. In these malonic and acetacetic compounds the presence of malonic ester or acetacetic ester of crystallization must be assumed, if this theory is adopted ; and, further, the number of molecules of "ester of crystalli- zation " corresponds in each case to the number of atoms of sodium ; the view, therefore, that the colored bodies are addition and not substitution compounds is confirmed by these observations. Other experiments were tried to study the effect on the formation of the colors of increasing or diminishing the negative nature of the aromatic constituent. That there is some effect of this sort has been shown already, * The ethyl and methyl compounds seemed to contain alcohol of crystallization, to judge from the percentages of sodium obtained. The publication of these results will, therefore, be postponed until further analytical data have been collected. The atnyl compound, on the other hand, gave a percentage of sodium corresponding to C6H8(NOa)8(NaOC6Hu)8. t Bee. Trav. Chim. PayB-Bas, XIV. 150. { Ber.d. chem. Ges., XXVII. 31 § Rec. Trav. Chim. Pays Bas, XIV. 89. || These Proceedings, XXXIII. 171. JACKSON AND GAZZOLO. — NITRO COMPOUNDS. 265 since certain substituted toluols give less stable colored derivatives than the corresponding benzoic acids.* Picramide, the first substance selected for this work, gave colored compounds with sodic methylate or sodic malonic ester, but too unstable to analyze, whereas trinitranisol or tri- nitrobenzol, in which the negative character of the nitro groups is not weakened by the presence of a positive radical like NH2, gave stable well marked colors. Dinitroxylol ((CH3)2 1. 3. (N02)2 4. 6.) also gave a slight and evanescent coloration with sodic methylate, and no reaction with sodic malonic ester, whereas trinitroxylol ((CH3)21.3. (N02)32. 4. 6.) gave colored compounds with both these reagents, which, although much more stable, could not be prepared for analysis. These results, there- fore, as far as they go, show that an increase in the negative nature of the aromatic constituent increases the tendency to form colored compounds. The next subject considered by us was the effect of the presence of methyl groups attached to the benzol ring on the formation of colors. Diuitrotoluol ((N02)2 2. 4.) gave colored compounds with sodic methy- late or sodic malonic ester; dinitroxylol ((CH3)2 1. 3. (N02)2 4. 6.) gave only a passing coloration f with sodic methylate, none at all with sodic malonic ester ; and dinitromesitylene gave no color with either reagent. Trinitroxylol gave strong color reactions with both reagents, trinitrome- sitylene none whatever. It is evident, therefore, that the presence of methyl groups on the benzol ring diminishes the tendency to form these colored compounds. Whether this effect is due to a specific action $ of the methyl group, or to the fact that these groups stand in the ortho position to the nitro groups, or to both these causes, cannot be deter- mined from the facts at present at our disposal. In consideration of the complete absence of a color reaction with trinitromesitylene and sodic methylate, it is interesting to note that M. Konowalow § obtained red salts from nitromesitylenes in which one of the nitro groups stands in the side chain. We cannot find that he ana- lyzed these salts to determine whether they were true salts or addition products with sodic hydrate. If the latter, they would have a strong bearing on the discussion given above. Another series of experiments was tried with aromatic bodies rich in * Am. Chem. Journ. (Remsen), XIX. 201. t This may have been due to a small quantity of a thiophene compound. As a rule we have not considered that a colored product belonged to the class we are studying unless we could obtain a copious precipitate of it with benzol. t Lobry de Bruyn, Rec. Trav. Chim. Pays-Bas, XIV. 95. § Ber. d. chem. Ges„ 1896, 2201. 266 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. negative radicals bul containing no nitro groups; for, if colors of the Bame class could be obtained from these, it would prove that the addition of the alkaline Bubstance t <><>k place on the benzol ring and not on the nitro group. We were encouraged to undertake these experiments by the Btriking resemblance in properties* between our colored products ami the green bodies made by Aatre f from the action of sodic alcoholati - on qui le. In the quinoms, however, the formation of hemiacetalsj is possible, and it may be that the green bodies belonged to tliis class : w 6 accordingly used for our new experiments Bubstances in which the forma- tion of hemiacetals could not occur, such as trimesic triethylester, which is especially lit for these experiments, since it has a still Btronger re- semblance to trinitrobenzol than quinone has, because it contain-, three negative radicals symmetrically disposed. We have not Bucceeded in obtaining any colored or other addition-products from this Bubstance, or from the free trimesic acid, although the attempts have been repeated often and under varying conditions. Nor did we have better sua with other bodies free from nitro groups, such as phloroglucine, or n cine; pyrocatechine.it is true, gave a temporary coloration with Bodic methylate, but we think this reaction does not belong to the series under discussion. These experiments, as they have given negative results, throw no light on the constitution of our colored compounds. It has been shown earlier in this paper that the only theory as yet proposed for these colored compounds (that of Victor Meyer) is inadmiss- ible, because they are addition-, not Bubstitution-products. The facts now at our disposal are not sufficient to furnish an absolute proof of the structure of these compounds, but it is possible to show that certain constitutional formulas explain these facts better than others, and it seems to us that the work has arrived at a point where such a discussion of the possible formulas will be useful. In this discussion the following proper- ties must be considered, as they seem to be characteristic of all the members of this group. (1) The very marked color. (2) The ease with which they are decomposed even by dilute acids, giving the aromatic constituent unaltered. (3) Their behavior with alcohols, which we describe here in some detail, because the principal observations are new. When the methyl compound CV.II ,i N< V .i ( )( 1 1 \a< X 1 1 | is allowed to stand lor some time with benzyl alcohol, both the methyls are replaced by benzyls, and the compound CV,II.j(N(),.);OC;II7Na( K'7II7 is formed. * These Proceeding. XXXIII 17.".. t Oomptea Rendus, ('XXI. 580 (is1.);,). J These Proceedings, XXX. 411, JACKSON AND GAZZOLO. — NITRO COMPOUNDS. 267 Conversely this benzyl compound is converted into the corresponding methyl compound if boiled with methyl alcohol. In the same way * the methyl is converted into the ethyl compound by crystallization from common alcohol. f There are three possible ways in which these compounds can be formed : — First, the addition of the sodic methylate (or other alkaline substance) may take place upon the carbon atoms of the benzol ring. Second, it may take place on the nitro group alone. Third, it may take place partly on the nitro group and partly on the carbon of the benzol ring. The first method of addition, that on the carbon alone, seems to us much less probable than the second or third, in which a nitro group takes part, especially since the work of Nef and others has shown that the sodium is attached to the nitro group in the sodium salt of nitromethane. As we have succeeded in finding no analogous case in which an alkaline substance is added to carbon atoms with the formation of a strongly col- ored product, we think that this first hypothesis is not worthy of a detailed discussion. Turning to the formulas in which the nitro group is affected, we have the second method of addition, in which the sodic methylate is attached to the nitro group only ; this would give rise to a structure such as the following : % — I. OCH3 C6II,OCII3(NOo)„— N ll\ O ONa; while the third hypothesis, according to which both the nitro group and the carbon of the benzol ring take part in the addition, would be * These Proceedings, XXX HI. 177. t Some experiments of less importance may be mentioned here, with the remark that they are not incompatible with the formula adopted later as giving the best explanation of the observed facts. Bromine decomposes CbH3(N0.2)3[CHNa(COOCoH.-)o]3, giving trinitrobenzol as one of the prod- ucts of the reaction. No salts with other basic radicals could be obtained from QH.^NOo^OCHjNaOCHg. No sodic iodide was formed by heating C„Il3(N02)3[CHNa(COOC2H5).2]3 with ethyl iodide to 140°. On the other hand, it looked as if benzoyl chloride acted on these bodies, but the end of the college year prevented us from studying this reaction. \ This is analogous to that given by Hantzsch and Rinckenberger, Ber. d. cheru. Ges., XXXII. 628, for their dinitroethanester acid. 268 INGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. represented by the formulas given below, in which it is supposed that an iaonitro * compound is formed with ihe development of aquinoid structure in the benzol ring. The difference between the two formulas is that in II. the quinoid structure is developed in the para position; in 111. in the ortho position. II. III. 0=N-0-Na 0=N 0 Xa We have used the formula of the addition product from sodic methylate and trinitranisol, as it is the simplest that will Berve in the argument which follows. In applying these formulas to the malonic ester com- pounds it must he assumed that the malonic ester radical which is added to the benzol ring has the constitution -OG\OC,IIr()-( 1 1('< )()( 1 1,, as, if it is assumed to he -CH(COOC8H6)j, we should have an attachment of carbon to carbon incompatible with the instability of these compounds. In applying Formulas I., II., and III. to the explanation of the observed properties of these compounds, we consider fust the strong color, their most marked characteristic; this is explained by the quinoid structure in Formulas II. or III., but is not accounted for by Formula I., since, accord- ing to Ilantzsch and Rinckenherger,t their substance CHg OC II. CH-NO / \ N02 OK , which contains the group characteristic of Formula I., has only a pale yellow color. The easy decomposition of the colored body by hydrochloric acid with regeneration of the trinitranisol, from which it was formed, is accounted for by either of the three formulas I., II., or III., hut the preference should be given to II. or III., since Ilantzsch and Rinckenherger | state that their * Compare Ilantzsch, Ber. d. chem. Ges., XXXII. 576-641, and also the ortho- benzoldioxime of Zincke and Sehwarz, Ann. Chem. (Liehig), CCCVII. 28. t Ber. d. chem. Ges., XXXII. G28. { Ibid. JACKSON AND GAZZOLO. — NITRO COMPOUNDS. 269 CH3 OC2H6 \ / CH-NO / \ N02 OH is a true stable acid ten times as strong as acetic acid, and it is fair to suppose, therefore, that the substance OCH3 C6H2OCH3(N02)2NO \ OH (formed by hydrochloric acid on our sodium salt, if it has Formula I.) would also be comparatively stable, and not drop at ouce iuto the trini- tranisol, which, as a matter of fact, is formed immediate]}' by the action of hydrochloric acid on the colored compound. On the other hand, this rapid decomposition by acid would be explained according to Formula II. or III. by the strong tendency of quinoid bodies to pass iuto the hy- droquinoid form, which might easily cause the splitting off of methyl alcohol as soon as the atom of sodium was replaced by hydrogen. This rapid decomposition with removal of methyl alcohol when the colored bodies are treated with dilute hydrochloric acid recalls the similar behav- ior of the dichlordimethoxyquinonedimethylhemiacetal ; * and the simi- larity of these phenomena may tell in favor of classing the colored salts with quinone derivatives, although the two reactions are not strictly analogous. The third point in favor of Formula II. or III. is the replacement of the two methyls in CcII.,(XO.,):;OCTI3NaOCH3 by benzyls when the com- pound is soaked in benzyl alcohol, and the reverse change when the benzyl compound is boiled with methyl alcohol. As under the same conditions benzyl alcohol has no action on methyl picrate, or methyl alcohol on benzyl picrate, it is obvious that the complete replacement of one radical by the other here depends on the structure of the addition product ; and, whereas Formula I. gives no reason why the change should proceed beyond the methyl attached to the nitro group, it is easy to see that in a substance constituted like Formula II. or III. any reagent which affected one methyl would act in a similar way on the other, so that the methyl compound would be completely converted into C6H2(NO,)3OC7H7NaOC7H7. * These Proceedings, XXX. 431. 270 PROCEEDINGS OF THE A.MEBICAH ACADEMY. The inferences drawn in the foregoing discussion may be briefly > pitulated as follows ; It is improbable that the Bodic methylate is added to the carbon of the benzol ring only. A quinoid formula II. or III. explains the observed tacts better than one in which the soilic methylate i- added to the nitro group alone (I.), but this latter structure is not definitely excluded. Under these circumstances we think it would be premature to contrive names for these colored bodies, or to give struc- tural formulas in the experimental part of this paper. We hope that the continuation of the work, now in progress in this Laboratory, will definitely settle the constitution of these colored substances. Experimental Part. Preparation of Picryl Chloride. As the method of making picryl chloride used by us in this work was an improvement on that given by l'i>ani," we describe it. L'o grains of dry picric acid were mixed with 50 grams of phosphoric pentachloride in a large Erlenmeyer lla.ik provided with an air condenser, and heated on the water bath until the violent reaction had ceased, and the contents had assumed a very dark brown color. When cold, the flask was sur- rounded with ice. and its contents treated with ice water, care being taken to avoid any considerable rise of temperature. The precipitate formed in this way was filtered out, dried, washed with ether, and crys- tallized from a mixture of benzol and alcohol to purify it. The advan- tages in our method are that there is a considerable saving of time, and there is much less danger that the substance will be converted into a tarry decomposition product, as happens in Pisaui's method if the heat runs too high in either the preparation or the removal of the phosphoric oxychloride by distillation. Action of Sodic Acetacetic Ester with Trinitntnisol. In our first experiment in this direction we prepared our sodic acet- acetic ester with sodic methylate. and obtained a red precipitate which gave the following result on analysis: — 0.2438 gram of the substance gave 0.0570 gram of sodic sulphate. Calculated for CeIUNO,130CII,Na0CU,. Found. Sodium 7.G9 7.06 * Ann. Chem. (Liebig), XCII. 320. JACKSON AND GAZZOLO. — NITRO COMPOUNDS. 271 It was evident, therefore, that we had only the color formed from sodic methylate, and that the acetacetic ester took no part in the reaction. In order, then, to obtain an acetacetic ester addition, it was obviously neces- sary to exclude all alcohol and alcoholates ; we accordingly proceeded as follows. To an excess of acetacetic ester mixed with beuzol a quantity of sodium in the form of ribbon was added (in our later preparations the amount of sodium used provided three atoms of it to each molecule of trinitranisol). After the sodium had disappeared, the liquid thus obtained was added drop by drop to a benzol solution of trinitranisol. It is un- necessary to say that absolute benzol was used in all this work. The first drop imparted a deep vermilion color to the solution, and this color became more and more intense as the reaction proceeded. During the process the mixture was kept cool by surrounding the beaker with ice. After all the sodic acetacetic ester had been added, the liquid was mixed with an excess of anhydrous benzol, which threw down a semi-gelatinous or oily precipitate. This was filtered out, washed with benzol, and pressed upon a porous plate, all these operations being carried on as quickly as possible. The dark colored dried product crumbled easily into a red amorphous powder of a much darker color than the addition product from sodic methylate. It was dried in vacuo, and analyzed with the following results : — I. 0.2376 gram of the substance gave 0.0740 gram of sodic sulphate. II. 0.2196 gram of the substance gave 0.0697 gram of sodic sulphate. III. 0.1928 gram of the substance gave 0.0700 gram of sodic sulphate. IV. 0.2596 gram of the substance gave on combustion 0.4028 gram of carbonic dioxide and 0.1148 gram of water. In this combustion the substance was mixed with chromic oxide to drive out car- bonic dioxide from the carbonate formed, and was spread out in a long copper boat, which was heated gently and gradually to avoid explosions. Calculated for Found. CcU.,(NO,)30Cn3(CH.1('OCIINaC00C.,U5)3 I. II. III. IV. Sodium 9.87 10.10 10.28 11.75 Carbon 42.91 42.32 Hydrogen 4.57 4.91 There can be ho doubt, therefore, as each analysis is of the product of a separate preparation, that the substance is a definite compound, and is formed by the addition of three molecules of sodic acetacetic ester to one of trinitranisol. The variation in the percentages of sodium in the 272 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY^ different specimens is do more than would be expected, when it isremem- bered that the product was purified only by trashing with benzoL Properties of the Addition Product of Trinitranisol and Sodic At Ester, < ,11 NOa)8OCH8(CH,( 0< HNa< OOC,B '1 bia Bubstance forms a deep crimson powder, which we have not buo- ded in bringing into a crystalline state. It is decidedly stable for a body of this class, keeping for even Beveral days in a desiccator, but finally decomposing into a black tar. When heated it is slightly explo- sive. It dissolves completely in water without decomposition, to judge from the color; is soluble in common alcohol, but gives a turbid solu- tion ; ou the other hand, it dissolves, forming a clear solution, in methyl alcohol; soluble in acetone; insoluble in benzol, ether, chloroform, car- bonic disulphide, or ligroin. Acids decompose it instantly, as was shown by the destruction of the color. Action of Sodic Malonic Ester on Trinitranisol. Two grams of trinitranisol dissolved in absolute benzol were mixed with a benzol solution of 4.0 grams of sodic malouic ester prepared by the direct action of sodium on the malonic ester. — that is, three mole- cules of the sodium ester to each molecule of trinitranisol. As the two solutions came together, an intense cherry red color appeared, with the formation of a thick gelatinous precipitate of the same Color, which increased in volume and deepened in color as the reaction continued. After the mixture had stood some time at ordinary temperatures, a large enough quantity of benzol was added to produce complete precipitation, the product was then filtered rapidly, washed with benzol till the filtrate was colorless, pressed quickly on the porous plate, and dried in vacuo. This reaction seemed to run more quickly and cleanly than the corre- sponding one with sodic acetacetic ester, giving a purer product which was very easily handled and washed. I. 0.2028 Lrr:im of the substance gave 0.0,">36 gram of Bodic sulphate. II. 0.3027 gram of the substance gave 0.07'.H> gram of sodic sulphate. Calculated for Found. C6U,(N0,)30CH OHN^GOOOjHg),], I. n. Sodium 8.74 8.0G 8.52 JACKSON AND GAZZOLO. — NITRO COMPOUNDS. 273 Properties of the Addition Product of Trinitranisol and Sodic Malonic Ester, C6H2(N02)8OCH3[CHNa(COOC2H5)2]3. This substance is an amorphous powder with a deep maroon color. We have not succeeded in crystallizing it. It is one of the most stable bodies of its class, as when exposed to the air it usually remains unaltered for nearly five days ; at the end of this time it begins to grow moist, then turns black, and is finally converted into a black powder with a some- what tarry consistency. When heated, it explodes with a slight puff, but with little or no noise; it is, however, apparently stable at as high a temperature as 140°. It dissolves completely in water, forming a clear cherry red solution ; soluble, although more slowly, in ethyl alcohol ; completely and quickly soluble in methyl alcohol, but this solution seems to be attended by some decomposition, as a fadiug of the color was ob served ; soluble in acetone ; insoluble in ether, benzol, chloroform, car bonic disulphide, or ligroin. A few drops of hydrochloric acid added to its aqueous solution changes the red color to yellow instantly, and causes a precipitate which, on filtration, solution iu alcohol, and evaporation of the solvent, proves to be a reddish oil containing malonic ester, to judge from the smell, and trinitranisol, since this substance crystallizes out on standing. As this substance was more stable than most others of its class, we tried the action of ethyliodide upon it in the hope of replacing the atoms of sodium with ethyl. For this purpose 0.5 gram of the addition prod- uct was heated in a sealed tube with ethyl iodide, at first to 100°, but, as this produced no apparent effect, later to 140° for an hour and a half, and then it was kept at 100° for two days. The contents of the tube were treated with benzol, after the ethyl iodide had evaporated, which gave a red solution and a black residue; the residue was extracted with water, and the extract gave no test for an iodide. It is obvious, there- fore, that the ethyl iodide had not acted at all, but that the unmanage- able black product was produced by the decomposition of the addition compouud. Action of Sodic Malonic Ester with Trinitrobenzol. The sodic malonic ester was prepared with sodium alone, benzol was used as the solvent, and the proportions were three molecules of the ester to one of the trinitrobenzol. As soon as the solutions were mixed, a deep scarlet lumpy precipitate was formed ; it was found best, there- fore, to add the solution of the sodic malonic ester in small portions at a vol. xxxv. — 18 274 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. time with constant stirring. The beaker w ed by immersing it in ice. The precipitate was washed with benzol until the filtrate was color less, and then dried on :i porous plate and in vacuo. Analyses I. and II. are of two different products prepared in this way. As in these prepara- tions and the other similar ones described in this paper we bad used tln-ee molecules of the .-odium compound to one of the nitro body, there Beemed Borne danger that our products might be nol definite compounds, but mixtures of an addition compound containing only one atom of Bodium, with the two additional molecules of the sodic malonic ester (or the corresponding reagent) precipitated by the large excess of the benzol. This objection to our results did not seem a \«r\ importanl because the} agreed better with the theoretical numbers than would be probable if this theory were true, but we felt that it was necessary to tesl it by ex- periment, ami for this purpose repeated the preparation, using two mole- cules of sodic malonic ester to each molecule of trinitrohenzol < I gram of trinitrobenzol and 1.7 grams of the sodic malonic ester). Analysis III. was made with the specimen prepared in this way. and proves that our suhstances are definite compounds and not mixtures, since it agrees with those prepared with three molecules of the sodium ester. I. 0.2038 gram of the Bubstance gave 0.05 1 1 gram of sodic sulphate. II. 0.2 lo 1 gram of the substance gave 0.0590 gram of sodic sulphate. III. 0.2G30 gram of the substauce gave 0.0756 gram of sodic sulphate. Calculated for C0II3(NO,t eiiv, OOOOA)&1» Sodium 9.09 Properties of the Addition Product of Trinitrobenzol and Sodic Malonic Ester, CcII,(NO,).,[CI I Nai ( !< K K ,1 1, >„],. This body has a rich maroon color brighter than that of the corre- sponding compound of trinitranisol and sodic malonic ester. It is stable for some time if kept dry and cool, otherwise it gradually undergoes decomposition, as shown by its change of color and becoming gummy. In its other properties it resembles the corresponding trinitranisol coin- pound most closely. When treated with hydrochloric acid the color is destroyed, and a thick oily brownish yellow precipitate is formed, by washing this with small quantities of alcohol to remove the malonic ester the trinitrobenzol was recovered in quantity, and recognized by its melting-point, 121°-122°, after recrystallization from benzol. As soon, therefore, as the three atoms of sodium are replaced by hydrogen, the addition product splits into its constituents. I. Found. II. III. 8.G6 8.87 9.31 JACKSON AND GAZZOLO. NITRO COMPOUNDS. 275 Action of Bromine on the Addition Product of Trinitrobenzol and Sodic Malonic Ester. The addition product C6H3(N02)3[CHNa(COOC2H5)2]3 was added in small successive portions to a chloroform solution of bromine cooled by immersing the vessel in ice. The color of the solid changed instantly from maroon to white. After the mixture had stood over night, the solid was filtered out, and the filtrate allowed to evaporate spontaneously, when it left a thick brownish red oil, which after standing two days deposited crystals identified as trinitrobenzol by their melting-point, 121°, the form of the crystals, and the formation of the characteristic red color with sodic alcoholates. The portion insoluble in chloroform, after thorough washing with chloroform and boiling benzol, proved to be sodic bromide. This experiment does not absolutely disprove the formation of some bromtrinitrobenzol, since a small amount of it might have remained dis- solved in the oil from which the trinitrobenzol was deposited, but it shows that trinitrobenzol is one of the principal products of the reaction ; and as this separated from the oil in a nearly pure state, it is very prob- able at least that no bromtrinitrobenzol was formed. Action of Sodic Acetacetic Ester on Trinitrobenzol. The product was prepared in the same way as the corresponding addi- tion compound of trinitrobenzol and sodic malonic ester. In this case the precipitate had a deeper red color than that produced with sodic malonic ester, and the reaction ran less neatly. Analyses of three different preparations dried in vacuo gave the following results : — I. 0.18G5 gram of the substance gave 0.0623 gram of sodic sulphate. II. 0.2017 gram of the substance gave 0.0G58 gram of sodic sulphate. III. 0.2104 gram of the substance gave 0.0680 gram of sodic sulphate. Calculated for Found. CcH3(N02)s[CH3C0CUNaC00C2II5]3, I. II. III. Sodium 10.32 10.82 10.56 10.47 The addition product of trinitrobenzol and sodic acetacetic ester is a rich brownish red amorphous powder darker than the corresponding product from trinitrobenzol and sodic malonic ester. It is fairly stable, if kept dry. In its other properties it is exactly similar to the colored substances already described in this paper. 276 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. Preparation of the Tri Sodic Amylate Addition Product of Trinitrobenzol. To a benzol solution of one gram of trinitrobenzol 1.5 grams of sodic amylate were added gradually, care being taken to keep the mixture cool. The proportions are three molecules of the amylate to each mole- cule <>f trinitrobenzol.' A heavy scarlet precipitate was formed as soon as the substances came together; this was filtered quickly, thoroughly washed with benzol, and dried on a porous plate, after whicb it was analyzed, with the following results: — I. 0.2596 gram of the substance gave 0.1070 gram of sodic sulphate. II. 0. 1 7(hi gram of the substance gave 0.0680 gram of sodic sulphate. III. 0.3190 gram of the substance gave 0.1288 gram of sodic sulphate. sulated for Found. CeU.; No CgHnONa), I. II. HI Sodium 12.71 13.36 12.96 13.07 Properties of the Tri Sodic Ami/late Addition Compound of Trinitro- benzol, C6H8(NOa)8(C6HuONa)8. Tlic dry substance is a dark crimson amorphous powder. It is re- markably stable for bodies of this class, since it did not change in color, or show am tendency to become moist, even after standing for two weeks in contact with the air. It is soluble in ethyl or methyl alcohol or ace- tone; very soluble in water; insoluble in benzol, chloroform, carbonic disulphide, or ligroin. The strong acids decompose it at once, giving trinitrobenzol as one of the decomposition products. Upon treating trinitrobenzol with sodic methylate or sodic ethylate under the same conditions, products were obtained with the following formulas, if we may judge from the sodium determinations : C6H8(NOs)8(CH8ONa)8CH8OH and C(,II,(NO,),(aiI6ONa)3C2II-OII, but as these seem an insufficient foundation for such formulas, we shall postpone the description of these substances until we have collected suffi- cient analytical data to establish their composition. They are both red, but decompose more rapidly than the amylate, becoming moist and dis- colored after exposure to the air for a few hours. Heating also decom- posed the methylate body, so that the presence of methyl aleohol of crystallization could not be. established in this way. The discussion of the conditions under which these tri bodies are formed instead of the mono compounds will also be postponed until it has been thoroughly settled by further experiments. JACKSON AND GAZZOLO. — NITRO COMPOUNDS. 277 Attempts to obtain Colored Compounds with other Reagents. Sodic phenylate, made by adding sodium to an excess of phenol, gave with trinitrobenzol a clear red color, but no precipitate. A similar result was obtained when an alcoholic solution of sodic phenylate was added to a benzol solution of trinitranisol ; but this latter coloration does not necessarily proceed from the sodic phenylate, as part of it may have been converted into sodic ethylate by the alcohol. Sodic hydrate also gives a red color with trinitrobenzol, as was observed by Hepp,* but as there seemed little chance of isolating this in a state fit for analysis, we did not attempt to study it. The sodium salt of phloroglucine, made by treating an excess of it with sodic hydrate, gave a light reddish color when treated with a ben- zol solution of trinitrobenzol, and upon adding an excess of benzol a most uninviting sticky precipitate was formed which it would have been foolish to try to analyze. We doubt whether this colored substance was really a phloroglucine compound, as it is very possible that it was formed from a little sodic hydrate produced by the decomposition of the sodium salt of the phloroglucine. Benzyl cyanide treated with metallic sodium, after the slight action with the sodium was finished, was mixed with trinitrobenzol. Upon stirring for a few seconds a deep blood-red precipitate appeared in large quantity ; but it was so unstable that even the addition of benzol to wash out the excess of benzylcyanide converted it into a black tarry mass, so that we were obliged to give up all idea of analyzing it. Attempts to obtain Colored Compounds from other Nitro Bodies. Picramide, C6H2(N02)3NH2, treated with a mixture of sodic methylate, methyl ulcohol, aud anhydrous benzol, gave at once a strongly colored dark crimson solution, which deposited a brick red precipitate ; but in collecting it for analysis the substance decomposed as soon as it dried on the porous plate, forming a brownish mass which later became tarry. We were unable, therefore, to make an analysis. Trichlorbromdinitrobenzol (Cl3 1. 3. 5. Br2(N02)2 4. 6.) gives a strong vermilion color with an alcoholic solution of sodic ethylate, as already stated by us in a previous paper. | Dinitrotoluol ((N02)2 2. 4.) melting at 70°. 5 gave with sodic methylate * Ann. Chem. (Liebig), CCXV. 359. t These Proceedings, XXXIV. 148. 278 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. a deep vermilion colored solution, from which a precipitate was obtained with an excess of benzol. A benzol solution of the dinitrotoluol gave with ->»li<- malonic ester a crimson red solution and u colored precipitate, but both this and the precipitate of tin- tnethylate compound decomposed while drying on the porous plate. Symmetrica] dinitroxylol melting at 98 ' ((CH,),1. 8, | N< >. ■ 1. 6 with sodic methylate after a few seconds ;i faint greenish color, which turned rapidly to a deep purple, ami fiually became brownish black. It was evidently therefore very unstable. Neither sodic malonic ester nor sodic acetacetic ester gave any trace of color. Trinitroxylol ((CII,t., l..".. (N02)82. 1. 6.) gave a deep cherry red solu- tion with either sodic methylate or a benzol solution of sodic malonic ester or of sodic acetacetic ester. An excess of benzol precipitated from each of these solutions a gummy reddish body which decomposed before it could be prepared for analysis. In these cases the decomposition- product bad a pinkish white color. Neither dinitromesitylene nor trinitromesitylene gave a trace of color after standing with sodic methylate. At the moment the trinitromesity- lene was mixed with the sodic methylate we thought in one or two c we perceived a very faint coloration, but it was so indistinct that we felt doubtful of its existence, and at best it was very evanescent Sodic ma- lonic ester and sodic acetacetic ester also gave negative results with both these, bodies. Dinitropbloroglucine trietbyletber, CcH(OC,Il l8(N04)j, gave no color with sodic methylate, sodic malonic ester, or sodic acetacetic ester. Attempts to obtain Colored Compounds from Bodies icltirli contain no Xt'tro Group. l'vrocatecldn gave no color with sodic malonic ester, but with sodic methylate a bright green color was formed along the edges, which soon darkened, and finally gave a black oil. This coloration is probably sim- ilar to those observed by Kunz Krause * on treating various phenols with sodium and alcohol, but we do not feel sure that these colors are related to those obtained from nitro compounds. Resorcine gave no color with either sodic methylate, sodic malonic ester, or sodic acetacetic ester. The same negative results were obtained with phloroglucine. Neither trimesicacid ((COOII)3 1. 3. 5.) nor its ester C0II,(CO(M H,t:! * Arch, riiarm., CCXXXVI. 642. JACKSON AND GAZZOLO. — NITRO COMPOUNDS. 279 i gave any sign of color with sodic methylate, although the experiments were tried with great care, and under conditions which gave colors even with some of the less reactive nitro compounds. Experiments on the Replacement of the AJhjl Radical in the Colored Compounds. Action of Msthyl Alcohol on the Benzyl Compound. — The addition product of benzyl picrate and sodic benzylate, discovered by W. F. Boos and one of us,* was heated with methyl alcohol for about half an hour, and the methyl alcohol was then allowed to evaporate at ordinary tem- peratures. The product consisted of glistening scarlet crystals, which were at once decolorized by hydrochloric acid, yielding a substance melt- ing at 64°, and crystallizing in yellow rhombic plates from benzol. It was therefore trinitrauisol, and the methyl alcohol had replaced the benzyl groups in the original addition compound by two methyls. Action of Methyl Alcohol on Benzyl Picrate. — Benzyl picrate was prepared according to the method given by Boos and one of us.f The melting point of this substance is 145°, not 115° as given in the paper just cited; the number 115° was due to a mistake in copying the melting point from the note-book. A quantity of the benzyl picrate was recrys- tallized four times from boiling methyl alcohol, and after each crystal- lization the melting point remained constant at 145°, thus showing that the benzyl picrate is not converted into methyl picrate by methyl alcohol at its boiling point. Action of Benzyl Alcohol on the Addition Product of Trinitranisol and Sodic Methylate. — The colored compound was dissolved in benzyl alcohol with the aid of gentle heat, and the mixture was allowed to stand at ordinary temperatures until crystals separated. The red substance ob- tained in this way was decomposed with hydrochloric acid, when the product after crystallization showed the constant melting point 145°, and was therefore benzyl picrate. In this case, therefore, the benzyl alcohol had converted the colored methyl compound into the corresponding benzyl compound. Action of Benzyl Alcohol on Trinitranisol. — A solution of trinitranisol in benzyl alcohol was allowed to stand in a paraffin desiccator until all the benzyl alcohol had evaporated ; the residue showed the melting point of trinitranisol, 64°. * These Proceedings, XXXIII. 177. t Ibid., 180. 280 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. Benzyl alcohol, therefore, does not affect trinitraniso] ander the condi- tion- used in the experiment described in the last paragraph. Attempts to prepare Derivatives from the Addition Compound of Trinitranisol • " Criterion of Somite Li mils. In determining the number of somites found in the body of the leech, it has been found necessary to rely solely on a stud\ of the nervous Bystem. It would seem natural, therefore, to look in the same direction tor a solution of the problem concerning the limits of the somite. CASTLE. — METAMERISM OF THE HIRUDINEA. , 287 "Whitman ('92) has shown that in the genus Glossiphonia (Clcpsine) each distinct ganglion gives off three pairs of nerves, which are dis- tributed respectively to the ring in which the ganglion typically lies (sensory ring), the ring before it, and the ring behind it (Fig. 1, VIII.).* If we take neurorneres as criteria of somites, the three rings thus innervated from a common souree should be regarded as constituting a somite. According to the commonly accepted view, however, the last two of these rings with the next following ring of the body, which is innervated from a different ganglion, represent a somite. See Figure 1, vi r. The only other view possible would be to regard the somite as com- posed of a sensory ring and the two rings which precede it, but I am not aware that such a view has ever been suggested, and I am unacquainted with any facts which could be presented in its support. Accordingly discussion may be limited to the two views before stated, which are graphically presented at the right and left margins respectively of Figure 1. a. Somite Reduction in Glossiphonia. What first suggested to me the possibility that neuroinere limits may coincide with somite limits, was a study of the method of somite reduc- tion at the ends of the body of Glossiphonia. See Figure 1, I.— IV. ; Figure 2, XXV.-XVII. In the regions indicated the metameric sense organs occur, not as in the middle of the body on every third ring, but on every second ring, or even on successive rings. This fact shows that in those particular regions the somite contains but two Hugs, or, in extreme cases, only one. If we regard such somites as having had originally each its full quota of three rings, we must suppose that one or two of the three primitive rings have subsequently disappeared. This disappearance might be explained as due either to a complete suppression of a ring or to its fusion with an adjacent ring. A comparative study of the abbreviated somites in different species of Glossiphonia shows that the latter process is invariably the first step in the abbreviation of a somite. An examination of Figures 1 and 2 will make this clear. In the case of somite IV. (Fig. 1) a fusion has taken place between the sensory ring and the ring which precedes it. A similar union has occurred in somites III. (Fig. 1) and XXV. (Fig. 2). In the case of * This leaves out of account a branch (rf, Fig. 1) which arises from the posterior of the three nerves and is distributed to sense organs on the dorsal surface of all three rings innervated by the ganglion. •J- PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADKMY. Ill/,— iv/. Vl/:' VII. VIII: Fig. 1. Dorsal view of the anterior part of tlie body of Glossfphonia para- sitica Say (Clepsine holhnsis Whitman), showing in the right half of the figure the nervous system ; in the left half, the lymph system (stippled). The pear-shaped dark hodies shown on certain rinirs are dorsal sense organs. '/., st mi i p of a nerve branch which innervates dorsal Bense organs on all three rings of a Bomite. nph'po., ney>hropore. va.t, transverse lymph vessel. Somite limits are indicated by roman numerals, at the lefl of the figure (I.-VII.'), according to Whitman's view ; at the right (I. -VIII), according to the view of the writer. After Whit- man ('02), simplified. CASTLE. — METAMERISM OP THE HIRUDINEA. 289 somites I. and XXVII. a fusion has taken place between the sensory ring and both the adjacent rings, the one which follows as well as the one which precedes it. An intermediate condition is found in somites II., XXV., and XXVI., where the ring following the sensory ring is XXIII.' xxiv/ s. y ^y J>xm xxv/ < . _ .xxv_ XXVII. Fig. 2. Posterior end of the body of Glossiphonia stagnate L. (Clepsine biocu- lata Saw), dorsal view. Somite limits as commonly placed arc sliown at the left of the figure (XXIII. '-XXVII. ') ; as the writer would place them, at the right (XXIV.-XXVII.). considerably reduced in size, but still distinct from the sensory ring anterior to it. The amount of shortening which the somite undergoes is thus seen to be increasingly greater as one progresses from the middle toward either end of the body. The successive steps of abbreviation are : — 1. A fusion takes place between the sensory ring and the ring which precedes it. 2. The ring which follows the sensory ring is reduced in size. 3. It fuses with the sensory ring preceding it. Accordingly, at the conclusion of this process, we find united in a single ring three primitively distinct rings, — a sensory ring and the two rings adjacent to it. But these three rings are typically innervated from the same ganglion (Fig. 1, VII., VIII.). This fact substantiates the view already expressed, that neuromere limits coincide with somite limits. If we do not admit that neuromere limits coincide with somite limits, vol. xxxv. — 19 290 IMMM'KI iMNi.- OF THE AMERK AN \< Mm Ml Whitman's ('92) theory that all the Bomitea of the body are of equal morphologica] value becomes untenable. For, suppose the bodj to eon- tain thirty-four distinct ganglia, each innervating three separate rings (the hypothetical primitive condition realized in all unabbreviated so- mites). Now if the Bomite limits be marked nil so as to include in a somite a Bensory ring and the two rings following it, a- is the practice of Whitman ami others (Fig. •'!, left halt, compare Fig. 1. left half), we shall have the absurdity of a ring at the anterior end of the bodj beloi ing to /<"/"■ of the thirty-four somites, ami Bomite XXXIV. at the post* - rior end of the body will contain only tlOO rings. On the Other hand, it' neuromere limits and somite limits are regarded as coinciding, all somites of the body are of « iqua 1 morpholo° i- cal value, each somite consisting of three rings innervated from a si: ganglion (Fig. ;!- right half). 2. Septa and other Metameric Organs as Criteria of Somite limits. If we are unwilling to be guided solely by the nervous system in determining somite limits, what oth- er criterion can we find ? Vaillant ('70) suggested a search for septa. But septa such as are found in Chse- topoda are wanting in the leech, unless we so regard (he entire blocks of mesodermal tissue which lie be- tween the transverse lymph vessels. The position of the lymph vessels is XXX XXXttl.' XXXIV.' XXXII. XXXIII. XXXIV. Fig. 3. Diagram showing tlic relation indicated by Stippling in the left half between neuromerea and somites in the 0f Figure 1 in the ease of Glos- i„„iy of a leech with three-ringed so- aphonia parasitica Say (Clepsine mites. — at the left of the diagram , ,, . ..... N _, . ' vm» r » »i ■ r hoUensts Whitman). 1 he transverse 1 1 \ \ \I\ i, according to the view of Whitman; at the right (I.-XXXIV.), lymph vessels are found regularly in according to the writer's view. the sensory ring of each Bomite ( r ig. 1 , >•((. f.). It is generally admitted that the lymph vessels represent a greatly reduced eel, mi. The blocks of tissue between the transverse vessels arc. then, morphologically equiv- alent to the Bepta of Cbaetopoda. But the middle of each such block falls CASTLE. METAMERISM OF THE HIRUDINEA. 291 midway between the sensory rings, exactly the position indicated for the somite limits by the study of the nervous system (Fig. 1, right half). In his work on "The Embryology of Clepsine," Whitman (78) states that the testes appear in the septa between the mesodermal somites. Now the position of the testis in the adult is regularly in the two non- sensory rings, that is, exactly midway between successive sensory rings. This is just the position in which the boundary between somites should be on the grounds already examined. Crop diverticula are repeated at metameric intervals throughout the middle part of the body in most species of Glossiphonia. They inva- riably arise, so far as my observations go, in the seusory ring of the somite, a fact readily explained by the occurrence in that position of the interseptal portions of the coelom, represented by the transverse lymph vessels. There is one other set of organs which is metameric in its arrangement, — the nephridia. A single uephridium, according to the account of Oka ('94), lies principally in the ring which contains the nephropore (seusory ring, Fig. 1, nph'po.) and in the two rings which precede it. Accordingly the nephridium is not confined to a single somite, either as somites are commonly limited or as I have suggested placing their limits. This need not surprise us, since in the Cha^topoda also the uephridium lies partly in the somite preceding that in which the greater part of it is found. III. Limits of the Somite in the Gxathobdellid.e. Let us next inquire whether the suggested criteria of somite limits are applicable also in the case of the Gnathobdellidae. 1. Relation of Five-ringed to Three-ringed Type of Somite. Whitman suggested and Bristol ('99) has demonstrated that the five- ringed type of somite, found in the Gnathobdellidae, may be derived from the three-ringed type, found in the Rhynchobdellidae, by supposing that each of the two non-sensory rings of the latter type has divided, while the sensory ring has remained unchanged. A comparison of the distribution of the nerves arising from a single ganglion in Glossiphonia (Fig. 1) and in Nephelis (Fig. 4) shows the correctness of the homology suggested. The anterior two of the three metameric nerves of Glossiphonia are united in the case of Nephelis (Fig. 4, a). They are distributed, as we should expect, to the sensory ring and the two rings which precede it. The posterior nerve of Glossi- 292 PROCEI DIXG9 "i llli: AMI RIC \N ACADEMY. vii/.; FiuuKK 4. CASTLE. — METAMERISM OP THE HIRUDINEA. 293 Fig. 4. The first seven somites and part of the eighth somite of Nephelis lateralis, dorsal view, a., anterior nerve ; d., dorsal branch of posterior nerve, which supplies nervous structures in all five rings of a somite ; ami. n., nerve ring found typically in each of the two annuli adjacent to a sensory annulus ; p, pos- terior nerve ; z, a branch of the anterior nerve which ramifies in annulus 1 of its somite. Roman numerals indicate the somite limits, at the left of the figure (I.'-VII/), according to the view of Bristol; at the right of the figure (I.-VIII.), accordiug to the writer's view. After Bristol ('99), simplified. phonia (Fig. 1) retains its separateness in Nephelis, and is distributed chiefly to the two rings which follow the sensory ring. In Glossiphonia the posterior nerve gives off a branch (d, Fig. 1), which is connected with sense organs on the dorsal surface of all three rings. In Nephelis the posterior nerve gives rise, to a homologous branch (d, Fig. 4), which is distributed to sense organs on the dorsal surface of rings 1, 3, and 5, and is also connected with the nerve rings (ann. n., Fig. 4) discovered by Bristol iu rings 2 and 4< Hence, if neurotuere limits coincide with somite limits, the latter must fall, in the case of somites VI.-VIII. of Nephelis, as indicated in the right half of Figure 4.* Bristol, working on the basis of Gratiolet's conception, that the sensory ring occurs at the anterior end of the somite, places the somite limits as shown in the left half of Figure 4. 2. Somite Reduction in NepJielis. An examination of the abbreviated somites at the ends of the body should, as in the case of Glossiphonia, throw light on the question whether somite limits and neuromere limits are identical. Giving attention first to the anterior end of the body, somite VIII., as I place the somite limits (Fig. 4, right half), is the most anterior unabbreviated somite in the body of Nephelis. Iu the case of somite VII., ring 1 has disappeared. For, the nerve branch (x., somite VIII.) which typically ramifies in ring 1 is wanting in somite VII. Moreover the most anterior annulus of somite VII. is shown to be homologous with annulus 2 of somite VI 1 1, by the fact that it contains the anterior nerve * No entire unabbreviated somite is shown in Figure 4, but the structure of a typical somite may be learned from a study of the last six rings of the figure, which represent unabbreviated the sensory ring and the two following rings of somite VII., and the sensory and two preceding/ rings of somite VIII. 294 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. ring of the somite (ann. n.), :i structure typically found in annulua 2 ( see somite V 1 1 1., Fig. I ) . Somite \ I. clearly consists of three annuli, of which we can identify :; and - by the dorsal sensillaa and the anterior nerve ring respectively. In place of annuli 1 aud ■'< we have in Bomite VI. a Bingle annulua, in which, however, Bristol found no nerve ring. Somite V. consists, apparently, of two annuli. But what the distri- bution of nerve \ '." Bhows to be undoubtedly the anterior nerve ring of this Bomite lies just within the limits of the uexi anterior annulus I IV.'. left half of Fig. 4). Our first impulse would be to include thai annulus in somite V.; but a careful study of the distribution of nerves I/'— IV." shows that tin- annulus in question contains important Structures i includ- ing the eye and associated mum- organs) belonging umpiestionabh to somite I V. It is possible to suppose that in this case the most anterior part of somite V. bas [used with somite IV. It stems to me, however, more reasonable to explain the condition as illustrating a general tendency in the head region for nerves t<> be carried forward of the somites to which typically thev would be limited. For example, nerve V." (Fig. 4) is carried forward ventrally as tar as the last annulus of somite II.; nerve IV." runs into the anterior annulus of somite II.: nerves II." and III." are carried forward into somite I. In Grlossiphonia (Fig. 1) also a similar tendency can be recognized in the distribution of nerves III."— V." The nerve ring found in the posterior portion of the annulus assigned by Bristol to somite IV. (Fig. 4, left half) cannot reasonably be considered the posterior nerve ring of somite IV.. because it is connected exclusively with nerve V." (See Bristol's PI. VII., Fig. 1G.) Moreover the posterior nerve ring has disappeared in Bomites V. and VI., we should therefore expect to find it wanting also in the more abbreviated somite IV Finally, unless this nerve ring does belong to somite V., that -finite contains no nerve ring al all, and somite IV., which is much more extensively abbreviated, still retains a nerve ring. This seems very improbable, for we find that nietanieric structures omitted from an abbreviated somite, do not appear in other BOmites still more strongly abbreviated. In determining the external limits of somites I. -IV.. Bristol has 1" I D guided by the position of the nietanieric BCD 86 organs and the distribution of the nietanieric nerves I." -IV.". which represent the nerve- given off from one side of primitive ganglia I.— IV. respectively, completely fused into Bingle trunks. The somite limits indicated by him in the case of these four metameres are. accordingly, neuromere limits, and, bo Far as I CASTLE. — METAMERISM OF THE HIRUDINEA. 295 can judge from secoud-hand knowledge of the subject, are entirely accurate. A comparison of Figures 1 and 4 shows that abbreviation has been more extensive in the head end of Nephelis than in that of Glossiphonia. The process also does not progress anteriorly with such even and regular gradations as in the case of Glossiphonia. Nevertheless, abbreviation takes place in both cases by practically the same steps. First the anterior end of the somite is affected, then the posterior end. XXIV. XXV. Fig. 5. Posterior end of the body of Nephelis lateralis, dorsal view. Somite limits according to the view of Bristol are shown at the left of the figure (XXIV.'-XXVII.') ; according to the writer's view, at the right (XXIV.-XXVII.). After Bristol ('99). Figure 5 gives a dorsal view of the abbreviated somites at the posterior end of Nephelis. Somite XXIV. (right half of figure) is the last unabbreviated somite and shows the typical condition, — a sensory ring in the middle of the somite preceded as well as followed by two non-sensory rings. In somite XXV. (ri. In Bomite XXVII. a complete onion has taken place between rings 1—3; rings l and 5 are probably repre- ted in the broad, curved pari of the body which bears distally the acetabulum. This pari is imperfectly divided by transverse erea (shown too distinctly in the 6gure), but is Bharply marked off from the preceding ring. To recapitulate : — We find in the case <>f Nephelis the Bame rul< a gov- erning the process of somite reduction as in the case of Glossiphonia. (1). Rings fuse into groups innervated typically from a common ganglion. Examples: Figure 5, right half, Bomites XXV. XX VI I. ; I jure 4, somites III. and IV. The union, at the margins of the body, of somite I. with the anterior ring of somite II. presents an apparent exception, hut here we have to do with an extreme case, in which "// the rings of one somite (I.) have fused with one another, and in addition a fusion between successive Bomites (I. and II.) i- foreshadowed. (2). Tltr first rings />> disappear are those at tin- ends of the somite, the anterior end being usually the one which is first affected. Examples: in Figure 4, somite VII. (only the most anterior ring, 1. wanting) ; so- mite VI. (a ring wanting at either end of the somite) ; somite V. (two rings wanting at the anterior end of the somite, only one wanting at the posterior end); in Figure 5, somite XXVI. (rings 1 and 2 fused together and partially muted with ring 3, rings 4 and 5 muted); somite XXVII. (rings 1 ■"> united, rings 4 and ."> united). \n somite XXV. alone we have a ease where abbreviation affects the posterior part of the somite sooner than the anterior part. But it will he observed that the middle of somite XXV. marks the boundary hetween the abbreviated and unabbreviated portions of the posterior half of the body. This may explain why in this single instance rings I and 5 are reduced, while rings 1 and 2 are unaffected. /■'mm //,/• foregoing facts it appears that in the case of Nephelis as well us of Glossiphonia there are natural somite limits, which coincide with the limits of the neuromeres. IV. Somite Growth. Having now examined with some care the process of somite reduction in the leech, it may he instructive to study also the reverse proc< --. namelj that of increase in the number of rings in a Bomite. This can best be done by an examination of typical somites from various genera of the two commonh recognized families of leeches. CASTLE. METAMERISM OP THE HIRUDINEA. 297 1 . Rhynchobdellidce. We are already sufficiently familiar with the typical three-ringed somite of Glossiphonia (Fig. G, C). In Haementeria, a closely related genus (Fig. 6, D), each of the non-sensory rings (1 and 3) is divided ventrally hut not dorsally. Branchellion has a three-ringed somite like that of Glossiphonia, ex- cept that the middle (sensory) ring bears a pulsating respiratory vesicle D A B m- m j... m Fig. G. Somites of Rhynchobdellidae. A, a much abbreviated somite of Glossiphonia; B, a less abbreviated somite of Glossiphonia ; C, a typical somite of Glossiphonia; I>, Haementeria; E, " " Pontobdella; F, " " Trachelobdella; G, Cystobranchus ; The sensory ring and its derivatives are stippled. H I K M 1 2 3 4 5 5: -7i Fig. 7. Typical somites of Gnathobdellidse. B, Nephelis ; /, Dina ; J-M, Trocheta. The sensory ring and its derivatives are stippled. connected with the lymph system. In Ozobranchus, a related genus, one of the non-sensory rings is divided in large individuals. Blauchard ('94), who has described this genus, states that the ring which divides is the third ring of the somite, by which I understand him to mean the ring which precedes the sensory ring, — ring 1 of my enumeration. In Pontobdella (Fig. 6, E), a typical somite consists sometimes of 298 PROCEEDINGS OF THE IHEBICAM ACADEMY. three rings, bat oftener of tour. The Bensory ring, which contains a respiratory vesicle, is always th<- broadest ring of the somite. The ring which is usually present, but sometimes wanting, is a narrow one, which has been added at one end of the somite. It is impossible to Bay, without Btudying the nerve distribution, at which end it has been added. Appar- ently, however, it is at the anterior end, for in those animals which I have had an opportunity to examine, the new ring appears to be united more closely with the ring which precedes than with that which follows a sensory ring. Moreover, t lie ring which precedes the sensory ring is usually not so broad as the one which follows it. This is an indica- tion that it is the former rather than the latter which has undergone division.* In Trachelobdella (Fig. G, F), according to Blanchard, the somite con- sists sometimes of three, sometimes of six ring-, each of the three prim- itive rings having, in the latter case, divided. The m nsilke remain on the anterior derivative of the original Bensory ring. In Cystobranchus (Fig. G, G) the somite consists of seven rings, two of which hear the respiratory vesicles and doubtless have arisen, as in Trachelobdella, from the division of the original sensory ring. The remaining five rings have probably been derived from the two primitive non-sensory rings, — three from one non-sensory ring, two from the other. One of the non-sensory rings must, accordingly, have divided only once, as in Trachelobdella; the other, twice. The position of the genital pores would seem to indicate that the posterior non-sensorv ring is the one which lias divided a second time; but it is impossible to Bay without study of internal structures whether this is really the case or not. A typical somite of Piscicola contains, according to Apathy ('88), twelve annuli ; according to Blanchard ( " '. » 1 ) . fourteen. Not havi had an opportunity to examine this genus myself, I do not venture to express an opinion as to the number or morphological value of the rings. Blanchard, however, states that the respiratory vesicle is borne on two rings of the somite, the anterior of which contains the nephropore. This would seem to indicate that the sensorj ring had divided only once, and that the remaining twelve rings (or ten. Apathy) had arisen by repeated division of the two primary non-sensory rings. To recapitulate : — We find in the IJhy nchobdellida* that, starting with a -omite of three rings of equal width, increase in the number of annuli • v.ul lan t i 'Tim, who was guided by the position of the "septa," also placed the Bomite limits so as to make t«'> rings p ecede the Bensory ring and one follow it. CASTLE. — METAMERISM OF THE HTRUDINEA. 299 takes place (1) most often by division of one or both of the non-sensory rings ; (2) occasionally by division of the sensory ring also. In other words, ring multiplication is most active at the ends of the somite. 2. Gnathobdellidce. The typical five-ringed somite of Nephelis, Hirudo, and other genera of Gnathobdellidae (Fig. 7, H) has undoubtedly been derived from a three-ringed somite through division of each of its non-sensory rings. This idea, suggested by Whitman ('92), has been abundantly confirmed by the careful work of Bristol ('99). In the two genera Dina and Trocheta, as described by Blanchard ('94), we find a further multiplication of annuli taking place. In the former genus (Fig. 7, /), the last of the five rings which, according to my view, constitute a somite (ring 5, Fig. 7, /) is broader than any of the others and is partially divided by a transverse furrow (not shown in the figure). In Trocheta (Fig. 7, J) the fifth ring is completely but unequally di- vided, the posterior of the two rings thus formed being narrower than its mate. Sometimes no further evidences of ring multiplication are found in the somite of Trocheta, but usually other divisions occur forming a somite of seven (Fig. 7, K) or more frequently of eight rings (Fig. 7, L). Next in order after the division of ring 5 comes that of ring 1 (Fig. 7, A'), then that of ring 2 (Fig. 7, L). Blanchard finds that individuals obtained from the Crimea often show evidence in certain somites of still further divisions affecting the sensory ring and the two broad rings which follow it. This brings the number of rings in the somite up to eleven (Fig. 7, //). It is interesting to note how these eleven rings are related to the three primary rings of a typical somite of Glossipbonia. The primitive sensory ring of Glossipbonia (2, Fig. 6, C) is represented in Trocheta by two narrow rings (stippled in Fig. 7, M). It may, therefore, be regarded as having divided once, the division being among the latest to occur in any of the rings. In place of ring 1 of Glossipbonia (Fig. 6, 0), there are four rings in Trocheta (Fig. 7, M). Primitive ring 1 may accordingly be said to have divided twice (compare Figs. G, C; 7, H\ and 7 , M). In place of ring 3 of Glossiphonia (Fig. 6, 0), we find in Trocheta (Fig. 7, M) five rings ; in other words, the primitive posterior ring of the somite has divided twice, and the most posterior of the four rings thus formed has divided a thvd time (compare Figs. 6, C; 7, //; 7, J; and 7, M). To recapitulate: — In ring multiplication among the Gnathobdellidae (1) all five rings occasionally divide ; (2) more often only the non-sensory rings divide, the sensory ring remaining unaffected ; (3) division takes 800 PBOI EEDINGS OF THB AMERICAN H ADEMT. place first and mosl often in those rings wliicli Btand at the limits of the somite ( rings 1 and 5, Fig. 7 ). If one marks off the somite limits in any other way than that which I have followed, regarding the Bensory ring either as the first or aa the last ring of the somite, the process oi ring multiplication becomes unin- telligible, taking place now in the middle, now at one end of a somite. The reader can test this for himself by reconstructing the diagrams given in Figures 6 and 7 so us to make the stippled ring come at one end or the other of the somite. From the foregoing discussion the conclusion seems warranted that neuromeric groups of rings, that is, rings innervated typically from the same ganglion, are natural groups behaving as units both in the process of abbreviation and in thai of elongation of particular body regions; in other words, that they are the true morphological units or somites. V. Primitive Condition of tiik Lee< h Somite. We have seen that the process of ring multiplication is verj general among the leeches, and that it takes place in quite an orderly manner, new annuli being formed, in the great majority of cases, at the ends of the somite. We have seen, further, thai the complicated tonus of somite found in the Gnatbobdellidae and some of the Rbynchobdellidae are all derivable from a primitive three-ringed type of somite, like that of Glos- siphonia. In view of these facts, does it not appear probable that the three-ringed type of somite itself has been derived from a simpler primi- tive condition? I am strongly inclined to think so. As to what this simpler condition was, we perhaps may get an idea from an examination of the abbreviated somites of Glossiphonia (Fig. G, B, A). For we have found that multiplication of annuli is the reveise process of somite reduction, both alike affecting the ends of the somite, the sensory (middle) ring being the stable component of the somite in changes of either sort. The final result of somite reduction in Glossiphonia (Fig. 6, A) points, to a primitive condition of the leech somite, in which it consisted, like the somite of a chretopod, of a single ring. A tendency to increase the number of annuli in the somite would, in harmony with what we know of the process of ring multiplication in the leeches, have called for the formation of a new and narrower ring at one end or the other of the so- mite, or at both. If new rings wire formed simultaneously at both ends of the primitive one-ringed somite, we should arrive, by a single step, at substantially the condition of somite found in Glossiphonia (Fig. 6, C). CASTLE. — METAMERISM OF THE HIRUDINEA. 301 If, however, a new ring were formed first at only one end of the somite, the probabilities are that it would be at the posterior end. For we have found that ring multiplication occurs rather oftener there than at the anterior end of the somite. Moreover, in somite reduction in Glossi- phonia, we get a stage (Fig. 6, B) intermediate between the one-riuged (Fig. (\, A) and three-ringed (Fig. 6, C) condition of the somite, in which rings 1 and 2 are united into a single broad anterior ring, while ring three is entirely distinct. The intermediate condition just described not improbably represents a true phylogenetic stage in the formation of the three-ringed type of somite, for it corresponds exactly with the condition found in a typical body somite of Branchiobdella or of Bdellodrilus (Fig. 8), those curious leech-like annelids, which nevertheless possess certain chae- topod characters. The ganglion (g., Fig. 8) of a somite of Bdellodrilus or Branchiobdella is situ- ated, as we should expect if the views just ex- pressed are correct, in the broader anterior ring of the somite. This ring, according to the homology suggested, corresponds with rings 1 Fig- 8. A single body and 2 of Glossiphonia (Fig. 6, B and C). somite of Bdellodrilus Ufa- T„ x , .. . .... minatus, lateral view, a., If, as 1 believe, the common assumption is well , . . r anterior ; a., dorsal ; 7., grounded, that leeches and chaetopods have been o-anglion ; p., posterior; derived from a common stock, can we discover v., ventral. After Moore any reason why ring multiplication should take Cy5). place in one group and not in the other ? I think we have a sufficient explanation in the fact tint the leech body contains always the same definite number of somites, no matter how large or how small the animal may be. This number is thirty-four, both in the Ilhynchobdellidae and in the Gnathobdellidaa. In the chaetopod, on the other hand, the body contains at first a relatively small number of somites, which is increased, as the animal grows in size, through the formation of new somites in some limited region of the body, usually at its posterior end. In some cases the newly formed somites may separate themselves off as a distinct individual, in other cases they serve merely for the elongation of the original indi- vidual to an indefinite extent. In the leech, however, there is no provision for increase in the number of somites. A definite number of somites, thirty-four, is laid down early in ontogeny, and never increased. Elongation of the body 302 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN &< LDEMY. takes place, therefore, only by elongation of the individual Borail which compose it. This method ol growth is probably what has called forth the phenomenon of ring multiplication. In support of this view maj be cited facts Buch as that Btated by Blanchard ('94) in regard to Ozobranchns, that one ol the three rings of ;i typical somite is doubled in the case of large individuals. Sr mm \hy. 1. The number of somites in the body <>f the leech has been deter- mined correctlj by Whitman ('92) for the Rhynchobdellidse, by Bristol (*99) for the Gnathobdellidse. In both cases the number is thirty-four. 2. The limits of the leech somite have been placed incorrectly by all Btudents <>t' leech metamerism, with the possible except! t Vaillant ('?()) in tin- case of a .single genus, Pontobdella, from the time of Gratiolet ('62) to the present. .;. The natural and Hue limits of the somite coincide with the limits of the neuromere ; that is. :i Boniite includes those annuli which typically are innervated from the same nerve ganglion. 4. The foregoing statement is confirmed by an examination of meta- merically repeated structures other than ganglia; namely. Bepta, testes, and crop diverticula. ."». Neuromeric groups of rings, that is, Bomitea a- defined under :>, behave as structural units (a) in somite abbreviation (reduction in the number of rings in a somite), (b) in somite elongation (increase in the number of rings in a somite). f). Both reduction and increase in the number of rings take place chiefly at the ends of the somite. The sensory ring occupies the middle of the somite and is least often and least extensively affected in the two processes just named. It represents the sttible component of the somite. 7. The five-ringed type of somite found in the Gnathobdellidse has been derived from the three-ringed type found in the Rhynchobdellidse, a> -invested by Whitman and demonstrated by Bristol. This has been brought about by division of the non-sensory ring :>' either end of the somite. 8. The wide prevalence of ring multiplication among the Birudinea BUggestS the derivation of the three-ringed type of somite from a still simpler type consisting, as in Chsetopoda, of :i Bingle ring. '.•. A phylogenetically intermediate Btage between the one-ringed and three-ringed types of somite is probably represented in a typical body somite of Branchiobdella. The same type of somite structure appeals CASTLE. — METAMERISM OF THE HIRUDINEA. 303 also in the abbreviated somites of Glossiphonia, as a stage intermediate between the three-ringed and one-ringed conditions of the somite. 10. The phenomenon of ring multiplication in the Ilirudinea is correlated with the restricted number of somites found in the body. Increase in the number of somites does not take place in the body of the adult leech. Without this, elongation of the body is possible only through lengthening of individual somites. Lengthening of the individual somite has probably been the cause, phylogeiietically, of increase in the number of rings in a somite. Papers Cited. Apathy, S. 88. Analyse dor ausseren Korperform der Iliruduieen. Mitth. Zool. Sta. Neapel. Bd. 8, pp. 153-232. Taf. 8, 9. Blanchard, R. '94. Ilinulinees de l'ltalie continentale et insulaire. Boll. Mus. Zool. e Anat. comp. Torino. Vol. 9, No. 192, pp. 1-81. 30 Fig. Bristol, C. L. '99. The Metamerism of Nephclis. Jour, of Morph. Vol. 15, pp. 17-72. PI. 4-8. Gratiolet, P. '62. Recherches sur I'orgauisation du systeme vasculaire dans la sangsue medicinale et l'Austome vorace. Ann. Sci. Nat., Zool. T. 17, pp. 175-225, PL 7. Moore, J. P. '95. The Anatomy of Bdellodrilus illuminatus, an American Discodrilid. Jour, of Morph. * Vol. 10, pp. 497-540. PL 28-32. Oka, A '94. Beitrage zur Anatomic der Clepsine. Zeit. f. wiss. Zool. Bd. 58, pp. 79-151. Taf. 4-6. Vaillant, L. '70. Contribution a l'etude anatomique du genre Pontobdelle. Anu. Sci. Nat., Zool. T. 13, pp. 31-71. PL 8-10. Whitman, C. O. '78. The Embryology of Clepsine. Quart. Jour. Micr. Sci. Vol. 18, pp. 215-315. PL 12-15. "Whitman, C. O. '92. The Metamerism of Clepsine. Festschr. Leuckarts. pp. 385-395. PI. 39, 40. Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Vol. XXXV. No. 16. — March, 1900. CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE GRAY HERBARIUM OF HARVARD UNIVERSITY. New Series. — No. XVIII. I. New Species and .Varieties of Mexican Plants. By J. M. Greenman. II. Synopses of the Genera Jaegeria and Russelia. By B. L. Rob- inson. III. New Dioscoreas from Mexico. By E. B. Ulixe. IV. New Phaenogams, chiefly Gamopetalae, from Mexico and Central America. By B. L. Robixjon. vol. xxxv. — 20 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE GRAY HERBARIUM OF HARVARD UNIVERSITY, NEW SERIES, No. XVIII. Presented by B. L. Robinson, January 10, 1900. Received January 26, 1900. I. — NEW SPECIES AND VARIETIES OF MEXICAN PLANTS. By J. M. Greenman. Spiranthes Nelsonii. Aphyllous : roots clustered, tuberous, densely covered with long hairs: stems 4 to 5.5 dm. high, clothed below with oblong-o.vate short-acuminate white scarious overlapping glabrous nervate bracts, these somewhat more remote toward the inflorescence, glabrous below, above and throughout the inflorescence more or less glandular- pubescent: spikes oblong, 6 to 10 cm. long, about 2.5 cm. broad, rather closely flowered ; bracts ovate, acuminate, shorter than the flowers : flowers sessile, about 2 cm. long, apparently white; the perianth later be- coming reflexed or more or less folded on itself; the outer lateral divisions of the perianth or lateral sepals oblong, slightly expanded above the middle, 1.1 to 1.2 cm. long, 3.0 mm. broad, obtuse, the upper sepal similar but slightly larger ; the inner lateral divisions of the perianth or lateral petals oblong-spatulate, about 1 cm. in length, obtuse, much nar- rowed toward the base; lip oblong ligulate, 1.3 to 1.4 cm. long, 4 mm. broad, subtruncate or obtusish at the apex, cuneate at the base, callous- tuberculate on each side just above the base, bearing in the lower half on either side near the margins a thick or fleshy pubescent ridge; clinan- drium pubescent along the free surface ; anther broadly ovate, 3 mm. long, obtuse : beak of the stigma short-oblong, minutely 2-toothed at the apex ; gland linear-oblong. — Collected by E. W. Nelson, between Rio Verde and Panixtlahuaca, Oaxaca, altitude 125 to 370 m., 25 February, 1895, no. 2384. Spiranthes Prixglei, Watson, var. minor. Flowers green or greenish white, one-half to two-thirds as large as in the species proper ; in technical characters and in general habit corresponding well with the type specimen of the species. — Collected by C. G-. Pringle in grassy fields near Jalapa, altitude 1,225 m., 17, 21 May, 1899, no. 8197. 308 PROCEl 1 III-: AMERICAN ACADEMY. Spiranthes tenuifiora. Roots Beveral, fleshy, tuberous: stems '■'> to bearing at the base remnants of the old radical above clothed with alternate lanceolate-acuminate white scarious imbri- ■ 1 bracts or sheaths, these Bomewhat more remote toward the inflorescence: racemes 1 to 2 dm. long, many-flowered, Bomewhat glandular-pubescent ; bracts ovate, lanceolate, acuminate, 3-nerved, shorter than the sessile slender flowers (2 cm. long): outer lateral divisions of the perianth lance-oblong, obtuse, 3-nerved, about 6 mm. long, 2 nun. broad, the upper sepal somewhat longer and broader than the lateral one; lateral petals narrowly lance-oblong, obtuse, shorter than and more or connivent with the upper sepal; labellum in general outline oblong, about 7 inn), long, short-unguiculate, slightly hastate by a rather prominent tubercle on either Bide at the base, terminated by ;i broadly ovate-reui- form acute somewhat turbinate conspicuous expansion, 5— 7-nerved, bear- ing just above the hastate base minute papillae. — Collected by ('. G. Pringle in lava fields near Cuernavaca, Morelos, altitude 1,525 m., 16 February, 1899, no. 6995. A very striking and characteristic spec readily recognized by the white showy bracts sheathing the stem, and by the elongated racemes with long slender mure or less remote reddish or reddish-yellow sparingly glandular-pubescent flow< Hosackxa bepkns, Don, Gen. Syst. of Gard. & Bot., ii. 200; Walp. Rep., ii. 855. Specimens collected by ('. G. Pringle in ditches at Tlalpam, Valley of .Mexico, 20 August, 1896, no. 7240, and by Dr. J. W. Harshberger, no. 170, are referred with little doubt to the ab meagrely described and little underst 1 species. As the specimens cited accord well with the brief characterization of Don, it seems best to take up the above name, and to present herewith the following amplified description. — An herbaceous perennial: stems repent or ascending, 3 to 7 dm. long, more or less branched, glabrous below, pubescent above : leaves including the petiole 2 to 6 cm. long) 5 9-foliolate; stipules triangular, acuminate. 2 to 5 mm. long; leaflets obovate-oblong, 1 to 2 cm. long, 1 to 8 mm. broad, obtuse, mucronate, narrowed below into a conspicuously blackened rather slender (1 mm. long) petiolule, ii and glabrous above, somewhat paler and pubescent beneath: inflorescence corymbose on long slender peduncles, these * to 18 cm. in length, much exceeding the leaves; umbel usually 5-flowered, and sub- tended by a Bhort-petioled 3-5-foliolate bract: dowers 1 to 1.1 cm. long, yellow, on short blackish pubescent pedicels ; calyx-teeth lanceolate. 8 mm. long, about equalling the more or less reddish-maculate tube, both tube and calyx-teeth pubescent : Btandard obovate-obleng, slightly GREENMAN. — MEXICAN PLANTS. 809 retuse, abruptly narrowed below into a rather long claw : legume linear, about 3 cm. long, compressed, glabrous. In general appearance H. r i pens, Don, resembles H. Torreyi, Gray, but in the repent habit, the very long peduncles, and in the longer claw of the standard, as well as in the conspicuously blackened petiolules, it is quite different. Hosackia oaxacana. An herbaceous perennial : stems erect or ascending, 1 to 2.5 dm. high, usually branched, glabrous : leaves includ- ing the short petioles 1.5 to 3 cm. long, 5-9-foliolate ; stipules narrowly ovate, 3 to 5 mm. long, acute ; leaflets somewhat rhombic-obovate or oblong-obovate, 0.5 to 1 cm. long, 3 to 6 mm. broad, obtuse or sub- mucrouate, green above, pale and somewhat glaucous beneath, having a few scattered hairs on the midrib beneath and on the margins, otherwise glabrous : peduncles usually exceeding the leaves, 2.5 to 5 cm. in length, glabrous ; umbels 3-6-flowered, subtended by a nearly sessile 1-3-foliolate leaf-like bract: flowers purplish, 1.2 to 1.4 cm. long: calyx-teeth slightly unequal, triangular-ovate, 1.5 to 2 mm. long, acutish, sparingly pubescent, barely one half as long as the glabrous more or less purplish an 1 somewhat glaucous tube ; standard obovate, slightly retuse, narrowed below into a claw, not auricled at the base or subcordate : mature fruit not seen. — Collected by the late Rev. Lucius C. Smith. Sierra de Clavellinas, Oaxaca, altitude 3,000 m., 26 June. 1894, no. 57. The affinity of this species is perhaps with the California!! //. gracilis, Benth., but it is readily distinguished from it by the shorter petiolate leaves, the much shorter- petioled and less conspicuous leaf-like bract subtending the umbellate floral cluster, by the shorter broader and more obtuse calyx-lobes, and finally by the subcuneate rather than distinctly auricled or subcordate standard. Arbutus glandulosa, Mart. & Gal. Bull. Acad. Brux. ix. 533 (reprint p. 5). This species, although originally described as having " sharply spinulose-denticulate " leaves, seems to vary considerably in the character of the leaf margin. It not infrequently happens that even on the same individual specimen one finds leaves from perfectly entire to sharply spinulose-dentate. This variation is well shown by Pringle's no. 8033, in herb. Gray. To this species may also be referred, as a form with entire or subentire leaves, Pringle's no. 8002, collected on the Sierra de Pachuca, 21 February, 1899. Styrax Ramirezii, Greenm. Proc. Am. Acad, xxxiv. 568. This species, described from flowering specimens, has been collected in the fruiting stage by Mr. C. G. Pringle on the Sierra de Tepoxtlan, Morelos; altitude 2,300 in., 7 February, 1898, no. 8023. The fruit, 310 CEEDINOS of tiii: AMEBIOAN ACADEMY. which emerges from the j 1 1( cap-shaped calyx, is oblong, 1 to 1.5 cm. in length, 6 to 7 nun. thick, pale green and i lepidote gbtly corrugated Burface. Stemmadenia macrophylla. Stems covered with a grayish bark and dotted with lenticels: leaves oblong-obovate to oblong-lanceol including the petiole 1 to 2.5 dm. long, I to 7.5 cm. broad, acuminate, entire, narrowed below into a short (5 to 15 nun. long) petiole, glabrous upon each Burface, dark green above, Blightly paler beneath: iuflo cence Bubracemose at the bifurcation of the branches, few-flowered; peduncles 3 cm. long: calyx deeply 5-parted, segments unequal, the two outer .shorter. 1 to 5 mm. long, somewhat narrowed toward the aj the inner oblong or slightly obovate-oblong, about 7 nun. long, rounded at the apex : corolla tubular-funnelform, about 6 cm. long, tube nar- rowed below, ampliated above, lobes spreading: fruil nol -<-<-n. — I lected by II. von Tuerckheim at Pansamala, Depart. Alta Verapaz, altitude 1,100 in.. January, 1886, uo. 981. This number (no. 981) of Mr. John Donnell Smith's collection was ori- ginally distributed as " Odontadenia ? " * and subsequently corrected to Stemmadenia bignoniaejlora, Miers, and under this nam'- Donnell Smith's no. 1800 was also distributed. The latter species is character- ized as having a calyx 1.3 to 1.5 cm. long. Stemmadenia macrophylla on the oilier hand has the calyx less than half this length ; thus by the character of the calyx alone the two - may be readily distinguished. Stemmadenia tomentosa. Shrub, '■'> to 5 m. high: some- what dichotomously branched above, covered with a grayish hark and dotted here and there with minute lenticels : leaves opposite, ovate- oblong, or Blightly obovate, short-acuminate, entire, narrowed at the base into a short slender petiole, glabrous above, densely Boft-tomentose beneatb ; petioles Blightly connate below and forming with the persistent leaf scar a narrow ridge about the stem in the axil of which is a continu- ous row of minute glands similar to those of the calyx: rather close dual clusters terminating the branches: flowers large: calyx deeply 5- parted, lobes broadly ovate, acute, about 5 mm. long: corolla yellow, tubular-funnelform, greatly ampliated above, narrowed below, usually more or less twisted in the throat, and with large Bubrotund spreading lobes: mature fruil not seen. — Collected by C. G. Pringle in lava beds near Zapotlan, State of Jalisco. 19 May. 1893, no. 1370, and distributed as ■• v mollis, Booth.?" The oearesl ally of >>'. tomentosa is apparently * See Donnell Smith, Enum. PI. Gnat. i. 26. GREENMAN. — MEXICAN PLANTS. 311 S. Palmeri, Rose, as shown by the calyx characters and by the general habit, but tbe former differs conspicuously from the latter by the presence of a dense tomentum over the entire lower surface of the leaves. The examination of a considerable number of specimens of S. Palmeri shows minute tufts of pubescence along the midrib on the lower surface of the leaves, otherwise the foliage is perfectly glabrous. This character seems to be fairly constant, and as no intergrading forms have yet been seen, it seems best to the writer, for the present at least, to regard Mr. Pringle's plant as a distinct species. Physalis acuminata. Suff rutescent : stems rlichotomously branched, glabrous below, glandular-viscid above: leaves single or in pairs, ovate, 4 to 10 cm. long, 2 to G cm. broad, acuminate, acute, entire, narrowed below into a slightly marginate glandular-viscid petiole, more or less glandular-pubescent upon both surfaces especially upon the midrib and veins beneath : pedicels 1 to 2 cm. long, later usually reflexed : calyx in anthesis 1.3 cm. long, densely glandular-pubescent ; lobes ovate, acumi- nate : corolla large, 2.5 to 3 cm. in diameter when fully expanded, siuu- ately 5-lobed with short acutish lobes, and very shallow sinuses, ciliate, conspicuously maculate in 5 areas with numerous dark purple spots, densely pubescent at the base: filaments about equal, glabrous; anthers purplish: fruiting calyx ovate, about 4 cm. long, equally 10-angled ; lobes convergent: berry 2 cm. in diameter, glabrous. — Collected by C. G. Pringle on the Sierra de las Cruces, State of Mexico, 23 October, 1892, no. 5315. Mr. Pringle's plant was at first doubtfully referred to P. glutinosa, Schl., but from this species it differs materially in the char- acter of the foliage. The leaves are all entire and narrowed below into a petiole, not cordate, and, moreover, the fruiting calyx is equally 10- angled, not 5-angled as in P. glutinosa. To P. Pringlei the plant under consideration bears a strong superficial resemblance, but differs in having the leaves all entire, and in the character of the fruiting calyx. Physalis Pringlei. • Suffrutescent : stems 1 to 1.5 in. long, more or less branched, below terete, glabrous or nearly so, above and throughout the younger parts densely glandular-viscid : leaves single or in pairs, ovate to ovatedanceolate, 3 to 8 cm. long, two-thirds as broad, more or less acuminate, acute, remotely sinuate-dentate or sublobate to subentire, narrowed at the more or less unequal base into a slightly winged petiole, glandular-viscid upon both surfaces: pedicels 1 to 1.5 cm. in length, at first erect or at least ascending, later reflexed : calyx during anthesis 7 to 9 mm. long ; lobes ovate, atteuuate, about equalling the tube : corolla about 2 cm. in diameter, repandly rotate, ciliate, conspicuously maculate 312 PEOCEl THE AMKRK'AN ACADEMY. in 'i distinct areas with numerous dark purple Bpots, internally at the base densely pubescent ; lobes obtusish : filaments about equal, glabro authers purplish : calyx in fruit oblong-ovate, about '■'> cm. long, defini 5-angled, with intermediate ribs: berry about 1 cm. in diameter, gla- brous.— Collected bj C. G. Pringle on the Sierra cm. long, 1 to 1 nun. broad, a slightly narrowed into a subpetiolate base, glabrous upon both Burfa margins more or less revolute: inflorescence in terminal usually one- sided racemes; pedicels 0.5 to 1 cm. in length, minutely puberulent: flowers large, 5 to G cm. long, scarlet, dark red or reddish-yellow; calyx rather prominently 4-ribbed with intermediate less prominent ribs, puber- ulent to nearly glabrous, lobes more or less unequal, lanceolate. \ ; mm. long, equalling or exceeding the tube, obtusish, entire: corolla externally pubescent, rather deeply bilabiate; tube below narrow, ampli- ated just above the base but not conspicuously ventricose; lower 3-l< lip about 1.5 cm. long, only slightly spreading: perfect Btamens "-'. shorter than and included under the galea; anthers calcarate at the base, villous-pubescent ; the posterior pair of stamens much shorter and bear- ing reduced villous anthers: style exceeding the anthers in length, pu- bescent; capsule ovate, narrowed above, glabrous. — Collected by V. Gonzalez and C. Conzatti on the Cerro de Papalo, camino de Chi ( uicatlan. Oaxaca, altitude 2.5<>0 m., 16-22 June. 1898, no. 760, and by C. Conzatti on the Cerro de Yalina. District of Villa Alia. Oaxaca. altitude 1,500 m., June, 1899, no. 9G5. The author take- pleasure in dedicating this beautiful species to Seiior Prof. C. Conzatti. whose i • efforts have contributed much to our knowledge of the llora of hern Mexico. As the species of this genus are treated in Am. Jour. Sci. 1. L69, /-. Conzattii would stand near L. tenuifolia, Mart. & Gal., hut it is readily distinguished by the larger, longer, and more deeply colored flowers. GREENMAN. — MEXICAN PLANTS. 313 Lamourouxia tencifolia, var. micrantha. Flowers only 1.8 to 2 cm. long: calyx cleft (in anthesis) nearly to the base: otherwise like the typical form. — Collected on the west side of Valley of Cuicatlan, Oaxaca, altitude 2,000 to 2,100 m., by E. AY. Nelson, 10 November, 1804, no. 1891. Types in herb. Gray and herb. U. S. Nat. Museum. Viburnum microcarpum, Cham. & Schl., var. evanescens. Leaves conspicuously discolorous, green and, except for a few scattered stellate hairs on the sunken midrib, glabrous above, white and densely stellate- tomentose beneath : in all other characters corresponding well with the type specimen of the species. — Collected by C. G. Pringle in hedges and thickets at San Miguel del Soldado, Vera Cruz, altitude 1,850 in., 20 April 1899, no. 8172. Galium triflordm, Michx. Fl. i. 80. This species, hitherto doubt- fully attributed to Mexico, may now be definitely incorporated in the Mexican flora. Specimens were collected by C. G. Pringle in swainps near Jalapa, altitude 1,200 m., 17 April, 1899. no. 8155. Vernonia serratuloides, HBK., Nov. Gen. & Sp. iv. 33, t. 316. Specimens collected by Dr. Edward Palmer in . southwestern Chihuahua, August to November, 188.3, no. 279, and described by Dr. Gray, Proc. Atn. Acad. xxi. 393, as Perezia paniculata, prove upon careful examina- tion to be a Vernonia, and moreover, correspond in all essential details with the original description and excellent illustration of V. serratuloides, HBK. Here also may be referred Goldman's no. 156, collected in the Sierra Madre, near Guasarachi on road from Parral to Batopilas, Chi- huahua, altitude 2,000 to 2,100 m., 2G September, 1898. Coreopsis rhyacophila. Suffrutescent : stems erect, terete, covered bcdow with a thin grayish brown more or less deciduous cortex: leaves opposite, petiolate, 3 to 8 cm. long, nearly as broad, pinnately tri- or quadri-partite, glabrous upon both surfaces, glandular-punctate, divisions narrowly lanceolate, apiculate-acute ; petioles 1.5 to 3 cm. long : heads 1 to 1.3 cm. high, and including the rays 2.5 to 3 cm. in diameter, few on lon°" slender striate naked or 1-3-bracteate peduncles ; involucral scales bi-seriate, the outer shorter, somewhat spreading, linear, acutish, the inner oblong-elliptic, 8 mm. long, half as broad, margins subsca- rious, glabrous except at the apex : rays yellow, longitudinally striate with brownish lines : achenes about 4 mm. long, the outer surface gla- brous, the inner pubescent, margins conspicuously ciliate ; pappus of two stoutish ciliated awns, equalling or slightly exceeding the achene. — Col- lected by C. G. Pringle in lava fields near Cuernavaca, Morelos, altitude 2,500 ro,, 9 February, 1899, no. 7866. In foliar characters C. rhyaco- 31 1 >CEEDING8 OF Till: AMERICAN ACADEMY. phila n elj resembles 0 petropkila, Gray, bat from this B] i> readily distinguished by the inflorescence, and by the much la heads. In the nature ol the inflorescence C rhyacophila is perhaps more nearly allied to C. anthemoides, DC, but from this species again our plant differs markedly in the coarser character of the leaves, and by tin- erect ligneous Btem. Spilanthes filipes. Herbaceous: erect, freely branching from the base, 8 to A dm. high, rather sparsely pubescent with jointed hairs: leaves opposite, petiolate, 3-nerved from near the base, ovate to oblong- lanceolate, including the petiole 2.5 to 6 cm. long, 0.8 to 2 cm. broad, obtusish, Bubmucronate, i -dentate, narrowed rather abruptly or even attenuate al the base into a le, glabrous or with a few ■ I hairs on the upper Burface and on the midrib and lateral nei beneath: heads radiate, A to 5 nun. high, nearly or quite as broad, borne on long Blender (5 to 1<> cm. long) peduncles which either terminate the Btems and branches or spring from the upper axils; involucral sea oblong-ovate, 2 to 2.5 mm. long, slightly acuminate, acute, inconspicu- ously ciliate ; ligules about .">, including the tubular portion 1 mm. in length; achenes of ray-flowers triangular: flowers of the disk 2.5 mm. long nes laterally compressed bearing two minute pappus-awns, ciliated, glabrous or nearly so on each face, at maturity about 1 mm. in length; pales rounded or subtruncate at the apex. — Collected by Dr. G. F. Gaumer in Yucatan, L896, no. 1122. In general appeara S.jUipes most resembles S. ramosa, Hemsl., but it differs materially by having much larger li aves, smaller head-, and stricter habit. Dysodia Seleri, Robinson & Greenman, n. sp. Stoutish herb: branches terete, striate, puberulent, at length glabrate, glandless: L< simple, opposite or sub-opposite, oblong, shortly acuminate, rounded or more often cordate at the sessile base, sharply and rather finely serrate, 6 to 13 cm. long, '-'.1 to I cm. broad, dotted with numerous round pellu- cid glands; the uppermost leaves reduced, elliptical, often alternate: peduncl linal, more or less clavate-thickened toward the summit: heads radiate, large, •'! cm. in diameter exclusive of the ligules: involu puberulent, glandless; outer scales free, about 2-seriate, unequal, lam . acute, herbaceous at least near the apex : inner BCales united for two-thirds their length, their tips attenuate: ray- 1 _' to 20, brown ill a dried siate, broadly elliptical, about 2 em. long including the tapering tubular base; pale- Bhort, thickish, fimbriate: tubular flowers 2 cm. I including the Bericeous-villous achenes: pappus 2-seriate, of about 20 Bubequal setose-fimbriate scales, 1 cm. in length: Btyle-branchea passing ROBINSON. — JAEGERIA AND RUSSELTA. 815 abruptly into a slender acuminate appendage. — Collected by C. & E. Seler, near Xochicato, Cuernavaca, Mexico, December, 1887, no. 410, also near the Hacienda S. Gaspar in the same region, 18 December, 1887, no. 317. The affinity of this species appears to be with D. gran- di flora, DC, D. serratifolia, DC, D. integrifolia, Gray, and D. squam- mosa, Gray. From all these it is readily distinguished by its glandless involucre with larger herbaceous outer scales. Type specimens are pre- served in the Royal Botanical Museum, Berlin. Lygodesmia ramosissima. Much branched from a perennial base ; branches striate-angled, glabrous, somewhat junciform, not spinescent : leaves linear to subulate-linear, 0.5 to 7 cm. long, entire or remotely den- ticulate, occasionally with more conspicuously spreading teeth, glabrous : heads 5-6-r!owered, terminating the ultimate branchlets on either short or elongated peduncles: involucre 2 to 2.3 cm. long, the outer calyculate bracts filiate, the inner bordered by a hyaline margin and bearing near the apex a keel-like appendage : mature achenes subterete, smooth and glabrous, about 1.5 cm. long; pappus nearly or quite equalling the achenes, tawny. — Lygodesmia juncea, Gray, PI. Wright, i. 120, not Don. — Collected by Charles Wright on the expedition from western Texas to El Paso, prairies of the Pecos River, August, 1849, no. 417; by C G. Pringle on plains near the city of Chihuahua, Mexico, 18 August, 1885, no. 578 and by E. W. Nelson, between Ramos and Inde, Durango, 11 to 14 August, 1898, no. 4710. In habit L. ramosissima resembles most closely L. juncea, Don, but from this species it is readily distinguished by the size of the heads. From L. aphylla, DC, and its variety, our plant is at once separated by the copiously branched stems. II. — SYNOPSES OF THE GENERA JAEGERIA AND RUSSELIA. By B. L. Robinsox. Tiie Genus Jaegeria. The small helianthoid genus Jaegeria, inhabiting muddy shores and shallow pools of tropical America, is exceedingly well marked by its non- imbricated involucral bracts. These are similar to each other in form and are equal in number to the rays, in fact each stands just in front of PR0CE1 OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. a ray and envelops the ray-achene by its thin infolded usually ciliate alar portions. The achenes are glabr ns and crowned with a Bhallow callous cup, bul otherwise pappus] Although thus clearly marked, the species of tb as have from habital similarities been much confused with thoseof Sabazia, Galinsoga, Melampodium, and Spilanthes. The following Bynopsis, drawn up dm .; the two new species here proposed, may therefore be found il in showing the present Btatus of the group. Heads axillary, pedunculate, ra relatively large (including the rays 1.0 2 cm. in diameter) : rays about 12, conspicuous, pale yellow with mor ilea of the involucre ciliolate, otherwise glabi weak aquatic essentially glabrous perennials. -i- Leaves slender-petioled. 1. J. petiolaris. Sabazia glabra, Wats. Proc. Am. Acad, xxiii. 277. Shallow water, pine plains, base of the Sierra Mad re. Pringle, no. .. The involute involucral scales enveloping the ray achenes clearly show this plant a Jaegeria. The transfer oi Dr. Watson's name gh ria is rendered undesirable by the varietal use of this designation under ./. hirta by Mr. Baker in the Flora Brasiliensis as mentioned •w. -t- -•- Leaves sessile, amplexicaul. 2. J. purpurascens. 1 tecumbent stem simple or sparingly branch* d. purplish, glabrous, leafy: leaves oblong-lanceolate, acute, sessile by a jping base, entire, glabrous, L.4 to 2 em. long, 3 to 1 mm. wide: pe- duncles terete, purplish, 3 to 1.2 em. Ion-, puberulent near the summit. borne in the upper axib : disk 8 mm. in diameter, hemispherical, at length somewhat conical: rays 11 to 13, linear or narrowly obl< purple1, 6 mm. long: bracts of the open flattish involucre uniseriate, ovate, acute, strongly ciliate at the broadesl involute part, green and glabi dorsally: disk-flowers numerous; corollas pale yellow, ■_' mm. long, gla- brous except for a tomentulose ring at the base of the tube: achenes glabrous, 1.7 mm. long, crowned with a narrow callous ring other',. calvous: ligules pale-yellow, shading to deep purple at the tip, 5 mm. long, 1.8 mm. broad. —Collected in shallow water near Durango, M. \- by Dr. Edward Palmer, November. 1896, no. 8<>.~> (distributed as § bazia glabra ). * * Heads Bolitarj and axillary (.!. prorepetu) or more often terminnl in the ! of the stem, or, when Beveral, borne in leafy cymes: mere or less pubescent plants of muddy shores or drier habitat : rays yellow or white. ROBINSON. — -JAEGERIA AND RUSSELIA. 317 ■*- Heads relatively large, including the well-exserted conspicuous yellow rays, 1.2 to 1.5 cm. broad. ++ Main stem prostrate, rooting at the nodes ; branches ascending, few-headed : bracts foliar. 3. J. macrocephala, Less. Syn. Gen. Comp. 223, & Linnaea, ix. 270. — Jalapa, Mexico, Schistic & Deppe, C. L. Smith, nos. 1624, 1835; brook-sides near Patzcuaro, Michoacan, Pringle, no. 4166. -w- *■*■ Main stem erect from a short decumbent base : heads many : bracts reduced. 4. J. pkdunculata, Hook. & Am. Bot. Beech. 290. — Jalisco, Bceckey, Palmer, no. 427, ace. to Gray, Proc. Am. Acad. xxii. 124 ; Prin- gle, no. 1772; also Palmer, no. 47 in part (Spilanthes sessilis, Gray, I.e. 428, not Hemsl.). The identity of Mr. Pringle's no. 1772 with the type specimen at Kew has been kindly verified by Mr. W. B. Hemsley. +- -t- Heads considerably smaller; rays inconspicuous, scarcely exserted, yellow or white: pubescent or hirsute annuals. ++ Dwarf but not creeping, very slender; pubescence scanty: leaves small, ovate, not at all clasping at the base. 5. J. mnioides, IIIiK. Nov. Gen. & Spec. iv. 278, t. 400. The only plant in herb. Gray corresponding at all satisfactorily to the plate and description of this Michoacan species is some rather poor material col- lected in Costa Rica by Oersted. In it the stems are very slender, simple or sub-simple, ami erect, while the leaves are small and truly ovate, sub- sessile, but in no sense clasping. Kunth describes the rays as yellow. It is not unlikely that this original species of the genus was only a starved condition of the common J. hirta, Less. ■*-<■ ++ Tall, inclining to be repent at the base: leaves ovate, acutish : peduncles filiform, several times as long as the heads: pubescence usually copious and spreading. 6. J. hirta, Less. Syn. Gen. Comp. 223. J. repens, DC- Prodr. v. 544. Acmella hirta, Lag. Nov. Gen. & Spec. 31 ; Less. Linnaea, v. 15.'!. Melampodium brachyglossum, J. D. Smith, Bot. Gaz. xiii. 74. Spilan- tltes sessili folia, Coulter in J. Donnell Smith, Enum. PL Guat. i. 23, iii. 43. Jaeyeria caloa, Wats., a binomial needlessly published by Rusby, Mem. Torr. Club, iii. no. 3, 62.* * Dr. Watson was quite right in regarding this plant as the characteristic cat- vous part of Schultz's mixed type of the unpublished (ralinsor/a calva, as the exam- ination of Mandon's no. 80 (a portion of which has been kindly forwarded from the Kew Herbarium fur comparison) clearly shows. Dr. Rusby's publication of another Galinsoga caloa, founded on a pappus-bearing plant (which in the well known onfusion of the Mandon numbers may or may not have bad any relation to 318 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMT. This is evidently the commonest and most widely distributed Bpecii the eenus extending from western Mexico t" Tropical Brazil. It is highly variable in stature, foliage, and degree of pubescence; yel floral or even vegetative characters fora satisfactory ^rogation appear to be lacking. Var. glabra, Baker, in Mart. Fl. Bras. vi. pt 8, 1 67, is, to judge from its first mentioned type ( Mandon's no. 80), merelj a smoother »ether glabrous form as its description would imply. _ _, _ Dwarf, not creeping, freely branched, smoothish: leaves, at least the upper ones, obovate or oblong, Bessile by a narrowed but still Bomewhat clasping base : peduncles Bbort or none. 7. .1. discoid ea, Klut. Arbeit, des Hamb. Botan. Mus. L893, p. 2 nt reprint. Heads small mot discoid even in Klatt's type specimen! short-peduncled or sessile: rays small although Blightly exserted, white or pale yellow. Pringle, no. 1279 from the Sierra de las ('races, State a has been a published binomial since II I and Dr. Rusby's G. calva, applied to a different plant, is thus a later homonym which a rational application of the Rochester inks would discard. It i- to be hoped thai if any one feels impelled, on account of the '•doctrine of homonyi a n>\\ name to Dr. Rusby's species, the choice may be more felicitous. ROBINSON. JAEGERIA AND RUSSELIA. 319 * * * Heads small, discoid : branched pubescent annual : Galapagos Islands. 9. J. gracilis, Hook. f. I.e. 213. — Charles Island, Darwin. Doubtful species. J. beleidioides, Spreng. Syst. iii. 591, of Uruguay, is unrecognized and probably, like nearly all of the other species referred by Sprengel to Jaeyeria, belongs to some other genus. Tiie Genus Russelia. Considerable recently acquired material of Russelia seems to show Bentham's extreme reduction of the species ill-advised. At least a dozen may be recognized with advantage. The following provisional key may prove of assistance iu identifying the members of this confused genus. * Stems and branches sharply 4-angled, the angles bearing ciliated wings : pe- duncles opposite, axillary, solitary. S. America. 1. R. alata, Cham. & Schlecht. Linnaea, iii. 3 (1828) ; Schmidt in Mart. Fl. Bras. viii. pt. 1, 2G9, t. 44, f. II. — Tropical Brazil, Sellow & Riedel. * * Stems and branches sharply angled not winged; the angles prominent, often thickened; the intervening areas flat or concave. 4- Juncoid, excessively branched : peduncles filiform, 1-2 (-S)-flowered, much ex- ceeding the subtending bracts. % 2. R. equisetifokmis, Schlecht. & Cham. Linnaea, vi. 377 (1831). R. juncea, Zucc. Flora, 1832, II. Beibl. 99 (1832), is only a large flowered form of this species. The type of R. equisetiformis has been examined by Mr. J. M. Greenman in Berlin and proves to have corollas which vary from 1 to 2 cm. in length, thus invalidating the chief dis- tinction between the species, a fact also noted by Dr. Loesener, Bull. Boiss. ii. 562. •<- i- 1'eduncles short, the primary ones never equalling the subtending leaf-like bracts, usually several-many-flowered. ++ Leaves entire, subcoriaceous, lucid. 3. R. subcoriacea, Robinson & Seaton, Proc. Am. Acad, xxviii. 113. — Tamasopo Canon, San Luis Potosi, Mexico, Privgle, no. 5086. i-f ++ Leaves serrate : calyx-lobes oblong-lanceolate, gradually attenuate, not at all subulate at the tip : flowers 2 to 2.4 cm. in length. 4. R. jaiiscensis. Copiously branched : stems and branches sharply PROCEEDD mi: AMERICAN ACADEMY. quadrangular, glabrous : leaves opposite, thin, ovate to ovate-lanceol acute, atb auate al il covered on both surfaces with a sp more or less deciduous pubescence and resinous! P) punctation, ciliolate ut lc-ast when young, Bharplj serrate; petioles 2 nun. long; blade about 2 era. long, half a-- broad: floriferous branches leafy-bracted ; bra Bomewhat obovate, cuneate at the base; peduncles 2-flowered; pedl Blender, 1 nun. in length : calyx herbaceous, <"> mm. long, divided nearly (o the base; segments oblong-lanceolate, gradually and eveuly narrowed almost from the base to the flat acute but not at all subulate tip: corolla rlet, :.'. 1 cm. long, externally glabrous, internally pubescent near the base and bearded along a ventral line; lobes orbicular, spreading: cap- sule ovate, stramineous, 6 nun. long. — R. sarmentosa, Gray in Wi Proc. Am. Acad. wi. 434, not Jacq. — Collected in Jalisco in barrancas near Guadalajara by Dr. Edward Palmer, June, 1886, no. 126, and by C. G. Priogle, June, 1889, no. 2568. Types in herb. Gray. '1 differs from any other known tu the author in the shape of its calyx-lol ** -*-«■ +* I- urate: calyx-lobes broadly ovate, acuminate to subulate tips. = Stems and branches chiefly 4-angled, glabrous or glabrate. a. Leaves not cordate. 5. R. sarmentosa, Jacq. Enum. PI. Carib. 25 (1762) nomen, Stirp. Select, ^.m. 17s (1763), t. 113. !,. Leaves cordate. 6. P. FLORIBTTNDA, IIP.lv. Nov. Gen. & Spec. ii. 859 (1817). Doubtless represented by Palmer's no. 252 from near Acapulco. 7. R. syuingaefolia, Cham. & Schlecht. Linnaea, vi. 876 (1831). = = Sterna and branches B-many-angled. (i. Stems glabrous or sunn glabrate. 8. R. verticillata, HBK. Nov. Gen. & Spec. ii. 3C0 (1817). 6. Stems tomentulose or pubescent 1. Leaves small. 9. R. poltedra, Zucc. Al.h. Akad. Moench. ii. 828 (1832-86). ,'.'. /■ trorsa, Greene, Pittonia, i. 17<',, is hardly distinct. 2. Leaves ].e 10. R. TERNIFOLIA, HBK Nov. (i.n. & Spec. ii. 859 (1817). ROBINSON. — JAECxERIA AND RUSSELIA. 821 * * * Stems sub-terete, merely striate-angulate. -t- Branches of the inflorescence pseudo-racemose, elongated, loosely flowered: leaves large, thickish, veiny, tomentulose beneath. 11. R. rotuxdifolia, Cav. Icon. v. 9 (1799), t. 415. — Near Aca- pulco, Mexico. Dr. Palmer's no; 509 must be of this species. -t- -<- Branches of the glomerate inflorescence cynaose, many-flowered : leaves thin, acute or acutish : stem glabrous. 12. R. mtjltiflora, Sims, Bot. Mag. t. 1528 (1813). — R. pani- culata, Mart. & Gal. Bull. Acad. Brux. xii. pt. 2. 19 (1845), appears to be merely a verticillate- leaved form of this species. . 1- +- ■*- Inflorescences cymose, very short, opposite on prolonged branches: flowers very small: leaves bullate, obtuse: stem pubescent. 13. R. tepicensis. Probably suffruticose ; stems subterete, striate- angulate with many line ribs, subappressed-pubescent, internodes con- siderably exceeding the termite broadly ovate cordate petiolate obtuse crenate-dentate leaves ; these; membranaceous, glabrous and with im- pressed veins, strigillose on the veins and resinous-punctate on the surface beneath, 3 cm. long, 2.1 cm. broad; petioles •'! mm. long, ap- pressed-pubescent : floriferous branches (1 to 1.5 dm. long) mostly verti- cillate toward the ends of the stems: bracts ovate, petiolate, crenulate, small but exceeding the short peduncles (2 to 3 mm. in length); pedicels and subulate bractlets pubescent: calyx-lobes ovate, acuminate to slender recurved tips, puberulent near the middle, thin at the margin, 2 mm. long: corolla G to 7 mm. long, bearded near the base within, externally glabrous; lobes spreading : capsule ovoid, nearly spherical, glabrous, lucid, small, 3 to 4 mm. in length, slightly grooved between the carpels; these slightly carinate dorsally. — Collected at Zopelote, Tepic, Mexico, February. 1895, altitude 600 to 900 m.. by Frank H. Lamb, no. 578. Type in herb. Gray. This species is distinguished from R. sarmentosa, Jacq., by its subterete pubescent stems, ternate subcordate leaves, and very small flowers. R. rotund if olia, Cav. and R. multiflora, Sims, the only other species with subterete steins known to the writer, have much larger inflorescences and also differ in the form and pubescence of the leaves. VOL. XXXV. — 21 322 PROCEEDINGS OP Till: AMERICAN ACADEMY. m.— NEW DIOSCOREAS FROM MEXICO. i;v E. H. I'uxi .. Dioscorea pumicicola. Only J plant Been. Stem Blender, gla- brous, dextrorsely twisted ; leaves cordate at base, deltoid or Bub-trilob lateral lobes rounded, mediae p.u-t ovale and blunl or abruptly acuminate at apex, about 7-nerved, glabrous above, Bparsely pubescent on the uerves beneath; flowers arrauged in 8— 5-flowered cy mules, which are short-pedunculate, and Bituated at the angles of the slender rhacl anthers sulisrssilc, triangularly disposed at the centre of the open cam- panulate greenish-brown corolla. Leaves 8 to 12 cm. broad, little longer than wide. Petiole 1 or 5 cm. long, puberulent. Rhachis slender, angulate-flexuous, puberulent, 1 to 1.8 dm. long. Cymules 1 to * nun. apart, subsessile or on short peduncles. Flowers sessile, 3 mm. wide, with orbicular corolla-lobes, the inner whorl shorter. Anther-; very minute.- This species is intimately re- lated to D. macrostachya and D. spicultfiora, its inflorescence and flowers being essentially the same as the latter, but it differs radically from both in its lobed lea^ es and pubescence. Morel os, 1 a a beds near Cuernavaca ; C. < >. Pringle oo. 7227 / . I D. oaxacensis, Uline in Engl. & Prautl, Nat. Pflanzenf. Nacbtr. /. II, 5, p. 86, without characterization. — Glabrous, glaucous; leaves charta >us, cordiform with wide sinus, 9-nerved, exterior nerves on both sides more or less forked; £ racemes elongate, simple; rhachises angulate; flowers shortly pedicellate, in '2 3-flowered rather remote fas- cicles (rarely solitary), segments of the Bubrotate 6-parted perianth oblong, rather acute, the interior ones Blightly narrower; fertile stam< 3, subcentral, a little shorter than the segments of the corolla, strongly incurved, anthi rs extrorse in the bud, sterile filaments 3, very .short, flat, entire, sometimes bearing effete anthers. Stem compressed, angular, sinistrorsely twisted. Leav< a Bcattered 2.5 to 1 cm. wide, acuminate. Petioles about 2 cm. long. Racemes as long as 1.5 dm. Floral fascicles 1 to 12 mm. distant, shortly pedunculate. Flowers 6 mm. wide, on short slender pedicels; corolla-segments thin- membranaceous, unequal, greenish-yellow. Syn. D. macrostachya, Man. & Gal. Bull. Acad. Brux. ix. pt. -, p. 391 i 1842), not Benth. Mexico near Reyes, altitude l.*00 to 2,050 m., E. W. Nelson, no. 1786, in part, i. e., as to £ plant, in 1894. The only other specimen ROBINSON. — MEXICAN PLANTS. 323 of this plant known to be in existence was collected by Galeotti (no. 5456 $ ) and is in the herbarium at Brussels. D. lob ata, Uline, var. rnorelosana. Middle lobe of leaf obtuse, mucronate ; larger leaves measuring 2.5 dm. long and wide ; flowers with deeper tube; pedicels shorter and nearer together than in the species. Morelos, lava beds near Cuernavaca, altitude 1,540 m., C. G. Pringle, no. 7341 $. IV. — NEW PHANEROGAMS, CHIEFLY GAMOPETALAE, FROM MEXICO AND CENTRAL AMERICA. By B. L. Robinson. Hechtia sphaeroblasta. Only $ plant known : leaves 7 dm. long, 4.5 cm. broad at the base, gradually attenuate to a slender pungent apex, gray and scurfy on the lower (in dried state concave) surface, pale green but nearly smooth upon the reverse face, armed on the margins at inter- vals of about 2 cm. with very sharp incurved stramineous spines (2 mm. in length): inflorescence many-branched; axes smooth and glabrous, at least 7 dm. high ; bracts ovate-oblong, acute, entire, 1 cm. or more long, scarious, with many fine dark veins ; branches 1 to 3 dm. long, angled, ascending, glabrous, 5-9-brauched near the middle, bracts of the second order, small, scarious, about 2 mm. long; branchlets 4 to 12 cm. long, slender, ascending, loosely floriferous from the base to the tip, their bractlets scarious, 1 mm. long ; buds broadly ovoid almost globose, •'! mm. long just before expanding: flowers 14 to 30 on each branchlet, borne singly or subverticillate, nearly sessile, 6 mm. broad in anthesis: calyx-divisions oval, 2 mm. long; petals (in dried state yellowish white) suborbicular, distinct or nearly so, 3 mm. long, obtuse : rudimentary ovary in £ flowers glabrous. — Collected by E. W. Nelson at Tlapa, Guerrero, Mexico, altitude 1,200 m., 3 December, 1894, no. 2044. Types in herb. Gray and herb. U. S. Nat. Museum. This species pos- sessing subsessile flowers, elongated flowering branchlets, and glabrous ovary, evidently belongs in the group with H. rosea, Morr. (which has much larger flowers), H. stenopetala, Kl. (which has a much denser inflorescence and acuter petals), and H. gamopetala, Mez (which has the petals united). Smilax domingensis, Willd., var. roicroscola. Stem rather thickly PROCEEDINGS "I mi: AMERICAN ACADEMY. and branches sparingly covered with very short Btraight conical bj 5 nun. in length) : otherwise corresponding closely t<> the typical W Iinli:iii plant. — Collected by E. W. Nelson between Tnmbala and Kl 0, Chiapas, Mexico, altitude 466 to 1,400 m.. 29 October, 1895, no. 12. Types in berb. Gray and herb. I S. Nat. Museum. Polygonum Meisnerianum, Cham. & Scblecht., var. jalapense. Shu,-., ochreae, leaf-margins, and bracts covered with numerous stalked glands; prickles (developed in the typical form) obsolete: leaves inclin- ing to hastate lobing al the base.- -This is probably the /'. Meisn iiiuiiii of Cham. & Schlecht. in Linnaea, v. 90, but much more glandular than the typical form, characterized in Linnaea, iii. 10. — Collected by i . < .. Pringle in wet places near Jalapa, Mexico, altitude 1,225 m., 5 1. 1899, no. 81 1 1. This species appears to have been overlooked by Mr. Hemsley, a> it is not recorded in the Biologia Centrali-Americana. Telanthera mollis. Branches lignescent, terete becoming bud- quadrangular near the slightly tumid nodes, covered when young with a iofl short spreading or even reflexed pubescence, al length quite glabrate: leaves lance-oblong, entire, acute at each end, finely appressed- pubescent and (in the dried state) rugulose above, much paler and sericeous-tomentose beneath, 1 bo 6 or more cm. long, about half as broad; pubescent petioles about 1 cm. long: heads oval, obtuse, leaf- less, 1.1 to 2.2 cm. long, 1.1 cm. in diameter, borne in 2— 4-chotomous spreading round-topped panicles: ultimate tomentose pedicels 1 to 1.5 cm. long; bracts ovate, acute: sepals oblong, acute and pungent, sub- equal, 7 mm. long, dorsally covered with long dense Bilky hair: Btamineal tube a little shorter than the ovary, the sterile segments 2.3 mm. long, fimbriated above, about equalling the filaments and Bomewhat surpassed by the anthers: style nearly as long as the ovary; Btigma globose, bed. — Collected in Oaxaca in a canon above Totolapam by C. & E. Seler, 3 January, 1896, no. 1637. Near T. pubiflora, Moq. and char, i '/'. pycnantha, Moq. Differing from the former in its rounded many-headed panic].- and from both in its larger Btrongly villous flowers. Type in herb. ( J ray. Mimosa Deamii. Arborescent, 3 m. high: branches terete, unarmed. fuscous, tomentulose and roughened 1>\ the enlarged persistent b strigose hairs ; stipules Bhort, thickish, subulate, strigose: petioles 1.5 to 2.7cm. long: pinnae a single pair; their rhachises about 5 cm. long, each bearing 5 to 6 pairs of leaflets, Btrigose; leaflets elliptical, rounded at each end, coriaceous, glabrous above, sparingly Btrigose (chiefly on the excentric midnerve) beneath. 2.3 to 8.6 cm. long, half as broad. 8-4- ROBINSON. — MEXICAN PLANTS. 325 nerved, strigose-ciliate : flowers roseate, in globose heads ; peduncles 2.5 cm. long, borne by 2's or 3's at the nodes of unbranched terminal racemes: heads (including exserted stamens) l.G cm. in diameter: bractlets small, spatulate or oblanceolate, with thickened pubescent acute ends : calyx translucent, closely appressed, scarcely toothed but strongly ciliate: corolla 4-lobed, 4-nerved, '1.1 mm. long, the lobes oblong, sub- carinate, tomeutulose toward the summit, about half the length of the tube : stamens 4 ; filaments 3 times as long as the corolla, slightly en- larged above : fruit green, 3-4-jointed, constricted between the oval moderately flattened strigose segments, stipitate, 3 to 3.4 cm. long. 8 mm. broad. — Collected at Salina Cruz, State of Oaxaca, Mexico, by Charles C. Deam, 21 December, 1898, no. 113. This species (of § Eumimosa) is most nearly related to M. jisilocarpa, Robinson, but is readily distinguished by its strigose fruit and narrow strigose not soft-pubescent leaflets. M. psilocarpa. Branches ligneous, terete, unarmed, roughened by ferrugineous lenticels : petioles 2.3 to 5'.4 cm. long; leaves . 1 -jugate ; leaflets on each division normally 3 pairs (the inner member of the low- est pair often reduced), obovate, oblique or semicordate at the base, firm and subcoriaceous, 2.8 to 3.6 cm. long, 1.5 to 2.5 cm. broad, when young finely pubescent upon both surfaces, in age pah', lead-colored (in dried specimens), slightly lucid, glabrate except for a few short appressed or incurved stramineous bristles upon the slightly thickened margin and upon the nerves beneath: peduncles about 3 cm. long, divergent, borne singly or by twos at the nodes of short terminal racemes ; bracts subu- late, ciliate ; flowers perfect (so far as observed), capitate : calyx 0.7 mm. long, slightly toothed, ciliolate: corolla 4-toothed, 4 mm. long, 4-nerved ; the teeth lanceolate, one-third the length of the tube : stamens 4 : ovary slender-stiped ; pod 2-4-jointed, glabrous, wholly unarmed, 2 to 3 cm. long exclusive of the stipe (nearly half as long), 1.3 cm. broad, con- stricted between the sesfments, mucronate. — Mountain woods between " S. Carl and S. Bartolo Yuahntepec," Oaxaca, collected by C. & E. Seler, 6 January, 1896, no. 1727. This species belongs to Bentham's series Caslae and may be placed near M. lactijlua, Delile, although in habit and large leaflets it suggests some of the Sensitivae. C'lphea. Reipublicae, Rob. & Sea. Proc. Am. Acad, xxviii. 100. The type number of this species, unfortunately cited at the time of publication as Pringle's no. 4112, is his no. 4142. Vernoxia liatroides, DC. Prodr. v. 34 (1836). Add syn. Eupa- tor'tum tulanum, Klatt, Abh. Naturf. Ges. Halle, xv. 323 (1882). 326 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMT. Stevia arachnoidea. Stem, branches of inflorescence, &c, at flrsl white-lanate, soon arachuoid, and at length merely glandular-pnberulent : leaves opposite, lance-oblong, acute, cuneate at the base to a verj Bhort petiole, pinnately veined, * cm. or more in length, dentate, puberulent above, much paler and tomeutose beneath : inflorescence a round-topped dense compound corymb, its branches mostly alternate, spreading at :i considerable angle and ofteu exceeded bj the long narrow linear subtend- iracts; beads slender, crowded ; involucra] bracts puberulent, acute, • I nun. long: corollas pubescent, 5 mm. long, the tube purplish, the limb white or at least pale: achenes black, glabrous: pappus of several Bhort unequal acute Bcales, without long awns. — -s'. compacta, Coult. in J. I). Smith, Enum, PI. Guat. ii. 33, nol Benth. — Collected by Mr. J. Donnell Smith on the Volcano of Agua, Department Zacatepequez, altitude 2,700 m., April, L890, no. 2327. Tjpe in herb. Gray. S. compacta, Benth. PI. Hartw. 197, must from description have been :i very different plant with ovate leaves a third to half as I and involucres also much 8mal let". Schultz Bipontinus (Linnaea, xxv. 279) regarded Bentham's species as probably a form of S. rhombifolia, HBK. S. ASCHENBOKNIANA, Sch. Pip. Linnaea, XXV. 2G9 (1852). Mr. J. M. Greenman informs me that his S. diffusa, Proc. Am. Acad, xxxii. .'li'7 i l^'.1?!. proves on comparison with authentic material at the Royal Botanical Museum in Berlin to be identical with S. Asckenborniana. S. bicrenata, Klatt, Engl. Jahrb. viii. 32, was founded upon a poorly developed specimen of S. elatior, HBK. S. elatior, HBK., var. decumbens, Rob. & Greenman. Am. .lour. Set 1. 152., later published as S. decumbens, Greene, Pittonia, iii. 32, is *S. Ldebmannii, Sch. Bip. in Klatt, Leopoldina, xx. ~~>. S. madrensis, Gray, Proc. Am. Acad. wi. 382, should, I believe, he reduced to 8. I'litiiiiucrae, Gray. There seem to he no differences of moment. s. monakdaepolia, HBK., var. amblyolepis. Leaves large and eery thin, the blade somewhat deltoid-lanceolate or ovate, rather abruptly contracted at the base: Bcales of the involucre obtuse or rounded at the apex. — Collected by E. A. Goldman, at Pinal, Chihuahua, Mexico, altitude about 1,800 m., 19 September, 1898, no. l 16. S. monabdaefolia, HBK., var. macrophylla. Leaves rhombio- ovate, L.2 dm. long, •"> to (J cm. broad, cuneately decurrent upon the petioles .'! cm. or more iii length : involucral bracts acute. — Collected by C. G. Pringle, woods of Eslava, Valley of Mexico, Federal District, ROBINSON. — MEXICAN PLANTS. 827 altitude 2,350 m., 28 January, 1899, no. 8057, and earlier in woods afc base of mountains in the Valley of Mexico, Federal District, G November, 189 6, no. 7328. S. neurophylla, Robinson & Greenman, n. sp. Erect strict slender somewhat rigid herb, 3 to G dm. high : stem terete, puberulent, simple or sparingly branched : leaves strictly opposite, thick, rigid, ap- pressed, linear-oblong, longitudinally ribbed with many close parallel nerves, 2 to 5 cm. long, 3 to 5 mm. broad, sessile by a subclaspiug base, coneolorous, green and nearly glabrous upon each surface ; the lowest shorter, the upper also much reduced and distant : heads capitately aggregated at the summit of the stem ; bracts of the involucre rather rigid, glandular-puberulent, acute, 5 to 7 mm. long: corolla white, nearly glabrous : achene dark nearly black, hispid both between and upon the lighter colored angles ; pappus of 4 to G long almost plumose awns and as many oblong intermediate scales. — Collected by E. W. Nelson between Ayusinapa and Petatlan, Guerrero, Mexico, altitude 1,500 to 2,100 m., 14 December, 1894, no. 2133. Types in herb. Gray and herb. U. S. Nat. Museum. S. Rosei. Herbaceous smoothish perennial herb with tough dark fibrous roots: stems single, erect or slightly decumbent, 3 to 5 dm. high, usually branched from the middle, puberulent (under a lens) with crisped white hairs or quite glabrate ; branches opposite, ascending: leaves opposite, sessile, oblong or lance-oblong, subcoriaceous, veiny, crenate-serrate or nearly entire, usually obtuse, with 3 to 5 more or less anastomosing nerves: heads in several small dense somewhat leafy- involucrate capitate corymbs, these together forming a very loose leafy corymb; involucral bracts green, linear, attenuate, very acute, 8 to 10 mm. long, almost glabrous, not much surpassed by the white or pale purplish corollas : achenes black, glabrous ; pappus of 3 or more oblong obtuse scales with or without 2 or 3 naked awns. — Collected by Dr. J. N. Rose on the Sierra Madre, west of Balafios, Jalisco, 15 to 17 September, 1897, no. 2994; also in the state of Durango, 13 August, 1897, no. 2258. This species is evidently related to S. Pringlei, but differs in its short-pedicelled glomerate heads, larger leaves, etc. It is also related to »S. venosa, Gray, and S. Plummerae, Gray, but differs from both in inflorescence and character of its involucral bracts. S. Seleriana. Stems stoutish, lignescent, terete, white-lauate upon the younger internodes, soon arachnoid, glabrate, and at length verrucose with prominulous lenticels : leaves all opposite, decussate, petiolate, oblong, crenate at the sides, subentire at the acutish apex; entire at the PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. cuneate base, thickish, glabrous and covered on both surfaces (under a lens) with very numerous dark glandular dots; blade 8 to 10 cm. long, 2.3 i" '■'< cm. broad, pinnate-veined, the midnerve prominent beneath, grooved above; petiole 1.8 cm. long; the upper axils proliferous: in- florescence relatively small, 1 cm. broad, a trichotomous Bhort-peduncled corymb; involucral bracts •"> to 6 mm. long, viscid-pubescent upon the back, acutish : flowers 5; corolla, apparently white, about twice the length of the involucre, the tube viscid-puberulent : achen< - Bmooth or nearly so, crowned with Beveral narrow acute or Bubulate Bcales ; more elongated awns apparently lacking. — Collected by C. & E. Seler in mountain woods between St. Carlo- and St. Bartolo, Yantepec, Oaxaca, Mexico, 6 January, 1896, no. 1695. Well marked. Types in herb. Gray and herb. Royal Botanical Museum, Berlin. S. s errata, Cav., var. arguta. Leaves narrowly linear, ascending or appressed, sharply serrate with incurved teeth: Bcales of the involucre attenuate to a dark subulate tip. — Collected by C. G. Pringle on the ( i rro Ventoso above Pachuca, altitude 2,900 m., 18 August, 1898, no. 7652. S. tephra. Ashy throughout with a close pulverulent pubescence not glandular: stems herbaceous, terete, purplish: leaves scattered, elliptical, obtuse, crenate-serrate, '■'> cm. long, half as broad, 8-nerved, finely pubescent upon both surfaces, Blightly paler beneath, mostly eon- duplicate along the midrib, gradually narrowed to a petiole 1 1 cm. in length) : fascicles of smaller leaves on short or scarcely developed axil- lary shoots: inflorescence a moderately dense compound corymb; its branches chiefly alternate, ascending, the lower and longer about s cm. in length, the head- densely clustered at their summits ; individual pedi- cels 1 to 2 mm. long; involucral scales merely acutish, cinereous- puberulent, without evident glands, green or purplish-tinged, 1 to 5 mm. long: flowers 5, about twice the length of the involucre: corolla-tube purplish, puberulent; limb white or nearly bo: achenes black, lucid. •1 mm. lone;, minutely roughened upon the angles; pappus of three awns (equalling the corolla) and •'! short blunt intermediate Bcales. — Col- lected by C. G. Pringle, Siena de Pachuca, Hidalgo, altitude 2,925 m., 13 September, 1899, no. 8229. Piptothrix Goldmanii. Glabrous: stems terete. Btriate, purple. Blightly lucid: internodes 6 to -s cm. long: branches opposite: leaves deltoid-ovate, acuminate, serrate, .".-nerved from the shortly cuneate base, green and glabrous upon both surfaces, 8 to 10 cm. long, 6 to 8 cm. broad, thin but firm in texture, reticulated veins Blightly prominent upon ROBINSON. MEXICAN PLANTS. 329 the scarcely paler under surface; petioles slender, 1.5 cm. loug, purple: heads small, crowded in round-topped corymbs at the ends of the branches ; pedicels and bracts filiform ; scales of the involucre linear, substriate, 2.5 mm. long, slightly ciliated near the acute tip : corollas white, 3 mm. long, enlarged at the base of the tube, glabrous : achene scarcely over 1 mm. long, black, glabrous ; pappus-bristles 5 to 8, often 5 one over each angle of the achene, unequal, white, caducous. — Col- lected by E. A. Goldman near Batopilas, Chihuahua, Mexico, altitude 1,700 to 1,750 in., 4-5 October, 1898, no. 19G. Readily distinguished from the other species of the geuus by its much broader and well- petioled leaves. This may possibly prove ideutical with Eupatorium tri angulation, Alain., or E. rubrocaule, II BK. An effort to secure a more accurate classification of the tropical Ameri- can Eupatoriums represented in the Gray Herbarium has suggested the publication of the following new species and specific reductions. The writer hopes later to publish a synopsis of the Mexican and Central American species and thereby show more clearly the affinities of the forms here proposed. Eupatorium adenachaenium, Sch. Bip. in Klatt, Leopoldina, xx. 75 (1884). Add syn. E. adenochaetum, Hemsl. Biol. Cent. -Am. Bot. ii. 91 (1881), nomen nudum. E. adspersi/m, Klatt, Bull. Soc. Bot. Belg. xxxv. 279. Add syn. E. polanthum, Klatt, 1. c. 281. It is impossible to detect differences of any moment whatever. I doubt whether either is really distinct from Dr. Klatt's earlier species E. anisochromum, Bull. Soc. Bot. Belg. xxxi. 186 (1892). E. aegirophyllum. #Stem terete, clothed with close sordid or tawny slightly scabrous tomentum ; internodes long : leaves opposite, ovate, subrotund, shortly acuminate, shallowly and broadly cordate, 1.2 dm. long, nearly or quite as broad, puberulent and slightly scabrous above, much paler and at first tomentose but at length glabrate and veiny beneath, serrulate (sometimes obsoletely so) ; nerves at base pinnate then palmate somewhat above the base; petioles tomentose, 5 to 7 cm. long: inflorescence a large round-topped many-headed panicle ; branches oppo- site, tomentose ; primary bracts petiolate, similar to the leaves ; the secondary and ultimate ones linear or subulate ; heads 1 cm. long, 20- 30-flowered ; involucral scales about 22, lance-linear, suhequal, acute, glandular-puberulent on the back, loosely imbricated : corollas 5 mm. long, about equalling the whitish pappus ; the slender proper tube ex' :'.:;<) PROCEEDINGS OP THE A.MEBICAN A.OADEM7. ceeding the gradually ampliated throat : achenea Blender, brown, attenu« ate below, 8 mm. long. -Collected by E. W. Nelson on eastern slope of Mt. Orizaba, altitude 1,500 to 2,100 m., 21 March, 1894, no. 804. \ i j >. in Klatt. Leopoldina, \\. 89 (188 h. Add Byn. II. drepanophyUum^ Klatt, Ann. k. k. Naturh. Hofmus. Wien, i.\. 356 (1894). The type of the latter species Btated by Dr. Klatt as col- lected by Sauwne is Gammer's no. 122 from Cozumel Isl. E. albica.1 ii:, Sch. 1 V i j > . , var. laxius. [nflorescence somewhat looser than in tin; type: scales of the involucre linear-attenuate, 5 nun. long. — Collected by Dr. Edward Palmer in Vmala. Mexico, 16 to 25 August, 1891, no. 1 174 (type) and by Dr. J. N. Rose at Rosario, Sinaloa, 7 July. 1897, no. 15G6. Dr. Rose's no. 1839 from the Bame locality is probably the Bame, although the inflorescence is -till more open. E. amblyolepis. Smoothish herb or underahrub, 3 to G dm. high; stems slender, terete, at first puberulent, soon glabrate and lucid, copi- ously branched; branches opposite, ascending: haves opposite, lanceo- late, acute to attenuate at each end. serrulate to Bubentire, thin, green, glabrous, and somewhat lucid, minutely pellucid-punctate, 5.5 cm. Long, 1.3 cm. broad. 3-nerved from somewhat above the cuneate base; petio 4 to G mm. long: heads small, numerous, in Bat-topped corymbs; pedi- cels 5 to 8 mm. long, bracteolate near the summit; involucral bracts about 13, in 2 subequal series, obovate-oblong, pale green, Btriate, rounded and ciliolate at the summit, 3 mm. long, at length spreading: flowers about 15, small : corolla probably while, 8.5 mm. long, somewhat exceeding the very delicate and rather sparse bright white pappus : achenes 1 .o nun. long, black, minutely roughened on th^ sharp angles. — ( Collected by < '. G. Pringle on cool Ledges of the Sierra de Tepoxtlan, 24 km. north- east of Cuernavaca. altitude 2,300 in.. 7 February, lS'.K). no. S03 1. E. AREOLAEE, DC, var. leiocarpum. Nearly glabrous throughout: flowers somewhat larger than in the typical form and borne in condensed (•vines: achenes smooth. — Collected by E. W. Nelson, near Chilpan- cingo, Guerrero, Mexico, altitude 2,700 to 8,100m., 24 December, 1894, no. 2221. Types in herb. Gray and herb. C S. Nat. .Museum. There are no marked differences between the typical form of this Bpecies and the later E. tubiflorum, Benth. PL Hartw. 76, bo far as the tolerably detailed descriptions indicate. Hemsley refers to Ghiesbreght's no. 580 under both names. The vaguely characterized E. papantlense of Lessing may perhaps he the same. ROBINSON. — MEXICAN PLANTS. 331 E. baditjm, Klatt, Bull. Soc. Bot. Belg. xxxi. 186 (1892), a species based upon a Costa Rican type, is well matched by Mr. E. W. Nelson's no. 2251 collected near Chilpancingo, Guerrero, Mexico. E. Bertholdii, Sch. Bip., var. stenophyllum. Leaves lance- oblong, attenuate at each end, 9 cm. long, 2 to 2.4 cm. broad, entire. — - Collected by C. G. Pringle in canons near Guadalajara, Jalisco, 8 Decem- ber, 1888, no. 1831. A shrub 2 m. high. The typical form of north- western Mexico has ovate serrulate leaves. E. brickettoides, Klatt, Jahrb. Iiamb. Wissensch. Anstalten, ix., pt. 2, 1892, 124, is a Trixis ! E. capnoresbium. Shrub with slender opposite terete glabrate branches; branchlets, petioles, and pedicels sordid glandular-tomentose : leaves opposite, elliptic-oblong, acute at each end, impuuetate, more or less serrate from the middle, to the apex, not re volute at the base, pubes- cent above with short rather sparse hairs, paler and pubescent especially on the midnerve and pinnate veins beneath, 3.5 cm. long, 1.6 cm. broad; petiole 6 mm. long: heads (1 cm. in length) in trichotomous round- topped fastigiate corymbs, slender-pedicelled, about 10-flowered; iuvo- lucral scales lance-oblong, acutish, purple-tinged, glandular-puberulent dorsally, one or two of the outer lance-linear and shorter than the rest: corollas 6 mm. long, purplish : acheues prismatic, 3 mm. long, puberu- ]ent. — Collected by C. G. Pringle in forests at the foot of the Sierra de Ajusco in the Federal District, Mexico, 26 June, 1897, no. 7438, type (in herb. Gray), and earlier by Schaffner on Mt. Popocatapetl, altitude 2,700 m., September, 1855, also by Bourgeau in a forest of the Desert Viego near City of Mexico, 1865-66, no. 844. This species has the inflorescence and much the habit of E. micranthum, Less., which, how- ever, has the leaves finely, but distinctly punctate on both surfaces and revolute at the base. See remarks under E. glaucum, below. E. cardiophyllum. Stout, tall herb, short-pubescent or tomentulose and scabrous throughout ; stem terete, striate, fistulose : leaves opposite, ovate-orbicular, short-acuminate, cordate with an open sinus, crenate, 1 to 1.6 dm. long, about as broad; petioles 2 or more cm. long, connate at the base : rounded terminal corymb loose, ample, 2 to 3.4 dm. broad, its branches subtended by bract-like much reduced leaves; bractlets linear or filiform; branches and pedicels dark purple, glandular-pubescent: heads 8 mm. long, 24-flowered ; involucral scales about 15, linear, acute, purple, puberulent, unequal, not strongly imbricated : corollas 5 to 6 mm. long, exceeding the nearly white pappus : achenes black, white- puberulent under a lens. — Collected by C. G. Pringle on slopes of 332 PROCEEDINGS OP Tin: AMERICAN ACADEMY. canons near Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico, 29 October, 1889, no. 2343, and earlier on the Rio Blanco in the same neighborhood l>\ Dr. Edw. Palmer, October, 1886, n<>. 665. Both plants were distributed as /.'. Benlhamii. However, Klatt'a Bpeciea of thai name (which is a clear Bynonym of the earlier /-'. Ehrenbergii, Elemsl.) has ovate Berrate not cordate leaves, more numerously flowered heads, etc. ED. < bapalbnse, Wats., var. salicifolium. Leaves narrowly lance- olate, merely serrulate, acute at both ends, 1 to 'J cm. long, 1.2 to 1.1 cm. broad: Bcales of the involucre oblanceolate, broader than in the typical form. — Collected l>y C. G. Pringle on mountains near Lake Chapala, Jalisco, Mexico, 18 October, 1895, no. 7i>71. The Leaves of the typical form arc more than 1 cm. broad. The variety retains the floral characters and unequal pappus of the type E. chiapense. Stem terete, clothed with a dense purplish brown tomentum; internodes long (0 to 8 cm.): leaves opposite, ovate, acuminate, Berrate-dentate except near the rounded base, dull green and except on the subpinnate nerves nearly glabrate above, paler and ferrugineous-tomentose upon the nerves and veins beneath, 1 to l.i dm, long, 6.5 to s em. broad; petioles densely tomentose, 1 to .V.". em. long: heads numerous, 9 mm. high, about 24-flowered, home in a compound round-topped corymb (1.5 dm. broad); the" opposite branches and pedicels tomentose with purple gland-tipped hairs; involucre subsimple and scarcely imbricated ; scales about 10, narrowly linear, attenuate, mostly 2-ribbed, •'> nun. Ion-, pubescent: corollas glabrous, ■> nun. long, exceeding the dull white pappus; throat equalling the proper tube: aehenes hlack, tdahrous, tapering toward the base, 1 nun. long. — Collected by E. W. Nelson, near Pinabete, Chiapas. Mexico, altitude 2,000 to 2,400 in., s February, L896, no. 3786. This Bpecies is n lated to /•;. Ehrenbergii, Elemsl., hut has much narrower involucral Bcales, smaller heads, glabrous corollas, etc. It i- also and perhaps still more closely related t<> /•,'. DonneU-Smithii, Coulter, which, however, has pale ohtusish involucral bracts, and flowers much smaller, Bcarcely more than hall' as long. E. crassirameum. Large shrub or small tree. :; to ."> m. high, glabrous throughout: branches thick, terete, soft-woody to the inflores- cence, covered with a pale gray cortex : leaves opposite, petiolate, la: g deltoid-ovate, thin, pellucid-punctate, glabrous, acuminate, repandly lew- toothed a i the sides, pinnately veined, becoming L.5 dm. long and aboul equally broad; petioles 5 cm. in length: heads numerous, about la-flowered, pedicellate in dense rounded compound corymbs (9 cm. in ROBINSON. — MEXICAN PLANTS. 333 breadth) ; involucres only 2 or 3 ram. long, little imbricated ; the scales oblong, scarcely acute, unequal, ciliolate : flowers purple, 6 mm. in length. — Collected by C. G. Pringle on lava fields near Cuernavaca, altitude 1,500 m., no. 8271. The flowers on the fleshy naked branches were secured 16 February, and the leaves 29 September, 1899. Very distinct in habit from any species of which I can find record. E. crenaeum. Erect herb ; simple stems so grooved as to be- come cross-shaped in transverse section, pulverulent-puberulent ; in- ternodes mostly long, the lower more than 1 dm. in length : leaves opposite, decussate, ovate, obtusish, crenate, obtuse at the subentire base, finely and sparsely pubescent upon both surfaces, 9 to 1 1 cm. long, 7 to 8 cm. broad, 5-nerved from the base, slightly paler beneath ; petioles relatively short, 1 to 1.3 cm. long, puberulent : heads about 50 in a terminal flat-topped corymb; pedicels filiform, flexuous, 5 mm. long; iuvolucral bracts about 14, subequal, linear, acute, 1-3-nerved toward the base, G mm. long ; flowers about 1 6 ; corolla probably white or pale, 5 mm. long, equalled by the white pappus ; achenes glabrous, gray. — Collected by ('. G. Pringle in springy places near Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico, G July, 1889, no. 2878. E. desquamans. Copiously branched shrub ; branches spreading, lignescent nearly to tin' tips; internodes mostly very short, soon covered by a grayish cortex : haves opposite, petiolate, small, oval, obtuse or merely acutisb at each end, 1.8 cm. long, 8 to 11 mm. broad, pinnately veined, finely serrate, at maturity green above and puberulent only under a good lens, paler beneath, when young clothed especially beneath with a close silvery web which soon breaks up into deciduous scalelike remnants ; petioles 3 to 5 mm. long: inflorescences simple or nearly so, terminal, 5-9-headed, racemiform ; pedicels opposite, 1 cm. long, bracteo- late nea$ the middle; involucre subsimple, of linear acute brownish puberulent subequal bracts about 13 in number and 5 mm. long : flowers about 15, 1 cm. long: corolla apparently white or pale, about equalled by the copious nearly white pappus : achenes smooth, black, shining, sharply angled. — Collected by C. G. Pringle on summit ledges of the Sierra de San Felipe, Oaxaca, altitude 3,100 m., 22 May, 1894, no. 5858. Type in herb. Gray. E. glatjcum, Klatt, Leopoldina, xx. 89 (1884). The publication of this species has been unfortunate in several ways. The name first appears in print as " E. glaitcum, Sch. Bip. ex A. Gray" in Hemsl. Biol. Cent.-Am. Bot. ii. 95 (1881), where Parry & Palmer's no. 335 from San Luis Potosi is referred to it. This mention cannot constitute PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. publication, however, a* it is not accompanied l>y any description or synonymy whatever. The specimen cited is /'. micranthum, L | /■'. ligustrinum, DC. ■ Dr. ( rray e\ idently got his idea of Schultz's E. glaucum from a plant now in herb. Gray collected by Schaffner on Popocatapet] and labelled in Schultz's own hand " E. glaucum, Sch. Bip. in Ehrenb. pL Mex. no. 897." This plant is a Bpecies evidently near /'. micranthum, Less., but differing in its impunctate h-.-n es, &c. In 1884 Dr. Klatt published, I. c, the first description of E. glaucum, but ll is quite evident from the characters given as well as from a good drawing and some fragments in his herbarium thai Dr. Klatt had quite a different plant before him from either /.'. glaucum, Gray (nomen milium) or E. glaucum, Sch. Bip. in herb. (coll. Schaffner). [dentical with Dr. Klatt's K. glaucum (which, being the first Bpecies described under that name, must stand) is E. Orizabae, Sch. Bip., described on the subsequent pagei Leopoldina, xx. 90) by Klatt himself. Thisspt is clearly shown 1>_\ the excellent specimens distributed by Liebmann, no. 80, and Nelson, no. 17;i7 (from near Reyes, Oaxaca). The leaves are Bmall, thickish, and subsessile and the branches numerous and ascending. The original E. glaucum, Sch. Bip. in herb., which is quite different was also distributed by Schultz under a name approaching " E. popoca- tapetlense" but with some differences in the spelling. Mr. Eiemsley refers E. />>>/><>cittapetlense (nomen nudum) to Schlechtendahl and cites under it Ghiesbreght's no. 529 (which with its glandular-punctate leaves revolute at the base is E. micranthum, Less.). Schultz's name in Dr. Gray's hand appears on the label of Ghiesbreght's specimen in herb. Gray, and the substitution of Schlechtendahl as authority is certainly a clerical error in the Biologia Cent. -Am. and Index Kewensis. While Schultz's species seems to be a good one, it would seem unwise to launch it under a diffen al spelling of a name already used in another significance. It has therefore seemed best to describe it as above under a new name E. capnoresbium. The Bynonymy of the related species here mentioned may be stated thus : — E. Mi' i: wiin \i. Less. Linnaea, v. 138 (1830), not of Lag. (which was an Ageratum). /:. Ugustrtnum, DC. Prodr. v. 181 (1836). /:. semialatum, Benth. PI. Hartw. 7G (1841). /.'. popocatapetlense, llemsl. Biol. Cent. -Am. Bot. ii. 99 (1881). ROBINSON. — MEXICAN PLANTS. 335 E. glaucum, Hemsl. I.e. 95 (1881), not Sch. Bip. nor Klatt. E. CAPXORESBIUM, n. sp. E. glaucum^ Sch. Bip. in herb. Also under another unedited name by Schultz. E. glaucum, Klatt, Leopoldina. xx. 89 (1884), not Sch. Bip. (nomen nudum) nor Ilemsl. (nomen nudum). E. Orizabae, Sch. Bip. in Klatt, 1. c. 90 (1884). E. heterolepis. Soft woody stems glabrous, lucid : leaves opposite, approximate, decussate, lance-oblong, entire, acute at each end, coriaceous, 1.2 to 1.4 dm. long, 3.G to 4.8 cm. broad, nigrescent, pinnately and rather obscurely veined, pulverulent under a good lens; petioles 2 to 3 cm. long; heads 8 mm. long, 1 to 1.2 cm. in diameter, about LS-Howered, borne on filiform flexuous divergent pedicels in an open pyramidal pauicle ; scales of the involucre of two kinds, the inner long, linear, acute, about equal- ling the flowers, stramineous, at length deciduous; the outer (about 6 in number) ovate to lanceolate, aeutish, much shorter, persistent, nigrescent: corollas 5 to 6 mm. long, with slender proper tube and distinctly en- larged throat: pappus of about equal length, somewhat sordid : achenes glabrous, 2 mm. long. — Collected by Dr. Sereno Watson in "eastern portions of Vera Paz and Chiquimula," Guatemala, 1885, no 65. Type in herb. Gray. A very distinct species with a calyculate involucre re- calling a Senecio. E. Heydeanum. Stems somewhat flattened, especially beneath the nodes, striate, tomentulose above, soon glabrate and slightly scabrous: leaves opposite, ovate to ovate-lanceolate, caudate-acuminate at the apex, cuneate at the base, entire, 3-nerved from above the base, sordid-tomen- tulose upon the nerves above, at first sordid-tomentose at length merely pubescent and slightly paler beneath, thin, 1.7 dm. long, 7 to 8 cm. broad ; petioles sordid-tomentose, 4 to 9 cm. long : panicle opposite-branched, rounded, terminal, 1 dm. broad ; heads about 22-fiovvered, 9 mm. long, short-pedicelled ; involucral scales linear, acute, about 16, loosely imbri- cated, sordid- tomentulose on the outer surface, the outer shorter : corollas 5 to 6 mm. long, gradually enlarged from the base to the short-toothed limb, without sharply differentiated throat: achenes slender, 5 mm. long, hispidulous on the angles; pappus sordid, of nearly equal length. — E. Ehrenbergii, Coulter in J. D. Smith, Enutn. PL Guat. iv. 74, not Hemsl. — Collected by Ileyde & Lux on Rio de Las Canas, Depart. Santa Rosa, Guatemala, altitude 800 m., March, 1892, no. 3427 of Mr. J. Donnell Smith's sets. Type in herb. Gray. E. Ehrcnbergii, Hemsl., has serrate leaves, much larger heads, and broader involucral scales. PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. E. I ill-. Stems I to :; m. high, terete, Btriate, covered al least when young with Bhaggy tawny wool: leaves opposite, thickish, short- petioled, oblong, acuminate, sharply serrate, narrowed to :i crisped 1' appressed-villous above especially upon tin- veins, soft-pubescenl upon 1 1 1 - - pinnate pi- inuloua veins beneath, concolorous, Blightly reticulate, 1.8 to 1.6 dm. long, •_' to •"> cm. broad; petioles lanate, 5 mm. long; iufli cence somewhat rigid, rather dense; lower branches widelj Bpreadi _. thickish; bracts lance-linear, nearly equalling the heads; involucre sub- turbinate; tin' scales pluriseriate, elliptical, regularly imbricated, at length campanulately spreading, finely striate, ciliolate : flowers 1.2 cm.'lo corolla 7 nun. ion--, cylindrical with little enlargement at the throat : pappus Blightly tawny, of the eame length: achenea columnar, puberulent on the angles. — Collected by Dr. Sereno Watson in the M( istern por- tions of Vera Paz and Chiquimula," 1885, nos. 74 a, 123. Types in herb. Gray. Nearly allied to tin- \Y. Indian /•,' plucheoides, Griseb., but dif- fering in its larger heads, broad smoothish obtuse involucral scales, etc. E. Loesenerii. Shrub, 2 to 3 m. high ; branches stout, terete, opposite, curved-ascending, covered with a -mouth gray cortex with longitudinal rifts, the lenticels not prominent : brauchlets Btoutish, elongated, covered with a line ochraceous tomentum i tometimes red to a mere pulverulence) : leaves opposite, petiolate, broadly ovate or oval, shallowly cordate, pounded or very obtuse with slight macro at the apex, obsoletely serrate or entire, 5 to G cm. long, 1 to 5 cm. broad, subpalmately veined, pale green and pulverulent above, tomentulose and ochraceous beneath : petioles 2 to 3.5 cm. lorn:, strongly channelled abi Bubconnate at the base : heads numerous, about 20-flowered, in terminal round-topped compound corymbs (9 to 12 cm. broad) ; pedicel- 7 to !i mm. long; involucres tomentulose, 3 mm. long, eampanulate, the seal - Bub- equal, obtuse or barely acute, ciliate, ochraceous or purplish, scarcely at all herbaceous: corolla white or pale purple. 1 mm. I resinous-punctate on the teeth: pappus-bristles about 20, white, unequal; angles of the achene upwardly hispid. — Collected in Oaxaca by C. G. Pringle on calcareous hills, La .altitude 1,800 m., 80 October, 1£ no. 0022. type (in herb. Gray). This plant was unfortunately determined aa E. sordidum, Less., from the not altogether satisfactory description of tli it species. A comparison by Mr. J. M. Green man of Mr. Prim plant with authoritative material of E. tordidum now shows that the latter is quite distinct, being jn fact oP the Hebeclinium group. E. Loesenerii lias also been collected by E. W. Nelson along the Cuicatlan road, Valley of Oaxaca, altitude 2,100 to 2,400 in., 3 October, 1894, no. 1549; by ROBINSON. — MEXICAN PLANTS. 337 L. C. Smith, Rancho de Calderon, San Juan del Estado, altitude 1,700 m., 4 November, 1894, no. 275; and by C. & E. Seler at Cuauhtilla, 28 November, 1895, no. 1537, between Yanhuitlan and Teposcolula, Oaxaca, 3 December, 1895, no. 1430, and Canada Sta. Maria, 8 December, 1895, no. 1596. I take pleasure in dedicating this species to Dr. Theodor Loesener of the Royal Botanical Museum at Berlin. E. Nelsonii. Slender shrub, 1.6 to 3 m. high: stems terete, striate, dark brown, minutely gray-pubescent, somewhat flexuous ; interuodes rather long : leaves opposite, ovate, caudate-acuminate, dentate, about 7-nerved from the deeply cordate and more or less hastate base, mem- branaceous, dull-green and finely gray-pubescent upon both surfaces, 8 to 10 cm. long, 5 to 8 cm. broad ; petioles flexuous, 3 to 4.5 cm. long, puberulent: heads about 16-flowered, numerous, 8 mm. long, borne in opposite axillary and terminal trichotomous nutant corymbs ; peduncles and pedicels pubescent, filiform; involucral scales very unequal, light green, striate, elliptical, obtuse, rounded or erose at the summit, imbri- cated in 3 or 4 rows: corollas at anthesis 4 mm. long, of essentially uniform diameter throughout, thus not clearly differentiated into tube and throat, pale, said to be yellowish : styles dark, strongly clavate ; achenes (of the genus) hispidulous, 3 mm. long, tapering almost from the summit to the base, at length subglabrate and nearly black. — Collected by E. W. Nelson between Ayusinapa and Petatlan, Guerrero, 14 Decem- ber, 1894, no. 2144; by C. G. Pringle on Monte Alban, Oaxaca, altitude 1,700 m., 21 December, 1894, no. 5637 (leaves less deeply cordate) ; and by C. & E. Seler, in mountain woods between Yanhuitlan and Teposcolula, Oaxaca, Mexico, 3 December, 1895, no. 1447. Types in herb. U. S. Nat. Museum, herb. Royal Bot. Museum, Berlin, and herb. Gray. This species has the involucre and clavate style-branches of a Brickellla. The achene, however, is distinctly that of a Eupatorium. E. Oehstedianum, Benth. in Oersted, Vidensk. Meddel. 1852, p. 74. Add syn. E. v/motiioides, Coult. Bot. Gaz. xx. 45. E. oresbium. Upper part of the stem, peduncles, and pedicels loosely pubescent with a sparse more or less deciduous tawny wool : leaves opposite, ovate, acuminate, rounded or subcordate below, very shortly cuneate at the attachment of the petiole, cuspidate-dentic- ulate, thin, very finely pellucid-punctate, green and glabrous above, scarcely paler and conspicuously villous upon the nerves beneath, 5-7- nerved from a point somewhat above the base, 1.2 to 1.4 dm. long, 1 dm. broad; petioles 8 to 10 cm. long, puberulent,' also tomentose along the grooved upper surface: corymb open, rounded or subpyramidal, tri- 338 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. cbotomous ; pedicels filiform, 5 mm. long; involucre) bracta thin, pale green, verj unequal, the inner oblong, obtuse, ciliate and minim ly puberulent, 0 nun. long, the outer much Bhorter, ovate-lanceolate, acute. glabrous: flowera about 16: corolla purple, 6 mm. long, considerably exceeding the delicate bright white pappus: achenee glabrous, dark . 2 mm. long, — Collected by ('. (1. Pringle in a wet mountain canon above Cueruavaca, Mexico, altitude 2,000 m., 15 February, 1 - no. Three to five meters bigh. E. pacacanum, Klait, Botanisches Beiblatt zur Leopoldina, i p. 3. Add syn. & roseum, Klatt Bull. Sue. Bot. Belg. xxxi in I | 1892), not Gard. Both of Dr. Klatt's Bpecies lure mentioned rest upon Pittier's no. 3324 The existe > of an earlier valid E.roteum m skates the adoption of Dr. Klatt's second name. E. phoenicolepis. Stems terete, probably herbaceous, purplish brown, covered with dense very short glandular sordid lomentum : lea opposite, ovate, acuminate, cordate with a narrow sinu>. serrate, dull green, pulverulent and sometimes bullate above, paler, tomentose and reticulate- veiny beneath, 3-nerved from near the base, 5 to 7 cm, long, -A to 4.5 cm. broad; petioles 1.4 to 3 cm. long; bracts similar to the leaves ex- cept in their smaller size, extending up into the many-headed opposite- branched round-topped panicle; heads 1 cm. in height, about 18- flowered; bracts of the involucre purple, flat, striate, acutish, very unequal, regularly imbricated in 4 to 5 series, the outer very short. ovate, dark and dull, the inner lighter and somewhat lucid, about equal- ling the tlowers: corollas apparently deep purple or crimson, ."> mm. long, equalling the delicate and not very copious pappus: style-branches clavate; achenes 2.2 mm. long, upwardly hispidulous under a lens. — Collected by K. W. Nelson between San Cristobal and Teopisca, Chiapas, Mexico. 1 December, 1895, no. 317"). Types in herb. Gray and herb. U. S. Nat. Museum. A species with the styles and to some extent the involucre of a BrickeUia but the achenes of a Eupatorium. It is most nearly related to II. Bigelovii, (Way, which, however, has much more acute scales and smaller leaves not cordate at the base. E. photinum. Glabrous up to the slightly pulverulent-puberulent inflorescence, herbaceous, erect, 5 dm. high: stems terete, subsimple, dark purple, with rather long inter lea : leaves opposite, ovate or OVate-lai date, 7 toll cm. long, 8 to 4 cm. broad, caudate-attenuate. serrate except near the Bubacute base, green, glabrous, and somewhat lucid upon both surface-. .". nerved from near the base j reticulate veins slightly translucent; petioles purple, 1.5 to 2 cm. long: heads small, ROBINSON. — MEXICAN PLANTS. 339 5 mm. high, about 16-flowered, borne in small round-topped corymbs at the ends of the opposite branches, also forming a larger dense terminal corymb ; pedicels 4 mm. long ; involucral bracts subequal, oblong, obtuse, pale green, striate, 3 mm. long : corollas nearly white, 2.5 mm. long, the well-marked throat nearly as long as the proper tube: pappus (not copious) about equalling the corolla: achenes black, 1.2 mm. long, minutely roughened on the angles. — Collected by C. G. Pringle on shaded cliffs of the Sierra de Tepoxtlan, 24 km. northeast of Cuernavaca, Mexico, altitude 2,300 m., 7 February, 1891), no. 8029. E. platyphyllum. Shrubs with stems pithy, 6-angled, stoutish but flexuous as if scandent, at first sordid tomentulose-pulverulent, at length glabrate; internodes rather long : leaves opposite, 1.2 to 1.8 dm. long, the largest 2.2 dm. broad, shallowly 3-lobed, acuminate, rounded below to a very shortly cuneate base, thin, green and glabrous or nearly so on each surface, 3-nerved from the base, coarsely reticulate-veined, the veins pale and slightly promiuulous beneath; lobes acuminate, cuspidate-denticulate ; petioles slender, 3 cm. long: heads large, numerous, fi0-7.J-Howered, aggregated at the ends of the slender ascending branches of a broad somewhat pyramidal panicle; pedicels filiform, about 1 cm. long; in- volucre campamdate, 1 cm. high, 1.3 cm. in diameter; scale? pluriseri- ate, regularly but loosely imbricated, very unequal in length, stramineous, striate, scarious and erose near the rounded tips: corollas 6 nun. long, probably white, very slender, without distinctly enlarged throat, equalled by the copious bright white pappus : achenes glabrous, 2 mm. long. — Collected by E. W. Nelson, near Chicharras, Chiapas, Mexico, altitude 900 to 1,800 m., 6 February, 189G, no. 3765; also by E. A. Goldman at Metlaltoyuca, Puebla, no. 78. Types iu herb. Gray and herb. TJ. S. Nat Museum. E. Saltivarii, Sch. Bip. in Rob. & Sea. Proc. Am. Acad, xxviii. 108 (1893). Add syn. E. abronium, Klatt, Ann. k. k. Naturh. Hofmus. Wien, ix. 355 < 1894). E. scabrellum. Stems angled and furrowed above, finely grayish pubescent or tomentulose : leaves subalternate (at least the upper ones), petiolate, ovate, scarcely acute, subcordate or rounded at the base, crenate-denticulate, 5 to 16 cm. long, 3 to 12 cm. broad, thin but of harsh texture, green upon both sides not paler beneath, glabrous to the naked eye, but somewhat scabrous and under a lens puberulent, palmately 3-nerved somewhat above the pinnately several-nerved base : inflores- cence an alternate-branched many-headed racemose panicle, its lower branches (subtended by leafy bracts) 1.2 dm. long, naked below, :)40 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. branched and somewhat thyreoid from the middle, pubescent ; iuvolucra] bracts about 10, oblong, pubescent d, subequal (only •_'.•"» mm. long pt the 1 or 2 calyculate external ones flowers about 1". corollas white, 2.5 mm. long, the throat funnel-formed without Bharp demarcation from the relatively Bhort proper tube : achenes at length black. 1.5 mm. long: pappus white, equalling the corolla, not copious. — Collected bj E. A. Goldman near Batopilas, Chihuahua, Mexico, alti- tude 1,700 to 2,000 m.. -1 to •". October, 1898, no. 197. Types in herb. i S. -Nat. Museum and herb. Gray. E. S( orodonioides, Gray, var. grossedentatum. Leaves deltoid, hastate, rather deeply cordate, coarsely crenate-toothed : pubescence less copious and shorter than iii tin- typical form. — Collected by < '. • i. Prin- on limestone hills near Tula. Hidalgo, 20 September, 1899, do 824 1. E. Selerianum. Branches opposite, weak, flexuous, terete, Btriate, finely pubescent: leaves opposite, petiolate, ovate, abrupt or cordate at t lie base, acuminate or narrowed to an obtusisb tip, glabrate above, gl tomentulose beneath, 1.5 to 3 cm. long, two-thirds as broad, crenate; petioles 1 to 1.5 cm. long: inflorescence a lax flat-topped compound corymh : the branches filiform, opposite or alternate, bearing 1 to several small nearly orbicular Bhort-petioled bracts ( 1 to '< mm. in diameter) : pedicels 1 to 7 nun. long, minutely bracteolate; scales of the involucre about 13, oblong, pale green or stramineous, striate, obtuse or erose at the summit, the inner about 1 mm. long, the two or three outer consider- ably shorter; head- about 15-flowered; flowers apparently pale or white: corolla 2.3 mm. long; the throat exceeding the proper tube: pappus white, not very copious: achenes black, glabrous. — Collected by ('. & E. Seler, at Hacienda Petapa, Tuxtla, Chiapas, Mexico. 1896, no. 1939. Type in herb. Gray. This -j ies i- related to E. guadalupense, but is probably perennial and differ- much in pubescence and in the pi of the orbicular bracts. E. Smithii. .Shrub, 1 to 2 m. high, cinereous-puberulent or tomen- tulose: branches opposite, spreading, covered with fissured bull cortex: leave- opposite, ovate inclining to be deltoid, rounded at the apex, trun- or subcordate at the base, pale green and merely pulverulent ab cinereous- tomentulose and veiny beneath, crenate to entire. 2.3 to 6 cm. long, 2 to 4.5 cm. broad ; petioles 1 to 1.5 cm. long, channelled above: inflorescences trichotomous round-topped corymbose panic!. dom ;■ ■"» cm. in breadth: pedicels and pale green Bubherbaceous loosely '.lubricated obtusisb involucral Bcales slightly woolly: flowers about '_'•"< in ahead. 7 mm. in length: corollas white, gradually enlarged from the ROBINSON. — MEXICAN PLANTS. 341 base and without definitely marked throat; segments ovate-oblong. — Collected in Oaxaca by C. G. Pringle, on Monte Alban, altitude L,800 m., 8 October, 1894, no. 4959, type (in herb. Gray) ; by L. C. Smith on mountaiDS of San Juan del Estado, altitude 2,100 m., 4 November, 1894, no. 274; and by C. & E. Seler, above Porian, 27 November, 1895, no. 1547. This species stands very close to E. Loesenerii and may eventually prove a variety of it, but as yet, although each species has been independently secured by three collectors, no intergradation has been observed. The differences are as follows : E. Smithii has smaller leaves of a more deltoid contour and with a cinereous rather than ochra- ceous indumentum ; its inflorescences are considerably smaller, while the involucral bracts are larger, more herbaceous, and less closely appressed ; finally the teeth of the corolla are, on careful comparison, longer and ovate-oblong rather than deltoid as in E. Loesenerii. E. Thieleanum, Klatt, Bull. Soc. Bot. Belg. xxxi. 191 (1892). Adil syn. E. rhyrianthum, Klatt, Botanisches Beiblatt zur Leopoldina, 1895, p. 3, founded on the same specimens and described in the same •words. E. Valverdeanum, Klatt, Bull. Soc. Bot. Belg. xxxi. 188, (1892). Add syn. E. chrysocephalum, Klatt, Botanisches Beiblatt zur Leopoldina. 1895, p. 2. Dr. Klatt's two species are founded upon the same speci- mens and their descriptions are identical. The earlier name must, of course, be adopted. E. Vitalbae, DC. Prodr. v. 163 (183G). Add syn. E Ecicadorae, Klatt, Ann. k. k. Naturh. Hofmus. Wien, ix. 356 (1894). Mikania eriophoua. Scb. Bip., var. chiapensis. Pubescence more hirsute than in the type, the hairs spreading, not at all felted or interplexed : leaves large, deeply cordate, becoming 2.2 dm. long, and 1.7 dm. broad: involucral scales early glabrate. — Collected by E. W. Nelson at Chicharras, Chiapas, Mexico, altitude 900 to 1,800 m., 6 Feb- ruary, 1896, no. 3769. This variety has much the habit of M. pyrami- data, J. D. Smith, but that has the leaves smaller, rounded at the base, and the pubescence subappressed on the pedicels. Porophyllum brachypodum. Shrub, scarcely or not at all glau- cous; stems somewhat rigid, branched toward the end, lucid: leaves fonly the upper ones shown) lanceolate to linear, narrowed to an obtus- ish glanduliferous point, cuneate at the base, entire, 3.5 cm. long, 4 to 8 mm. broad; petioles 4 mm. long; glands on the blade all marginal, large, subremote, on the narrower leaves often alternate: pedicels 5 to 8 mm. lone, slio-htlv clavate, spreading; involucral bracts oblong, rather broad, 12 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. obtuse, tufted :it the cuspidate apex, 9 mm. long, usually carinate, pale green with broad diaphanous margins; glands biseriate, approximate in the keel, elliptical or oblong, not linear, amber colored: flowers about 16: corollas 7 nun. long, at anthesis about equalling the Bordid pappus; the Blender proper tube about twice the length of the throat: achenes Blender, « 1 ■ 1 1 1 black, upwardly hispid, 7 to 8 nun. long. — Collected by Dr. J. N. Rose at Guaymas, S >ra, Mexico, 5 to 11 .June, 1897, no. 1272. Near /'. obtus'folium, DC, which, however, lias more acute* dark purple involucra] Bcales marked with (lark linear glands. Liabum Pringlei, Rob. ^v. Greenm. Proc. Am. Acad, xxxii. 49 The type specimen <>!' this species published by clerical error as no. 6215 is 6214 of Pringle's Plantae Mexicanae Perezia Nelsonii. Tutted with rusty wool at the Blightly decum- bent base; stein soon erect (probably 1 m. tall), subterete, Btri branched, leafy about to the middle, glabrous and Bmooth, purplish: leaves large (1.7 dm. long, G to 8 cm. broad), firm, retidulated, oblong- oblanceolate, rounded, obtuse or acute at the apex, cordate-clasping at the base, sharply dentate with small spreading teeth: branches ascending,. nearly naked : head- few, large, many-flowered, 2.5 to 3 cm. long and broad; pedicels 2 to 5 cm. long, bearing several small lanceolate attenu- ate appressed scale-like bracts passing gradually into the broader ovate to oblong or at length lance-oblong involucral scales, these green with a slight purple tinge, ciliolate, imbricated in about 7 rows, the middle and inner ones obtuse or rounded and mucronate at the tips, the outer acute, slightly spreading and pungent: purple strongly bilabiate corolla 1.5 cm. long: columnar granulated achene 1 mm. long. — Collected by E. W. Nelson on mountains near Talpa, .Jalisco, Mexico, altitude 1.100 to 1,500 m., 7 .March, 1.SU7. no. 4037. A species near P. michoacana and P. cuernavacana, but clearly distinct from either. Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Vol. XXXV. No. 17. — March, 1900. THE FRESHWATER TERTIARY FORMATIONS OF THE ROCK I 310 UN TAIN REGION By W. M. Davis. THE FRESHWATER TERTIARY FORMATIONS OF THE ROCKY MOUNTAIN REGION. By W. M. Davis. Received January 29, 1900. Presented February 14, 1900. CONTENTS. 1. Piedmont Depositories of Moun- tain Waste 345 2. The Various Origins of Stratified Deposits :;i7 3. Accounts of Tertiary Lakes in tlie Rocky Mountain Region . I'.IT 4. Characteristics of Lake Deposits 351 5. The Vermillion Creek Beds of Wyoming 354 6. The Arapahoe and Denver For- mations of Colorado .... 356 7. Lacustrine and Fluviatilc Quater- nary Deposits 359 8. Continental Deposits .... 360 9. Fluviatile Deposits .... 360 10. The Indo-Gangetic Fluviatile Plain 362 11. Fluviatile Deposits of the Great Plains 363 12. Fluviatile Basin Deposits . . 364 13. Pocky Mountain Basin De- posits 365 14. Deposits in Arid Basins . . . 366 15. vEolian Deposits 369 16. Summary 370 1. Piedmont Depositories of Mountain Waste. — Extensive plains stretch forward from the base of many mountain ranges. They are formed of the waste brought from the valleys in the mountains by the streams that have for ages drained them. Sometimes the plains are open and slope gently to the seashore, as in northern India and northern Italy ; sometimes they occupy a basin drained through a gap in one of its enclosing ranges, as in Hungary and California ; sometimes they fill the floors of interior continental basins from which no river escapes to the sea, as in Utah and Nevada, Persia and Central Asia. Although Piedmont fluviatile plains are familiar geographical features, their genetic association with mountains is seldom stated explicitly. It is seldom that sufficient importance is given to the complimentary relation in which the plains stand to the mountain valleys whence their materials have been derived, even though some emphasis may be allowed to the fact that the 340 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. form of all vigorous mountains is much more due to the carving of \:'.l- leys in their uplifted mass than to irregularities in their initial form. The habil of regarding rivers as destructive agents, except near their mouths where they may build deltas in bodies of Btanding water, Beems to have retarded the recognition of the importance "I rivers as constructive agents. It is perhaps for this reason that t In- first suggestion made a> to the .in ol piedmont plains generally ascribes them to deposition in the or in lakes. It only after closer study has Keen given tu their com- position, structure, and fossils, as well as to the activities of aggrading rivers, that the prevailing Quviatile origin of most i»i«-f the High Plateau Tertiaries by Gilbert and Howell ( Wheeler's Survey, iii, l"'7. 267) Bhow the occurrence of numer- ous alternations betwe< a shales, sandstones, marls, and limestones. ■ rring t<> the Tertiaries of northwestern Colorado, C. A. White ■■ I li.-v were deposited in great lakes, the existence, extent, and elevation of which were respectively determined by the varying configu- ration of the general land surface as elevation and degradation progressed (9th Ann. Rep., U. S. < ■• S., 695). Weed makes brief mention of "the lake whose Bediments formed the Livingston beds " in the lower Tertiary of Montana ; and of the gather- ing of '-lake waters in the subsidence that caused the deposition of the great thickness of sandstones and clays that form the Crazy mountah (Bull. I":-. I". S. G. S., 27). In Clark's " Correlation of the Eocene Deposits of th<- United States," attention was not especially directed to conditions of deposition ; hence his remarks on this subject may be taken rather as a reflection of general opinion than as a result of direct and independent investigation. They present only conclusions without argument, for example: — ••From an open sea of Cretaceous age, in which the life was marine, a gradual change took place to great fresh-water lake- in which the typical Ter- tiary deposits of the Interior were accumulated. . . . The great fresh- water lakes continued with successively dismissed areas during the remainder of the Eocene period. With the advent of the Neocene an extensive area was again covered with fresh-water lakes which finally became drained in the orographic movements accompanying the elevation of the Rocky Mountains*' (Bull. 83, IT. S. G. S., Ill, 132). The Neocene correlation paper Dy Dall and Harris (Bull. 84, U. S. G. S.) contains many extracts from accounts of the fresh-water Ter- tiaries of the Rocky mountain region, in which frequent references to great lakes seem to be approvingly quoted. As in the preceding paper, the origin of deposits was not the chief subject of the authors' attention in this publication. The abundant details concerning the Tertiary formations of Nebraska in Darton's receut report on the " Geology and Water Resources " of the western part of that 6tate (19th Ann. Rep., U. S. G. S.) include mention of local and general unconformities, pebbly beds, cross-bedding, and conglomerate-filled channels. Conditions of origin are hardly touched upon in this report, but two phrases suggest deposition in lakes. A certain soil bed is taken to " indicate that there was here a land sur- face while the Gering formation was being deposited to the south " DAVIS. ROCKY MOUNTAIN TERTIAKIES. 351 (751) ; and volcanic ash is said to have been "undoubtedly borne on the winds and deposited in the waters which laid down the several Ter- tiary formations" (761). Barbour's account of the Devil's Corkscrew or Dreinonelix (Bull. Geol. Soc. Amer., viii, 305-314) reflects the generally accepted lacus- trine origin of the Loup fork beds of Nebraska (Arikaree of Darton. the formation that contains a number of old channels filled with conglom- erate) in certain phrases, such as " on the sandbars of this lake " (307), •'plants which drifted into the lake" (312), " the inference from the branching is that the seaweeds or rootlets . . . grew downward in the sand, not upward in the water " (o09). 4. Characteristics of Lake Deposits. — The extracts given above might be greatly multiplied. A review of their sources will show that the explanation of fresh-water strata as lake deposits has been almost uni- versal among the geologists of our western surveys. The deposits are as a rule well stratified ; they contain no marine fossils ; they frequently preserve an abundant land or fresh-water fauna and flora. Without explicit discussion of the various conditions under which such deposits could be formed, the earlier observers seem to have taken it for granted that all the fresh-water sediments were gathered in ancient lake basins ; and the later observers have generally followed the belief of their prede- cessors. In a word, stratification has been taken to mean deposition under water and not merely by water. There does not seem to be a single instance, in the accounts of the fresh-water Tertiary formations above referred to, of a deliberate inquiry into the essential characteristics of lacustrine deposits, followed by a comparison between the consequences deduced from the assumed theoretical conditions and the facts deter- mined by observation. In the absence of such an inquiry, it does not seem too much to say that it became habitual to speak of strata bearing fresh-water and land fossils as lake deposits, just as strata bearing marine fossils are habitually spoken of as marine deposits. Under the guidance of this habit of interpretation, it was no more worth while to enter into a deliberate inquiry as to the origin of the so-called lake deposits of Tertiary age than into an inquiry as to the origin of the accepted marine deposits of earlier ages. We may now turn to a theoretical consideration of lake deposits, without attempting to present anything more than a brief outline of their inferred characteristics. It will not be necessary here to consider small lakes, for those inferred to exist in the Rocky mountain region were scores or hundred of miles in extent; and for the moment, shallow 352 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. lakes Deed Dot 1"- bonie id mind, as their deposits will be discussed farther on. The present paragraph deals only with the depos - and comparatively deep lakes. Such deposits are « * t" two ki: marginal and central. The marginal deposits may be relatively coarse, luit as such they can extend but little distance from the Bhore line: the marginal strata of subaerial origin Bhould be mure nearly horizontal than those of sabaqueous origin. The central deposits are shown by studies of existing lakes to be of very line texture, Mich as clays, marls. or very fine sands. The stratification of these fine Bediments must be vvr\ even, with few variations in texture or composition. The move- ment- of the water- of large lake-, either in wave- or currents, do not Buffice to sweep pebbles out to deep water; hence conglomerates and pebbly sandstones with inclined and cross-bedded layers must be limited to a narrow heir around the lake margin. It can hardly be imagined that the sediments deposited on the floor of a large lake Bhould contain frequent alternation- of liner ami coarser hed-, such as claj - ai d sat but it may lie inferred that the gradual filling of such a lake would allow the encroachment of tin' later marginal hed- upon the earlier central ones; ami thus a relatively thin cover of coarse and variable depi might come to overlie a heavy body of line and uniform di [f deformation or climatic change should cause repeated variations in the area and depth of a large lake, a complicated series of lacustrine, ilnviatile, and subaerial deposits might result; hut this will not In- further discussed for the present, as the reports n ferred to above -■ l- dom explicitly recognize variations of area and depth, excepting such as ur at the times of -eparation of successive formations to which differ- ent name- are given. The manner of mention of the water body in which each formation was believed to have been deposited implies cli irly enough that it was thought to be a single, large, continuous lake. If we now turn to the deposits of large shallow lakes, they are found to he more variable in composition, texture, and structure: for the waves may stir up the material- of the bottom and the currents may shift the materials from place to place ; hut conglomerates need he expected to occur among them except c]o-e to the shore line. La shallow lake- cannot, however, he of great importanc gically, for they iiiiis| he rare and -holt lived : rare, because their production de- pends on the accidental concurrence of unrelated conditions ; namely, the crustal deformation of a flat region by a -mill and nearly uniform amount over a lai i: Bhort-lived, hecati-e their preservation de- DAVIS. — ROCKY MOUNTAIN TERTIARIES. 353 ponds on the accidental compensation of several imperfectly related processes ; namely, marginal and central deposition, marginal and cen- tral deformation, and lowering of level by erosion at the outlet, or in interior basins by evaporation. It may be pointed out that the pres- ervation of open fluviatile plains during the slow deformation of the floor on which they are accumulating does not involve the balance of conditions or processes so little related as in the case of extensive shallow lakes; for the rate of fluviatile deposition responds most delicately to any deformation of the fluviatile plain. If slow local depression occurs, the rate of aggradation increases and the swinging rivers build up the de- pressed area about as fast as it sinks. If slow elevation occurs, the swinging rivers tend either to degrade the uplifted area, or to con- centrate their deposits on the districts that are not uplifted and thus maintain a generally even surface. If a shallow lake .of large extent should happen to be formed, it would probably soon change by depression to a deep lake or to an arm of the sea; or by elevation, marginal deposition, climatic change, and erosion of outlet to a land surface. Hence the deposits of shallow lakes are ■likely to be followed either by deep lacustrine deposits or by marine deposits, each recognizable as such ; or by fluviatile and other sub- ial deposits, particularly around the margin of their basin. The converse of these statements does not seem to hold true; for an open fluviatile plain is more likely to maintain itself as such than a shallow lake is to per-;-' as a broad and thin sheet of water. The deposits of a fluviatile plain are therefore not likely to be associated with those lakes, unless in interior basins. If a review is now made of the descriptions of the so-called lacustrine formations in the Rocky mountain region, frequent mention will be found of strata that are strikingly unlike those which might be expected from the observation of existing large lakes and from the reasonable extension of principles based on such observations ; but before giving examples of this kind, it should be remarked on the other hand that some of the deposits are entirely consistent with a lacustrine origin. For example, King reports that there are even-bedded " paper shales" of very fine texture and with numerous fossil fish in the Green river basin, "giving general evidence of accumulation in still, rather deep water" (40 Par. Surv., i , 447). Russell writes regarding the basin of Lake John Day in the northwest : " Before the Columbia lava was broken and tilted ... its surface over the whole of central Washington and probably far into Idaho and Oregon, was covered by the waters of a vol. xxxv. — 23 354 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. great lake" in which " the accumulation of fine Bediraent . . . went on with 1 mi t slight changes i"'>r a sufficient length of time for more than a thousand feet of evenly bedded strata to be laid down one above an- other" (Bull. 108, I'. S. G, S., 22, 23). It is evident from such examples as these that certain western Ter- tiarj deposits have a well characterized lacustrine fades : but ii is also evident that just in bo far as Tertiary lakes are inferred from the occur- rence of fine and uniform sediments, they are exclude <1 by the occurr< ol coarse and variable sediments. It must be concluded that the laki -. whose quiet waters permitted the accumulation of fine-textured, thin- bedded shales, had disappeared when the deposition of cross-bedded con- glomerates began. It is possible that some variation of lacustrine con- ditions may have been tacith assumed by the writers <>f the Burvey reports. It may have been taken for granted that subordinate varia- tions of shore line and depth were produced by orographic movements during the existence of each great Tertiary lake, sufficient to have caused Blight changes in the bottom deposits, but not sufficient to have produced significant unconformities in the accumulated strata; or it may have been intended that some small share of the deposits were laid' down outside of the margin or above the level of the lake waters; but it would be going beyond the spirit as well as beyond the letter of the reports above quoted to give a considerable value to deposits of Bubaerial origin, resulting from alternations of laud and lake conditions, in any of the western Tertiary formations. "When a student reads these reports, he will without question conclude that their authors regarded Bubaerial deposits as of negligible volume because no mention is made of them, and that the formations are essentially lacustrine because continual mention is made of deposition in large lake-,. Reference will be made again to line-textured deposits on a later page : attention being now turned to special examples of coarse-textured and variable Btrata such as are repeatedly deserihed in the accounts of our w< atern " lake deposits." 5. The Vermillion Greek Beds of Wyoming. — Many authors might be ipioted to show how frequently various kinds descriptions, ami do student would gather them from his text. Yet it is rather in explicitness and detail of statement than in interpretation that this report differs from many others. 6. The Arapahoe and Denver Formations of Colorado. -It was nol perhaps unnatural, at a time when little attention had been given t'> the importance of subaerial deposits, that geologists should fall into the habit of regarding all Don-marine formations a- lacustrine. To-day there is more reason for critical discrimination, and several extol given further on will show that some geologists have been led to Dew interpretations of the origin of certain western fresh water Tertiary formations. It is not improbable that other than a lacustrine origin would be attributed to many of these formations, or to many parts of them, if they were dow seen for the first time. There are indeed some indications that an unpublished, perhaps unconscious change of opinion has to some extent taken place on this subject, similar to that by which many of the geologists of Great Britain have been transformed from sup- porters of the theory of marine abrasion to that of subaerial degradation in the production of peneplains. No one would suppose by reading British geological essays of recent years that the British \ of to-day had wr\ largely given up Ramsay's theory concerning plains of marine denudation, and substituted therefor the theory of Bubaerial degradation, as advocated l>y Sir A. Geikie; yet conversation with a Dumber <>t' them last year convinced me that such was commonly the case. Similarly, it may be that our western Tertiary deposits are no long( r regarded as exclusively lacustrine 1>\ a certain number of Ameri- can geologists who, although they have published uothing to indicate a change of opinion, may have come bj more or less unconscious revision of theories to recognize the great accumulative work that various Bub- aerial processes can have accomplished in Tertiary time. But the change of opinion cannot be universal, for some of the extract- given above from the accounts of our western Tertiaries are from reports of recent years, and one of the recent monographs of the l'. S Geological Survey Bhows that Borne of our most experienced geologists still follow, the interpretation of earlier years in referring even coarse-textured DAVIS. ROCKY MOUNTAIN TERTIARIES. 357 fresh-water deposits to lakes, without any published discussion of other possibilities. The following extracts from the monograph on the " Geology of the Denver Basin in Colorado," above referred to, gives a fair idea of the emphasis that there is placed upon the lacustrine origin of the Arapahoe and Denver formations ; all the page references here made being to Monograph XXVII. of the U. S. Geological Survey. "After an erosion of the Laramie beds ... a considerable fresh-water lake [Arapahoe] was formed and sedimentation again set in. What the exact area of this lake was it is not possible now to determine; its extent was undoubtedly considerably larger than that covered by its 'beds at the present day, especially to the northward" (31). "The movement which caused the drainage of the [Arapahoe] lake . . . was succeeded after a considerable lapse of time by a depression sufficient to allow of the formation of a second [Denver] lake. . . . The nature of the depression which produced such lakes without admitting marine waters ... is not readily conceivable" (32). "The beds deposited in the Denver lake reached a thickness of over 1,400 feet along the Hanks of the mountains, but were probably somewhat thinner toward the middle of the basin " (33). Certain deposits are referred to as hav- ing been laid down near the shore line, but always as if on the lake side of it; for example, "some exposures of Denver strata which clearly show the immediate proximity of the old shore-line" (183); ". . . materials might have been derived from the eastern shores" (201). Several contemporaneous lava flows are said to have been "poured out upon the surface of the sea-bottom " (34). One of these is " the basaltic sheet of Table mountain which was poured out upon the floor of the shallow Denver sea" (1G1 ; see also 291, 292) ; not that direct proof is given of the presence of standing water into which the flows advanced, but that the presence of standing water i$ involved in the theory of the lacustrine origin of the underlying strata, even though some of them are conglomerates. One of the most significant observations bearing on the conditions of deposition is likely to pass unnoticed by many readers, because it is given only an inconspicuous place in the description of details : — " The preseuce of considerable tree stumps in erect position with roots in mud layers and broken trunks in sand or gravel, shows that the water was shallow or even that low-land masses alternated with shallow seas. Probably the latter was the case " (1G8). Nevertheless, the alternations of low-land and shallow water here suggested are elsewhere unmentioned, the usual terms for the area of deposition being " the sea," " the lake." PBOI EEDING8 OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. The materials of the Arapahoe and Denver formations seldom bu| typical lake deposits. "The lower 50 to 200 feel [>>t the Arapahoe formation] were conglomerates, the upper 400 to 600 feel arenaceous clays'3 (31). " In passing eastward . . . the conglomerates are gradually replaced by sandstones" | 153). "Thelower 1 < » * * feel of the [Denver] . a are composed entirely of eruptive de*bris ; above this point Archean and sedimentary debris are found in Bmall bul increasing proportion, and above 900 feel the material derived from . . . Archean rocks is largely predominant " (33). The debris here referred to is elsewhere described as largely conglomeratic near the mountains; on advancing over the Plains, the sediments become finer, but .-till contain plentiful coarse sands ami occasional pebbles, with numerous alternations between fine conglomerate, grits, Bandstones, and clays (180, 193, 195). Repeated instances are given of structures that are much more BUg- gestive of fiuviatile than of lacustrine origin. "That the Denver b< were deposited in shallow waters is shown by the frequent cross bedding observable both in sandstone and conglomerate" (33). In the foot- hills.-the Bandy parts of the bed develop in places to wedge-shaped masses exhibiting in their relation.- to each other and to theconglomei a very marked cross-bedding" ( 163). "The coarser-grained beds show cross-bedding" (165). Describing a local clay deposit occurring as a break in a conglomerate layer, it is remarked : •• Probably the conglom- erate succeeding it was deposited in turbulent waters"' (177). "The study of the conglomerate series made it evident that fine-grained beds of local development might occur al almost any horizon" (177). < )n the Plains at ten or twenty miles from the "shore line," special mention is made of "the irregular unconformable contact bo frequently -ecu to exist between a conglomerate or grit layer above and a clay or shale below. . . . Often the unconformability is very marked. . . . The changes in conditions of sedimentation which give rise to such -trati- graphical relations of consecutive beds were, however, common in both Denver and Arapahoe epochs. Fine sediments were often disturbed and locally removed at the beginning of periods of rapid deposition of coarser materials ' ( 180, 181). The fossils, both of plants and animals, give no clear BUggt Stion of B lacustrine origin. "Plant remains and standing tree stumps . . . abound at certain horizons" (83). "The only animal remain- yet found in the Arapahoe beds are the bones of vertebrates of new and remarkable types. These occur in the conglomerate along the foot-hills and in the basal Bandstones and overlying clays beneath the prairies. In DAVIS. — ROCKY MOUNTAIN TERTI ARIES. 359 the conglomerate but few have been found, and these are more or less worn ; in the clays they are abundant and their articulation, edges, and muscular insertions are sharp and clearly defined. . . . They are found at all horizons in the formation, aud occur buried in the clays or sand- stones or partially weathered out upon the surface" (154). "Fossil wood, leaves, and stems are abundant" (169) in certain strata of South Table mountain. Within the limits of the city of Denver " there was formerly a very good outcrop of Denver sandstones and clays, with cross- bedding structure, and full of plant remains in certain layers. Here, too, occurs a thin local seam of coal. ... In these same strata Mr. T. W. Stanton found some molluscan remains, associated with plants, and a small but perfect crocodile tooth " (193). The fossil mollusca seem to be of lluviatile rather than of lacustrine types. Nowhere in this report or elsewhere have I been able to find any discussion of the share that fiuviatile processes may have had in the origin of the formations, otherwise so elaborately described. Hills has suggested that some of the materials may have been brought from the South park region which " then as now, drained into the Denver basin," thus implying river action in the collection of land waste; but he does not directly discuss the condition of deposition, although the context indicates that he accepted the prevalent theory of a lacustrine origin (Proc. Colorado Sci. Soc, iii, 1890, 393-394). Yet to my reading the record of observations on nearly every page of the Monograph suggests that a fiuviatile origin is at least as probable if not more probable than a lacustrine. Conglomerates near the mountains, pebbles aud sands alternating with clays on the plains, cross-bedding and local uncon- formities, standing tree stumps and fossils of large land animals are in my reading all witnesses to rivers rather than to lakes. 7. Lacustrine and Fiuviatile Quaternary Deposits. — The body of scientific opinion above quoted regarding the interpretation of our west- ern fresh-water Tertiary formations as lake deposits stands in marked contrast to another body of opinion that might be adduced regarding the origin of the Quaternary basin deposits of the same region. The Quaternary deposits that are interpreted as lacustrine are clays and marls, with the addition of the strictly marginal gravels and sands near the shore lines. Mere wedges of gravel between clay and marl beds in the Bonneville basin, wedges that are trifling in volume when com- pared to many Tertiary conglomerates that have been described as lacustrine, are interpreted by Gilbert as indicating a reduction of Lake Bonneville "so far as to bring subaerial agencies locally into play," 360 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN LCADEMY. Monogr. !•• 0. S. ( ■• s-. 193). Beds of cross-bedded gravel and Band, iciated with sandy loam, occur between :i lower and :i higher marl In the Lahontan basin : of these Russell says: "the remarkable similarity the middle member of the Lahontan Bection, us exposed in certain localities, to the . . . deposit formed by meandering streams, lead- u refer its with considerable confidence to similar causes " i Afonogr. XI.. I'. S. (.. S., 129). Indeed the whole theory of the variation- of Quaternary climate in the Great Basin depends on a Bubaerial origiu of certain gravel and -and deposits which are in many ways similar to deposits thai have hern repeatedly described as lacustrine in account- of Tertiary formations. 8. Continental Deposits. — It was during a western excursion with Professor Penck of Vienna in the Buinmer of 1897 thai a possible or probable non-lacustrine origin of many of our western fresh-wa Tertiaries was first clearly presented to me. Since then, I have hud opportunity of seeing something of th fluviatile plain ofthePo, and of recalling what I had long before seen of similar plains in California and in northern India, as well as of reviewing several essays thai bear on the genera] problem here considered ; and the problem has thus come to have an importance that warrants the present review and summary. Penck's views on this subject may be found in his " Morphologic der Erdoberflache " (ii, 2 1-36), where he discusses the occurrence ol deposits formed on subaerial plains in the older geological systems. Recognizing thai non-marine formations may result under the action of Various sub- aerial agents as well as within lakes, he suggests the name, continental, to im-lude till such formations, leaving the discrimination of particular deposits to further study. Penck's term deserves acceptance among geologists, as an aid in the general consideration that it set m- desirable to give to the problem of our western Tertiaries ; they might he called "continental" in order to avoid implication of either lacustrine or fluviatile origin. Yet as far as the published descriptions of tl deposits afford evidence of their detailed structure, it appear- to me probable that streams and rivers have had more than lakes or winds to do with their formation, and he that "fluviatile" might often to advantage replace "lacustrine" in describing them. 9. Wluviatile Deposits. — It i- perhaps 1 ause so much has been written regarding the erosive power of rivers that their constructive powers have been too little considered; bul their capacity to aggrade a sinking area deserves as careful examination as their capacity to degrade a rising area. When acting as aggrading agents, they spread out broad DAVIS. — ROCKY MOUNTAIN TERTIARIES. 361 sheets of gravels, sands, or clays, the coarser sediments frequently show- ing cross-bedding and local unconformities, the finer sediments generally possessing an even stratification. The area over which such deposits may accumulate is shown by existing fluviatile plains to rival that of the western Tertiary deposits. In a region of considerable precipitation, with a background of mountains from which abundant waste is shed to lowlands in the foreground where the rivers have free discharge to the sea, the activity of fluviatile aggradation is often equal to the average activity of the deforming forces that tend to cause marine submergence or to produce broad lake basins. A slight acceleration of littoral depression might cause submergence, or a rapid local warping might pro- duce a lake; a pause in these movements would allow the rivers to convert the sea border or the lake into a fluviatile plain again. The preponderance of one condition or the other might be determined by the proportion of line, evenly stratified layers (if such deposits are necessarily marine or lacustrine, and out of the reach of river action) to variable strata with cross-bedding and local unconformities in the resulting deposits, as well as by a study of the fossils that they contain. The capacity of rivers to form extensive deposits of fine texture and even stratification seems in particular to be underrated. It is true that a torrential river, gathering coarse detritus and exposed to heavy floods in its headwaters among lofty mountains, may carry cobbles and pebbles many miles forward upon a piedmont fluviatile plain. The artificial enclosure of its channel by dikes to prevent overflow probably increases the distance to which pebbles can be carried, as on the plain of the Po ; but if the river is free to spread upon an aggrading surface, the pebbles would be sooner laid down. In arid regions the coarse piedmont depos- its assume great importance, as is more fully stated below. On the other hand, rivers of moderate size, rising in uplands of moderate height, may contribute chiefly very fine and well stratified sands and clays to the plains that they aggrade. This will be especially true if their headwaters drain regions of deep soils, such as occur on slightly elevated peneplains ; or of weak strata, such as are found in basin deposits of earlier date. At times of high water and overflow, rivers of this kind will spread layers of fine silt far and wide over their plains, and the repetition of this pro- cess must lead to the formation of thick deposits, fine in texture and even in structure, with little admixture of coarser sands and pebbles. Ripple marks, foot-prints, aud raindrops may be preserved in the sediments of shallow flood-plain lagoons, and mud-cracks may form as the lagoons are dried up. The plains of the Po aod of the Ganges, and the great fan of PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. the Hwang-ho are very largely composed of fine Bediments; the propor- tion of tin' irse materials in the extensive deposits of these riv< Beems to be greater than it is in many of the so-called lake beds of the West The surface of many extensive fluviatile plains Beems level as far as the eye can reach. This level Burface is the bes! obtainable index of the evenness of structure thai musl prevail both in the Btrata already laid down beneath the plain, and in those yel to be deposited upon tin- plain. In the absence of special studio ,.n the degree of continuity ol river deposits, it cannot now be said how far a single stratum or a group of strata, marked by recognizable peculiarities of texture or color, may extend; but it may be urged that mere continuity of even bedded depos- its, Buch as is reported in our western Tertiaries, even if occurring over areas of many square miles, should not alone be taken as conclusive evidence of lacustrine origin. Some other criterion than continuity is needed to distinguish fluviatile from lacustrine deposits of fine texture. No Other feature seems so likely to serve this need as the filled channels and lateral unconformities that musl occur, albeit rarely, even in the finer fluviatile deposits. The occasional presence of these distinguishing struc- tures might readily escape notice in beds whose continuity has been traced only by observations of colored strata, such as are visible at a distance on the barren slopes of arid regions. 10. The Tndo-Gangetic Fluviatile Plain. — The alluvial deposits of the Indo-Gangetic plain stretch over hundreds and hundreds of miles. They are well described in the .Manual of the Geology of India by Medlicott and Blanford (or in the second edition by Oldham. 1893, 127— 458), where references are given to original articles for further details. Gravels and conglomerates are abundant near the sloping borders of the plain, while the prevailing material of the central area is some form of clay, more or less sandy, with subordinate deposits of sand, gravel, and conglomerates; but pebbles are scarce at greater distances than twenty or thirty miles from the enclosing hills. Borings show the deposit t,, bo hundreds of feet, and at one point more than a thousand feet in depth, with no trace of marine fossils; and from this it is inferred that depres- sion accompanied accumulation. Organic remains are not common, but shells of river and marsh molluscs are occasionally found, and calcareous material is not lacking; the latter is frequently gathered in concretionary nodules ; it sometimes forms compact beds of earthy limestone. The (days bordering the Jumua, as well as the calcareous shoals of this river, have yielded remains of a variety of vertebrates, including elephant, hippopota- DAVIS. ROCKY MOUNTAIN TERTIARIES. 863 mus, ox, horse, antelope, crocodile, and various fish. The borings yield pebbles, sands, and clays, with peat and wood, and remains of terrestrial mammals, fluviatile reptiles, and fresh-water molluscs. Still more pertinent to the present discussion is the account given of the inclined strata of the Siwalik (Tertiary) formation in the Himalayan foot-hills (Ibid., 356-868). "The lower portion of the system is char- acterized by a great thickness of fine grained grey, micaceous, pepper and salt sandstone, interbedded with clay bands near its lower portion, while the upper part of the system is composed of soft earthy clays, undistiu- guishable from the alluvium of the plains, . . . and coarse conglomerates of well rounded pebbles and boulders " (356). These strata are much tilted; their thickness is estimated at 14,000 or 15,000 feet. The ver- tebrate fauna of the Siwalik formation is well known to paleontologists. " The earlier observers regarded this great series of beds as having been deposited in a sea, a supposition which is sufficiently disproved by the complete absence of any marine organisms, and by the occurrence of the remains of fresh water molluscs, fishes, and tortoises. It is hardly possi- ble that they could have been deposited in a fresh water lake, for it is not conceivable that a fresh water lake extending the whole length of the Himalayas could have existed. Moreover, the fresh water organisms whose remains have been found are all such as inhabit streams, and not lakes. The very close resemblance between the upper Siwalik beds and the recent deposits of the Gangetic plain leaves little room for doubt that th'e Siwalik beds were deposited subaerially by streams and rivers " (358). While it does not seem necessary to deny the possibility of conceiving the existence of a lake all along the base of the Himalayas, the necessity for believing in such a lake seems to be removed by the striking re- semblance between the upturned Siwalik strata and those of the Indo- Gangetic plain. 1 1 . Fluviatile Deposits of the Great Plains. — In view of these various considerations and examples bearing on the competence of rivers to form extensive stratified deposits of fine as well as of coarse texture, there seems little room for doubt that some part of the fresh-water Tertiary formations that stretch forward from the Rocky mountains across the open slope of the Great Plains may be of fluviatile and not lacustrine origin. The first observer to reach this conclusion was Gilbert, whose views are to be found in a report on underground water in eastern Colo- rado (17th Ann. Rep., U. S. G. S., 553-601). He ascribes the Tertiary strata that unconformably overlie the Cretaceous of the Plains chiefly to river action, but partly to transportation by wind and to deposition in 864 DCEEDING8 OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. lakes. The change from the erosion of the Cretaceous floor to the - Bilioo of the Tertiary cover " was brought about l>y Bome modification of conditions which is nol yel clearly understood. Perhaps the plain- reg Was dep t the west, and the Blopes thus rendered bo gentle that the ima could no longer carry off the detritus which came from the moun> taius, and it was d< I on the way. Perhaps a barrier was lifted at tli.' east, so that the base level Btood higher. Whatever the cause, the ims . . . filled their channels bo thai their beds lay higher than the neighboring country . . . and they thus came t'> flow in succession over all parts of tin- plains and to distribute their deposit widely, bo that tin- whole plain in tin' district here described was covered 1>\ .-ami- and gravels ln»ni^rht from the canyons ami valleys of the Rocky mountains. The chief material is coarse sand ... in irregular beds with much obll lamination, [n the sand are occasional pebbles and . . . bed veL . . . At the northeast, . . . clays, mails, and other fine-grained beds alternate with the sand in thr lower pari of the formation, and t1 are probably continuations (,i the lake deposits observed in Kan (.".7."'. 576). Hawortb eoes even further than Gilbert in excluding lacustrine condi- tions in his discussion of the " Origin and Mode of Formation of the Tertiary" in Kansas (Univ'3 Geol. Surv. Kansas, ii. 1897,281-284). After quoting extracts from Gilbert's report, this author says: -The relative positions of the gravel, sand, and clay of the Tertiary over the whole of Kansas orrespond much better to river deposits than to lake deposits. The irregularity of formation succession, the limited lat- eral extent of the beds of gravel, clay and sand, the frequent Bteepness of the cross-bedding planes, all correspond to river deposits, but are not characteristic of lake deposits. ... It is quite possible that during Tertiarj time, in which there were so many changes in the velocity of the water carrying tie' sediments, lesser local lakes and lagoons and swamp- and mar-he- may have existed in different places and for \ ar\ ing lengths of time, lint when we consider the Kansas Tertiary a- a whole and vet in detail, it must he admitted that the material- themselves have many indication- of river deposits and a very few of lake dep<>-ii» 12. Fluviatile Basin Deposits. — Broad plains frequently occupy ha-in-1 ike areas enclosed by mountains. Streams flow from the enclos- ing Blopes to the central depression, whence the united waters find escape through a gorge in the bordering highlands. Such plains frequently give the in on of having been once occupied by a lake. The plain of Hungary is an admirable example of this kind, yel there is much DAVIS. — ROCKY MOUNTAIN TERTIARIES. 865 probability that its strata have been deposited for the most part by aggrading rivers. The sediments to-day laid down by the Theiss and other rivers that wander over the central parts of the plain are of very fine texture. Borings show that similar sediments underlie the surface to depths of 100 to 200 meters. As described by Penck, these deposits consist of a complex of tine sand and clay layers whose sections, dis- closed in neighboring bore holes, are so unlike that deposition in a lake is held to be impossible. The plain of the middle Rhine is a longitudi- nal graben, enclosed by uplands through which the river has cut its narrow gorge north of Bingen ; but here again the evidence of borings is taken by Penck to be decidedly in favor of a fluviatile origin for the deposits (Morph. der Erdoberfl., ii, 15). In both cases it must be con- cluded that the deformation by which the basins were produced was so slow that the production of lakes was prevented by deposition on the depressed floor and by erosion on the rising rim. An older example of this kind is offered by the fresh-water Molasse of Switzerland, flanking the Alps on the north, and now uplifted, tilted, and eroded, it is often referred to as a lacustrine formation, and its marls may well justify such a reference; but its heavy sandstones and conglomerates, such as are now upturned in the marginal range of which the Righi is a member, give strong suggestion of fluviatile origin. The resemblance of the Swiss Molasse to the Siwalik beds of northern India has been pointed out by Medlicott (Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc, 1868, 45, 46). The subrecent deposits of Kashmir, Nepal, and Hundes, all basins within the Himalayas, are of special interest in the present connection, for they have been described as lake deposits, although now referred chiefly to fluviatile agencies (Manual Geol. of India, 2nd edition. -122). Their dimensions are comparable to those of some of our western Ter- tiary basins. They frequently contain fine deposits in the more central areas, and these may have been laid down in temporary lakes ; but in Kashmir the repeated occurrence of beds of shingle and sand alternating with thin layers of lignite point to a subaerial origin; and while the central deposits of Hundes are "a fine homogeneous clay with but little gravel in it, . . . there is nothing to show that the whole [series of layers] . . . might not be of subaerial origin, as it is almost certain that the bulk of them might have been." The clays and gravels now dissected to a depth of 3,000 feet contain mammalian remains, including the rhi- noceros, ox. horse, hyena, sheep, and goat. 13. Rocky Mountain Basin Deposits. — The resemblance is so strong between several of the basin deposits here described and the Ter- 366 PROI EEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. tiary formations of the Green river and other Rocky mountain basins, that a fluviatile origin for many of the latter becomes probable; bul re- examination in the field with Bpecial attention t" discriminating struc- tures will be necessary before definite conclusions can In- announced. It is also probable that the basins produced by the Pliocene deformation of the previously denuded Rocky mountains ol Montana may have been ;it least during part of their existence occupied by fluviatile plains as well .i> by lakes. 1 1 :i\ < Kn referred to them only as lakes: — "These . . . broad valleys [of the Missouri headwaters in Montana ] have all been lake- basins during the last portion of the Tertiary period," and on another pagehesays: — " The great valleys . . . during the latter Tertiary period w,ere the basins of fresh-water lakes, so that we have everywhere the white and yellowish- white sands, marls, clays, sandstones, and pudding- stones <>!' tin' Pliocene lake deposits passing up into the Quaternary or local drift" (Geol. Surv. Terr., 1871 (1872), 117. Ml.. The same comment maj he made regarding deposits of the basins "t South park and San Luis valley, Colorado, which were described as lacustrine by Stevenson (Wheeler's Survey, iii, 453, I'd I. II. Deposits in Arid Basins. — In regions of drier climate, such as interior continental basins, calcareous, saline, and alkaline matter may slowly accumulate along with detritus of liner oi- coarser texture in the tral depression, while conglomerates, gravels, and sands would gather to greater thickness in laterally continent fans around the mountain bor- ders. The importance of marginal deposits of this kind, both recent and Tertiary, is attested by the following quotation from Powell, who says: " I think that many geologists would ascribe this [BMiop mountain] con- glomerate to the action of ice, but throughout all that portion of the Rocky mountain region which I have studied, I have so frequently found gravels and conglomerates of subaeiial origin, and have in BO many ci found reason to change my opinion concerning them, often having attrib- uted a drift-like deposit to glacial action, and afterward on further study abandoned the theory, being able to demonstrate its subaerial origin, and witnessing on every hand the accumulation of such gravels in valli and over plains where mountains rise to higher altitudes on either Bide, and having in many cases actually seen cliffs breaking down and the gravels rolling out on the floods of a storm, I am not willing to disregard explanations so obvious and so certain for an extraordinary and more violent hypothesis. . . . Nor need the thickness and extent of this Bishop mountain conglomerate serve to weaken this explanation, for the sub-aerial gravels in the valleys between the ranges in the liasiu province DAVIS. — ROCKY MOUNTAIN TERTIARIES. 367 are of equal and often of greater development. Whenever a low plain, valley, or basin is for a comparatively long period but little elevated above the base level of erosion, and during this time mountains and hills stand about the lowlands, there must be a great accumulation of drift, and where the highlands are areas of progressive elevation and the low- lands areas of progressive subsidence this accumulation may continue indefinitely" (Geol. Uinta1 Mountains, 170, 171). Dutton's Report on the High Plateaus of Utah may be quoted to the same end : " There is another class of conglomerates which claims our special attention. These are of alluvial origin, formed, not beneath the surface of the sea nor of lakes, but on the land itself. They do not seem to have received from investigators all the attention and study which they merit. . . . Throughout great portions of the Rocky mountain region they are accumulating to-day upon a grand scale and have accu- mulated very extensively in the past." After describing the transporting action of torrents in mountains, and their depositing action at the moun- tain base, the same author says : " The formation thus built up is an 'alluvial cone.' . . . The slopes near the circumference usually lie between 1° and 2° ; those near the apex between 2° and 3|°. The lengths of the radii of the bases often exceed 3 miles, sometimes exceed 4 miles, and seldom fall below 2 miles. ... So nearly together are the gateways along the mountain and plateau flanks, each having its own alluvial cone, that the cones are confluent laterally; giving rise to a con- tinuous marginal belt . . . consisting of alluvial slopes which are sensibly nearly uniform. . . . Our surprise is often great at finding the cone wonderfully well stratified." Examples are then given of heavy Tertiary conglomerates which are ascribed to an alluvial origin, although they are " about as well stratified as the average of those which are attributed to sub-aqueous deposition" (Geol. of the High Plateaus, 1880, 219-223). The occurrence of calcareous materials other than pebbles in fluviatile and subaerial deposits is seldom discussed. Marls and limestones, even if impure, are taken as evidence of marine or lacustrine conditions. Yet earthy limestones are explicitly recognized among the strata of the fluviatile plain of northern India, as above noted, and calcareous material may be deposited as a cement in the piedmont wash of an arid region. Concerning the latter, Hill writes as follows: — " Throughout the limestone regions of the hot climates of America a superficial crust of white-lime material is found, called tepetate. Sometimes it is compar- atively free from foreign material, or occurs as the matrix or cement of conglomerates. This is a concentrate of the lime which has been 368 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. dissolved from the surface, transported in solution by the torrential Btreams, and redeposited through evaporation. . . . Tepetate is forming eat incrustations around the margins of the bolson plains of northern Mexico" i L8th Ann. Rep., U. S. < •■ S., - .Many othe aces might be made to the importance of the sub- ial deposits or " wash " at the ba sub-arid mountains, for Buch deposits are well known in Utah, Nevada, and southern California, as I as in more distant parts of the world (see Hilgard, Cienegas of Southern California, Bull. Geol. Soc. A.mer., iii. 127; Manual Geol. ot Imiia, 2nd edition, 417, 418; Blanford, Superficial Deposits in the Valleys and Deserts of Central Persia, Quart. Journ. Geol. ls7:;. 193), but a return to the reports of Fortieth Parallel Survey will suffice. Here one may find abundant testimony to the competence of subaerial processes to form extensive deposits flanking mountain ran lmt attention is given almost exclusively to the coarse, unstratified de- posits that are formed by storm Hoods mar the mouths of mountain valleys. For example: — "The interior valleys of the Cordillei from California eastward to the Wahsatch range, are all filled to a varying depth with subaerial Quaternary accumulations. ... In each one of these [Great Basin] depre rable covering of angular and sub-rounded Quaternary gravel, always of an evidently loea! character, directly to be traced to the Banking mountain rant lt> coarseness varies from large bowlders, weighiug many tons, to Hue gravel, sands, and clay. Except where it lias been rearranged in the now extinct Quaternary lakes, it is altogether an unstratified deposit, brought down by the rush of floods from t lie flanks and caiions of the mountains " (40th Par. Surv., i. 460). The sands and clays that are gradually washed far forward from the piedmont tans of coarse gra\ and conglomerates can hardly have been in mind when describing these subaerial deposits as " altogether unstratified." I cannot find that any is-reference was made from the account of these heavy unstrati conglomerates to the description of the almost structureless conglom- erates, between ."..nun and 4,000 feet thick, already quoted from the description of the Vermillion creek lake deposits (880). It is possible that a re-examination of certain •■ lacustrine " conglomerates in the Rocky mountain Tertiaries might lead to their explanation as arid Bubaerial -its. The central deposits of arid interior basins may be as fine as the marginal d( are coarse. The playas or mud plains of Nevada, as described by Russell, and the plains around Lob Nor in the central DAVIS. — ROCKY MOUNTAIN TERTIARIES. 369 basin of Asia, as described by Sven Hedin, are composed of exces- sively line materials, yet they are rather of fiuviatile than of lacustrine origin in the ordinary sense of these words. If a shallow lake occurs in the lowest part of interior basins of this character, it occupies but a small part of the entire depression; it is variable in position, shifting to a new site as it is driven about by growing deltas; it is still more vari- able in volume, changing with the weather, the season, the century, and the climatic cycle. Only in epochs of moist climate does a playa hike reach dimensions comparable to those attributed to the Tertiary lakes of the Rocky mountain region ; yet in dry as well as moist epochs, fine sediments gather in the basin, aggrading its floor. The manner in which the fine mud of playas is distributed when the very shallow water is agitated by wind is s.tid to prevent the production of well defined strati fieation. Ancient playa deposits would therefore be prevailingly of a massive structure, -instead of being finely laminated like typical lake beds; and they would be associated with wedges of coarser deposits that were washed forward on the basin floor by intermittent streams. 15. jffiolian Deposits. — Wind-borne dust and showers of volcanic allies are both of importance as possible contributors to subaerial deposits, particularly in regions where the streams are aggrading the surface, and where running water is incompetent to remove the aerial sedi- ments. The recognition of wind-borne dust is still a matter of uncer- tainty, or at least a subject of disagreement. Volcanic materials are in recent years generally detected by the aid of the microscope. Matthew has recently called attention to the importance of wind de- posits in an article entitled, " Is the White River Tertiary an iEolian Formation?" (Amer. Nat. xxxiii, 1899, 403-408). This author begins by saving that the Loup fork beds have been "shown to be largely a flood-plain deposit" (403), and closes with a statement that the Rocky mountain Eocene i-; " probably a mixture of lake and fiuviatile sediment — what proportion of each would not be easy to determine" (408). He objects to the origin of the White river clays in a lake because of the size of the lake required, and because of the absence of an eastern barrier and of shore lines ; furthermore, he states that the clays are not well stratified ; they contain land mammals in abundance, but they preserve no plants, no fish, and no aquatic reptiles or invertebrates. While the included sandstones are thought to be river-laid, the clays are said to be better accounted for by aeolian action, such as is now going on in the production of loess on the open grassy surface of the subarid Plains. This article is of especial interest, not only from its vol. xxxv. — 21 370 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. critical quality, but also because it is concerned with a fine-textured formation which has been referred to a lacustrine origin with mo confidence than almost any other in the Rocky mountain region. 16. Summary. ■ The object of this paper is to promote consideration rather than to announce conclusions. The author's leaning towards the explanation <>t' parts of our western Tertiary formations a-* fiuviatile rather than as lacustrine deposits is not to be concealed, but he would prefer to leave the decision of the points here mooted to those who have a larger personal knowledge of the Rocky mountain region than he has. • nations recorded by western explorers and geologists are in no case disputed; descriptions ol observed structures are accepted as if they were first-hand facts; but the origin attributed to the observed structures is not always accepted, because it is thought that other interpretations than those offered by the observers are in some ci to be preferred. This essay is therefore not concerned with the direct observation of facts in the Rocky mountain region, but with the the- oretical discussion of recorded observations, a discussion in which anj one may reasonably take part, whether he has visited the region under consideration or not, provided that the Tacts of structure arc well observi d and described by those who have been there. It is in no spirit of antagonism, but simply from interest in a theoretical problem thai expression is here given to an opinion in a matter of interpretation different from that adopted by the authors whose observation-, are quoted; an opinion which it Beems advisable to express freely in order to bring the discussion of the problem to the attention of geologists interested in this aspect of their science. The points in discussion seem to be in the main these: — Lake waters may receive materials of various kinds from their shore- and from the rivers running into them; and the materials thus gathered, coarse and fine, will be deposited in stratified arrangement near the border and over the floor of the lake. Their volume will depend on the rate, area, and period of accumulation. River basins may also, under certain con- ditions, receive in their lower portions more material than can be carried forward and discharged into the sea; or interior basins not containing lakes may be gradually aggraded by the materials washed in by Btreams from the enclosing; highlands : lure again the materials may be coarse and fine ; they may have a stratified arrangement, the area of deposition may be small or large ; and the volume of the deposits will depend on the rale, area, and period of accumulation. Recognizing these possibilities, assured by observation in various parts DAVIS. — ROCKY MOUNTAIN TERTIARIES. 371 of the world to-day, how cau the products of similar conditions in the past be recognized ? In both cases, the deposits are stratified ; in both cases, the deposits may include fine as well as coarse materials ; in both cases, the area of deposition may be large as well as small ; in both cases, the thickness of deposits may be great as well as light; in both cases, the strata may bear ripple-marks, mud-cracks, cross-bedding, and other indications of small and variable water depth. With all these similarities, it would not be remarkable if a lake deposit were sometimes called a river deposit, or if a river deposit were mistaken for a lake deposit ; for the safe discrimination of the two classes of deposits must depend on their differences, not on their resemblances. While the marginal sedi- ments of a lake may be coarse, the body of the central sediments must be fine and uniform. The marginal parts of a fiuviatile deposit may also be coarser than the forward parts, but the latter may be characterized by frequent variations of texture and structure, and occasionally by filled channels and lateral uucomformities. The origin of the western fresh-water Tertiary formations should be considered with all these items in mind, and with an equal hospitality to the fiuviatile and to the lacustrine theory. In whatever way the discussion on this subject may end, it may be noted a considerable body of geological opinion will follow its decision. The lacustrine origin of the fresh-water Tertiary formations has had an acceptance so general and undisputed that it has for some years held a place in the geological history of the Rocky mountain region as an established doctrine. Many examples of this might be given. Dutton writes : — "I know of no more impressive and surprising fact in western geology than the well attested observation that most of that [High Plateau] area has been covered by fresh-water lakes. . . . The marvel is not in the fact that here and there we find the vestiges of a great lake, but that we find those vestiges everywhere. The whole region, with the exception of the mountain platforms and pre-existing mainlands, has passed through this lacustrine stage" (Monogr. II., U. S. G. S., 21G). The occurrence of numerous Tertiary lakes is made the basis of infer- ences concerning Tertiary climate by the same author : — '• We know that the Miocene climate of the west was moist and subtropical. This is indicated by the great extent of fresh-water lakes in some portions of the west, their abundant vegetable remains, and the exuberance of land life " (Ibid., 223) ; but fiuviatile plains do not imply a moist climate. A low stand of the western part of the continent during part of Tertiary time as inferred by the same geologist from the long endurance of 372 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. istrine deposition: — UA considerable number of large lakes being formed, the next process was 1 1 1 « - desiccation of these lakes and the evolution of river systems. So long as the region occupied a ] w altitude this process, we may infer, would be very protracted. B ire a arge lake can !"• drained its outlet must be cut down. But ral causes in the present instance would combine to render this >n very slow and feeble. The elevation being small, the declivity and consequent conasive power at the outlet must be correspondingly small. .Moreover, the waters issuing from a large lake contain little or no sediment . . . Corrasion by clear water is an exceedingly Blow pro- cess" (Ibid., 218). On the other hand, fluviatile and subaerial depo may accumulate at considerable altitudes above sea level in interior basins. The preservation of numerous vertebrate fossils was explained by Marsh as " probably, without exception, due to their entombment be- neath the waters of the great fresh-water lakes which existed in this [Colorado] region during Mesozoic and Cenozoic time" (D. S. ('<■ S., Monogr. XX\'II.. 525). From the time when Warren first called attention to the inclined position of the Pliocene strata of the Plains, their attitude has been taken to prove a post-Pliocene elevation of the Rocky mountain System by all writers who have considered the subject. If the Pliocene of the Plains is fluviatile instead of lacustrine, a much smaller elevation may be demanded. The Tertiary lakes of the Pocky mountain district have become stock subjects of geological teaching, as the Bubject is represented bj the text-books generally in use, and it is here that my own interest in the mailer is especially aroused. Dana, Leconte, Scott, and Tarr all assert the existence of Tertiary lakes without qualification ; they give no indication that a large share of the BO-called lacustrine formations may really 1"' of llu viatile or other subaerial origin. Similar statements are naturally made by the standard European text-books, such as those by Geikie, I. apparent, and Credner, who naturally adopt the lacustrine origin of our western Tertiaries without demur. The older generation of geologists, who had a first-hand acquaintance with the facts, may have interpreted "-lacustrine " very liberally, including therein a considerable share of marginal subaerial deposits; but the brief and direct statements of the text books leave the coming generation of ideologists no option in the matter; they will accept the completely laCUStri Hgin Of all the deposits so-called. The probability or possi- bility iA' fluviatile origin is not given a chance to gain a hold in the DAVIS. — ROCKY MOUNTAIN TERTIARIES. 373 mind, for its place is taken by an opinion already established in favor of lacustrine origin. In all efforts to visualize the Tertiary geography of the Rocky mountain region, our students are now led to imagine broad sheets of level water surface, scores or hundreds of miles across, and well deserving the name of " seas " often given to them in various re- ports ; and the long slopes of subaerial plains to which an important place may come to be given now receive very scanty consideration. Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Vol. XXXV. No. 18. - March, luOO. CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE CHEMICAL LABORATORY OF HARVARD COLLEGE. ON THE DETERMINATION OF SULPHURIC ACID IN THE PRESENCE OF IRON: A NOTE ON SOLID SOLUTIONS. By Theodore William Richards. CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE CHEMICAL LABORATORY OF HARVARD COLLEGE. ON THE DETERMINATION OF SULPHURIC ACID IN THE PRESENCE OF IRON; A NOTE UPON SOLID SOLUTIONS. By Theodore "William Richards. Received February 5, 1900. Presented February 14, 1900. Within the past year have appeared three interesting articles by Kiister and Thiel * concerning several methods of precipitating baric sulphate free from iron when that element has been present in the solu- tion. One of the methods which they have proposed is an excellent addition to our always imperfect analytical repertory, and the chemical world owes them a debt for the ingenious although exceedingly simple suggestion. so Wliile not wishing in the least to detract from the merit and interest of this work, I feel that attention should be called to several omissions in their paper, especially those which concern theoretical considerations involved in previous work upon the subject. In their first paper, where the admirable analytical device is explained, Kiister and Thiel ascribe the "occlusion" of iron to the presence of the ferric ion. It is interesting that this idea, which they themselves have since shown to be false, should have led them to the desired goal. The circumstance might be taken as an argument in favor of the proposition that even an incorrect idea is better than none. In a reference to this paper, Ostwald t points out that the occlusion is in all probability due not to the ferric ion. but rather to a molecular complex ; and in their last paper Kiister and Thiel describe experiments which prove beyond much doubt the correctness of Ostwald's suggestion. Oddly enough, however, they still cling, in their summing up of the matter, to the statement that the ferric ion is the essential agent. * Kiister and Thiel, Z. anorg. Chera., 19, 97 (1899); 21, 73 (1899); 22, 424 (1900). t Ostwald, Z. phys. Chem., 29, 340 (1899). PR0CE1 OP THE AMERICAN AC LDEMT. It i< curious al-<. thai they should have overlooked the following Btate- in. nt in :i paper published over tea years ago by Profi ssor Jannasch and myself. In Bpeaking of the cause of the phenomenon under consideration, said: " Es lasst sich unmittelbar annehmen, dass das Eisen als eine Doppelverbindung mit Baryum als Baryum-Ferrisulphat gefallt wir.l, welches wahrscheinlich ein Molekiil gebundenes Was^.r < -o^t-n. Consti- tutionswasser) enthalt."* Kiister and Thiel have offered new arguments which they consider as being in favor of the first part of this pro| osition, without appearing to recognize that the proposition is not itself i '111. % have moreover ascribed an arbitrary formula to the substance, while we did not feel prepared either to assume it, exact nature or to explain the mechanism of its occlusion. Three years after this publication Schneider described some interesting experiments in which evidence was given that the occlusion of the double or complex compound is a variety of solid solution.! The idea was new at the time, and did not meet with general favor; but a knowledge of the work would have saved Kiister and Thiel trouble. In 1894,$ after the passing of two more years, Gladding published a modification of Lunge's method of precipitating baric sulphate free from iron, which is the most convenient of any which had appeared up to that time. He precipitated the iron with ammonia, filtered without especial washing, acidified the filtrate, ad. led an excess of baric chloride, and then collected on one filter both the main mass of the baric sulphate and the small amount of the same substance which he obtained from the ferric hydroxide. The chief difference between this method and the method of Kiister and Thiel is the fact that the latter pointed out the uselessness of filtering off the ferric hydroxide before adding the baric chloride. It is .piite probable, however, that Kiister and Thiel did not know of Glad- ding's work, and hence independently devised the whole process. Let us consider for a moment the nature and cause of this kind of occlusion. In the first place it must be distinguished sharply from the mechanical retention of mother-liquor in minute cells which all crystalline precipitates exhibit. Even large crystals rarely contain cells of included mother-liquor plentiful enough to increase their weight by more than the fraction of a percent; and this impurity is of course chiefly water. It is easy to test the magnitude of this inclusion by precipitating such a sub- stance as calcic carbonate from a solution containing a large quantity of * Jannasch ami Richards, J. prakt. Chem. [2], 39. S21 (It t E. A. Schneider, Zeitschr. phya. ('hem.. 10. 426 (18 J T. 8. Gladding, Jl. Am. Chem. Soc, 16, 898 (1894); 17, 317 (1897). RICHARDS. — SOLID SOLUTIONS. 379 some easily identified substance such as sodic chloride. Mr. R. P. Cushiug kindly made a number of such experiments for me, and found that not even from a saturated solution of salt did more than 0.1 percent of the precipitate consist of sodic chloride. Of course this value fixes the maximum, for some of the substance may well have been occluded instead of included. Very different from the mechanical process of inclusion is the behavior of baric sulphate. Here the impurities may amount to several percent, and the foreign material is disseminated equally throughout the mass. The experiments of Schneider show that the amount of the occlusion is greater as the concentration of the impurity in the solution increases, although not in direct proportion. It is very clear that we are dealing here with a special case of the distribution law ; but in this case the distribution can take place only at the moment of precipitation, because afterwards the rigidity of the solid prevents free motion. Kiister and Thiel evidently thought of this possibility, but they did not amplify the idea. In the present paper I have retained the name occlusion for this phenomenon because no other term seems to be applicable. There is indeed a certain analogy between the occlusion of hydrogen in palladium and the dissemination of a solute out of a solution into a solid ; and since the name gives rise to no misunderstanding it will answer its purpose. Obviously the study of the distribution law in other cases should throw light upon this one by analogy. When hydrochloric acid is distributed between its aqueous solution and the vapor phase, the concentration of the undissociated part, alone is concerned in the distribution, because ions can exist only in the solution. In the same way, when a moderately strong acid is distributed between water and ether, only the undissociated part of the acid comes into play, because ether does not cause important dissociation. From these analogies one might infer that the group which is concerned in cases of concomitant precipitation are not ions, but rather electrically neutral complexes. The inference is not a perfectly safe one, for little is known about the possible degree of dissociation in solids; but experimental evidence is at hand to support this view. In 1894 Richards and Parker made the observation that the occlusion of baric chloride by baric sulphate is much increased by the previous addition of hydrochloric acid to the solution of baric chloride.* For example, the addition of twenty cubic centimeters of strong hydrochloric acid caused almost twice as much occlusion as the addition of ten cubic centimeters * Proc. Am. Acad., 31, 74 (1894) ; Z. anorg. Chem., 8, 420 (1895). PROCEEDINGS OF THK AMERICAN ACADEMY. in another otherwise similar case. The conditions attendant upon mixing two liquids are bo uucertain that it is unsafe to attempt the quantitative interpretation of the relationship; 1 >ut qualitatively this result is wholly in accord with the law of mass action, provided that the ondissociated i iposed tn In- tlir one concerned. The nature of the electrically neutral group with which we have to do in the present case is less easy to imagine. Custer and Thiel assume that it is Ba[Fe(S04)2]a ; but this is evidently an unsafe assumption. The analogy to the case of chromium which they quote is an excellent point, but they do not seem to have made themselves conversant with the literature upon this Bubject, and hence apply their useful analogy unfortunately. They seem to consider that chromium exists in the green solution as part of an acid ion, instead of in the basic semi-colloidal form ascribed to it upon excellent grounds 1>\ both Recoura and Whitney.* One could hardly expect a basic substance to form such a salt as Kiister and Thiel's with barium. Some light upon the subject is to be had from the study of the quan- titative results in the paper of Jannasch and myself before mentioned, found that the impure baric sulphate precipitated from :i ferric solu- tion (containing enough sulphuric acid to have yielded L.1608 grams of pure baric sulphate) as a matter of fact weighed on the average only 1.1 17<> grams, and contained 0.014-4 gram of ferric oxide, hence the baric sulphate actually present amounted to 1.1170 — 0.0144 = 1.1026 grams. This is 0.0.382 gram less than the amount which should have been present; hence, supposing that no sulphuric acid remained in the solu- tion. there must have been 0.0582 j^-^^r ~ 0-0199 gram of sulphur trioxide in the iron complex. But 0.0144 gram of ferric oxide corre- sponds to 0.0216 gram of sulphur trioxide in ferric sulphate; hence there was a deficiency of nearly two milligrams. If sulphuric acid lined in solution, the deficiency in the complex must have been still greater. It is true that the observed difference is only half so great that demanded by a formula analogous to Recoura's, Fe,i S( >4) . (I >l I id is perhaps not very much greater than a possible experimental error; Ear as the argument goes, it points toward the existence of a basic complex in the precipitate. ' A convenient resume1 of the argument in favor of this point of view is to be found in a recent article by Whitney, Jl. Am. Cliem. Soc., 21, 1075 (1899). RICHARDS. — SOLID SOLUTIONS. 381 Turning to the results of Kiister and ThiePs work, we find other arguments indicating the same thing. On pages 439-440 of their third paper they point out that the addition of acid diminishes very much the occlusion of the iron complex. This is wholly consistent with the present thesis : for (according to the Mass Law) the addition of acid must diminish the concentration of the basic complex in the solution, and hence (according to the distribution law) the amount which finds its way into the solid. It is true that this argument is somewhat diminished in force by two circumstances : first, because Kiister and Thiel have not here considered the fact that hydrochloric acid increases the weight of the precipitate by introducing into it more baric chloride ; and second, because the addition of hydrochloric acid undoubtedly causes a chloride- complex which is not occluded to nearly so great an extent as the sulphate- complex by the baric sulphate. In order really to study the effect of the hydrogen ion one should not rely simply upon the total weight of the mixed precipitate, but should actually determine the amount of iron present in the precipitate and compare it with the amount present in a precipitate obtained from a solution containing the same amount of iron and an amount of sodic chloride equivalent to the hydrochloric acid used in the first case. In spite of these objections, however, the effect observed by Kiister and Thiel is so great that one must ascribe a portion of it to the action of the hydrogen ion, and hence, according to Whitney and Recoura. infer the substance concerned to be a basic com- plex. Kiister and Thiel offered no explanation for the action of the hydrogen ion. Again. Kiister and Thiel point out (pp. 437-438) that the hydrolysis caused by dilution prevents the addition of much water from causing as considerable a decrease in the absorbed material as would otherwise have been expected. This is equivalent to saying that the complex which is concerned is a basic one : for the hydrolysis undoubtedly involves the ionization of hydrogen. Yet another, although less cogent, argument in favor of the basic nature of the complex is the fact that Jannasch and I found the impure baric sulphate to be capable of retaining about three per cent of water at 250°. While it is not impossible that this should be at least in part simply held in minute cells or as crystal-water, one is inclined to ascribe part of it to hydroxyl existing in the precipitate. It may well be, however, that the extra water is simply dissolved in the precipitate, as other uudissociated substances are dissolved by baric sulphate. This tendency to dissolve water may be the reason why PROCEEDINGS OP Till: AMERICAN ACADEMY, manj precipitates require prolonged ignition in order to attain constant Over a year ago I was attracted by the observation that green ch mic sulphate is plentifully occluded by baric sulphate,* into beginning a studj of the subject of occlusion with the help of this phenomenon. Chromium \\a^ selected instead oi iron because its complex is n .-talilc and has been more thoroughly >t uf the base of the hind wings is pale yellow or citron, bni one species in the extreme east has this area generally red, while in one found in tin- extreme west it is usually pale blue, though both Bpeciea have sometimes the normal yellow of the genua. The Bpecies may be separated by the following tabic : — Table oi the Species of Derotheha. I1. Smaller forms ; eyes very prominent; tegmina distinctly tapering, with nearly straight costa, the intercalary vein subequidistant between median and ulnar veins; the more conspicuous markings ol tegmina generally confined, and thai narrowly ami subequally, to the costal and inner edges. . . . [Dbbotmbma pbopbb />'. Metazona broad, tlie hind margin rounded, rarely feebly obtusangulate. i '. Dark band of wings normally broader than the metazona, reaching the margin posteriorly and percurrent, or broken only in the posterior axillary ana. 1. laticinctum. (•-. Dark band of wings narrower than the metazona, not reaching the margin posteriorly and lacking almost throughout the axillary area. . 2. delicatulum. !>-. Metazona, even in female, no broader or scarcely broader than at eyes, the hind margin distinctly angulate. c1. Rugosities of metazona wholly irregular and not longitudinally pectinate ; dark hand of wing9 relatively narrow, nowhere broader and generally narrower than length of pronotum, more or less narrowed in the posterior axillary ana. and occupying more but generally less than half the outer half of the wing ; base of wings pale blue or citron. . cupidineum. >/-. Metazona very obtusangulate posteriorly ; coBtal margin of tegmina with vivid contrasts of black and pallid, giving it an ornate appearance ; basal half of wings normally pale blue, occasionally pale citron. I saussureanum. r-. Rugosities of metazona forming longitudinal ridges giving it a pect appearance; dark band of wings broad, Bubequal, much broader than length of pronotum and occupying more than half the outer half of wing; basi of wings red or citron 5. haydeni. I Larger form-; eyes less prominent, especially in female: tegmina of Bub equal breadth, with arched costa, the intercalary vein closely approaching the in dian and widely separated from the ulnar vein ; costal and inner edges of tegmina not marked distinctively from the rest of the wing. . [ I'm i kka] Disk of pronotum relatively smooth, posteriorly obtusangulate; tegmina with contrasted markings on costal half, in large patches as in Conoz 6. lileyanum. SCUDDER. — THE GENUS DEROTMEMA. 389 b2. Disk of pronotum fcuberculate, its hind margin rectangulate, rarely feebly obtusangulate ; tegmina with almost uniformly distributed markings, consisting largely of longitudinal streaks or fleekings following the longitudinal veins, rarely so arranged as to form massive blotches and then inconspicuous and simulating Trimerotropis rather than Conozoa. c1. Hind wings broad in the radiate area, after the manner of Circotettix, so that they are more than three fifths as broad as long; tegmina flecked through- out rather than streaked 7. lentig'tnosum. c-. Hind wings of normal form, rarely more than four sevenths as broad as long; tegmina beyond the basal fourth marked almost exclusively with longitudinal streaks 8. lichenosum. (Subgenus Derotmema.) 1. Derotmema laticinctum, sp. nov. Of relatively small size, fusco-cinereous, flecked with fuscous. Head with prominent subglobose eves, the occiput ascending, more or less clearly separated from the descending fastigium of the vertex by a transverse ridge; fastigium rather broad and depressed between high lateral walls, traversed by a slight median carina, the lateral walls con- verging anteriorly and continuous with the lateral margins of the frontal costa, which is narrow and deeply sulcate above, but broadened at ocellus and particularly at base ; lateral carina' (if face strongly divergent below; antenna) somewhat longer (£) or somewhat shorter (9) than the hind femora, the joints, or most of them, alternately pallid and fuscous. Pronotum cinereous, more or less flecked with fuscous, mesially constricted so as to be subselliform, the metazona broad, generally broader than at the eyes, its posterior margin very broadly rounded, with no or scarcely a trace of angulation mesially : disk of metazona generally smooth or nearly so, but sometimes, at least in the female, distinctly ru nun., 9» 22.25 mm.; hind femora, J, 9 mm. 9 . 1l' mm. 30 $, 28 9. Las Cruces, N. Mex., T. I). A. Cockerell, C. II. T. Townsend ; Mesilla, N. Mex., June 30, A. P. Morse; Phoenix, Ariz., (><-t. 16, T. I). A. Cockerell; Fort Whipple, Ariz., E. Palmer; fortj miles east of Tucson, Ariz., E. Palmer. Mr. A. P. Morse found this species common at Mesilla on dry soil, especially on sandy ground. It (lies freely and is not easily caught. 2. Derotmerna delicatulum. sp. nor. Of relatively small >ize, pallid testaceous, occasionally tinged with rufous, flecked more or less with fuscous. Head with the face often hoary in the male, with prominent subglobose eyes, occiput, fastigium and frontal costa exactly as in the last s| ies ; antennae a> long a> (J) or considerably shorter than ( 9 ) the hind femora, pallid, interrupted with fuscous, Pronotura testaceous, often more or less rufescent in female, Becked more or less with fuscous, somewhat selliform especially in the male, the metazona broad, generally broader, especially in the female, than at the eyes, its posterior margin very broadly rounded, but occasionally showing signs of angulation mesially, the disk nearly smooth but generally with raised points and occasionally slightly rugose in the male, distinctly and rather sharply rugose in the female, the lateral carina' rather distinct but fading on the prozona. Tegmina slender and tapering, marked as in the last species and with similar intercalary vein; wings pale citron yellow at base, hyaline apically, with a Blight infuscation of the veins at extreme apex and a narrow and somewhat cloudy extramesial fuscous band, narrower than the metazona, almost completely interrupted in the axillary area though sending in its upper portion a short shoot toward the base, and by a trifle failing posteriorly to include the hind margin, leaving at least four lobes of the radiate area free. Hind femora cinereo-testaceous, obliquely and obscurely fasciate with fu8COUS. Length of body, £ , 14 mm., 9> 22 mm.; antennas £ , 8.75 mm., 9- 9 mm.; tegmina, £ , 1">.."> mm., 9> 21 mm.; hind femora. J, 8.75 mm., 9 1 1 2.5 mm. 5 £ . •'! 9. Lancaster, Cab, July 3 1 , A. P. Morse; Mohave, Cab, Aug. 1. A. 1'. Morse; between (iila Bend and Yuma, Ariz., duly 4, A. P. .Morse. SCUDDEK — THE GENUS DEROTMEMA. 891 3. Derotniema cupidineum. Derolmema cupidineum Seudd., Ann. Rep. Chief Eng., 1876, 513 (1876) ; Sauss., Prodr. CEdip., 156-157 (1884). The type of the genus, and originally described from northern New Mexico. I have since taken it on different western trips at Green River and Alkali, Wyo., July 27 ; at White River, Col., near the Utah boundary. July 24, Aug. 3 ; and at Castle Gate, Utah, Aug. 22. It is one of the smallest species of the genus. 4. Derotniema saussureanum, sp. nov. Derotmema . i u i i n Br n< r!, MS. Of relatively small or medium size, fusco-testaceous, much mottled with fuscous. Head with prominent subglobose eyes, followed centrally by a fuscous stripe, the face tfteu wholly or hugely hoary, the form and sculpturing of the occiput, vertex and front agreeing perfectly with the two species described above ; antennae as long as (<£) or somewhat shorter than (9) the hind femora, rufous, banded with fuscous, distinctly in the male, obscurely in the female. Pronotum fusco-testaceous more or less ferruginous, the lateral lobes margined below with hoary and marked from the centre toward the lower posterior angle with a bright white attenuated oblique stripe margined with black ; prozona mesially constricted, at least in the male, so as to be subselliform, the metazona scarcely or not so broad as at the eyes, its disk sparsely and irregularly rugulose, often in the male nearly smooth, the hind margin very obtusangulate, the angle distinct. Tegmina long, slender, and tapering, dull ferruginous becoming subpellucid apically, the fore and hind margins flecked alternately with dark fuscous and pallid, the contrasts between which are vivid on the costal margin : intercalary vein subequidistant between the median and ulnar veins: wings either pale blue* or pale citron at the base, pellucid at apex, with some infuscation of the veins at the extreme tip, and crossed by an extramesial, moderately broad and solid blackish band, narrowed at the axillary area, nowhere broader than the length of the pronotum, occasionally broken at the lower margin of the axillary area, in that area sending a short spur baseward, attaining the bind margin but not the anal angle, leaving two to three lobes of the radiate area free, and not occupying in all more than half the outer half of the wing. Hind femora ferrugineo-testaceous, fasciate with * The tint as in the European (Edipoda ccerulescens or paler than that of our Leprus wkeeleri. 392 PBOCEl DINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. fuscous and especially with a Btrongly oblique forward directed median stripe. Length of body, J. 11 nun.. 9, 19.5 aim.; antennas, ,;. 9.5 mm., 9, 10.5 mm.; tegmina, £, 15.5 mm., ?,20.25 mm.; bind femora, J, nun.. 9. 12.25 mm. ''..;i 9. California, in the following localities: San Bernardino, July 16; Colton, July 17; (';ihon Pass, July 18; San Diego, July 22; Coronailo, .Inly 2 1 ; Los Angeles, .Inly 26; Rubio Wash, Altadena, July 29, — all the above collected bj A. P. Morse; and Anaheim, Coquilletl ( Bruner). Specimens with bine hind wings come from all the above localiti* except Cahon Pass and Anaheim; those with yellow hind wings come from these two localities, and also from San Diego, San Bernardino and Altadena. 5. Derotmeraa haydeni. (Edipoda haydeni Thorn., Ann. Rep. D. S. Geol. Surv. Terr . v. W0-461 (1871). Derotmema haydeni Brun., Ann. Rep. Nebr. Bd. Agric, 1896, L82 (1897). Derotmema brunnerianum Sauss., Prodr. CEdip., L55 166 (1884). First described by Thomas from Colorado and Wyoming, and credited by Bruner to the Yellowstone and Nebraska and by Sanssure to Colorado. I have specimens before me from Colorado, 5500', Morrison; Canon City, Col., P. B. Uhler ; Alpine. Tex., dune 26, and Sierra Blanca, Tex., A. P. Morse; and have myself taken it at Lakin. Km-., Sept. 1. and in the following localities in Colorado: Cucharas, July 8-9; Pueblo, Aug. 81; between Pueblo and Veta Piss. Aug. 27; and Garland, Aug. 28-20. The color of the base of the hind wings is sometimes red and some- times citron. Specimens at hand with the latter color come from Cucharas and Garland, Col., and from the two Texan localities; those with red wings from all the localities excepting Sierra I'danca. Tex. A yellow-winged female of this species, taken at ( rarland, was observed in flight to produce from six to ten short sharp clicks in rapid succession, like the ticking of a watch but much faster. (Subgenus T.MKTODERA.) 0. Derotmema rileyanum. Derotmema rileyanum, Bauss., Prodr. CEdip., 156 (1884). Originally described from Idaho. '*Salm Co." is given by Saussure, but there is no such county, and probably Salmon City in Lemhi Co. SCUDDER. — THE GENUS DEROTMEMA. 893 was meant. I have specimens from Humboldt Station, Nevada, Green River, July 21-31, and Alkali. Wyo., July 27 ; Salt Lake Valley, Utah, Auo-. 1-4, and White River, Col., next the Utah border, July 24-Aug. 3, all but the first taken by myself. I consider this, rather than either of the following, to be the species described by Saussure, principally from the wider angle of the hind border of the pronotum, and the band of the wings more noticeably broken at its crossing by the veins. 7. Derotmema lentiginosum, sp. nov„ Of relatively large size, fusco-testaceous, much flecked with fuscous. Head not very prominent, much infuscated above the clypeus, the fastigium of vertex deeply channelled between high walls which gradually approximate both in front and behind, and with a distinct median carina; frontal costa relatively narrow, subequal but gently expanding at base, sulcate throughout, its margins continuous with the walls of the fastigium; eyes only moderately prominent; antenna' scarcely so long as (c?) or much shorter than ( 9 ) the hind femora, ferrugineo-testaceous, very obscurely banded with fuscous. Pronotum ferrugineo-fuscous, flecked with fuscous and especially marked on the lateral lobes with a broad fuscous bar, darkest below, inclosing a narrow one of testaceous, the lateral carina' sharp and distinct on the metazona, the disk of which is rather delicately i uguloso-tuberculate with a slight pectinate appearance, its hind margin rectangulate or in the male some- times slightly acutangulate. Tegmina shaped as in Trimerotropis, with arched costa. ciuereo-fusemis, with nearly uniformly distributed rather coarse fuscous deckings, sometimes obscurely grouped into patches near the base and middle, rarely very obscurely streaked longitudinally in the apical half, the intercalary vein approaching the median much more closely than the ulnar vein ; wings broad and full in the radiate area, somewhat after the manner of Circotettix, being about three fifths as broad as long ; they are very pale citron at base, apically hyaline but with nearly all the veins and cross-veins irregularly infuscated, and with a moderately narrow generally unequal and percurrent but more or less interrupted extramesial fuscous band, narrowest just below the axillary area, and in the latter sending an offshoot half way to the base. Hind femora ferrugineo-testaceous, rather obscurely fasciate with fuscous. Length of body, g, 19.5 mm., 9, 25 mm. ; antenna, J1, 9 mm., 9, 8.5 mm.; tegmina, 26 mm. ; hind femora, £, 10 mm., 9,12 mm. PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. 10 (t. -2 9. South Park, Col., Aug. 11-16; Garland, ( ol., Aug. 29, collected by myself. - Derotmema lichenosum. Bp. qot. Of relatively larg >-ciuereous, much marked with fuscous and ferruginous. Head not very prominent, the face much mottled with cinereous and fuscous, generally darker above the . the fastigium and frontal costa much as in the I '-1 species; 1 l\ moderately prominent even in the male; antennae ahoul as long .-.- (J) or much shorter than (9> the himl femora, ferruginous, distinctly banded with fuscous. Pronotum cinereo-fuscous, often flecked or blotched with bright ferruginous (simulating the rusty lichens of the »rush) on the disk, the lateral lobes with markings similar to th the last speci lateral carina' sharp and distinct, at least on the metazona, the disk of which is granuloso-rugose, its posterior margin rectangulate, ran feeblv obtusangulate. Tegmina 9haped as in Trimerotropis, with arched costa. cinereous, marked with fuscous nearly uniformly distributed in slender streaks and patches, showing a decided longitudinal tendency, especially in the distal three fourths where they follow interruptedly tie- course of the longitudinal veins; occasionally an obscure tendency is seen to their grouping basally, as common in Trimerotropis; the inter- calary vein approaches the median much more closely than it does the ulnar vein ; wings marked quite as in the last species, the hand as there reaching the hind margin but not the anal angle, and leaving three lobes of the radiate area free : but they are of the normal form, not full in the radiate area and rarely more than four sevenths as broad as long. Hind femora cinereo-tesl . rather obscurely fasciate with fuscous. Length of body, $, 21 ram., ?. 26.5 mm.; antenna'. £, 10.5 mm.. 9. in nun.: tegmina, $, 2-1 mm.. 9. 28.25 mm.; hind femora, <£ , 10.7") mm., 9, 13 mm. 40 A 11 9- Alkali, "Wyo., July 27 ; Green River, Wyo., July 21- 31; between Green River and Evanston, Wyo., Jul\ 31; Evanston, Wyo., Aug. 6; Fossil, Wyo., Sept. 2; Castle Gate, Utah, Aug.! White River, Col., at the Utah border, July 24 Vnj. 13; Florissant, Col., Aug. 17 22; South Park, Col., Aug. 11-16; Garland, ( Aug. 28 29, all collected by myself. The species was much more commoi in the northern of these localities than in the' southern, and was found on and about the Bage-brush, its colore rend' riii'': it most inc mspicuous and bo me times Bhowing, especially upon the I :asionally upou the head, rusty patches . Impression of a />/"/*/ or worm ! This marking or impression was found by Mr. J. II. Clarke in a boulder of line red shale at South Attle- boro, Mass. Whether it is an impression of an aquatic plant or of a worm I am not sure, but am rather inclined to regard it as a worm-cast It is serpentine, with from four to five curves, no two curves alike. In front it ends broadly, is pointed triangularly, tapering more at what appears to be the posterior end. Length 70 mm. ; greatest breadth 4 mm. Sections of worm holes. I am indebted to Mi". J. B. Woodworth for the opportunity of visiting with him an interesting quarry, one mile south of East Attleboro, in red and green shales and light conglomerate-, the greenish shales showing distinct coarse ripple marks, rain-drops, and mud eracks, besides numerous sections of worm holes, perpendicular to the bedding. The worm holes are abundant, some eight or ten to the square inch, and varying in size from ,',, to }. of an inch in diameter. The round deep holes had been excavated in a fine mud, and then, after the worms had left them or died, silted up with fine sand. It' the worms which made these deep holes were fresh-water forms they were much larger than any Xais like OligOCheteS known to us at the present day. and were possibly therefore marine. MOLLU8CA. Anthracomya arenacea (Dawson) Hind. (Fig. 1, A. B, C.) These oeeimvd in a small boulder of line black shale found by Mr. Clarke at PACKARD. — RHODE ISLAND CARBONIFEROUS. 401 Valley Falls. In this specimen there were about a dozen casts of valves of old and partially grown shells with the shape and markings in some cases well preserved owing to the fineness of the shale. Another specimen showing well the shape of the valves was detected in the black shaly plant-beds enclosing a vein of coal just north of Silver Spring, East Providence, by Prof. F. P. Gorham, associated with the verticillate leaves apparently of Calamites. In these specimens the valves are elliptical, long, narrow, pod-like, the anterior end but little larger and rounder than the posterior end. The umbones are situated at or between the anterior ^ and £ of the shell. There are about twenty-five fine lines of growth. The fully grown specimens are narrower than the young and the anterior is but little larger and rounder than the posterior end. Size and proportions of the largest examples : length 22 mm., breadth 9 mm., being about 2.V times as long as wide. Length of the East Providence example, 17 mm.; breadth, 9 mm. In this example the umbones are situated near the anterior fourth of the valve. The young in the loose boulder were 10 mm. in length, 5 mm. in width, or one-half as wide as long, with numerous fine lines of growth. Figure 1. — Anthracomya arenacea. X 2f. u, umbo. The Rhode Island specimens present no differences from the descrip- tion and figures of Dawson (Acadian Geology, 3d edit., p. 205). It is an entirely different species from Naiadites elongatus and laevis Dawson, of vol. xxxv. — 20 102 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. which I have examples, kindly sent me by tin- late Sir J. W. Dawson. It is also different from any British species figured by Wheelton Hind in his elaborate monograph. Desirous of comparing our specimens with types from Nova Scotia, I applied to I >r. . I can see no specific differences, although the Sydney examples are casts in a rather coarse micaceous sandstone, a less favorable medium for the preservation of specific marks ; but the general shape and proportions of the valves are the same. The Sydney examples are small specimens from 8 to 14 mm. in length ; each end is much alike, and the beaks are plainly situated at the anterior J-J <>f the shell; in the largest one at the anterior third. In Fig. 1, A represents a large, and />' a much smaller specimen in the pebble found by Mr. Clark, and Ca specimen intermediate in size found in place by Prof. Gorham. All are drawn to the same scale and are enlarged. Track of a gastropod mollusc f Pawtucket plant beds. (Scholfield) Proc. liost. Sue. Nat Hist., xxiv., p. 21"). This track is, of course, doubt- ful, and might have beeu made by a worm. Merostomata. Protichnites narragansettensis, n. sp. This name is given to a new kindof track discovered in a pebble of dark arenaceous shale taken from a kame in north Providence by one of my class, Mr. II. II. Mason. It is allied to ami evidently made by a species of perhaps the same group as made the tracks described as Protichnites octonotatus Owen, and /'. /«/"- minus Marsh from the Cambrian. Description and figures are reserved tor a future occasion. Crustacea. Remains "f 'a Crustacean^ Three fragments of the remains of what appears to he a macrurous crustacean were found in the black shales of Valley Falls by Mr. Clarke, associated with the leaves of Calamites. The better preserved fragment is square at the base, with one side produced above and ending squarely; the lower corners are truncated. On the lower edge of this fragment is a distinct raised boss or tubercle, while the two other fragments are not thus marked. The plates remind one of the epimerum of a shrimp, which is wider on the ventral edge than above. The surface is polished but has not the markings "fa Pandalus. The surface is however marked with very fine irregular raised lines PACKARD. — RHODE ISLAND CARBONIFEROUS. 403 passing across the surface. The edge is margined somewhat as in Pandalus. I was at a loss to what group to refer these remains, but on showing • them to Prof. C. E. Beecher he suggested that they might be crustacean, and I am inclined to agree with him. The sides of the segments of Acanthotelson are no wider ventrally than tergally ; there is also no close resemblance to the segments of Palseocaris, both being from the Carboni- ferous beds of Mazon Creek, Illinois. It is possible that they may be- long to some true shrimp such as Anthrapalremon or other macruran of that period. Ostrakichnites carbonarius (Protichnites carbonarius) Dawson, Acadian Geology 3d edit, 1878, p. 55. Fig. 9, a. Dawson describes and figures certain tracks from the millstone grit formation at McKay's Head in Nova Scotia which he refers to Protichnites and which he supposes to have been made by a Limulus- like animal. Somewhat similar but much less regularly arranged tracks occurred in a boulder of fine red shale found in a stone wall at South Attleboro, kindly given me by Mr. J. II. Clarke. The tracks were associated with mud cracks, raindrops, and the wormdike impression already mentioned. They are of the same size as those figured by Dawson, but are not so regularly arranged, being much more scattered, and with no median linear tail-mark. Yet the individual impressions are of the same shape and size, and so like those of Dawson's Protichnites that they were apparently made by the same kind of animal and could perhaps have been made by the extremities of the feet of a small shrimp-like creature. The impressions are in sets of three, each of which is round in front, deep ami succeeded behind by a shallow faint furrow, showing where the tip of the foot or spine of the hinder feet had trailed over the mud, before the final impress of the feet was made. The three impressions are not arranged in a straight line, but in a slightly curved line, showing that the middle spine or claw was longer than the lateral ones. In some cases there are single impressions forming two series about 8 mm. apart, but with no tail-mark between. The Protichnites tracks figured by Dawson, could not have been made by a full grown Euproops or Prestwichia, and it should be observed that the set of three prints is quite different from the long oblique crescentic tracks made by the hind cephalic legs of Limulus. The tracks might as well have been made by the crustaceans Gampsonychus, Anthrapalaemon, 1"1 PROCEEDINGS OP Till: AMERICAN ACADEMY. or Acanthotelson, whose l''_r- end in a Bharp point, As the tracks were evidently not made by any nx-i-i^tnine, we have thought it well t<> refer tin-.' trails to a new genua, for which we propose the name Ottrakich- nit's, although we are not fully persuaded that it i> worth while to . Penner's Ledge, Cranston, near Providence. (F. 1'. Gorliam ami II. Scholfleld). " gorhami Scudd. Pawtucket plant beds. (F. P. Gorham.) exilis Scudd. From a l>oulik-r Dear Kettle Point, East Providence. (II. Scholfleld.) sp. Pawtucket plant beds. 11 Scholfleld.) " reliqua. Pawtucket plant beds. (F. P. Gorham.) ttina scapularis Scudd. Pawtucket plant beds. ill. Scholfleld.) " fraterna Scudd. Silver Spring, East Providence. (II Scholfleld i Rhaphidiopsis diversipenna SeixM. Cranston plant beds. (Rev. E. F. < "I irk.) Parcdogus ceschnoides Scudd. Silver Spring, Easl Providence. (F. P. Gorham.) The presence of the Spirorbis and of the tracks <>f two marine Arthropods suggest that the Rhode Island plant-beds, even if in general of fresh water origin, were deposited where the sea had access to them. The presence of these marine fossils, with the fresh water naiad, Anthracomya arenacea, strongly suggests that the horizon <>f the black shales of Providence and also of the red and greenish beds of Attleboro, Mass., belong to the Bame horizon as those of the South Joggins of Nova Scotia, which is Upper Carboniferous, the rocks there consisting of sand- stones and dark carbonaceous Bhales, frequently becoming reddish. The South Joggins shales also contain the remain- of Anthrapalaeraon, which should be looked for in the Narragansett coal measures. Thus f;u-, then, the animal remains confirm Lesquereux's reference of the dark plant-beds to the Upper Coal Measures. These beds also appear to be higher in the Beries than the Middle Carboniferous blazon Creek beds of Illiuois which contain a larger PACKARD. — RHODE ISLAND CARBONIFEROUS. 405 number of marine animals, viz.. Belinuridte (Euproops, Prestwichia and Belinurus), besides Anthrapaloemon and Acanihotelson, together with the impressions of marine annelid worms. It should be observed that the black plant-beds of Providence on the western side of Providence Bay, which dip southeastward at an angle of 45o-50°, extend over to the arkose conglomerates on the western edge of the basin, which are very highly inclined and dip westwards. The thickness of the plant-beds, unless much folded, appears to be over a mile. The exact relations of the plant-beds on the eastern side of Providence to the arkose conglomerates we have thus far been unable to definitely determine.* Brown University. * Since reading this proof I have, at a point about half a mile north of Natick, on the western edge of the coal basin, seen the gradual passage of the carboniferous shales into the arkose. Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Vol. XXXV. No. 21. — April, 1900. CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE CRYPTOGAMIC LABORATORY OF HARVARD UNIVERSITY. — XLII. PRELIMINARY DIAGNOSES OF NEW SPECIES OF LABO ULBENIA CE^E. — II. By Roland Tiiaxter. CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE CRYPTOGAMIC LABORATORY OF HARVARD UNIVERSITY. — XLII. PRELIMINARY DIAGNOSES OF NEW SPECIES OF LABOULBENIACE^E. — 2. By Roland Thaxter. Received March 19, 1900 ; Presented April 11, 1900. Dimorphomyces Myrrnedoniae dot. sp. Male individual tinged with smoky brown, relatively small, similar to those of the other species, except that the neck of the antheridium is pro- portionately much shorter, its base inflated, its distal portion short and attenuated ; the distal cell of the receptacle large, distally very thick- walled, the thickened portion undergoing a gelatinous degeneration. Total length to tip of antheridium, including foot, 65 /x, to tip of sterile portion 40 /x. Antheridium 38 li long, the venter 25X14 li. Female individual relatively large, tinged with smoky brown, the sterile part of the receptacle terminated by a blunt distal cell, subtended by a blackened septum, the distal portion of which is thick walled and often swollen or disappearing through gelatinous degeneration ; the fer- tile portion resembling that of the other species in general structure but developed almost at right angles to the axis of the sterile part on one side only, as iu D. Tkleoporae, very long and nearly isodiametric through- out ; the perithecia from two to five in number and the appendages from three to six, alternating as a rule, the two series diverging slightly from opposite sides, the subtending cells relatively large and slightly oblique in reference to the marginal portion, so that their size appears to be greater when viewed on one side than on the other. Perithecium rather long and slender, nearly straight, stouter in small individuals and somewhat inflated ; the tip blunt or nearly truncate ; tinged with smoky brown, borne on a short divergent stalk-cell (hardly visible), from which it bends abruptly upward. Appendages relatively large, consisting of two superposed cells constricted at the septa, the basal one longer, distally more deeply suffused, the upper distally suffused and modified like the 410 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. corresponding portion of the Bterile portion of the reo ptacle. Sp< about 20 ••'!/'. Peritbecia in well developed individuals LOO ■ 18 ft. Lateral portion of receptacle 75 • 20 /*, the sterile portion 60/*. Ap- pendages about 58 < 13 //. On Myrmedonia flavicornU Fauv., British Museum i Biologia Coll.), \ , 766, G uatemala. Dimorphomyces Thleoporae nov. gp. MtiL- individual much as in D. muticus, the receptacle ending in a shorl blackened cell, bluntly rounded or nearly truncate. Total length tn tip of antheridium 66 «, to tip of sterile cell 37 \u Female individual. Structure of tlie receptacle like thai of the other species, but only developed on one side of the median Bterile portion, which < sists of three cells like that of the male individual and is black tipped. The appendages and perithecia arising as in the other species, the latter nearly symmetrically Fusiform, bluntly rounded at the tip, tit. with Bmoky brown, the tip undifferentiated, the appendages (broken) relatively large and simple. Perithecia (not quite mature) 50 < \ i /i. Foot to end of lateral portion 50 tt. Total length to tip of perithecium 80/-. On Thleopora corticalis Gz., Paris Museum, No. 297, Santa Anna. Madeira. On inferior surface of abdomen. Dimeromyces pinnatus now Bp. Male individual consisting of a basal cell more than twice as Long as broad, the axis above of eight or nine cells separated by horizontal septa, all hut the lowot and the terminal cell separating a small cell on one side which forms the base of an antheridium or of a Bterile appendage, tin- two organs diverging slightly from one another bo as to form two vertical rows. Anlheridium compound, short and stout, the \ enter abruptly dis- tinguished from the stout ne^k. the base of which is Blightly enlarged and purplish brown, the distal part tapering very Blightly, the apex blunt. Appendages consisting typically of six cells, including the basal Cell, constricted at the dark septa, the distal cells sull'iiscd with brownish, the terminal one larger, longer, and more or less vesicular, the thick walls tending to gelatinous degeneration. Total length of receptacle 100 < 12 /*. Antheridia 35 < 12 /*. Appendages 50 X 7 /*. Female individual. Basal cell large and stout, the cells above it about twenty in number, greatly Battened, the septa horizontal, a lew of the THAXTER. NEW LABOULBENIACE.E. 411 lower cells having appendages on only one side or none, the rest bearing them on both sides. Appendages simple, consisting of from five to seven cells including the basal cell, constricted at the dark septa, the terminal cell hyaline and much larger, as in the male ; the rest, except the basal one, purplish or the upper one tinged with brown. Perithecia one to three in number, mostly rather slender, slightly curved outward; the stalk portion about half as long as the remainder, which is purplish brown, deeper distally ; the tip well distinguished when not distended by spores, consisting of a basal portion larger and slightly inflated and a distal one, formed by the lip-cells, abruptly distinguished, its external margins generally symmetrically divergent, the four cells nearly equal and symmetrical and ending distally in a corresponding number of papillae about the pore. Perithecia including stalk, 125 X 20 //,. Re- ceptacle 190-225 X 28 //., not including basal cells of appendages. Appendages 55 X 8 /a. On Ardistomis pp., Hope Collection, No. 29 G. No locality, but probably Mexico or South America. At base of elytra and ou leg. Dimeromyces nanomasculus nov. sp. Male individual very minute, consisting of three superposed cells, the upper bearing a terminal two-celled appendage with dark septa, the sub- basal cell giving rise to a single antheridium like that of D. pinnatus, smaller, the neck usually abruptly turned to one side. Total length to tip of appendage 35 tx ; the antheridium about 15 X 5 /i. Female individual resembling that of D. pinnatus in general structure, the basal cell large and long, narrower below ; the cells above about ten to fifteen in number, usually roundish ; the appendages mostly five-celled above their basal cell, variably suffused with brown, the septa dark, some- times curved or almost hooked distally, the distal cell not conspicuously enlarged becoming brownish ; the subterminal cell of the single terminal appendage examined producing a blackish-brown, lateral, irregular, spine- like outgrowth. Perithecium straight, more commonly solitary near the tip, brownish yellow to dark brown, not at all distinguished from the stalk, which is hyaline only at its narrow base, the hyaline tip abruptly distinguished by a slight subtending ridge, its margins usually converging symmetrically to the truncate or blunt apex. Spores about 45 X 3 /a. Perithecia, including stalk, 100-120 X 20-24 /x. Appendages longer 60 X 6 jx. Total length to tip of perithecium 245-285 X about 22 /j. On Ardistomis viridis Say, Cocoanut Grove, Florida. November. On A. educta Bates, British Museum (Biologia Collection), No. 676. 412 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. MONOICOMYCES - l; ceptacle consisting of a basal and subbasal cell, above which it ter- minates in :i Bmall two-celled Bterile portion, the terminal cell of which may or may not be in the form of ;i short appendage; the Bubbasal cell giving rise to from one t" Beveral Fertile branches, the habit becoming thus unilateral, bilateral <>r Bubverticillate in different sped* j, The f< r- tile branches consisting of from one t" Beveral cells in different Bpecies, the terminal cell of each branch normally giving rise to a stalked peri- thecium and a stalked antheridium ; the remainder, if there arc more than one. appendiculate on the upper side, rarely (abnormally ?) produc- ing an additional aiitlicridiiun. Antheridium of the compi und type, con- sisting of a .-talk composed of a pair of cells, the antheridium proper consisting of certain basal cells, two tiers of peripheral cells, which sur- round (not on all sides?) numerous antheridial cells and a cavity ah them, and three or four terminal cells, which appear to surround an open- ing through which the antherozoids art' discharged, and which subse- quently grow upward, forming terminal simple appendages of irregular length. Monoicomyces Homalotae nov, Bp. Receptacle consisting of very small hyaline basal and Bubbasal cells surmounted by a distal portion, very much as in Dimorphomyces, which is blackish brown, the lower cell larger and distally inflated. Fertile branches normally two, when the individual is bilaterally symmetrical, rarely three, consisting of a single cell which hears distally an antheridium from its outer and a peritbecium from its inner angle. Perithecium amber brown slightly asymmetrical, relatively very large, short and -tout, the lower half greatly inflated, generally more so on the miter than the inner side, distally conical, the small tip not distinguished, usually abruptly truncate, the stalk-cell hyaline, narrowing to its base. Anthe- ridium home on a pair of rather short stalk-cells, the basal cells some- what smaller and angular, forming part of the wall around the antheridial cell-, the wall cells somewhat smaller than the basal cells, hut large and distinct, the terminal cells apparent 1\ four in number, later forming stout finger-like upgrowths of unequal length. Spores about 35 X 8 /-. Peri- thecia including basal cells 100-120 X 80-85/*, the Btalk-cell ■ '•'< |o ,,. Antheridia including Btalk-cells (not the terminal projections) 70—80 85 ft. Sterile part of receptacle about 7<>//. On Homalota putrescens Woll., British Museum, No. 412, Azores. On inferior surface of abdomen. THAXTER. — NEW LABOULBENIACE^. 413 Monoicomyces Brittanieus nor. sp. Nearly or quite hyaline. General structure as in M. Homalotce, the sterile portion of the receptacle small and inconspicuous, the terminal cell in the form of a short hyaline simple appendage. Fertile branches consisting of a single cell bearing the antheridium and perithecium as in M. Homalotce. Perithecium rather long-stalked, slightly asymmetrical or bent, the base inflated, tapering gradually to the blunt undifferentiated tip. Antheridium borne on a pair of rather long stalk-cells, the basal cells almost exactly similar to them and distally not enclosing any por- tion of the antheridial cavity, the wall cells well developed, the cavity within them relatively small, the terminal cells growing up into gen- erally stout finger-like processes which may extend above the tip of the perithecium. Perithecium, including basal cells, 90 X 30 /x. Antheridia to base of terminal projections 80 X 20 it. On Homalota tnsecta Thorn., British Museum, No. 454, Hammer- smith, England. On superior surface of abdomen. Monoicomyces St. Helenae nov. sp. Superficially resembling Compsomyces in general habit. Pale yel- lowish or straw colored. Receptacle consisting of a triangular basal and a squarish or roundish subbasal cell which bears a small distal cell with a short terminal appendage separated from it by a constricted blackish septum; two to four branches arising from the subbasal cell, normally fertile and consisting of from two to five, usually three, superposed cells which are commonly somewhat inflated distally, more so on one side, an upgrowth from which becomes separated so as to form a prominent small cell lying close against the base of the axis-cell next above and is simple or longitudinally divided ; in the former case bearing one, in the latter a pair of peculiar short appendages from which they are separated by a conspicuously blackened septum ; the basal cell of this appendage usually similarly blackened externally, as is the base of the cell above it, which is usually characteristically geniculate, its terminal portion erect suffused with brown or hyaline, and either terminating the appendage or followed by two or three hyaline cells. Perithecium symmetrically inflated slightly distinguished from the basal cells, the tip small straight truncate tapering but slightly and abruptly distinguished. The antheridium relatively small, its stalk and basal cells about equal, the antheridium proper about as large as the basal part and hardly broader, its terminal cells develop- ing as in the other species to long flexuous hyaline upgrowths. Spores 414 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. <3.5/i. Perithecia 100-120 X W-48/a. The stalk 84-50 > 25-27 /-. Appendages of fertile branch 50-90 • •"»//. St. -rile part of recep- tacle50 ."»»»„. Greatest length to tip of perithecium 250-435 u. ( )n Oxytelus alutaceifrons Wbll., British BIu d, No. 111. Island of St. Helena. <>n abdomen and elytra. Monoiconiyces invisibilis dot. sp. Hyaline. Basal cell of receptacle small subtriangular, the Bubl coll rather long ami narrow, bearing terminally a distally rounded cell from which it is separated by an oblique Beptumand which is surmoui by a short Bimple cylindrical appendage ; the fertile branch developed on one side only i not distinguished from the receptacle and its append consisting of two or three obliquely superposed cells extending obliqui ly upward in :i divergent series, the terminal cell bearing a perithecium and antheridium in the usual relative positions, the subterminal cell sometii apparently producing a second antheridium instead of the simple appen- dage which terminates the lower cell of the series. Perithecium borne on a rather short stout stalk-cell, its inflated basal half not distinguished from the flattened basal cells, its slender distal half abruptly distinguished. Antheridium apparently similar in general to that of the other species, its detailed structure not recognizable in the types. Perithecia 8 1 X .';<» //. The stalk-cell 20X10/U. Receptacle, sterile part, about 10 /i. Total length to tip of perithecium 110-1 10//. On Homalota putrescens Wbll., British Museum, No. 412, Azores. POLYASCOMYCES nov. genua Receptacle consisting of two superposed cells, tin1 upper bearing a perithecium laterally and an appendage terminally. Appendage consist- ing of a series of superposed flattened cells, surmounted by a dome shaped portion which is not persistent (a compound aiitlieridium ? ). l'eri- thecium with a distinct stalk-cell and well developed basal Cells, the BUpporting cell and the lower wall cells forming a broad base the upper surface of which forms a broad aseigerous area, the asci arising from it numbers of aseigerous cells. It has not been possible from the material available to determine the exact nature of the antheridium in this remarkable genus. The terminal dome shaped portion of the appendage appears to consist original!) ol several cells, but whether it constitutes the whole of the antheridium or whether the latter is represented in part or wholly by the curious cells THAXTER. NEW LABOULBENIACE.E. 415 below it, was not shown by the material. The multiplication of ascigerous cells of which there are not less and probably more than thirty-six, dis- tinguishes it from all other known genera. Polyascomyces Trichophyae nov. sp. Pale dirty brownish. Perithecium broadest in the ascigerous zone, tapering thence to the distinctly differentiated neck-like tip, the subter- minal wall cells enlarged distally, externally and laterally, the resultant rounded protuberances forming a ridge about the tip just above its middle, the distal portion, formed by the lip-cells, of which that on the right is slightly longer than the rest, broad blunt brownish, the other three somewhat shorter terminating in narrow blunt extremities which lie on three sides of the first. The stalk-cell similar to and lying beside the subbasal cell of the receptacle to which it is united throughout, its base being in contact with the distal end of the basal cell, while from its distal end the large basal cells of the receptacle curve abruptly outward and upward. The appendage consisting of from three to six flat super- posed darker brown cells, constricted at the septa, looking as if they had been made irregular by crushing, the terminal portion (antheridium ?) blunt, slightly longer than broad, with evidences of lateral apertures. Spores 28 X 2.5 ,x. Perithecia 175 X 50-65 p. Basal cells 40-48 X 30 p. Stalk 38 ji. Receptacle 70 /x. Appendage 48-60 X 20-24/*. On Trichophya pilicornis Gyll., British Museum, No. 453, Farnham, England. On superior surface of abdomen. Cantharomyces Platystethi nov. sp. Yellowish with a brownish tinge. Receptacle consisting of a small basal cell and a subbasal cell more than twice as large, bearing the perithecium and appendage. Perithecium borne on a rather long stalk- cell, the basal cells continuous with its main body which is inflated below, conical above, the narrow apex truncate or bluntly rounded. The appen- dage large, its subbasal cell nearly twice as long as the basal, bearing the very small antheridium which forms a short cellular margin below its upper inner angle and apparently consists of not more than ten cells ; the suhbasal cell terminated by an irregular series of small cells which appear to produce a tuft of branches distally, and from which it may sometimes be separated by a third cell similar to it. Perithecia 80-86 X 35^. The stalk-cell bo X 20 /x. Receptacle 50-70 X 28/x. Appen- dages 140-1 70 fx. 41'! PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. On abdomen of Platystethus cornuttu Grav., British Museum, No. 1 19, Killiuni. England. Eucantharomyces Diaphori dot. sp. Pah' Btraw colored. Perithecium rather short and stout, its basal cella ill, slightly and usually symmetrically inflated; tapering from about the middle to the broad blunt Blightly asymmetrical tip, which ia Bub- t- nihil liflow the free lips, on the inner Bide, by the Bat trichophoric cell, jusl above which arises a very Blender recurved rigid append (not cellular) about 8-9 /i long. Receptacle rather short ami Btout, the Bubba8a] (anterior) cell somewhat stouter than the basal, the two together somewhat larger than the short stalk-cell of the perithecium. Appen- dage relatively large, its basal cell short suhtriangular, the upper ami low ei- septa oblique, the subbasal cell Blightly longer than broad, its upper two thirds bordered by the marginal cell which terminates in a -lender stiff straight Bpine-like process about 11-12/;. long ;m,i slightly diver gent; the antheridial cell- in five rows of five, tour, three, three, and two cells respectively ; a single additional cell sometime- persisting above the antheridial cavity; the discharge tube bent outward and Blightly upward, the tip bluntly coincal with a slight basal enlargement. Spores 10 X 3.5/*. Perithecia 120 X 30/1. The stalk-cell 30 X 18/». Appendage 70fi long, the antheridium 28 X 21//. Receptacle 45 X 24 fi. Total length to tip of perithecium 180 ji*. On Din/thorns tenuicornis Chaud., British Museum (Biologia Coll.), No. 71 1. Oaxaca, Mexico. On mid-elytron. Eucantharomyces spinosus nov. sp. Perithecium straw colored, rather stout, inflated, tapering to the broad asymmetrical tip which is slightly silicate; the outer lips often larger than the inner, the latter bordered or subtended by the more deeply Colored trichophoric cell which, in mature specimens, is not very COn- spicuous; the stalk cell rather short. Receptacle short, the cells nearly equal. Appendage much a- in II. Diaphori, more slender, the marginal cell extending Dearly to the base of the subba-al cell, distinctly enlarged below a terminal spine-like process, which is usually nearly erect ; the antheridial cells in three rows of five, three (relatively large) and one to two cell- respectively, the discharge tube large and broad, nearly trun- cate, bent abruptly upward from the base. Spores 35-40 X 8.5-4 /x, Perithecia L88 • 11/'. Appendage 70 ■ 1 1 /», the antheridium 85 X THAXTER. NEW LABOULBENIACE^}. 417 16 fi. Receptacle 50 X 20 /x. Total length to tip of peritheciura 190- 207 fji. On Drypta sp., Paris Museum, No. 80. Java. On elytron. Eucantharomyces Euprocti nov. sp. Perithecium straw colored to pale amber brown, slightly asymmetrical, somewhat inflated below ; the upper half tapering gradually to the blunt asymmetrical apex which is subtended on the inner side by the rounded flat darker amber brownish trichophoric cell which may extend slightly beyond the lip-edges, simulating a lip-cell ; the outline of the mature perithecium becoming more or less corrugated through the appearance of three to five rather broadly rounded successive elevations, corresponding to the distal and basal septa of the two lower tiers of wall cells and to a median protrusion of these cells where five are present; stalk-cell be- coming slender, mostly slightly shorter than the receptacle ; the basal cells small. Receptacle relatively rather long, the cells nearly equal. Appendage generally longer than the receptacle, its basal and subbasal cells nearly equal ; antheridial cells in three rows of five, three, and two cells each, the marginal cell bluntly rounded above and extending nearly to the base of the subbasal cell ; the discharge-tube large, bent outward or obliquely upward. Spores 50 X 4.5 fx. Perithecia 160-170 X 48 //., stalk-cell 70 X 15 /x. Receptacle 85-90 X 25-30 /x. Appendage 110/*, antheridium 41 X 22 /x, the discharge-tube 30 /x. Total length to tip of perithecium 310 fx. On Eiiproctus quadrinus Bates, British Museum (Biologia Coll.), No. 731. Volcan de Chiriqui, Panama. Eucantharomyces Casnoniae nov. sp. Perithecium relatively large, rather long, often slender, inflated below, tapering to the relatively narrow blunt apex; its outline corrugated through the presence of from seven to eleven elevations varying in prominence, the trichophoric cell simulating a lip-cell, the basal cells elongated and as long or nearly as long as the rather stout stalk-cell. Receptacle relatively small. The basal and subbasal cells of the appen- dage relatively small and stout, nearly equal, or the latter somewhat smaller, the marginal cell bordering its upper half and dis tally promi- nent, partly free and slightly inflated, ending in a short spine-like tip ; the antheridium consisting of three rows of nine, seven and five cells respectively, the discharge-tube relatively short and stout, bent upward vol. xxxv. — 27 11^ ICEEDINGS OP Till: AMERICAN ACADEMY. and over the prominent tip of the marginal cell Spores I- 3.5/*. Perithecia 240-260 ■ 15-62 /i, stalk-cell 75-80 X 20-28 /t, basal cells 75 [00 x 25-80/uu Receptacle 55-65 X 27 //. Appendage 85-103 /i, the antheridium 50-60 < 24-28/*. Total length to tip of perithecium 150 ii. On r,,*,,..,.,,',? subdistincta Chaud., British Museum ( Iliologia Coll.), No. 704. Cordova, Mexico. Eucantharomyces Callidae nov. sp. Perithecium rather narrow, Blightly inflated, tapering from about the middle to the blunt tip which is rather abruptly distinguished externally, sometimes bent outward, its distal margin outwardly oblique; the rela- tively small trichophoric cell simulating :i lip-cell, projecting slightly be- yond the latter externally, l>ut not abruptly distinguished on it- iuner side; the outline of the perithecium becoming inconspicuously corrugated through the presence <>f sometime - as many as eleven successive eleva- tions; the basal cells elongated, the base of one of the outer external to the stalk-cell from which it is separated by an oblique septum Ioi than tin- width of the Btalk-cell, which is narrower below and about equal to the basal cells in length or somewhat shorter. Receptacle symmetri- cally Bulcate distally, rather long, the two cells nearly equal. Appen- dage rather long, its basal cell extending downward and lying exterual to the upper half of the subbasal cell of the receptacle; the sul.basal cell more than twice as long as broad, the marginal cell reaching to its base and distally prominent. Antheridium relatively small, the antheridial cells in three rows of live, four, and three cells respectively, thedischai tube rather short and stout, erect or bent but slightly. Spores in X Perithecia 230-265 X 50/*, basal cells 120/x, stalk-cell 103^. Recep- tacle 100-1 20 /t. Appendage 1 _M»-1 ■_>."> ,/. antheridium 25 X 38 ll. Total length to tip of perithelium average 325 p. Ou Callida sp., Paris Museum, No. 68. Venezuela, Eucantharomyces Africanus nov. sp. Very similar to E. Callida. Amber brown. Perithecium large sub- fusiform, the margins generally indistinctly corrugated, sometimes marked by line transverse striations which may be whollj absent, the tip rela- tively small and rather abruptly distinguished, the trichophoric cell well defined, projecting beyond the lip-cells so that the apex usually appears oblique asymmetrical and Blightly Bulcate; the basal cells somewhat THAXTER. NEW LABOULBENIACE.-E. 419 shorter than the stalk-cell, their lower septa nearly equal and symmetri- cal, hoth slightly oblique. Receptacle of medium size, the basal cell dis- tally enlarged. Appendage short, the two basal cells rather small and nearly equal in length, consisting of three rows of six, four, and four cells respectively, the discharge-tube slightly curved, abruptly nearly erect, distally somewhat narrower and conical when young, the marginal cell extending nearly to the base of the subbasal cell. Perithecia 275-325 X 45-50 /x, the stalk-cell 100-130^, the basal cells 75-100 /x. Recep- tacle 100 X 2G [x. Appendage 100 //.. Antheridium 45 X 21//, the discharge tube 21 /x. Total length to tip of perithecium 575-600 /a. On Cullida Natalensis Hope, Hope Coll. No. 274, Natal, Africa. On Callida sp., Brit. Museum, No. 550, Angola, Africa. On elytra. Eucantharomyces Catascopi nov. sp. Straw colored becoming pale amber brown. Perithecium elongate tapering but slightly toward the tip or becoming distally swollen through the pressure of the spore mass, the margins corrugated through the pres- ence of sometimes as many as seventeen or even more prominences, which are mostly well defined, especially the distal one of the series, above which the slightly bent tip is abruptly distinguished, its distal mar- gin straight oblique, the lip-cells extending just beyond the small darker trichophoric cell ; basal-cells very much elongated and often corrugated through the presence of six or more elevations corresponding to those of the perithecial wall-cells; the stalk-cell rather stout much shorter than the basal cells, from which it is separated by an outer very oblique and an inner short nearly horizontal septum. Receptacle relatively small, the basal cell longer than the subbasal cell, distally enlarged so that it almost coincides with the base of the stalk-cell, which is thus hardly in contact with the subbasal cell from which it was originally derived. The basal cell of the appendage somewhat smaller than the subbasal cell, the marginal cell bulging outward slightly distally and extending almost to the base of the subbasal cell. Antheridial cells in five rows of eight, seven, six, five, and four cells or the four inner rows somewhat variable. Spores 50 X 4.5 /x. Perithecia 400-475 X 60-70 /x, the stalk-cell 140- 200 X 35-40 ix, the basal cells 200-240 fx. Receptacle 100-1 1 0 X 33 fx. Appendage 120 /x ; antheridium 60 X 32 fx. Total length 680-950 ti. On Catascopus sp., Paris Museum, No. 117. lies des Moluques. On the margin of the right elytron. 420 PROCEEDINGS OF Till: AMEBIC AN ACADEMY. Dichoiiiyces Javanus nov. sp. Perithecium as long or longer than the receptacle, clear dark reddish brown, translucent, straight or slightly carved, rather Blender, of about the Mini.- diameter throughout, the tip usually abruptly distinguished, and more or less conspicuously bent to one side, tapering but little to the rather broad blunt undifferentiated apex. Receptacle rather narrow, the basal cell dark red-brown below, nearly hyaline above; the central cell of the fower tier dark red or red-brown, lighter or hyaline at the base; the cells on either side symmetrical blackish brown opaque, ling upward so as to partly enclose the base of the se id tier, the margin the two tiers coincident: the second tier composed of from seven to nine cells, hyaline or becoming suffused below with reddish brown, bearing a well defined sharply pointed purplish slightly asymmetrical antheridium. on either side, which are subtended by from one to two typical rather short appendages: the upper tier very similar to the middle or slightlj larger, nearly hyaline, the single perithecium rising to the right of the median appendage, the right half of the tier thus Bomewhat larger and higher than the hit, three typical appendages usually present on either side. Perithecia l 15 ■ 26 /x. Spores about 3G x -1 ,«. Receptacle 120-140 X 50 /x. Total length to tip of perithecium 250-275 /*. Ou Philnitthus sp. British Museum, Xo. 37.3. On abdomeu. Dichoiiiyces exilis nov. sp. Basal cell hyaline. Median cell of lower tier deeply suffused with brown but not opaque; marginal cells wholly opaque or translucent on the inner margins, extending upward so as to enclose the base of the second tier: second tier consisting typically of thirteen cells, colorless or partly suffused with brownish, the antheridia large brownish straight or slightly curved, the renter inflated, the cells external to them appendieu- late, the outer three free above the marginal prolongation of the lower tier and forming a short blunt projection on either .side: upper tier like the middle one mostly somewhat longer and narrower, consisting of from thirteen to fifteen cells, the sub-median ones nearly triangular and for the most part distally overlapped by the external cells next in order and the basal cells ,,f' the perithecia. Perithecia typically two, pale brownish amber, long and narrow, slightly if at all inflated, tapering gradually to the undifferentiated broad nearly truncate apex. Spores 35 X 4 /a. THAXTER. NEW LABOULBENIACE^. 421 Perithecia 130-140 X 22 ft. Receptacle 130-140 X 22 /a. Total length to tip of perithecium 250-275 /x. On Philonthus xanthomerus Kraatz., British Museum (Biologia Coll.), No. 751, San Andres, Vera Cruz. On antenna? and anal appendages. Dichomyces Angolensis nov. sp. Basal cell hyaline. Lower tier opaque or the middle cell subhyaline, the marginal cells opaque, extending up on either side of the middle tier : middle tier relatively large, consisting of about thirteen to sixteen hyaline cells, the three to four external ones continuing the margin of the first tier directly and either subhyaline or blackened below, each bearing a normal appendage; the antheridia of medium size, brownish: upper tier smaller, shorter, and narrower than the middle one, consisting of from thirteen to fifteen hyaline cells : distally slightly concave, bearing a pair of perithecia, the appendages small, hyaline. Perithecium large aud stout straight, faintly brownish, slightly inflated, tapering distally to the nearly symmetrical truncate apex. Perithecia 120-135 X 30 fx. Length to the tip of perithecium 250 p. Greatest length of receptacle 140 X 75 fi. On Philonthus sp. indet. British Museum, No. 379. Angola, Africa. On elytra. Dichomyces insignis nov. sp. Basal cell suffused with reddish brown or partly hyaline; the lower tier wholly opaque or translucent along the median line; the middle tier consisting of about thirteen to seventeen cells, exclusive of those which are indistinguishable in the slender fork-like prolongations which extend on either side higher than the middle of the upper tier, the margin broadly blackened, continuous with the opaque margin of the lower tier; the lower portion of the three to five median cells marked by a few large scattered transversely elongated brown patches which merge on either side into the opacity of the marginal cells; antheridia very large, the venter slightly inflated, the neck sharply pointed, conical, brown, often abruptly contrasting, three to five of the cells immediately external to them bearing normal brownish appendages : distal tier very large sub- triangular, distally concave, consisting of from twenty-nine to thirty-nine narrow and elongated cells and bearing from four to eight perithecia with some irregularity ; the appendages brownish, paired above the sub- tending cell, not as long as the perithecia. Perithecia relatively small, 122 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. purplish brown, tapering almost continuously from ike broad base; the tip moderately well distinguished, the posterior lips prolonged to form long nearly straight and horizontal Blightly inflated appendages which project from the tip on either Bide : the anterior lips forming the truncate \, which consists of two distinct lateral projections with an interven- ing convex portion having a median apiculus. Perithecia about 85 ,'. the appendages from tip to tip 85 39 y. Antheridia 50 ■ 11 n. Receptacle 300-340 • 200-230 «. Total length to tip of perithecium 375 100 p. On an undetermined Btaphylinid collected by A. II. Wallace at Sarawak. Borneo, Hope Coll. No. 218. Dichomyces biformis nov. <\>. Basal cell hyaline or nearly so, usually somewhat enlarged and often with a heel-like anterior projection; lower tier rather narrow. < j u i te opaque, the marginal cells extending up to the Bubterminal marginal cell of the middle tier or to the eell next below it : the middle tier short and stout, the nine to eleven cells hyaline or faintly reddish brown above, usually becoming more or less sufluM-d below and externalh with brown : the median cells, where suffused, marked by darker transverse flecks on their anterior face, the marginal cells ending in a blunl distal often hyaline prominence on either side: antheridia short and stout Bubconical, subtended by a single brown inconspicuous appendage: the distal tier assuming in well developed individuals the form of a rather slender crescent, the number of cells very variable, the maximum about fifty, sometimes less than half this number, in which case the form is stouter, the marginal cells rarely extending above the tips of the perithecia which are four to eight in number and of two kinds which are not known to be ■ associated on the same individual : in the one case they are stouter. purplish brown, the basal third or more often abruptly hyaline or nearly so, the much darker red brown tip tapering rather abruptly to the apex, which is hyaline nearly truncate, with a well defined median blunt pro- jection; the posterior lip-cells prolonged much as in J), insignia to form a long horizontal nearly cylindrical or slightly tapering bluntly tipped hyaline appendage on either side ; the second type more often longer and more Blender than the first, pale reddish brown, the tip tapering, Blightly truncate or blunt, often with a blunt median projection as in the first type, but without appendages. Perithecia 105—110 x 20-oo ft. Receptacle 200 •• 100-800 ■ 27i) ii. On Philonthw sp., Niagara Falls, New York, Mr. Charles Bullard: on THAXTER. NEW LABOULBENIACE^. 423 Philonthus umbratilis Grav., British Museum, No. 362, Leicester, Eng- land; Paris Museum No. 206 and British Museum, No. 407, Madeira; Paris Museum, No. 175, St. Pierre et Miquelon. Dichomyces hybridus, nov. sp. Basal cell small hyaline with a red brown suffusion near the base: lower tier narrow and elongate, opaque or sometimes with a median trans- lucent line : middle tier rather narrow, not more than five of the median cells distinguishable, and more or less conspicuously marked on the ante- rior side by dark transverse flecks or striae ; distally hyaline or merely tinged with reddish brown above, becoming red-brown and finally opaque below; the margins opaque, continuous with those of the first tier and extending upward to form fork-like opaque projections, as in D.furciferus, which equal or exceed the upper tier in length ; a single appendage aris- ing posterior to the rather small purplish antheridium : upper tier rela- tively large, distally concave, composed of from fifteen to thirty-three nearly hyaline cells with reddish brown shades along the septa, the median cells sometimes flecked with reddish brown spots or transverse stride towards the base, bearing two to six perithecia which may be of two types associated on the same individual or occurring on different individuals : the one type somewhat smaller, straighter and more erect, reddish brown, the lower half often abruptly paler or nearly hyaline, tapering rather abruptly to the tip, the lips of which are modified much as in P. furci- ferus ; the other type larger, rather characteristically divergent, tapering rather abruptly to the truncate unmodified apex ; appendages hyaline, sometimes as long as or even longer than the perithecia. Spores 35 X 4 fi. Perithecia 100-115 X 25-30^. Total length to tip of perithecium 250-300 tx. Receptacle 175-250 X 85-145//,. With both types of perithecia : on Philonthus aeneipennis Boh., Paris Museum, No. 203, Gulf of Oman, India; on Philonthus sp., British Mu- seum, No. 366, Sylhet, Assam, India; on Philonthus sp., British Museum, No. 368, Hong Kong, China. With only one form of perithecium (not appendiculate) : on Philonthus ventralis Grav., British Museum, Ealing, England ; Paris, No. 207, Funchal, Madeira; British Museum, No. 426, Europe; on Philonthus sp. British Museum, No. 495, Balthazar, Grenada, West Indies; British Museum, No. 369, China ; on P. proximus Woll., British Museum, No. 403, Canaries; on P. gemellus Kr., British Museum, No. 367, Ceylon ; on Philonthus sp., Niagara Falls, N. Y. (C. Bullard). llM PROCEEDINGS OF Till: AMERICAN ACADEMY. Dichomyces Madagascarensis dot. Bp. Basal cell deeply suffused with brown. Lower tier very long and Blender, opaque except for a faint median translucent Line : middle tier with three to live of the median cells distinguishable, red-brown ; the n si indistinguishable in the opaque margins which extend upward to form long fork-like outgrowths on either side that may reach nearly to the tips of the perithecia; antheridia not large, brownish: upper tier consisting of about twenty-one to twenty-three cells, tinged with reddish brown, relatively large, deeply concave distally ; the median cells like those of the middle tier, marked by fine faint transverse stria;, bearing normally two perithecia which are loug and Blender, often Blightly curved and divergent, pale reddish brown, the tip narrow, the posterior lip-cells form- ing two small, slightly divergent projections (like those of D. furcif* but relatively smaller) curved at the tips, the anterior lips meeting ;,, a point between them. Appendages hyaline, sometimes equalling the peri- thecia in length. Spores very Blender and abundant, 35 < "_'<<. Peri- thecia 125-135 < 25/i. Total length to tip of perithecium i 0/x- Receptacle 225-240 x 105 /a. On Philonthut Sikorae Fauv., Pari.-, Museum, No. 179. Tananarivo, Madagascar. On abdomen. -&- Dichoniyces vulgatus nov. Bp. Receptacle short and stout, the basal cell small squarish hyaline; the lower tier externally opaque, except the who! ■ the middle of the median cell or only its ppper end, the opaque margin divergent extending above the base of the second tier, the blackened margin of which is continuous with that of the first tier; sometimes, like it, divergent, more often abruptly less divergent or evei erect, extending upward to form on either side free fork-like, usually opaque, sometimes hyaline projections as in />. •US which may extend to a point somewhat above the base of the perithecia or may be almosl obsolete; the three middle cells of the middle tier usually more or less conspicuously punctate below, with transversely elongated blackish brown spots: the antheridia normally placed, unusu- ally long and large, pointed, with two or three short, inconspicuous normal appendages placed one behind, the rest external to it. The upper tier distally concave, consisting of from fifteen to twenty-one cells, producing normally four perithecia associated as usual with short stout typical append Perithecia usually i traight, rather stout, pale reddish THAXTER. NEW LABOULBENIACE.E. 425 amber brown, the lower half or third often abruptly lighter, tapering to a blunt tip which bears ou either side a short, stout, often slightly recurved ear-like outgrowth as in D. furciferus formed by the prolongation of the anterior lip-cells, the posterior lips forming a usually angular, sometimes sharply pointed projection between them. Antheridia purplish, nearly straight or slightly curved, rather abruptly enlarged below the sharply pointed apex, the venter somewhat inflated. Perithecia 80-100 X 25 /x. Antheridia 35 X 7 /x. Total length to tip of perithecia 200-225 X 100 -115 /x. Appendages 35 fi. On Philonthus flavolimbatus Erichs., Panama, British Museum, No. 750 (Biologia Coll.) ; P. parvunanus Sharp, Chontales, Nicaragua, British Museum, No. 746 (Biologia Coll.) ; Philonthus sp., Mt. Gay, Est Grenada, West Indies, British Museum. 489 (Smith Coll.) ; P. sabalarius Nord., British Museum, No. 406, Madeira ; P. longicornis Steph., British Museum, No. 408, Island of St. Helena ; P. cruentatus Gmel., British Museum, No. 358, Europe ; P. varians Peck, British Museum, No. 359, Ealing, England ; P. dimidiatus Er., British Museum, No. 761, Not- ting Hill, England. On abdomen. A form, apparently this species, also from Hong Kong, on Philonthus sp., British Museum, No. 396. Dichomyces Cafianus nov. sp. Tinged with dull amber brownish throughout, the perithecia darker. Basal cell nearly hyaline, the lower tier as in D. vulgatus, the opacity involving in general but half of the upper (external) cells, the septa of which are visible on the inner side, the median cell dark brown, its lower half or more opaque : the middle tier consisting of typically thirteen cells, the margins unmodified and ending in a short external rounded projection, which does not extend beyond the base of the upper tier; the rather in- conspicuous antheridium normally placed, concolorous, a single short appendage close behind it : the upper tier consisting of from nineteen to twenty-three, usually twenty-one, cells, forming an inverted crescent, the short, stout, bladder-like appendages arranged as in D. vulgatus. Perithecia normally two in number, somewhat inflated externally, nearly straight, slightly asymmetrical, rather stout, tapering to the bluntly pointed undifferentiated tip. Spores 45 X 4.5 /x. Perithecia 120-140 X 35-40 /x. Receptacle 200-250 X 100-140 M. Total length to tip of perithecium 310-350 /x. Appendages about 20 X 6 /x. On Gafius puncticeps White, British Museum, No. 381. Colenso (S. Africa ?). 126 PROCEEDINGS OP Tin: AMERICAN ACADEMY, Dichornyces dubius nor. sp. Receptacle mucb a~ in D. princeps and similarly colored, smaller, Bhorter, and stouter, antheridia large purplish ; the distal tier of cells producing typically tun, rarely more, perithecia, which hit pale brown- ish and dimorphous; usually rather Blender, tapering slightly, tin- pos- terior lip-cella producing car-like outgrowths recurved or bent forward a> in 1). vulgatus: more rarely Larger and Btouter, the blunt, often asym- metrical t i | » without appendages; the two tonus sometimes, but not usually, associated on the same individual : external appendages normally large, long, colorless, reaching to the middle of the perithecium or even to its tip. Individuals asymmetrical, with a Bingle antheridium and peri- thecia of the second type, are not infrequently met with on the legs of the host. Perithecia 70-90 X 2<>//., those without appendages 70—105 X 30 -35 ft. Spores.-;.", x l/i. Receptacle about 120 x 7.3 ft. Total length to tip of perithecium average l'.*<»/jt. On PkilonthllS sp., Niagara Falls. New York. On all parts of host, On hosts received from .Mr. Charles Bullard. Possibly a variety of />. princeps, to which it is very closely allied. None of the abundant mi rial of the latter from differ* nl parts of the world, however, show any tendency to produce an auricled type of perithecium. Dichornyces Peruvianus nov. sp. Receptacle with faint brownish shades especially along the septa, almost in the form of two superposed isosceles triangles, the lower \. ir- regular, including the basal cell and the first and second tiers, its distal margin horizontal, the upper truncate at the base and distally concave. The basal cell short, the lower tier consisting of from three to torn- cells, marly equal in length; the middle tier of typically thirteen cells, antheridia of medium size, the outer five cells distally appendiculate, of the appendages situated behind the antheridium as usual; the distal series consisting of usua'ly twenty-seven cells hearing typically lour peri- thecia, the appendages placed as usual, colorless, somewhat shorter than the perithecia, which are mostly brownish externally and hyaline on the inner side, the brown or reddish fawn color sometimes predominating. asymmetrical, somewhat inflated, slightly bent inward near the tip which b small, pointed, and well distinguished. Perithecia about 120 30 fi. Receptacle 207-240 X 1-10-17.")//. Appendages 185 p. (longest). Total length to tip of perithecium 300-350 //. On Brachyderw simples Sharp. In Dr. Sharp's Collection, Peru. On elytra and abdomen. THAXTER. — NEW LABOULBENIACE^E. 427 Peyritschiella Amazonica nov. sp. Peritheciuru trauslucent brown, about as long as the receptacle, sub- clavate large, contracted below to form a neck-like base, somewhat in- flated distally, the tip well though not abruptly distinguished, tapering to the nearly truncate apex formed by the slightly expanded tips of the lip- cells which are otherwise unmodified. Receptacle rather narrow, pale translucent brown, consisting of a single basal cell followed by three tiers of cells ; the lower symmetrical or nearly so consisting of three long narrow nearly equal cells not appendiculate and not projecting laterally: the middle tier asymmetrical, consisting of about twelve cells, the series projecting distally on either side, all the cells except the three larger median and the external ones producing distally short typical ap- pendages, the third cell on the right from the median cell bearing a prominent erect antheridium : the terminal tier very similar to the middle one, consisting of about the same number of cells which produce short typical appendages distally and (in the types) a single nearly median perithecium. Perithecia 200-210 X 36 fx. Receptacle 225 X 70 fx. Antheridium 45 jx long. Total length to tip of perithecium about 400 ,x. On an undetermined staphylinid. British Museum, No. 400. Nanta, Amazon River. Peyritschiella protea nov. sp. Perithecia translucent, brownish amber colored, rather stout and sym- metrically inflated, the symmetrical tip tapering rather abruptly, the apex rather narrow truncate, the lip-edges unmodified. Receptacle nearly or quite hyaline, consisting of a single basal cell, above which the three typical tiers of cells are very variously developed : the lowest of these may rarely consist of a single cell, often of three which do not project laterally, or in well-developed specimens of as many as twelve or more cells, those external to the middle three forming ou either side distal external angular usually asymmetrical projections, one or both of which may bear termi- nally one or even two perithecia and typical appendages : the middle series like the lower when the latter is well developed, subtriangular in form, consisting of sometimes as many as fifteen to eighteen cells, generallv somewhat asymmetrical ; a single perithecium usually arising distally from the projecting portion on either side, together with numerous typical appendages : the distal tier similar to the middle one, mostly smaller, somewhat asymmetrical, bearing usually a single perithecium above the 1-N PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN kCAOEMT. median cell, though aol produced from it, the remaiuing cells bearing i\ pica! append . ften aa long or longer than the perithecium. tin- small subtending cell being unusually well denned. Subject to great variation, and sometimes producing more than one antheridium. Perithecia 80 96 x 32 p. Receptacle 270 X 80-100 to 120 < 45 ft. Total length to tip of perithecium -1 h| 350 ». On Bledius bicornis Germ., British Museum, No. •';:|_'. Europe (Thu- ringia), No. 432, Europe j on Oxyteltu rugostu Fabr., British Museum, 150, Hampstead, England; on Acrognathus mandibularis Gyll, Brit- ish Museum, No. 43 I, Europe. < m legs, elytra, and prothorax. In small specimens the two lower tiers may be but Blightly developed, bearing neither appendages nor perithecia, the middle producing one antheridium, the number of cells and appendages on one side of the perithecium being as in all case.-, greater than on the other. LIMNAIOMYCES nov. genus. Receptacle consisting of two portions, a basal pari below the perithe- cium and a distal part united to its posterior margin ; the basal portion consisting of a single basal cell, surmounted by two tiers of cells (some- what as in Peyritschiella), the anterior cell of the upper tier giving rise to a compound antheridium in structure similar to that of Peyritschiella: the distal (marginal) portion consisting of an inner and an outer elon- gated cell, the inner terminating in one of the bell-shaped appendiculate cells characteristic of Chitonomyces, separated from the simple appendage by a broad, constricted, blackened septum; the outer l>y successive sub- terminal external proliferations forming a Beries of cells from which a smaller secondary appendiculate cell is separated above, the whole cor- responding in development to the external portions of the tiers of cells in Dichomyces, the proliferation taking place to the right and left 8UO sively, so that the appendages appear to arise in two rows. A clearly defined genus apparently intermediate between Peyritschiella and Chitonomyces. Limnaiomyces Tropisterni nov. sp. Perithecium amber brown, straight, erect, with a slight nearly median inflation or tapering but very Blightly to the undifferentiated tip; the upper half tree. Receptacle pale straw colored, distally dull amber brownish, the foot minute. Mack; the basal Cell short and small, the lower tier consisting of tWO cells which are Dearly equal, several times THAXTER. NEW LABOULBENIACE.E. 429 as long as broad : the second tier consisting of three cells, the posterior one longest, the median longer than the anterior, which terminates in the antheridium, which is subtended by four basal cells, two of them outer and lower and separated by oblique partitions, while a smaller upper one lies on either side: above the antheridium two vertically elon- gated cells form the clearly defined base of the perithecium ; external to these cells and somewhat obliquely separated from them lies the broad base of the inner marginal cell of the distal portion of the receptacle, which lies next above the middle cell of the upper tier, its cavity nearly obliterated above as the spores mature, the primary appendiculate cell which terminates it rather elongate ; the proliferation of the outer mar- ginal cell beginning quite near its base, forming a series of about eight cells separated by oblique septa and terminated by small appendiculate cells; the appendages very small, vesicular, brownish below. Perithecia 127-175 X 35-37 fx. Receptacle, basal part, 75-110 fx, distal part 75-110 /x. Appendages 6X3 /x. Total length to tip of perithecium 240-375 fx, to tip of receptacle 190-205 fi. On Tropistemus sp. indet., Paris Museum, No. 47. Mexico. On tip of abdomen. Limnaiomyces Hydrocharis nov. sp. Hyaline. Perithecium rather stout and short, somewhat inflated, its tip abruptly bent outward, the apex bluntly rounded or nearly truncate; the tip and the appendiculate cell usually symmetrically divergent. Basal portion of the receptacle relatively short and stout but otherwise similar in structure to that of L. Tropisterni ; the two basal cells of the perithecium almost obliterated at maturity so that its base appears to rest immediately on the antheridium ; the distal portion of the receptacle bordering the perithecium to its tip, the inner cell becoming almost wholly obliterated in the middle and terminating in a short bell-shaped appen- diculate cell which is slightly divergent: the outer marginal cell usually proliferating three times ; of the three cells thus formed the two inner, as a rule, produce well developed, long, simple, hyaline appendages; not, however, as well developed as the primary appendage, which may be twice as long as the perithecium. Spores 50 X 3 p. Perithecia 60-80 X 17-20 /<. Receptacle, basal part, 50 X 20-26 ju, distal part 50-62 ^. Appendages, longest, primary 140 jx, secondary 70 p. Total . length to tip of perithecium 100-128 jx. On Hydrocharis obtusatus Say, Cutts Island, Kittery Point, Maine. At tip of abdomen. PBOCE of Tin-: am; ri< an a.C mm mv. Chitonomyces Floridanus nov. Bp. 1* ile Btraw colored with a smoky, brownish tinge, the basal and Bubbasal relatively large, the former rather elongate, the latter broader than long, the distal cell erect, conical, appendiculate, its basal septom hori- zontal. Perithecium relatively large, distally Bouiewhat inflated, the p »sterior margin to the apex nearly straight, the tip moderately well dis- tinguished, the inner margin Btrongly convex between the tip and the secondary appendage; the lip-cells each forming a more or leas distinct papilla. Spores relatively large about 85 X '■> «. Perithelia 70 < 28 u. Receptacle, distal part. G2 p. Perithecia commonly two. long and Blender, a basal middle and distal portion distinguished, corresponding to the basal, middle and the distal wall- and lip-cells, the basal portion Blightly inflated, purplish, the middle distinguished from it by a Blighl elevation at thesepta; the middle nearly hyaline, rather abruptly narrowed, its margin Blightly concave owing to a Blight distal enlargement, which, in mature specimens, distinguishes it rather abruptly from the much shorter narrower Bubconical moBth sym- metrically truncate eolorless distal portion; the Btalk-cell rather short, concealed by the appendages; the basal cells forming a squarish base. Receptacle relatively sin dl. symmetrical or asymmetrical, the basal cell translucent brownish, the subbasal cell very small, flattish, wholly in- volved by the deep nearly opaque Buffusion of the lower half or more of the upper cell, which is nearly hyaline above. Appendages short, Blightly exceeding (he base of the perithecium, rather rigid, slightly divergent, for the most part dark brown ; forming a lather dense tuft, many ending in pointed cells, the slender terminal ions straight or bent and forming the beak-like cells characteristic of the genus. Spores oG x \ fj.. Perithecia 1 tO-175 X 25-30 **, the stalk-cell about :)'>,,. Receptacle about 85 X 35 ll. Appendages (longest) about 7n Bhort branchleta Dear the base. Spores 26 X 2/i. Perithecia 100—125 > 25 -28/*, 85-38 X 14-18/*. Receptacle 40 X 18/*, Appendage without branches 50 X 16/*. Total Length to tip of periihecium 190-207/*. The Celebes material somewhat smaller. On Apotomus xanthotelus Bates, British Museum, No. 578, Celebes; on A. rufus Rossi, British Museum, No. ~>77, Europe. On elytra. Rhizornyces crispatus nov. sp. Perithecia brownish, rather stout: when viewed Bidewise, the inner margin strongly convex, the outer nearly Btraight with a general median elevation or concave owing to a general outward curvature, tapering to the undifferentiated tip, tin- apex broad truncate usually symmetrically bisulcate : viewed at right angles to this position Btraight symmetrical, abruptly enlarged helow the narrow symmetrical abruptly distinguished tip: the basal cells well defined nearly isodiametric, the stalk-cell la' as long or longer than the perithecium. Receptacle two-celled, the foot typically modified and blackened without rhizoids, distally geniculate through a protrusion of the distal cell helow the insertion of the stalk- cell and Opposite that of the appendage. Appendage end. sometimes exceeding the tip of the perithecium, consisting of a single series of super- posed cells, the three or four lower suffused with smoky brown, the rest subhyaline, each cell except the basal one giving ri.-e directly and exter- nally to a branch, the insertion in successive cells being .somewhat to the right and left of the median line so as to form two vertical rows, the basal cells of alternate branches being superposed ; each branch con- sisting of a basal cell externally blackened, which gives rise above to a -celled short branchlet, bearing usually a pair of long, Blender anthe- ridia, the remainder of the branch curved upward blackish brown except its upper margin, and giving rise from its lower (external) Bide to a series of close-set simple branchleta, black, recurved, more abruptly at the tips which are slightly enlarged and nearly hyaline, the whole suggesting the margin of a curled black feather. Spores 20 X 2.8/*. Perithecia 65- 75 ■ -~ 80/*, the stalk-cell 50-85/*. Receptacle 80/*, Append. i« 1 I" 175/*. On Diopns -p.. British Museum, No. 739, Natal. Africa. THAXTER. NEW LABOULBENIACE^B. 435 Rhachomyces Philonthinus nov. sp. Peritheeia borne on a short broad hardly visible stalk-cell, reddish brown, inflated toward the base, couical above, straight and nearly sym- metrical, the tip blunt, undifferentiated symmetrical. Main axis of the receptacle distinct, consisting of about twenty cells, including about eight to ten cells which form its erect free termination beside the base of the perithecium ; the three lower cells mostly suffused with red brown, those above hyaline or partly suffused, increasing in size to about the eleventh cell, above which they become successively smaller to the tip of the free portion ; the septa for the most part marked by rather prominent con- strictions. Appendages numerous but not obscuring the main axis of the receptacle, slightly divergent, mostly tapering distally and slightly bent below the straight hyaline tips ; those arising about the base of the perithecium longer and stouter, brown and mostly blunt tipped, about six in number and extending about to the middle of the perithecium. Spores about 40-45 X 4/x. Peritheeia 140-200 X 40-GO^. Receptacle 220-340 fx. Total length to tip of perithecium 350-500 p. Longest appendages about 100 /x. On Philonthus longicornis Steph., British Museum, No. 408, Island of St. Helena; on Philonthus sp. indet., Hope Coll., No. 225, British Isles. On abdomen and elytra. Rhachomyces velatus nov. sp. Perithecium short stout straight symmetrical, evenly inflated pale brownish, translucent ; the tip abruptly dark brown opaque or nearly so, tapering symmetrically to the blunt rounded apex. Receptacle varying in length, consisting of perhaps eighteen to twenty cells, the basal cell and sometimes two or three of those above it hyaline or nearly so, the rest indistinguishable, being concealed by the densely crowded appressed appendages, which are rather short and slender, deep brown or opaque except along the inner margin and at the tip ; those around the base of the perithecium also densely crowded, subequal blunt-tipped, wholly suf- fused, completely enveloping it and wholly concealing it till it is fully developed when the tip alone projects beyond them. Spores about 35- 40 X 3-4 ft. Peritheeia 175 X 75 fi or smaller. Total length to tip of perithecium 400-550 p. The longer appendages about 120 ft. On Colpodes agilis Chaud., British Museum (Biologia Coll.), No. 096, Jalapa, Mexico; on C. atratus Chaud., British Museum (Biologia Coll.), \:)i\ PROCEEDTN THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. No. 698, [razu, Costa Rica; on Gynandropw Mexicantu Putz., British Museum (Biologia Coll.), No. 682, Cordova, Mexico. I sually on l< s Rhachomyces Thalpii aoy. Bp. P< rithecium hyaline or Btraw colored, becoming faintly tinged with brown, slender, inflated oear the base; the distal half or less mostly curved awaj from the appendages, tapering gradually to the blunt uudifferentiated apex. Receptacle normally consisting "I eleven • superposed to form the main axis, hyaline, their septa horizontal or but Blightly oblique, the basal cell subtriangular, tinged with reddish In-own ; the cells of the secondary series hyaline and proportionately rather large. Appendages rather dense, almost opaque except the marly or quite hyaline tip and inner margin ; rather short, about four to six of those about the base of the perithecium much larger, longer, and Btouter, reach- ing somewhat higher than the middle of the perithecium, their tips at first clavate becoming obliquely truncate or fan shaped through the degeneration of the hyaline portion, the curved tips of the antheridia projecting rather conspicuously. Perithecia 115X30/*. Total length of receptacle 140/a. Longer appendages 90/*. On Thalpius rufulus Lee, Amer. Mus. of Nat. History. Texas. Rhachomyces Zuphii nor. pp. Perithecium relatively small, straw colored, somewhat inflated at the base, the tip rather abruptly distinguished and slightly inflated. Axis of the receptacle Blender, consisting normally of about sixteen cells which are nearly hyaline, or with brown shades below the Bepta. Append] nearly opaque, straight stout appressed, not elongate, more or I swollen distally along the inner margin of the Bubhyaline tip; eight to ten about the base of the perithecium longer and stouter. Perithi 110-140 X 25 p. Longer appendages about 110-140/a. Total length to tip of perithecium 350- 100 /». On Zuphium Mexicanum ('hand.. British Museum (Biologia ColL), No. 713. Cordova. .Mexico. Rhachomyces Canadensis nov. Bp. Perithecium pale 8traw colored, nearly straight, a median and Bubter- minal well-defined broadly-rounded ridge marking the transverse Bepta between the three lower tiers of wall-cells; the tip tapering rather abruptly, hyaline, the apex rounded. Receptacle rather sleuder, the THAXTER. — NEW LABOULBENIACEiE. 437 basal and subbasal cells relatively large, hyaline, the rest pale straw colored, the main axis consisting of fifteen or sixteen cells, the upper five or six forming a free erect termination. The appendages not numerous, appressed, brown ; those about the base of the perithecium larger, distally blunt and hyaline, about two thirds as long as the peri- thecium. Perithecia 90-130 X 27-30 //.. Receptacle 175-225 fx. Ap- pendages, longest, about 100 fx. Total length to tip of perithecium 250- 325 fx.. On Trcclnis flavomarginatus Woll., British Museum., No. 419. Ten- eriffe. On elytra. Rhachomyces tenuis nov. sp. Perithecium relatively small, the lower half or more hidden by the appendages, hardly inflated, faintly tinged with brown, tapering very slightly to the tip, which is suil'used with dark brown, broad, hardly dif- ferentiated and slightly asymmetrical. Receptacle very long and slen- der, the cells of the main axis thirty to forty in number, dark reddish brown or nearly opaque, subhyaline below the somewhat oblique septa, except the lower members of the series, which are as a rule wholly opaque ; the cells increasing slightly in size from the base upward. Appendages straight, narrower distally, rather short and appressed, not very numerous ; those about the base of the perithecium, about twelve in number, somewhat larger and longer than the rest, surrounding and concealing it more or less completely ; some of the lower appendages also longer and curved conspicuously outward, as are the antheridia. Perithecia about 110 X 30 /a. Longer appendages about 140-1 GO /x. Greatest width of receptacle about 20//. Total length to tip of peri- thecium 800-1000 u. Ou the legs of a small carabid beetle, Paris Museum, No. 113. Java. Rhachomyces Cryptobianus nov. sp. Perithecium hyaline or pale straw colored, very long and slender, nearly isodiametric throughout, almost straight, the tip apparently blunt and not well differentiated. The main axis of the receptacle consists of about sixteen cells ; the basal cell and those immediately above it slender black and opaque ; the rest becoming larger upward, hyaline suffused or mottled with reddish brown. Appendages numerous slightly divergent, becoming longer from the base upward, nearly opaque except along the inner margin and at the tip which is generally bent abruptly 138 PROCEEDINGS OP Till-: 4MEBI0AS ACADEMY. outward, a group of about six below t lie base of the perithecium much longer than the real and curved outward in a tuft, those arising about the base of the perithecium very elongate, erect, with straight blunt tips, reaching nearly to the apez of the perithecium. Perithecda 490-450 • (about) 35 p. Receptacle 275-430^. Total length to tip of perithecium 650 800 /i. Longest appendages 300 I.'IO^. ()n Cryptobium capitatum, Paris Museum, X". 172. Brazil. Rhachomyces Cayennensis nor. sp. Perithecium rather small, yellowish, the ant. riot- margin nearly Btraight, the posterior convex; the tip clearly and abruptly differentiated, concolorous, asymmetrical, Bomewhat bent. Main axis of the receptacle rather strongly curved, consisting of about twelve (ill-; the basal 1 slender, deeply suffused, those immediately above opaque Blender, the rest rather large with central brown Buffusions ; tin- distal fells paler. Appendages rather coarse, crowded, black brown, opaque or nearly bo, the tips mostly bent outward, appressed below, somewhat divergent distallv ; six or more about the base of the perithecium slightly longer than the rest, marly equalling, sometimes slightly exceediu"; the perithecium in length. Perithecium 120-140 X 25-30 p. Total length to tip of peri- thecium about o'>0 ^ (average). Longest appendages 140 /.1. On Cryptobium sp. indet., British Museum No. 387. Cayenne. On the inferior surface of abdomen. Rhachomyces stipitatus nov. sp. Perithecium pale straw colored becoming tinged with brownish, much darker toward the tip; broadly Bubfusiform, usually symmetrical, taper- ing from about the middle to tin- small blunt usually symmetrical, hardly differentiated, often hyaline tip: borne tree on a stalk-eell which is i ■ colorous, Bometimes as long as the receptacle, in other eases but slightly developed. Receptacle straw colored, or faintly brownish : the main axis consisting of about lifteen to seventeen cells, the septa rather oblique, its distal portion, consisting of about two to four cells, erect and tree: the e.lls of the secondary axis relatively large, concolorouB, tint oppos the subbasal cell of the main axis bearing a long opaque blackish brown appendage curved toward the receptacle ami often equalling it in length, other similar appendages arising at intervals above it hut not from all the lower cells. b< mini: more numerous throughout the distal half and in some instances extending to or beyond the tip of the perithecinin even THAXTER. — NEW LABOULBENIACE.E. 439 in the long stalked forms, associated throughout with shorter appendages and antheridia. Some of the individuals on A. Lespezi small, the main axis of the receptacle consisting of only seven cells, the perithecia nearly sessile and small in proportion. Spores 50-GO X 4 //. Perithecia 140- 150 X 45-69 fi (100 X 30 // in small specimens), the stalk including basal cells longest 220 X 47//. Total length to tip of perithecium about 550 /* (200-680 ju). Receptacle 325// (1 10-350 /,). Appendages longest 400//. On Anophthalmus Rhadamanthus Lind., Hope Coll. No. 306, Greece; on A. Lespezi Fair., Paris Museum; No. 185, Grotte des Capucini, Seine et Garonne, France. Compsornyces Lestevi nov. sp. Receptacle consisting of a small basal and subbasal cell, the latter giv- ing rise to rarely more than two branches ; one of which consists of a basal cell, from the upper side of which the stalk-cell of the perithecium arises; while externally it gives rise to a characteristic sterile branch, simple, usually slightly upcurved, rather closely and somewhat obliquely septate, commonly consisting of about nine superposed cells tapering rather abruptly at the tip. Perithecium borne on a well developed erect stalk-cell, nearly symmetrical, tapering from about the middle to the broad truncate undifferentiated tip ; the basal cells small, but slightly distinguished from the inflated base of the ascigerous portion, the spores few and relatively large. The other branch arising from the snbbasal cell of the receptacle, an antheridial branch, divergent, consisting typically of four superposed cells above which it becomes furcate, dividing into two branches which are large stout tapering, distally curved ; the third cell of the appendage producing a single short flask-shaped antheridium distally on its inner side and sometimes giving rise to a branch similar to those above. Spores 42 X 4//. Perithecia 75-85 X 30-35//, the stalk 75 X 22 //. Antheridial appendage including branches 275 //, the basal part about 60 X 20 /,. On Lesteva sicula Erich, British Museum, Nos. 452 and 453, Paisley and Red Hill, England. On abdomen and elytra. CLEMATOMYCES nov. genus. Receptacle consisting of a basal and a subbasal cell from which arises distally a main axis bearing a terminal perithecium and formed by a double row of cells ; the cells of the external row producing sterile appendages, II" PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. tin i-i ■ (if the inner producing either secondary axes Bimilar in Btructnn the primary one, or antheridial branches; the secondary axes producing autheridial or Bterile branches on both Bides, and like the primary ones bearing a single terminal perithelium. The antheridia simple, born< in Compsomyces, usually Beveral from the distal t-inl - of successive cells. Clcmatomyces Pinophili dot. »p. Nearly hyaline or yellowish, the basal and subbasal cells small, the cells dt' the main axis in six to twelve pairs more or less alternate on either side, each cell of the outer series giving rise to a three or four celled usually simple generally appressed sterile appendage, the terminal cell of which is often Bmoky brown, its basal cell almost wholly united to the cell of the axis next above ; the secondary axes one to three ill number, usually with a single basal cell, the external branches more often simple and sterile, the iiimr fertile ; the antheridial appendages oi both primary and secondary axes more often Bimple, Bometimea sparingly branched, those near the perithecia bearing the greatest number of an- theridia whicb may arise singly or opposite in pairs, or in whorls of three or four from the distal (one to four) cells of the appendage. Perithecium solitary, sessile at the tips of the primary and secondary axes, often Btraight and symmetrical tapering to the truncate unmodified apex, pale becoming amber brown. Spores about 38 X 3/t. Perithecia LOO— 150 X 25-40 ft. Sterile appendages, longer, 100X7 u. Greatest length to tip of perithecium (main axis) 300-400 X 35 p. Ou Pinophilus sp. indet., British Museutn, No. 390, Burmah, India. On inferior surface. Sphaleromyces obtusus no v. sp. Perithecia relatively large, clear dark brown becoming almost opa<|iic : tbe inner margin nearly Btraight, the outer strongly convex; tapering very slightly basally and distally; the tip paler brown, abruptly distin- guished, and when viewed sidewise flaring;, with Btraight divergent lateral margins, tbe distal margin as broad as the portion of the perithecium below the tip and slightly concave, th iter lips more prominent and much broader than the inner: when viewed at right angles to this p tion the tip appears in general bluntly rounded not expanded, the more or less papillate tips of the lip-cells situated in asymmetrical pairs, which are visible above ami below a broad bluntly rounded median portion between them: the basal cells colored like the perithecium, distinct, THAXTER. — NEW LABOULBENIACE^E. 441 hardlv broader than the stalk-cell which is hyaline contrasting thick- walled and about twice as long as broad. Receptacle small, suffused with brown, two celled; the septa somewhat oblique, the upper cell con- trasting abruptly with the colorless stalk-cell, aud giving rise laterally to the slightly divergent appendage, which consists of from five to six nearly opaque brown cells, separated by oblique septa ; each producing distally on the inner side a short hyaline branch, sometimes once branched. Spores about 40 X 3.5 p.. Perithecia 140-150 X 40-45 /x, the stalk-cell 35 X 20 //,. Receptacle not including foot 27-35 X 10 fx. Appendage, mostly broken 70-100 //.. Total length to tip of perithecium 230-245 fi. Ou Lathrobium lllyrieum Dej., British Museum, No. 384. Algeria(?). On superior surface of abdomen. Spkaleromyces propinquus nov. sp. Like S. obtusus in size, form, and color, except that the tip of the perithecium is symmetrical or nearly so, the lips forming a broadly rounded blunt termiual prominence with sometimes a slight median ele- vation, while at the base the tip is characteristically broadened through the presence of distinct lateral elevations on either side : the stalk-cell rather abruptly swollen below the basal cells of the perithecium. On Lathrobium, sp. indet., British Museum, No. 383. Europe. On superior surface of abdomen. This species is doubtfully separated from S. obtusus on account of the very different conformation of the tip of the perithecium, which, as the material in either case occurred in the same position on the host, can hardly be due to position of growth. Sphaleromyces atropurpureus nov. sp. Perithecium large, purplish, more or less distinctly curved away from the appendages, tapering below, ofteu broader distally above the middle, tapering thence slightly to the tip, which is usually not distinctly differ- entiated ; the apex small truncate or slightly papillate ; the basal cells large, as long as or longer than the stalk-cell, dull amber brown. Basal cell of receptacle large, not greatly elongated, tapering below, the nearly hyaline distal portion obliquely distinguished from the deeply suffused, partly opaque portion of the cell below ; the subbasal cell subtriangular. Appendage consisting of about five cells decreasing in size from below upward, the septa nearly horizontal ; those above the basal cell giving |42 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. rise to a brancb on the inner -: 1 ■•. which in the Bubbasal cell and the ,.,.11 a00 insist of a wry large broad basal cell, from which arise from two to four Bubhyaline branches which may be once branched, the branches crossing the Btalk and basal cells of the perithecium obliquely, usually on the left Bide, bo thai when the perithecium lies at the left, the adages lie above them. Spores 85 X 8.5/*. Peritl la 175 200 x 15 fiy the stalk and basal cells together 50-70 X 17-20/t. Receptacle 85-100 X 10/,,. Total length to tip of perithecium 270-350/1. Appen- dage without branches 50 75 (i. On Quedius graeiliventris Sharp, British Museum, No. 7 1" (Biologia Coll.), Vblcan de Chiriqui, Panama; on Q. basiventria Sharp. No. 741, from same locality- On abdomen. Sphaleromyces Brachyderi nov. Bp. Perithecium evenly suffused with brown, paler distally, Bomewhat inflated at the base, tapering Blightly toward the tip; an external deep brown almost opaque appendage projects subterminally, exceeding tin- til) of the perithecium, broad with a nearly median indentation of the inner side, the miter margin slightly, the upper strongly curved outward, terminating in a short blunt point or slightly inflated portion rather abruptly distinguished on its inner side; the tip asymmetrical, one of the outer lip-cells extending above and free from the others, forming a hyaline bluntly pointed termination at the base of which the tips of the other lip-cells form irregular prominences; basal cells concolorous, stalk- cell short and similar to the basal cells. Basal cell of the receptacle very large, long, attenuated below and deeply blackened, as in Camptomj the distal cell subtriangular concolorous with the Btalk-cell. Appendage consisting of four or five rather flattish brown cells, decreasing in size from below upward, their septa directed obliquely outward and down- ward, each producing a branch from its upper inner angle, which is simple or one or more times branched, the branchlets Bubhyaline. Spores about •"><> x :5 ,x. Perithelia 120-1 10 X 28-35 /x, its appendage 35 X 12 /i. Receptacle S.">-100 X 80-35 ft. Primary appendage about 85 ft, with branchlets about 120 p. Total length to tip of perithecium 225-260 ft. On Brachyderua antennahu Sharp, in Dr. Sharp's Coll. Peru. THAXTER. — NEW LABOULBENIACE.E. 443 MISGOMYCES nov. genus. Receptacle consisting of numerous cells superposed singly or in tiers of two to three cells each, terminating in a more or less irregularly cellular base bearing appendages singly or in groups. The solitary perithecium arising beside the appendages, the two situated in relation to one another as in Laboulbenia. The antheridia could not be recognized in the material examined, the appendages being more or less broken in all cases, but are doubtless simple, the genus being probably related to Laboulbenia, while at the same time it suggests some forms of Ceratomyces. Misgomyces Dyschirii nov. sp. Rather rich amber brown, the receptacle consisting of from eight to twenty-three superposed cells, the upper ones rarely divided longitu- dinally, the distal cell lying between several, usually three, smaller cells which become separated from it on either side, and which, together with its base, are united to the base of the perithecium ; while above it, and separated from it by a thin dark insertion, a cellular base gives rise to the group of appendages, the irregular basal cells of which alone remain in the material examined. Perithecium nearly oval or very slightly pointed, the tip and lips undifferentiated. Spores, seen only in peri- thecium, with base apparently abruptly recurved or bent, about 60 X 3.8 p. Perithecia 70-85 X 35-40^. Receptacle 135-400 /,.. Total length to tip of perithecium 200-435 p. On Dyschirius globosus Herbst., Hope Coll., No. 349, England ; on D. salinus Schaum., British Museum, No. 582, Europe. Misgomyces Stomonaxi nov. sp. Hyaline or pale straw colored. Receptacle consisting of a basal and one or two more single superposed cells, the cells above these becoming rather irregularly divided longitudinally to form a double row of variable length, above which a second longitudinal division appears, the recepta- cle in this region being made up of three-celled tiers as far as the base of the perithecium, above which its distal part consists of several super- posed pairs of cells, or of two rows of cells more irregularly distributed, the insertion of the appendages rather indefinite, the cells composing it producing irregular hyaline or brownish branches distally. Perithecium externally nearly straight, the inner margin convex, the tip rather abruptly 444 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. differentiated, straight or curved outward. Perithecia 90-100 • "J.'i-.'JO a. Receptacle 300-335 p. Tota] length to tip of perithecium 365 l^u x 40-45 a. On Stomonazus striaticoQh I>ej., British Museum No. 598, China. ( >n r faintly brownish; the twentieth <<-ll (about) forming the base <>f the perithecia] appendage which is black, quite opaque, curved outward and upward and geniculate near its base the inner margin of which is abruptly distinguished (not continuous with the adjacent margin of the tip as in C confusus) ; the tip distally hyaline, the apex Forming a prominent symmetrical well defined rounded hyaline papilla. Recepta- cle consisting of three superpose, 1 cells almost wholly black and opaque except along their anterior margins and the distal margin of the upper cell, which are pale straw yellow or amber colored, the series Burmounted by two small llattened cells from which arise the perithecium and appen- dage respectively. Appendage long tapering, consisting of seven or eight superposed cells, clear reddish brown with a blackish ti1 the inner margin as well as the distal portion yellowish or amber colored. Perithecia 300-325 x GO «. The appendage lo<> «. Recep- tacle 150-160 x 75 (i. Appendage about 175-200 fi. On Tropisternus yhiber 1I1>. Eustis, Florida, Octoher. On margin of left elytron. Ceratomyces cladophorus nov. sp. Perithecium very large with a slightly Bigmoid curvature, tin1 lower half conspicuously inflated above the rather narrow base, the outer mar- gin of the inflated portion strongly convex, the inner >lightly concave; the distal half or third more nearly isodiametric, bulging subterminally on the inner Bide, the margin curving thence abruptly outward to the short broad beak-like tip; the apex sometimes apicnlate ; about the fortieth cell of the outer row of wall-cells forming the hasc of a suhterniiiial appendage which i-- curved upward, geniculate at its base, rather long slender and tapering, amber brown becoming blackish below; the peri- THAXTER. — NEW LABOULBENIACE^E. 445 thecium at first pale yellowish, the inflated portion becoming rich amber brown, the distal portion much paler except in the region of the more deeply suffused subtermiual elevation on the inner side. The narrowed base nearly hyaline, not differentiated from the receptacle. Receptacle consisting of three superposed cells, short, narrow below, abruptly very broad above; the foot relatively small, the basal cell small, at first hyaline, later becoming tinged with smoky brown ; the two distal cells relatively very small and broadly blackened except along the nearly hyaline anterior margin, the opaque area extending obliquely so as to involve the geniculate base of the appendage. Appendage relatively very large and stout, tapering in very young individuals to a slender apex and consist- ing of from fifteen to twenty superposed cells, many of which may be once longitudinally divided, a subtriangular appendiculate cell being separated from the inner side, or also from the outer distally ; the branches numerous with very long and slender branchlets which may be several times branched. Spores 95 X 4 /j. Perithecia 475-550 X 90- 110 (inflated portion) X 70 (i (distal portion). Receptacle including foot 85 p. Total length to tip of perithecium (longest) Go5 p. Appen- dage 275-475 X 45 p, its longest branches 550 X 3 (i. On Tropisternus nimbatus Say. Eustis, Florida. On the inferior sur- face of the thorax on the left side. Ceratomyces denticulatus now sp. Similar to C. rostratus. Amber brown, the ascigerous portion of the perithecium slightly inflated and rather abruptly distinguished from the elongate neck, which at maturity is straight or slightly sinuous ; the cell rows containing about fifty-five cells, the neck more slender toward the base, distally somewhat broader; successive cells in two adjaceut rows in this broader portion projecting to form well marked rather slender tooth- like blunt outgrowths, directed obliquely upward and separated by a basal septum, one series usually consisting of five cells, sometimes six, the cells immediately below often bulging prominently or forming shorter tooth-like outgrowths ; the second series consisting of usually not more than three well defined similar tooth-like outgrowths : above these two series the upper fifth (about) of the neck is bent abruptly backward, lying nearly parallel to the portion below it; the tip broad snout-like, the lip-cells forming a small papillate prominence above and external to a broad rather distinctly differentiated cell, which terminates one of the inner rows, and is almost as large as the lip-cells taken together. Re- 446 PROCEEDINGS OP Till: AMERICAN A.CADEMY. ceptacle rather Blender, tapering to the base, consisting of (invariablj ten Buperposed cells, exclusive of the foot-cell, which is not always wholly blackeued. Appendage aa in C. roatraiiu, the numerous branches and branchleta rather Blender, not verj Long, forming a rather compact tufi more or less appressed around the base of the perithecium. Perithe- cium, ascigeroua portion about 85 • 85 1" », nek to recurved portion 17."' 500 ■ 20-25 [i, recurved portion about L25 p, tooth-like projec- tions 15-35 < 6-7 tu. Receptacle (ten superposed cells) 130— 150 p. Appendages (longest branches) 17.") x 8 a. On a small hydrophilid beetle, Paris, Mas., No. 11, lies Marianm ou under surface, and legs. Ceratomyces elephantinus nov. ip. Closely resembling C. denticulatus, rather faintly tinged with pale amber brown, the neck proportionately Bomewhat broader; the upper three sevenths to four ninths abruptly recurved, certain adjacent cells of two opposite rows just below this curvature producing broad rather -hurt blunt tooth-like outgrowths, one to two and three to four in each respectively; the tip broad slightly and irregularly aulcate. Receptacle consisting of from seventeen to twenty-two Bquarish or Battened cells, sometimes hardly broader distally. Appendage producing numerous long slender flexuous branches repeatedly branched. Perithecia, asci- gerous part about 140 X Go ft, ueck to recurved part 475-525 u. re- curved part 390-400 /.t. Spores 70 x 3.5 /j. Receptacle 375-ioO ft. Longest branches of appendage 600 a. On Hydrobius sp. ?. Eustis, Florida, October. On legs. Ceratomyces rhynchophorus nov. sp. Hyaline. Receptacle long slender, but slightly narrower below, con- sisting of about forty (thirty-five to fifty) Buperposed cells, wider than long ; those in the lower half more flattened, the foot small. Perithe- cium lateral, nearly erect, slightly divergent ; a short but definite stalk- cell ; the cells at the base greatly elongated, extending some distance up around the ascus mass and forming together with the large elongated supporting cell a broad sterile base t<> the perithecium which is not differ- entiated I torn its main body: the cell rows consisting of but five cells, including the very small lip-cells, and the cells of the sterile base : the three upper tiers of cells forming an abruptly differentiated, thick walled, long, tapering beak-like termination, curved outward or inward, often THAXTER. — NEW LABOULBENIACE.E. 447 at right angles ; below which the distal end of the outer wall-cell forms a slight rounded prominence, the very small lip-cells forming a slight enlargement. Appendage similar to and continuing the axis of the receptacle directly, or diverging very slightly ; the cells giving rise to brandies on opposite sides which are subtended by small cells obliquely separated at the distal angles, those from the lower cells short (antheridial ?), those from the upper long and several times branched ; the main appendage usually broken, but in young individuals consisting of from twenty to twenty-five superposed cells. Spores 48 X 3 p. Peri- thecia, ascigerous portion 175 X 45-50^, beak-like termination 140- 160 fi, sterile basal portion about 100 p. Receptacle 270-430 X 30-35^. Appendage (young individuals) 350//, the branchlets 200 X G ^. On Phcenonotum estriatum Say. Eustis, Florida, October. On legs and inferior surface. A form growing on the lower surface of the apex of the elytron has enormously developed perithecia with a maximum length of one millimetre. Ceratomyces reflexus nov. sp. Closely allied to C. rhynchophorus. Hyaline with a few purplish or reddish suffusions on the receptacle, which is composed of from about twenty-five to fifty superposed cells ; the foot hyaline, or slightly yel- lowish, much enlarged, bladder-like or spherical ; the distal portion dis- tinctly broader, its axis coincident with that of the erect appendage which forms a direct continuation of it. Perithecium small with few asci, abruptly recurved at the base, its apex thus sometimes touching the in- flated foot ; nearly straight, tapering almost symmetrically to the blunt slender tip ; the ascigerous cells situated at the base just above the small angular stalk-cell. Appendage usually flat and broader than the recep- tacle towards its base, the superposed flat cells of which it is composed producing appendages on either side much as in O. rhynchophorus. Spores 70 X 4 fi. Perithecia 140 X 20 ;/. Receptacle 140-280 p. Appendage 200-400 (i. Foot about 30 X 30-38 (t. On Phcenonotum estriatum Say. Eustis, Florida, October. With C. rhynchophorus. Ceratomyces acuminatus nov. sp. Hyaline. Receptacle consisting of three superposed cells, the basal cell partly suffused and continuous with the blackened foot. Perithecium rather stout, the outer margin nearly straight, the inner strongly convex; the seventh wall-cell of the inner row greatly enlarged, its outer wall 448 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. very thick, forming ao erect tapering bluntly pointed terminal appenda :it the ba i which the papillate apex of tin- lip-cells projects on the right side; the fifth cell of the external row of wall-cells growing out to form a subterminal slender appendage, eight-celled in the type, distally attenuated, its terminal cell bearing one or two Blender branches. Ap- pendages consisting of from four i" five Buperposed c< lis, the distal ones append iculate (the branches mostly broken). Perithecium l^i x -in,,. The appendage without branches 82^, the branches 150 /u; the rostrate terminal cell 50 X 17 u (al base). Reo ptacle 85 18 u. Spores about 7u x 3.~> /.i. Appendage, broken, without branches 70 u. On Berosw Bp. indet. Eustis, Florida, October. On the inferior surface of abdomen and thorax. Ceratornyces Californicus nor. sp. Allied to C camptosporit8. Amber brown. Receptacle relatively Blender, consisting of three small Buperposed cells surmounted by two similar cells which form the base of the appendage and perithecium ; the foot small, normal. Perithecium Bhort and stout, from two to three times as broad distally as at the base; about twenty cells in each of the inner rows of wall cells, the inner margin convex, distally abruptly bent inward to the short beak-like apex ; the conformation of the tip, the inner margin of which is thus horizontal or even oblique, resembling that <>| O. ornithocephalus ; about the eighteenth cell of one of the outer rows forming the base of the usually straight rather n motely Beptate peritl cial appendage which commonly diverges at an angle of forty-five degrees or even al right angles. Appendage small and slender (the extremities broken in the types) becoming lateral in position. Perithecia 185—200 X (base) 30-40 (distal portion) 70-85 p. Receptacle 50-70 • 2bp. Total length to tip of perithecium 250— 300 ft. On Tropistemus dorsalis Brulle*. California. On the left anterior inferior angle of the. prothorax. Ceratornyces ornithocephalus nov. sp. Allied to O. furcatits. Hyaline or becoming more or less Buffused with amber brownish. Perithecium relatively rather Btnall, the ex- ternal margin somewhat concave, the inner convex, the tour distal cells of the eight external wall-cells rather abruptly enlarged, their ex- ternal walls much thickened and forming an irregularly rounded crest- like prominence, the distal half of the margin of which becomes abruptly THAXTER. — NEW LABOULBENIACE^E. 449 almost horizontal, terminating near the base of the beak-like pointed apex, which projects somewhat obliquely from the right side : the external row of wall cells producing above the fourth cell a large append- age, geniculate at its base, tapering distally where it curves outward, consisting of from ten to twenty cells, the terminal cell rarely bearing one or more slender brauches. Receptacle consisting of three superposed cells, the basal one usually opaque, except distally, and continuous with the foot, surmounted by two cells from which arise the periiheciuin and the appendage. The appendage (usually broken) curved outward and upward, consisting of about ten superposed cells, the upper ones giving rise to a few branches on the inner side, which may be several times branched, the brauchlets slender, mostly erect and rather rigid. Spores about 70 X 30 (i. Perithecia 120-1 GO X 35-45//, the crest-like tip 38- 45 (i broad, the appendage 12'i-.'] _*") «. Receptacle 85-120//. Append- age, exclusive of branches 140-150//. Total length to tip of perithe- cium 210-290 p. On Berosus striatus Say. Kittery Point, Maine. On margin of right elytron towards the apex (invariably). EUZODIOMYCES nov. genus. Receptacle elongate, multicellular; consisting of a large and indefinite number of cells superposed above the single basal cell and distally be- coming divided by few or many longitudinal septa ; the distal portion bearing a unilateral series of perithecia and appendages. Perithecia with from nine to ten wall cells in each row, borne on a three-celled stalk. Closely allied to Zodiomyces. Antheridia were not distinguished, the material being scanty and in bad condition. Euzodiomyces Lathrobii nov. sp. Hyaline or faintly yellowish. Receptacle long and slender, or shorter and stouter as in Zodiomyces, according as the longitudinal septa are few or abundant ; the superposed cells and tiers of cells sometimes nearly a hundred in number, the upper half or more producing a unilateral series of perithecia and appendages. Perithecia distinctly broader distally, the fourth or the fifth to the seventh wall cells inclusive, of two opposite rows, growing upward and outward to form well developed prominences, giving the margin on either side in this region a bluntly serrate appear- ance; the lip-cells arched, forming a characteristic broad dome-like apex ; vol. xxxv. — 29 450 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. the two lower stalk-cells Bmall, the upper much larger, stout, and as broad as the base of the perithecium. Appendages long Blender cylindrical, Bimple or sparingly branched, flexuous. Perithecia 75 • 28— 30 u (in- cluding projections), stalk aboul 10 ft, the upper ••ell abonl 22 x 1 i «. Total length of receptacle 200 175 X 25-70 ft. Appendages 125 280 X 4 «. < )n Lathrobium punctatum Zett., British Museum No. Hi'. Notting Hill, England; on L. mtUtipunctatum Grew. British Museum N Europe; on L.JUiforme Gray. British Museum No. 448, Notting Hill, England. Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Vol. XXXV. No. 22. — April, 1900. CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE PHYSICAL LABORATORY OF THE .MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY. XLIX.— HISTORICAL NOTES RELATING TO MUSICAL PITCH IN THE UNITED STATES. By Charles R. Ci;oss. CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE PHYSICAL LABORATORY OF THE MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY. XLIX. — HISTORICAL NOTES RELATING TO MUSICAL PITCH IN THE UNITED STATES. By Charles R. Cross. Presented March 14, 1900. Received March 20, 1900. Except in a very general way there is not much to be said regarding the early history of musical pitch in this country. The different manu- facturers and musical organizations necessarily followed the usage abroad, and the same gradual rise in pitch that occurred there occurred here also. The great harm arising from the excessive height to which the pitch had risen at the time was recognized by those interested in the procure- ment of the Great Organ for the Boston Music Hall, and when it was erected in 1863, it was tuned to the French pitch, A3 = 435 double vibrations per second, corresponding to a tempered C3 of 258.65 vibra- tions, which had been established in France four years before. It was hoped and expected that the result of this would be the gradual accept- ance of the " normal diapason " as a standard throughout the United States. A second German organ, by the same maker, Walcker of Lud- wigsburg, built a few years later for the First Church of Boston, was tuned to the French pitch, at which pitch it has remained up to the present time. Also in 1868, the French pitch was introduced as a standard into the public schools of Boston, by vote of the School Com- mittee, although it never obtained a firm foothold there. Meanwhile the musical instruments in use by the various orchestras were still at the high pitch, and opera troupes and other foreign musical organizations em- ployed the same standard. Serious difficulty was experienced from this cause, especially when the Great Organ was used in connection with an orchestra. After a time, in fact, at two separate periods, the Harvard Symphony Orchestra was furnished with instruments in accord with the organ, but apart from the concerts of this society, at theatres and else- 154 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. where, tin* performers wen- still obliged to use instruments at the high concert pitch, which naturally caused much annoyance. Moreover, the large organs built in this country during the • i • shortly following 186S, did not copy the example of the .Mum.' II:ili Organ, and outside of ton the French pitch wns nowhere adopted. After much discussion, and not without Btrong opposition^ it finally resulted that a decision was made to retune the Music Hall Organ, and raise the pitch to that ordi- narily in use; the feeling of those who urged the change and finally prevailed being that while the lower pitch was desirable, and might be the piich of the future in this country, they were concerned rather with the procnt. ami might better wait the result of the efforts to introduce it abroad, which did not at first make rapid progress. The Great Organ was retuned in 1871 and remained thereafter unchanged at the high pitch Ca = 271 vibrations, and tempered A8 = -15.3.8 vibrations, until it was taken down in 1884. No further serious attempt to lower the pitch in this country was male for a considerable time. A number of years later, however, when the French pitch had come to be quite generally adopted abroad, the subject again attracted attention here. In 1882, Professor Eben Tourjee, then Director of the New England Conservatory of -Music, determined to introduce the French pitch into that institution. For some reason, not wholly clear at the present time, the standard chosen was a C'r a true sixth below the French A; and giving 261 double vibrations per second, and a fork of this pitch was con- structed and adopted as a standard. The organ of the Conservatory was tuned to this pitch, and the fork continued to be used as the standard of the Conservatory until the close of 1897, when it was replaced by a new- fork of 258.65 vibrations, a tempered sixth below the French A .. The older fork had the disadvantage that an instrument tuned in equal tem- perament from it would differ somewhat in pitch from one tuned in the same temperament from an A3 at French pitch, \:).~> vibrations. Soon after this date several important orchestral organizations adopted a lower pitch than the one then ordinarily in use in the United States. In 1882 the orchestra of Theodore Thomas employed a sort of compro- mise pitch, slightly higher than the French pitch, viz.: A8 = 437.4 vibrations. During the seasons 1881 2, 1882-3, the first and second of its existence, the Boston Symphony Orchestra employed a high pitch. A & 448.5 vibrations, but in the fall of L888 it adopted the French pitch a-. B Standard, a procedure which speedily became general among American orchestras. CROSS. — MUSICAL PITCH. 455 During the years preceding the installation of the Great Music Hall Organ, the pitch of organs and pianos shared in the general upward tendency, though instruments of the former class were not infrequently tuned at a somewhat lower pitch thau that used hy the orchestra. Cabi- net organs intended for export were also in certaiu cases tuned to the French pitch. But the organ pitch commonly used was substantially identical with the high orchestral pitch, and that habitually used by piano manufacturers was often even higher. The general lowering of the orchestral pitch in 1883 and the following years, of course necessitated a corresponding lowering of the pitch of pianos and organs used in concert with the orchestra, though it was a number of years before any general action was taken by the manu- facturers. In 1889 the National Music Teachers' Association at its Philadelphia meeting adopted the French pitch, and the National League of Musicians at Milwaukee, in March, 1891, also urgently recommended the adoption of this standard. For several years prior to this date the question of bringing the standard pitch used for pianos and organs into unison with the low pitch which had come to be the generally accepted pitch for or- chestral use, had been agitated by a number of persons engaged in the manufacture of pianos and organs, and especially by the late Gov. Levi K. Fuller, of the Estey Organ Co., of Brattleboro, and Mr. William T. Miller of Boston. Finally at a meeting of the Piano Manufacturers' Association, held in New York, March 31, 1891, it was unanimously decided that it was desirable that a uniform pitch should be adopted in the United States, and a Committee was appointed, of which Mr. Wm. Steinway was chairman, and Gov. Levi K. Fuller, Secretary, to consider what standard should be adopted. This committee collected much evi- dence relating to the subject, and in response to a request therefor, received expressions of opinion from a large number of manufacturers and others interested in the determination of a standard, together with sample tuning-forks giving the pitch then in use by those sending them. The Committee reported in favor of the adoption of the A of 435 double vibrations per second as a standard of pitch, and their recommendation was adopted by the Association. It was also decided to call the newly adopted standard the " International Pitch." The International pitch is of course identical with the French pitch, each having an A3 of 435 double vibrations. Some confusion has arisen at times from the fact that the official standard A3 made in 1859, and intended to represent the " diapason normal," is in fact somewhat sharper PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. than it purports to be, making, according to Koenig, 185.45 doable vibra- tions | .. r second instead of 485, when at the temperature of 15 < !., and making exactly 435 vibrations only at the temperature 24.26 C. But the legal French | »i t « - 1 » was defined l>y the rate 870 Bingle vibrations, and not by the fork constructed by the Commission. Moreover the standard French forks made by Koenig were substantially correct in rate. The difference is, of course, too Blight to be of any consequence in practice. The [nternational pitch has come to be generally adopted, so that it i- dow the standard pitch of this country, although it Beems to be custom- ary to tune pianos for use at concerts somewhat sharp, even up • A 440 vibrations, which is in fact the " Stuttgart pitch " of L884. At various times during the past twenty years the writer has taken the opportunity to ascertain the rates of sucli tuning-forks and other stan- dards of pitch as were accessible. The results of a considerable number of these- immurements were published in the "American Journal of Otology " for October, 18*0, in a paper "On the Present Condition of Musical Pitch in Boston and Vicinity," by Charh - R. < ross and William T. Miller. The later measurements have not hitherto been published. These have been made in part by the writer and in part by Beveral of his assistants in the Ropers Laboratory, Messrs. Goodwin. Mansfield, Wendell, and Burgess. The present paper is intended to include such results as are likely to be of general interest. Table I. is reprinted from the paper of Messrs. Cross and Miller. The tonometer forks available at the time of its publication were less accurate than those which have been procured subsequently, bo that in certain cases, when- the standards measured in 1880 were still accessible a remeasurement has recently been made, the results of which will be found in Table II. Where this has been done, it is indicated in the tables by an asterisk prefixed to the number designating the Btandard. By a comparison of Tables I. and II. it will be Been that the remeasure- ments have not materially altered the values obtained in the earner measurements. The standard C fork upon which the measurements of 1880 were based was a C8 fork (No. 1 of Table I.) by Koenig, belonging to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the rate of which had been deter- mined by comparison with a C, fork 1>\ Koenig belonging to the Stevens [nstitute of Technology, which last fork bad been very carefully rated by 1'rofessor A. M. -Mayer of that institution. The standard A used was a fork by Koenig assumed to be exact. From these the forks of an improvised tonometer were rated, the C forks being of pitch C, and CROSS. — MUSICAL PITCH. 45' TABLE I. No. Designation. Vibration Remarks. Frequency. C8 *1 Koenig, physical pitch . . . 256.1 Stamped 512 v. s. *2 Koenig, French pitch (approxi- 260.2 Stamped 520 v. s. *3 Koenig, German pitch . . . 264.2 Stamped 528 v. s. *4 Ritchie, physical pitch . . . 256.2 5 Koenig, physical pitch . . . 256.2 Stamped 512 v. s. 6 Marloye, physical pitch . . . 256.4 Made between 1845-50. 7 259.1 Made about 1868. 8 259.4 it a a *9 Ritchie, copy of Chickering's 269.0 Made about 1868. *10 Mason & Hamlin, French pitch 259.1 Used for a few years only. 11 Hutchings, Plaisted & Co . . 264.0 Low organ pitch, C4 fork measured. 12 Hook & Hastings, old flat organ 264.6 C4 pipe measured. Tempera- ture, 69° F. 13 Organ in church of the Imma- culate Conception, Boston . 266.7 C4 pipe measured. Tempera- ture, 69° F. 14 Smith American Organ Co . . 267.2 C4 fork measured. 15 New England Organ Co . . . 268.2 C4 fork measured. *16 Chickering's standard fork . . 268.5 C3 fork, marked " 1865, stand- ard pitch." *17 268.9 C4 fork measured. *18 Mason & Hamlin, present stand- 269.0 C3 fork measured. 19 Fork of W. H. Clement, tuner . 269.2 C4 fork measured. 20 George Woods & Co., cabinet 269.5 C4 fork measured. 21 Hook & Hastings, present stand- 270.0 C3 and C4 pipes measured. Temperature, 73° F. 22 Chickering piano used at Joseffy 270.1 C4 fork of tuner measured. *23 Covent Garden pitch, 1879 . . 270 3 C4 fork furnished by R. Spice. 24 270.3 String of piano measured. 25 271.1 C4 fork furnished to builders of great Cincinnati organ. 26 271.2 C3, principal, great. Tempera- ture 70° F. *27 Steinway's pitch 272.2 C4 fork furnished by R. Spice. *28 Highest New York pitch . . 273.9 c3 " 29 Nichols' fork, Boston, Germa- A3 • 448 Corresponding to untempered C8, 269 *30 426 Imported by Prof. Lovering, 1845-50. *31 Florence pitch, Marloye . . . 438 a it a *32 Vienna pitch, Marloye . . . 446 it a t( 33 Milan pitch, Marloye .... 448 it a tt 458 PROCEEDINGfl OF Tin: A M I : l ; U ■ \ N ACADEMY. mostly large forks, while tin- A forks were the ordinary musicians' small A toning forks, toned by the authors to convenient pitches. The Bame forks were osed for several years subsequent to 1880. In the recent measurements three large standards of Coenig have been used as a basis, viz.: a(', ol 266 doable vibrations, a tempered C« of 258.65 vibrations, and an A of 185 vibrations, at a Btandard temperature of 20 C. Prom these were rated l>y the method of beats, a series of rks and also two Bets of (', Bmall Scheibler's tonometer forks by Koeuig, and two sets of A3 forks of the same character. These Bmall tonometer forks were also compared with a series of large Scbeibler tonometer forks by koeuig, which last were assumed to be Correct within the limits Bought in our measurements. Table II. gives the results of ratings of various standards of epochs indicated by the date. In all measurements later than 1891 the rloenig Btandard tonometer forks have been employed. The data given in Table II. are all in terms of the pitches of (', and A .... The pitch of the Btandards actually measured is specifically stated in all cases except when it is (', or A3. Table III. contains the results of measurements of fifty-^i x forks by various manufacturers to the Committee of the National Piano and Organ Manufacturers' Association in response to their request already referred to. A preliminary rating was made by me in 1890—91 with such forks as I then possessed. The results of this were shown m a circular privately printed in 1891 for the use of memhers of the Associa- tion. A more exact determination was made by me a few month- later in 1891, using the Koeuig tonometer forks as previously stated. The results of these measurements are found in the table. Certain of the forks and other standards referred to in Table II. deserve special mention. Those numbered 4, 5, G, 7, 9, 10, 11. 12, 1.'!, 1 1. 1"'. 16, 17, 18, 19, 87, 88 were intended to give the physical pitch. Nos - and '■'< had been in the possession of their owners for many years, and wen- authenticated as to the date assigned to them. No-. 5 ami G arc two forks belonging to Harvard University, imported many years since. No. 5 is of the early Marloye pattern, with inclined prongs, hut does not hear any mark to indicate the maker. No. 6 bears the mark M R. K," always employed by Koeuig. Nos. 1G and 17 are also Koenig forks of early date, belonging to Harvard University. No. 8 is a pitch pipe formerly employed for church use, belonging to Mr. 1J. .J. Lang of Boston. It is a whistle with a movable plug, and the pitch can be varied through an octave. When the plug is set for C4, according to the lines CROSS. MUSICAL PITCH. 459 TABLE II. C4 No. 4 5 6 7 8 9 *10 11 12 *13 14 15 16 17 18 19 Vibration Frequency. 506 509.7 510.8 511.1 511.5 511.7 511.8 512 512.1 512.1 512.2 512.2 512.:] 512.4 512.5 512.6 512.7 514.7 514.8 20 21 22 515.5 515.6 515.6 23 24 25 517.0 517.3 517.3 26 27 517.4 517.5 28 29 517.5 517.5 no 517.6 31 517.7 32 517.8 33 34 *3o 517.8 518 518.5 36 37 518.7 519.0 Designations and Remarks. Tonic Sol-Fa, 1882. N. E. Conservatory of Music. Rated in 1882. Old Fork of J. T. Batchelder, 1782. Rated in 1884. Old Fork of G. A. Emery, 1840. Rated in 1881. E. S. Ritchie & Sons, Standard C4 ; early fork. C3, 255.75, Marloye pattern, Harvard University. < ' , 255.85, R. K., ; early fork, Harvard University. ( !„, 255.9, Tufts College. Early Pitcli Pipe, Maker's Standard. T = 23° C. B. J. Lang. C3, 256.05, R. K. " 512 v. s.," slender pronged ; early fork, M. I. T. C3, 25ii.00, R. K. " 512 v.s." 1873, Basis of measurements of 1877, M. I. T. ('... 256.1, E. Greaves, " Scheibler Pitch." B. K. "102 1 r. s.," M. I. T. E. S. Ritchie & Sons, Standard C8, 256.17. E. Greaves, " Scheibler Pitch, 512." W. T. Miller, 1880. Physical Pitch. C8, 256.28, R. K., "512 v. s.," ; early fork (prior to 1868), Harvard University. R. K., C4 " 1024 v. &."; early fork, Harvard University. Walmsley, Fuller & Co., Chicago, 1895. Co, 128.7, E. S. Ritchie & Sons, makers, University of Virginia. L. K. Fuller; electrically welded fork, 1893. Tempered C4, French Pitch, 1883. Small Fork, M. I. T. " 517.3 Piano Mfrs. Ass'n." New England Conservatory, 1898. "Philharmonic." Tufts College. Pitch Pipe, 1826, Yale University. Tempered C4, French Pitch, 1884. Small Fork. Rated in 1884. Miller's Standard Tempered C„ 258.68, 1884. Rated in 1884. Tempered C4. Small Fork, French Pitch, 1883, Boston Symphony Concerts. M. I. T. C3, 258.78, Ritchie, early fork, Marloye pattern. M. I. T. Tempered C4, French Pitch, 1884. Large fork on box. M. I. T. E. S. Ritchie & Sons, C3, 258.78, early fork, Marloye pat- tern. M. I. T. E. S. Ritchie & Sons, C3, 258.83; early fork. University of Virginia. Chickerinsr & Co., new tempered C3, 258.9, French Pitch, 1884. Rated in 1884. Tempered C4, French Pitch, 1883. M. I. T. Early Pitch Pipe. Local Pitch, T = 23° C. B. J. Lang. Mason & Hamlin, Weighted C3, 259.24. French " Stand- ard 1866," Pitch. G. S. Hutchings, "517.3," "International Pitch." C4 Pipe giving Thomas' Pitch of 1883. T = 22° C. Hook & Hastings. ■llil) PROCEEDINGS OF TIIF AMERICAN ACADKMV. TABLE a — Continued. N 38 in *41 12 18 It 16 W 47 48 49 50 51 62 53 54 55 *50 57 58 CO 6] 02 68 *64 66 •66 *67 68 •69 70 71 72 73 71 7". 77 78 •7'.' Vibration 619.0 619.2 619.6 620.1 ."._'! I 1 620.6 520.6 620.6 620.8 621.4 621.8 521.8 622.1 622.4 623.5 628.2 632.8 536.3 636.0 636.8 636.8 636.8 636.9 637.3 637.6 687.9 538.1 638.2 688.6 688.9 539 589.8 689.8 540.2 .'.ill 642.6 644.6 nation! mil Id-marks. c . 269.6. N. K. Conservatory standard of 1882; on box. Remeaaurement, L898, 1 >... dismounted, 269.6. 1 to. 1 in mi i» i\, 269.8. 1 to. C , 260.07. R. K. "620 ■ »." 1878. Pitch used by Patti, 1882. L. K. Fuller. G. S. Hutchings. [nternationa] Pitch, C*, natural. " .", ■_'•_'. i ;>tiv Organ Co." \. E. Conservatory. " \. B. Conservatory, 1892." 1. K. Fuller. "622, Estey Organ Co." G. B. Hutchii " [nternationa! Pitch." Fork of Bi. Steinert & Sons Co., Boston, lb!'-. C . 260.7. French Fitch, on box, N. F. Conservatory Standard of P\sl>. Rated, L888. C8, 260.9. Copy of N. F. Conservatory Standard of 1882, M. I. T., on box. Hating of Is--). ('.. 260.9. F. S. Ritchie & Sons, Standard C, "281." True French C.,, L883. M. I. T. ::• 261.1. Copy ofN. F. Conservatory Standard of 1882. M. I. T., off box. Rating of 1-83. C3, 261.1. Copy of N. I]. Conservatory Standard of 1882. .M. 1. T.. on box. Rating of L898, Theodore Thomas' Fitch, 1882, N. E. Conservatory. Rated in 1882. Whitney *v Raymond Organ Co., 1882. N. E. Conserva- tory. Rated' in 18SJ. Cs, 204.11, R. K., 187::, " 528 u. s.," German Fitch. M. FT. C8, 266.4. Princeton University. R. & M., Richmond, Va. F. K. Fuller. Is8:i. Standard Pipe, Pitch of 1884, "540." Hook & Hastings. Hazelton, L. K. Fuller, 1883. Fork of period 1880. W. T. Miller. Decker, L. K. Fuller, 1883. Ca, 268.4. Copy of Chickering's Standard " 18G5." N 1 Conservatory. Rated in l^s". C3, 268.44, Chickering Co., Standard fork, "1865." "Con- cert Pitch." McPhail, F. K. Fuller, 1892. Miller. Btandard of lssu. ( '... 268.96. F S. Ritchie & Sons, 1870. Copy of Chick- ering's Standard. Hodge S Essex, I.. I\. Fuller. L892. ('.. 269.1. Mason & Hamlin Co.," Standard Fitch, 1806." Isotonic Fork, High Pitch. L880. ■('. 640," Estey Organ Co. N. F. Conservatory. ".".in." Estey & Co. G. s. Hutchings. Chickering Concert Pitch. 1882. N. E. Conservatory. Rated it, ISS'J. " Philharmonic." F. K. Fuller. 1888. F Greaves, "640, Scheibler Pitch." •■c.vent Garden," 1879. R. Spice W. T. Miller, Fork of period, 188Q. Sanders, F. K. Fuller, [888. Steinwav, New York, 1880. M. I. T. CROSS. — MUSICAL PITCH. 461 TABLE II. — Continued. No. 80 81 *82 83 Vibration Frequency. 84 85 80 87 *88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 *109 110 *111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 545 545.1 547.7 549.0 415.3 422.3 423.7 426.2 420.5 428.8 432.8 433.0 434.3 434.5 4S4.6 434.7 434.8 434.9 434.9 435.0 435.0 4350 435 435.4 435.4 437.4 437.7 437.8 438.1 438.4 441.3 446.0 446 446.7 448.0 448.5 449.1 451.5 454.1 457.5 457.7 Designations and Remarks. Theodore Thomas' High Pitch prior to 1893. N. E. Con- servatory. Rated in 1883. Reed Pitch Pipe, 1885. Rated in 1885. C3, 273.85, Highest New York Pitch, 1878. R. Spice. " Philharmonic Pitch," Standard Pork of Steinert & Sons Co., 1898. A.„ 207.7 " Shore Fork," 1715. L. K. Fuller. " Handel Fork," 1749. L. K. Fuller. Pipe, Pitch of 1889, Hook & Hastings, T = 21.7° C. A2, 213.1, Ritchie early fork, University of Virginia. Marloye, " 853^." Harvard University. Tufts College. French A, Boston Symphony Orchestra, Henschel's original small fork, 1883. liitz, L. K. Fuller, 1883. " Piano Mfrs. Ass'n." G. S. Hutchings. "A, 435, Piano Mfrs. Ass'n." N. E. Conservatory. " A, 435, Piano Mfrs. Ass'n." M. I. T, from L. K.'Fuller. E. Greaves " French Pitch." R. K., French Pitch, correct at 15° C. 1883, M. I. T. Electrically welded fork, L. K. Fuller, 1893. R. K., A 435 at 20° C. Mason & Hamlin Standard, 1898. Standard R. K., "870 v. s. at 20°." G. S. Hutchings. R. K., A 435 at 20° C. H. F. Miller, Standard, 1891. R. K., A 435 at 20° C. Chickering Co., Standard, 1898. Pitch Pipe, 1826. Yale University. Ritz. L. K. Fuller, 1883. Small R. K. Fork, " 870 i\ s.," Tufts College. Theodore Thomas' Pitch, 1883. M. I. T. Theodore Thomas' Pitch, 1883. Georg Henschel. Rated in 1883. Ritz. L. K. Fuller, 1883. "French Pitch." L. Waldo, 1898. " Florence Pitch." Harvard University. E. Greaves, " Scheibler Pitch," German Pitch. " Vienna Pitch." Harvard University. Reed Pitch Pipe. Rated in 1885. Carl Eichler, L. K. Fuller, 1883. L. K. Fuller, 1883. Boston Symphony Orchestra, Standard A, 1882-83. L. K. Fuller, 1883. Chickerins's Pitch, L. K. Fuller, 1883. W. T. Miller, 1880. L. K. Fuller, 1883. Steinway, L. K. Fuller, 1883. 462 PROCEEDINGS OP THE IMEBICAM ACADEMY. made for the purpose, the rate i-. as given in the table, 512 vibrations. Notches have been cut in certain places, apparently to give the "local pitch " used 1>\ the choir. When adjusted by these •■ • No. S 1 1, the i i- 518, practically French pitch. The frequency of vibration of such a pipe is of co ur.se greatly influenced by the temperature. This pitch pipe was used in a church in West Town-. -inl, .Mas-., early in the present century, and its pitch was adjusted to that in use in Boston. \ 10 is a Coenig fork already referred to. made for the Massachu- setts Institute of Technology in 1*7.3, and used a- the basis of measure- ments by Cross and -Miller in l.sjso. Like all of Koenig's fork-, prior to the establishment of his new standard in 1880, it is a little sharp. Nos. 11, 11, 95, 110 are forks made by .Mr. E. Greaves. No. !-'i, the stan- dard ('.; of E. S. Ritchie and Sons, was procured from DuIiommj of Paris at a date prior to 1870. It has the inclined proogs of the Marloye forks. Nos. 19, 31, 87, are large forks made for the University of Virginia by E. S. Ritchie and Sons more than twenty-five years since. No. 1' 1 is a pitch pipe deposited in the library of Yale University by the class of 1826, and kindly rated by Professor A. \Y. Wright. No. 102 LB the same pipe wlen set to give A . When properly blown it gives, substan- tially, French pitch. No. 26 is a fork used by Miller and Sons as their standard for piano pitch in 1884. No. 29 is one of a pair of large forks on resonating boxes made in 1883, for the purpose of tuning the Chicker- ing piano when used in the Boston Symphony Concerts, the orchestra having adopted the French pitch. It was tuned from No. 27. The firm desired to tune the piano from C rather than from A. No. 32 is a la tempered C fork, adopted in 1884 by the Chickerings for toning pianos to be used with orchestras employing the French pitch. No. 35 is the standard French Pitch of the Mason and Hamlin Co. The fork No. is lowered in pitch by attaching to each prom: by wax a small rectangular piece of steel. No. 36 is a fork of G. S. Hutchings and Co;,used in tun- ing the organs made by them. No. 37 is a line pipe belonging to the I look and I las tings Organ Co.. and giving the pitch proposed by Theodi ire Thomas in 1883. Nos. 38, 3'.», 40 give ratings under different conditions of a large standard fork made by Ritchie and Sons for the New England Conservatory of Music in 1882. No. 48 is the same as measured in 1S83. The fork has flattened by a considerable amount since its manufacture, from unknown causes. It has apparently been kept with care. The box- has a considerable influence upon the pitch of the fork. No. 12 is a fork belonging to Mr. Levi K. Fuller, giving the pitch which wis used in opera in 1882 by Fatti. It is a little sharp of French pitch, tbou-li CROSS. — MUSICAL PITCH. 463 far below the high pitch then habitually used in this country. No. 47 is a small fork, the standard for "International Pitch" of the M. Steinert and Sons Co., Boston. Nos. 1, 54, 55, 63, 71, 73, are forks belonging to Mr. F. W. Hale of the New England Conservatory of Music. No. 57 is an old C8 fork belonging to Princeton University, and probably dating from the time of Prof. Joseph Henry. It is considerably rusted. No. 59 is a flue pipe giving the high pitch used by Hook and Hastings in 1884. No. 64 is the former standard fork of the Chickerings, made in 1865, and giving the high concert pitch then in vogue. It is a large C3 fork, marked " 1865, Standard Pitch," with its prongs inclined towards one another. No. 67 is a copy of the Chickering fork made by E. S. Ritchie and Sons for their own use in 1870. It has sharpened somewhat after tuning. No. 69, the Mason and Hamlin Co.'s former standard, is a large fork, almost a counterpart of the Chickering fork. It is marked " Standard Pitch, 1866." No. 76 is a small fork furnished 1>\ Mr. Robert Spice of Brooklyn, in 1879, and giving the pitch then used in the Covent Garden Theatre. No. 82 is a bell metal fork made in 1878 by Mr. Spice, and giving the highest pitch then used in New York. No. 83 is a small fork at the high " Philharmonic Pitch " of the Steinert and Sons Co. Among the A3 forks, No. 84 is a very old and low-pitched fork, pro- cured by Mr. Levi K. Fuller in P^ngland, and purporting to have been made in 1715 by John Shore, the inventor of the tuning-fork, and to be the oldest fork in existence. No. 85, which also belonged to Mr. Fuller, is supposed at one time to have been used by Handel. No. 86 is a pipe giving the pitch settled upon by Hook and Hastings in 1889. Nos. 88, 109, 111 are small forks imported by Prof. Joseph Lovering for Harvard University, between 1845 and 1850. No. 90 is one of a number of small forks made for Mr. Georg Henschel in 1883 as a basis for the pitch of instruments to be made for the Boston Symphony Orchestra. It was tuned from the forks of a Valentine and Carr tonometer (see No. 3, Table V.), and owing to the extreme flatness of the "A,432" and " A, 436 " used in the comparison, it is considerably below French pitch. No. 96 is a standard A3 "French Pitch," by Koenig, imported by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1883. It is correct at 15° C, and hence at 20° C, the present standard temperature, is slightly flat. Nos. 98, 99, 100, 101 are large Koenig standard forks, mounted on boxes. No. 102 is the same pitch pipe as No. 24 when adjusted to give the Note A3. Nos. 105, 106 are small forks giving the medium pitch proposed and used by Theodore Thomas in 1883. No. 106 was given to Mr. Henschel 4G4 PROCFFPIXCS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. by Mr. Thomas. No. 105 was copied from this. No. LIS is a fork giving the pitch used by the Germania Orchestra in 1888. No. 115 i- a high A fork, made by Mr. 1». Spice, and belonging to the Massachu- setts Institute of Technology, which was used by the Boston Symphony TABLE III. C4 Forks. No. 1 2 3 4 6 6 7 8 0 in 11 12 13 14 16 16 17 18 IP 20 21 22 23 lit 251 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 85 86 87 38 39 •10 Designation. Kii.-iiic & Co., Baltimore (Low Pitch) Roosevelt Organ Co., N. Y c. B. Snyder, Winfield, Kan J. II. &. ('. S. Odell, N. Y Chickering & Sons, Boston (Low Fitch) . . . . J. & C. Fischer, N. V Wilcox & White Organ Co., W. Meriden, Conn . Jewett & Co., Leominster, Mass Shoningcr Ortr.in & Piano Co.. New Haven, Conn. Gallup & Metzger, Hartford, Conn J. II. Foote. N. v Francis Bacon, N. Y Dyer & Hughes, Foxcroft, Me A. Weber, X. Y Mason & Hamlin Organ & Piano Co., Boston . . Vose & Son<, Boston Benning & Sons. N. V C. C. Briggs & Co., Boston A. M. McPhail Piano Co., N. Y Chickering & Sons, Boston (High Pitch) . . . Clough & Warren Co.. Detroit Atlanta Piano Co., Atlanta, Ga Ceo. Steck & Co., New York Wm. E. Wheelockfi Co., X. Y Board man & Gray, Albany, N. Y Estey Piano ( !o., N. Y Decker Bros., X. Y Mehlin & Sons, X. Y i; M. Benl & Co., N. Y Pease Piano Co., N. Y. ., A. B. Chasi Co., Norwalk, Ohio Newby & Brans, X. Y Knabe & Co., Baltimore (High Pitch) . . . . Stirling Co., Derby, Conn I [azelton Bros., NY 1 decker & Son, X. V Conover Bros., N. Y. . , Sherman Clay & Co., San Francisco Lester Piano Co., Philadelphia Leicester Piano Co., Leominster, Mass Vibration tency. 6< is 516 518. E20, 62 1 628 631. 634 536 687 637 689 639 639 540. 540. 540 640. 641. 542. 642. 6 12. 546; 547. 549 s - * 8 8 I 0 8 '.i 0 9 - 1 9 1 1 l '•■',' ."> 637.8 638.2 4 9 'i 1 •< 1 Forks very poor and hard to rate. CROSS. — MUSICAL PITCH. 465 TABLE III. — Continued. A3 Forka No. 41 42 43 441 451 46 47 481 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 5G Designation. P. Werlein, New Orleans, La Mason & Hamlin Organ & Piano Co., Boston . . Philadelphia C. H. W. Ruhe, Pittsburg, Pa Hook & Hastings, Boston Clough & Warren Organ Co., Detroit Kranich & Bach, N. Y Geo. Jardine & Son, N. Y J. H. Foote, X. Y W. \V. Kimball Co., Chicago Hallet, Davis, & Co., Boston Sohmer & Co., X. Y Krakauer & Bros., N. Y Steinway & Sons, X. Y Chas. M. Stieff, Baltimore Keller Bros. & Blight, Bridgeport, Conn. . . . Vibration Frequency. 431 434 439, 441 44:; 444 444 447 44'.) 451 453 454 454 456 456 458 TABLE IV. Forks issued in 1892 as representing " International Pitch." A3 Ci M 424.1 M 434.4 M 445.0 M 516.3 M 429.8 M 434.6 M 445.5 M 517.2 N 432.3 M 434.8 M 491.9 M 517.7 M 433.1 M 435.4 M 498.1 M 519.4 N 433.3 0 435.7 M 520.2 Orchestra as a standard in 1882-83, the year prior to the introduction of the French pitch. In the following years an exact copy of No. 96, a large Koenig A?J 435 fork mounted on a resonating box was used, which was subsequently replaced by an electrically driven fork made by Wolters of Vienna. The orchestra also possesses a Koenig A3 fork 1 Forks very poor and hard to rate. vol. xxxv. — 30 166 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. mounted on a boi and giving International (French) pitch, with which the last-mentioned fork can be compared. In Table IV. are given the rates of a number of small musicians' forks loaned l»y Mr. L. K. Fuller, which were sold in L892 as representing the i.rw "International Pitch." The attached letters, M, .V 0, denote the different dealers who furnished them. It will be seen that the C4 forks range from, approximately, 516 to 520 vibrations, 1 1 » * - true value being 517.;'> vibrations, and the A; forks from 12 1 to 198 vibrations, the differ- ence in the latter cast- amounting to over a major tour, and showing an extreme of carelessness in tuning and comparison that is aim incredible. TABLE Y. Tonometer Forks. Valentine and Carr. rieqomcj . Measured Frequency. 1 2 3 4 5 420 419.6 417.5 124 423.6 421.5 428 427.7 426.6 432 131.8 42'J.5 429.8 430.3 (36 435.7 433.4 433.7 434.4 440 139.8 437.5 137.4 438.3 Hi 113.4 441.2 441.2 442.5 448 447.3 1 15.6 445.5 41G.6 452 461.1 ■1 19.8 456 454.0 453.3 256 265,8 255.8 512 511.2 511.8 512.0 510 616 1 536 686.3 540 539.2 630.0 Ratings have also been made of forks selected at random from several tonometers. In Table V. will be found the results of measurements upon fork- from four tonometers by Valentine and Carr. The forks are all of the small pattern ordinarily used by that firm. The numerals 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, beading the corresponding columns indicate the particular set of CROSS. — MUSICAL PITCH. 467 forks referred to. With the exception of No. 5, the tonometers are long range ones, running from C3 to C4. No. 5 is a short range tonometer of 12 forks, from 512 to 544 vibrations, purchased by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, in 1882. No. 1 belonged to Mr. Levi K. Fuller and was purchased by him in 1892. No. 2 was made for the Massachu- setts Institute of Technology in 1882. No. 3 refers to the same tono- meter. The values under (2) were obtained by comparison of the forks with those of (1). The values under (3) were obtained by direct com- parison with Koenig's forks, as were all the results in Table V. except those under (2). No. 4 is a tonometer belonging to Harvard University, and which was purchased by Professor Lovering about 1883. The forks taken for comparison were A3 and C4 forks. It will be seen that the error is in some cases very considerable, amounting for some of the A3 forks to several vibrations. The small tonometer forks of Koenig are usually closely in accord with his large standard and tonometer forks, not often deviating from the num- bers stamped upon them by as much as one tenth of a double vibration. In all the measurements referred to in the present paper time-intervals were measured by the use of an accurate stop-watch reading to one-fifth of a second. Rogers Laboratory of Physics, March, 1900. Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Vol. XXXV. No. 23. — May, 1U00. THE DRIVING ENERGY OF PHYSICO-CHEMICAL REACTION, AND ITS TEMPERATURE COEFFICIENT By Theodore William Richards. Investigations on L:giit and Heat, made and puiilisiied wholly or in part with Appropriations from the rumford fund. THE DRIVING ENERGY OF PHYSICO-CHEMICAL REACTION, AND ITS TEMPERATURE COEFFICIENT. Bv Theodore William Richards. Received April 10, 1900. Presented April 11, 1900. Every beginner in Physical Chemistry of course notices the similarity in form of the equations of Clausius and van't Hoff, ~~pfT — n w> and — —■ — rr • The differences in the interpretation of the sym- < ' 1 ill bols are the only hindrance to the welding of the two equations into one. P usually consists of a single quantity, a pressure, while K is usually a product of concentrations. On the other hand, the second member of the equation sometimes includes work (A = A — U) and sometimes contains simply the diminution of the internal energy (U) of a process conducted at constant volume. Since these distinctions are so confusing that errors from the lack of proper discrimination have crept into some of our best and most helpful treatises, the present paper, which is a treatment of the subject from a single point of view, may be of assistance to students who have not mas- tered the matter. I have found it advantageous, both in teaching and in thinking, to look at the whole field from the point of view of pressure. This practice has recently received support in an interesting article by Arrhenius * on the speed of reactions. That the pressures affecting a given reaction should exert the deciding influence in determining the magnitude and direction of a chemical change, is no more astounding than that the resultant of mechanical forces should be the agent determining the change of position of finite masses. Hence the consideration of pressure, which has the dimensions of an intensity, seems to be a more direct method of studying the progress of a reaction * Zeitschr. phys. Chem. 28, 317 (1899). 172 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. than does the consideration of volume or entropy, which have the dimen- sions of capacities merely. There are of course many possible ways of attacking the subject math- ematically. Perhaps the simplest is given below. J ii his recent comprehensive and exceedingly interesting paper on equilibrium and free energy,* Gilbert N. Lewis lias shown that the following equation is a very general one, applying to both homogeneous and heterogeneous systems, but rigorously accurate only when the sys- tem is composed of ideal gases, ideal solutions, and "condensed phases" of constant volume. This is of course the equation of van't lloff. din"' *',••• rfln^ 'x "'?•',"'' ... <■-■(■' ■■'■■ ... IT = + — (1) dT dT RT-- In this expression v means molecular volume; T, absolute temperature J c, concentration [ = - J ; n, the number of reacting molecules of any given molecular species ; U, the diminution in the internal energy of the process, or the heat of reaction at constant volume; and Ii, the gas con- stant (1.98 calorie-units, or better 8.31 c. g. s.). The products of a reaction are indicated by a subscript 2, the factors by 1. The chief dis- advantage of the equation for practical purposes is the fact that the numerator of the second member does not always represent the actual heat of the reaction, since it does not take account of the work which the reaction may involve on account of changing volume. Let us now introduce pressure instead of concentration into this expression, c = 77-™, hence the expression becomes d (7? r^* + "'» • • •> jV>V''' • • • r d~fU(R 7,)<"> + "'« • • *pf*jft'* . . . z= R T* ' * These Proceedings, 35, 1 (1890) ; Z. pays. Chem 32, 984 (1000). I am much indebted to Dr. Lewis for valuable mathematical criticism of the present paper. To Dr. Edgar Buckingham also I owe thanks for his interest, and for valuable suggestions as to matters of detail. Since reading the manuscript the latter has derived the " reaction-isobar " according to the method of Duliein : but in the present exposition I have retained the original derivation, because it is much simpler than his more rigorously exact method, as well as because most readers of physical chemistry are accustomed to the method and nomenclature of Nernst. RICHARDS. — ENERGY OF PHYSICO-CHEMICAL REACTION. 473 Cancelling the unnecessary powers of R T, we have d (R Tf* + "'»•-.- »i ~ *Jpi»ip'«\ . . . U n „ »,«' «', — TT^a* (2) rfT pfif/j**... ~ RT Let us consider for the sake of argument a case in which («2 + n\ • • • — wi — n'\) = -W is positive, that is, a case in which the total number of gram-molecules in the product is greater than that in the reacting mixture before the reac- tion took place. The expression then becomes d^ (R T)*Plip\*\ . . ■ _ _U_ dT p»*P'/*... ' RT*' K) From this pressure-equation at constant volume we may omit din R, because R is a constant. Thus ji Pi *P 1 l • • • ■* «ln — t—, ^ p^p'o'"- ■ ■ ■ U (4) dT ~ 'RT2 ' Here two cases may arise. If iV = 0, that is, if the osmotic or gas pressure (or total number of molecules) does not change during the reaction, the pressure remains constant. Mathematically, Ty becomes 1 and hence disappears. On the other hand, if jV^ 0, TN becomes a serious factor in the equation, affecting immensely the temperature coeffi- cient of the " mass-law constant." The numerator of the second term of this modified equation of van't Hoff still consists merely of U ; hence if the equation is to be used with data obtained under constant pressure, the observed heat of reaction must be corrected for the work done during expansion. For this reason its prototype has been called the " reaction isochor " by Nernst ; it repre- sents immediately the observed conditions only when the reaction takes place in constant volume. The introduction of the correction causes an interesting simplification. At constant pressure the heat evolved during the reaction would be less than U, because the work N R T is done against constant pressure ; N R T N hence we shall be obliged to subtract n _ , = -=. from each side of the equation in order that the numerator of the second member may truly indicate the actual conditions. But -17 1 PROCEEDINGS OF ill l : AMERICAN ACADEMY. .V .Y,/ln T T d T ' hence l>\ umplj subtracting the equations we obtain Simplifying, and noting thai — U+NIiT=X, the beat actually ah Borbed in the reaction, we may write d pftj/f'i . . . _ — A dT r,r' ./*... = £T*' Here — A signifies heat griren ou< when the reaction takes place un- der constant gas or osmotic pressure, because A signifies heal absorbed, or latent heat. The equation states that when pressures are being com- pared, the latent heat under constant pressure is the term to be used in calculation. Hence at constant outside pressure the heat observed in any reaction hears a very simple relation to the acting pressures which take part in that reaction, just as at constant volume the concentrations are similarly related to the observed evolution of heat. This equation may be called the " Reaction-isobar," on account of the fact that constancy of total pressure is the condition essential to its immediate application. The equation of Clausius is a special case of this law. Evidently these reactions isobar and isochor may now be combined into one, for the obstacles to this union are now removed. Before com- bining them, it is advantageous to examine into the meaning of d\n(BT)' = din T\ which constitutes the only puzzling difference between them. The physical meaning <>f this important factor in the equation is inter- esting. From its mode of introduction into equation ('2), this term i- clearly the representative of the pressure caused by an addition to the total number of molecules in a given space. When the total pressure is artificially maintained at a constant value, In '/"• disappears from the equation, just as it does when the pressure remains constant because the total number of molecules present is not increased by the reaction. This is equivalent to defining .V in its present situation as a direct function of the increase in tin' total pressure of the reacting substances during the reaction. In order to avoid conflict with the original definition of X. we RICHARDS. ENERGY OF PHYSICO-CHEMICAL REACTION. 475 shall call this newly defined exponent N'. Mathematically, the inspec- tion of the equations (4) and (5) shows that the expression (where ifl is the total number of gram-molecules in the initial reacting mixture, and Px and P2 the initial and final total pressures respectively) is true either for constant pressure or constant volume. Whether this still holds true for the ill-defined cases where neither volume nor pressure is constant, we shall not at present determine. In constant volume, according to this definition, N' = N ; under constant pressure, likewise according to this definition, N' — 0. With the help of this new defini- tion, together with the use of the symbol Q to signify in general the actually observed latent heat of the reaction, it becomes possible to com- bine the reactions-isochor and isobar into one equation, from which either may be logically obtained again, according to the circumstances attending the reaction. Thus, we may write: — dTln p^pY*--- ~ RT1' w which is a general expression for the temperature coefficient of the equi- librium ratio* of dilute reactions. If the total osmotic or gas pressure is kept constant, W = 0, hence Tx' = 1, and disappears, and Q — A =■ NRT — U. This is the reac- tion isobar. If, on the other hand, the volume is kept constant, TN' rep- resents the increase in pressure which at constant pressure would have represented work, and — Q = U. This is the reaction isochor. If N' is 0, and — Q = U, the equation is both isochor and isobar. For the general expression (6) which defines the temperature-coeffi- cient of the equilibrium ratio I propose the name "reaction metatherm" (fierd, between). The chief advantage which it possesses over the con- centration equation is the fact that its term — Q is always the heat actually evolved, whether work is done or not, as well as the fact that it deals with the more rational dimension, — pressure. Since Q is the heat really observed, it is clear that the expression must be the analytical statement of the theorem of Maupertuis or Le * This satisfactory name is due to Lewis. " Mass law constant " is less satisfac- tory, because the quantity is not constant, and the law seems to be due to pressure rather than to mass. J~,; PROCEEDINGS OP TIIK AMKRICAN ACADEMY. Chatelier u far ai heat is concerned. In order to trace this evident necessity, one must assume a somewhat puzzling inverted attitude. The pressures indicated by the formula define a condition of equilibrium, not a condition oi action. It is clear, then, that a small pressure in the numerator of the logarithmic expression means ;i great tendency towards the denominator. That is, a growing denominator mean- an increasing tendency to change from factors to products. But the logarithms in the denominator take the minus 6ign, or the sign of Q, which represents heat absorbed. Hence a reaction which absorbs heat evidently must be pushed farther by increasing temperature. The inverted attitude just mentioned may be easily remedied by con- sidering carefully the nature of the quantities involved. We have seen that the expression Pi** £»«•»• .. the familiar '• mass-law " expression for equilibrium expressed in terms of pressure, seems to represent the resultant reacting tendencv of a riven reaction at constant temperature; because it is this quantify which is concerned with the theorem of Maupertuis. When concentrations are used, it is difficult to imagine any physical meaning in this equilibrium ratio; but when the expression is conceived of in terms of pressure, we may look upon k as an opposing tendency which has been balanced by the ratio of the pressures observed. That is, we may call k the " reaction tendency." This means not merely pressure, but work ; be- cause the expression RT\— from which it was originally derived means work. It represents then the variable factors in the "driving energy " of the reaction. We may conceive of this reaction tendency as consisting of a number of individual reacting tendencies, one for each substance. But the pres- sures in the pressure-equilibrium ratio do not directly represent the individual reacting tendencies of the substances represented. The\ are only the pressures which remain in equilibrium when all the reacting forces have been balanced. When under the circumstances a given individual pressure is small, we must ascribe to that substance a great reacting tendency, and vice versa. Thus it seems to me probable that each of these pressures must have a term in the function k which corre- sponds to its tendency to react, and this individual tendency we shall call lnr, — a term which will be in the numerator when the correspond- RICHARDS. — ENERGY OP PHYSICO-CHEMICAL REACTION. 477 ing pressure is in the denominator, and vice versa. The reasoning may be stated in the form of an equation : — \nPl P,1 , '=ln 2 2 "••• This equation is simply a definition of the values z, which are made logarithmic from analogy to the other pressures. One must bear in mind, however, that this z, or " physico-chemical potential," need not be the reciprocal of p ; for the condition of equilibrium demands only that the total sum of the logarithms on each side must be equal, and not that the individual opposites are immediate functions of one another. The p values depend of course upon the amount of substance present; while the z values are constant for any given temperature, because they are by definition the constant factors of a constant. Any constant tendencies, not given by the differential equation, may hence be included among the z values. Transposing the second member, we obtain hf'f :-'*"¥:...- (7) p-2 - p 2 " • • • z2 " z 2 - • • • This expression may be written n1 In (j?! zL) + n\ In (p\ z\) — n2 In (p2z2) — ri2 In (//2 s'2) . . . = 0. Except for its logarithmic form and the substitution of pressure for mass, this equation reminds one of Berthollet's old statement concerning chemical action. It is a fundamental equation of chemical equilibrium in dilute or ideal mixtures. Stated in words, the equation reads : Each molecule taking part in a reaction may be said to possess at any given temperature a reacting ten- dency which is the logarithm of the product of its constant physico-chemical potential and variable observed pressure. Obviously the logarithmic arrangement is so convenient as almost to demand its adoption, although the same idea might have been expressed otherwise. One may say, for example, that in equilibrium the algebraic sum of the opposing energies concerned is zero, — almost an axiom. The logarithmic equation is a plausible hypothesis which is concordant with the well known Nernst equation, and with many other natural tendencies. The substitution of the new value for k instead of its pressure equiva- lent in the equation gives us a less inverted view of the theorem of Maupertuis : — 178 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. ■■■' y ?■"■••• _ - Q d T R '/'' ' li will be Been at once that the sum of the reacting tendencies of the initial Bubstances In =■,"•, lnc',"'1, etc., agree in sign with Q\ thai is, a reaction which absorbs heat will have a greater tendency to take place as the temperature rises. Besides comprehending the partial pressures within a single phase, and the " physico-chemical potentials '* of the various substances which are in it. the pressure equations may be applied to the relations between two phases; siuce the equation from which they were derived 18 true for ideal heterogeneous equilibrium. We may then introduce into the equation phase-pressures, such as vapor or solution tensions, which are exerted in opposition to gas or osmotic pressures respectively. Such phase- pressures will be represented, for the sake of convenience, by the usual designation J'. A few simple physical examples may now be cited, to show that the point of view is uot inconsistent with the facts in these cases. For example, in the case of an evaporating liquid, we may say that the force concerned is the vapor tension, which therefore takes the place of :,. It is placed in the denominator because the process absorbs heat. There are no opposing forces except the constant gas pressure against which the evaporation proceeds ; hence the equilibrium equation becomes , * rt ln-p=0, — an obvious truth ; and the reaction-metatherm reduces at once to the equation of Clausius. A more complicated case is the evaporation of water from a crystal- lized salt; but the treatment is equally simple. The water has a certain reacting tendency or driving energy which manifests itself as a definite pressure at each temperature. Precisely the same explanation applies to calcic carbonate, or an\ other similar case. The simplicity of the conception of this reacting tendency seems to commend itself as an improvement over the usual involved treatment, since it does not demand that all the solid should be vaporized in order to effect the change. A -till more complicated case is the evaporation of amnionic stilphy- drate. Here we have to consider the physical tendency <>!' the evaporat- ing Bubstance, which is balanced by the pressure of the amnionic sulphy- RICHARDS. — ENERGY OP PHYSICO-CHEMICAL REACTION. 479 drate, as well as the physico-chemical potentials and actual pressures of the three molecular species. The equation of equilibrium would then be This expression is an analysis of the forces which are at work in maintaining equilibrium. pu the pressure of the undissociated NII4SII, occurs first in the numerator as opposing P, the sublimation tension of the solid substance, and then in the denominator as a factor of the chem- ical reacting tendency of the amnionic sulphydrate. These two of course cancel, and since at constant temperature P and all the z values are constant, we obtain for the chemical part of the equilibrium the familial- expression p.,p'2 = k' . This is entirely in accord with the results of Isambert, and is undoubtedly true. Many other examples of the application of the pressure equations might be given. For example, the dissociation of nitric peroxide is easily treated by the reaction-isobar, while that of hydriodic acid needs merely the simplest form of all, which is both isochor and isobar. Moreover, it is obvious that upon introducing electrolytic solution ten- sions and osmotic pressures into the reaction isobar, it becomes at once the well known expression for the temperature coefficient of electro- motive force. In short, whenever pressures are under consideration, one of the two special forms of the equations above affords a ready means of treatment. The results of this paper may be summarized as follows : — 1. It is pointed out that the study of pressure affords a more direct method of analyzing the progress of a reaction than the study of volume, concentration, or entropy. 2. An expression called the " reaction-metatherm " has been evolved which represents in terms of pressure the temperature coefficient of the equilibrium ratio of ideal physico-chemical reaction. 3. Since this equation always contains in its second member the heat actually evolved in the reaction, whether under constant volume or con- stant pressure, it is a mathematical expression of the Theorem of Maupertuis or Le Chatelier. • ISO PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. 4. Moreover, since the equation represents this fundamental theorem, its logarithmic quantity must represent tin- variables in the reacting tendency, or the driving energy of reaction. 5. When analyzed, this equation shows that the part played by each substance in a reaction may be considered :i> the logarithm of the product of its "physico-chemical potential " and its actually present pressure. G. The reaction metathenn may be simplified into B reaction-isobar and a reaction-isochor, according B8 the pressure or volume is kept constant during the reaction. 7. While the reaction-isobar, expressed in terms of pressure, offers the most convenient basis for the calculation of the cases to which it is applicable, results obtained under constant volume are more conveniently calculated if the reacting substances are expressed in terms of concentra- tion, according to the equation of vau't Hoff. IIakvakd University, April u, l'JOO. Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Vol. XXXV. No. 24. — May, 1900. SUPPLEMENTARY NOTE ON THE CHIEF THEOREM OF LIE'S THEORY OF FINITE CONTINUOUS GROUPS. By Stephen Elmer Slocum. SUPPLEMENTARY NOTE ON THE CHIEF THEOREM OF LIE'S THEORY OF FINITE CONTINUOUS GROUPS. By Stephen Elmer Slocum, Clark University. Presented by Henry Taber, April 11, 1900. On pages 239-250 of the current volume of these Proceedings, in a paper entitled " Note on the chief theorem of Lie's theory of continuous groups," I pointed out an error in Lie's demonstration of the first funda- mental theorem of his theory. In what follows I indicate how this error may be avoided and the demonstration completed. Lie's error in the demonstration of the first fundamental theorem con- sists in neglecting conditions imposed at the outset upon certain auxiliary quantities /u1} ju2, • . . introduced in the course of the demonstration. Thus in the Continuierliche Gruppen, pp. 372-376 (and substantially in Trans- formationsgruppen, vol. III., pj>. 558-564) Lie proceeds as follows: — Being given a family with an oor of transformations Ta, defined by the equations x'i =/t Oi • • • *»< «! • • • «,) (• = 1, 2 . . . w), containing the identical transformation, and, moreover, such that the xns satisfy a certain system of differential equations, he defines by the intro- duction of new parameters fx, a family of transformations E^, x'i = F{ (x\ . . . x',„ fn . . . fxr) (i = 1, 2 . . . n), each of which is generated by an infinitesimal transformation ; Lie then establishes the symbolic equation Ta Ey_ = 7,M * If the equations defining the families of transformations Ta and Ey. are re- spectively, >'',- ~fi (*i ■ ■ ■ xn, ax. . . Or) (i = 1, 2 . . . n), and x\ = Fi (x\ . . . x'n, Ml • • • Vr) (i = 1, 2 • . . n), the symbolic equation Ta E^ — Ta is equivalent to the simultaneous system of equations 484 PROCEEDINGS 01 rHE AMERICAN ACADEMY. where the a's and p's are arbitrary, and ak = k (fn . • • •)< the *'a being independent functions of the jk's. For a, Elk= r«,* where afc = $4(Ml...ftr, Ox« . . . a,"") (* = 1,2. ..r). Tims every transformation of the family 7sV is :l transformation of the family '/'„. [f, eonversely, every transformation T„ belonged to the family A'M, it would follow that that is to say, we should have shown that the family of transformations '/', Forms a group. But, although the 's are independent functions of the //s, nevertheless the /''s in certain cases become infinite for certain systems of values ol the a's ; and infinite values of the fi's, by their definition, are excluded at the outset. $ We cannot then assume that every transformation '/'. belongs to the family E^. We may, however, proceed as follows: — For all values of the a's for which the functions •r'i =.A(-rx • ■ ■ *ni "i • • • "■). r\ = /',•(.»•', . . . x',„ Mi • • • M-), (»' = 1,2... n) ./, (',... xn, n} . . . a, ), or to tlie functional equations /' (/] (•'', o) . . .,/;, (x, a), Mi • • • Mr) -fi ('', . . . /„. ax . . . Or) (i - 1, - • • »)■ * That is. /•' (,,,... ZB,Ml . . . n,.) = /•',-(/, {X, n'O ) . . ,/'„ (X, oW),Ml • • -r*r) =/H*1 • • ■ *»- "1 ■ • "••) (i = 1,2... n), since /,(*, . . . r,,,,,,"". ••«r") (s = 1, 2 . . .n). t That is, ft( /,('.") . • ./;.(', a), a, . . .Or) =/<(*! '»,", ■ • "r) («'= 1,2.. ' 5 These Proceedings, p 2 IT SLOCUM. FINITE CONTINUOUS GROUPS. 485 },. = Mj (at . . . a,., ax1"' . . . a,m) (J = 1, 2 . . . r) are finite, we have la la = 7a -C> = I „. that is, fi C/i (x> a) . . .fH(x, a), ai . . . a,) = Fi (A (*> '') • • •./« (x'« «)> i"l • • *^r) —fi(*l • • • »n? «1- • • «r) (i = 1, 2...»). Let fix, jS2 • . • be a system of values of the as for which one, or more, of the corresponding /x's is infinite in all branches. Also let bu b2 . . . be the system of values assumed by the a's for ak — fik (k = ], 2 . . . ?•). Since the functions f are continuous functions of the variables and parameters, and we assume that the system of parameters /3 give a defi- nite transformation T$ of the family, we have fi(fi(x, a)... f„ (x, a), 0, . . . /?,) = lim./ (/, (x. It) . . ./„ (,r, a), Ql . . . ar) arr/3 = I'm../,' (ar, . . . xn, a1 . . . a,) =/. (a"! . . . x„, b{ . . . br) (i = 1,2... n), a = b which is equivalent to the symbolic equation T-u Tp = Ts lim. Ta = lira. Ta Ta = lim. 7^ = Th. Consequently, the composition of two arbitrary transformations Ta and T$ of the family is equivalent to a transformation 7), of this family ; that is to say, the family of transformations T„ forms a group. The transformation Tb, however, may not be a transformation of the group that can be generated by an infinitesimal transformation of this group. Thus, every transformation of a group with continuous parameters is not necessarily generated by an infinitesimal transformation of the group. Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Vol. XXXV. Xo. 25. —June, 1900. CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE GRAY HERBARIUM OF HARVARD UNIVERSITY. New Series. — No. XIX. By M. L. Ferxald. I. A Synopsis of the Mexican and Central American Species of Salvia. II. A Revision of the Mexican and Central American Solanums of the Subsection Turvaria. III. Some undescribed Mexican Phanerogams, chiefly Labiatae and Solanaceae. CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE GRAY HERBARIUM OF HARVARD UNIVERSITY, NEW SERIES, NO. XIX. By M. L. Fernald. Presented by B. L. Robinson, March 14, 1900. Received April 19, 1900. I.— A SYNOPSIS OF THE MEXICAN AND CENTRAL AMERICAN SPECIES OF SALVIA. In his monograph of the Labiatae in De Caudolle's Prodromus, Ben- tham (1848) recognized 118 species of Salvia in Mexico and Central America, several of them, however, being known only from the original descriptions. In the botanical portion of Biologia Centrali-Americana, Mr. Hemsley enumerated 135 species, but a number of them were unknown to him, seven have proved to be identical with others there listed, and the records of two are based upon their occurrence in adjacent portions of the United States but not in Mexico proper. Thus excluding these nine species, there were recorded by Mr. Hemsley, in 1887, 126 Mexican and Central American Salvias. During the past quarter century the unprecedented activity in the botanical exploration of those countries has brought together in Salvia, as in many other large genera, an abundance of material for study. Many of these recent collections have been critically examined, and a large number of species based upon them have been described. The collections of the past decade, furthermore, contain very many unique plants which cannot be referred to any of the species already published. These species, together with those described in the last half-century, since the publication of Bentham's treatment of the group in the Pro- dromus, increase the number of known Mexican and Central American Salvias by nearly one hundred. In order to place before students of Mexican botany many previously undescribed forms and to show more clearly than could otherwise be done their affinities, a synopsis has been prepared of all the known Mexican and Central American species. In the preparation of this work the general divisions of Bentham have been adopted, though with 400 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. more material at hand it baa been necessary in many cases to amplify or alter the limits ol groups as defined by him. It was hoped that the treatment of the genus published by M. le Professeur Jean Briquet in " Engler & Prantl's Natttrlicben Plaucen- familien " 1 would be of assistance in preparing this Bynopsis ; but, except for the introduction of somewhat helpful minor divisions of tin- groups, that work adds little to the earlier conclusions of Bentham. In fact, so far at least as the Mexican species are concerned. Professor Briquet's translations of Bentham's sectional and subsectional diagnoses are most unfortunate, often so far so as quite to contradict the true characters "t the plants he is supposed to be describing, and entirely to mi-lead the student who attempts to follow bis synopsis. In the description <>t the very first group, the § Micranthae, for example, Bentham says : " Corolla vix 3-linearis calyce dimidio vol rarius subduplo longior*' (corolla about 3 lines long, once and a half or rarely almost twice as long a- the calyx '. proportions which are maintained almost without exception by the species of that section. Yet this is rendered by Briquet '• Blkr. [Blumen- krone] kleiu, die Haifa der Lange des Ketches erreichend, seltener '_' mal grosser " (corolla small, half the length of the calyx, rarely twice longer) although the species which constitute the section have the corolla as defined by Bentham. Briquet's description of the § Microsphaceae, in- cluded by Bentham in the Prodromus under § Micranthae, reads '. '■ Blkr. klein, kaum die Hcilfte der Lange des Kelches erreichemt" (corolla small, scarcely half as long as the calyx), thus suggesting plants with the cal\ x definitely exceeding the corolla, instead of the species, enumerated by him, with the corolla distinctly exceeding the calyx. Again in the § Brachganthae Bentham describes the lower lip of the corolla as fol- lows : "labium patens . . . galea longiw" (lip spreading . . . Ion. than the galea), while Briquet, rendering it into German says "... ausgebreiteter Unterlippe,' diese nicht langer als die Oberlippe " (. . . the spreading lower lip, this not longer than the upper lip [ galea] ). thus absolutely contradicting the character of the corolla as shown by the species included by him in the section. Of the 217 Salvias recognized in the present paper, specimens — or in Beverj cases merely authentic plates — of 171 species have been ex- amined. Of the remaining 43 species very many, although well described, were unknown to Bentham and have not been identified with recently collected material. Others recognized by Bentham as of doubt- i Engl. & Prantl, Nat. Pflanzenf. iv. Ab. 3, 270-28G. FERNALD. — MEXICAN SALVIAS. 491 ful status ai-e here noted, although they are so incompletely character- ized as to make their identification without access to the types quite impossible. In such cases the traditional conception of the plant has been maintained as far as possible, though it is highly probable that future study of these little-known types will identify some of them with better known species. The descriptions of two species recently published from old manu- scripts contain so little of specific significance that it is impossible to say upon what plants they were based. These are S. azurea and S. dichroma, La Llave in La Naturaleza, vii (1885) Apend. 82. A European species, S. Sclarea, L., is often cultivated in central Mexico and is sometimes distributed in exsiccatae as if an indigenous plant (for example, see SchafFher's no. 49 from the mountains of San Luis Potosi). In the study of species of § Membranaceae Mr. N. E. Brown of the Royal Gardens at Kew has rendered very valuable service by comparing specimens submitted to him with the types of Bentham's species. SYNOPSIS OF SPECIES. (As far as possible the sectional numbers and descriptions have been maintained as given in the Prodromus.) Section VII. CALOSPIIACE, Benth. Calyx ovate, tubulose or campanulate, the upper lip entire or shortly tridentate, the teeth approxi- mate, and the middle one longest. Corolla-tube exserted or included, not annulate within, but occasionally furnished with 2 teeth near the base. Upper lip (galea) straight or concave, entire or often short- emarginate; the lower with spreading lobes. Anterior portion of the connective deflexed, linear, longitudinally connate or approximate, oc- casionally a little dilated, and rarely bearing an empty adnate anther-cell. § 1. Micranthae, Benth. Bracts small, mostly deciduous. Corolla blue or white, short, 8 mm. or less (in one species nearly 1 cm.) in length, very slightly or rarely almost twice exceeding the calyx; the tube generally ventricose ; the galea straight. # Corolla very small, 3 to 5 mm. long : calyx glandular. +- Calyx-lobes blunt. 1. S. occidentalis, Swartz, Fl. Ind. Occ. i. 43; Benth. I.e. 29G; Gray, Syn. Fl. ii. pt. 1, 370 ; Hemsl. 1. c. 562 ; Briq. 1. c. 277. S. pro- cumbens, Ruiz & Pav. Fl. Per. & Chil. i. 27, t. 39, fig. a. S. radicans, Poir. Diet. vi. 621. Verbena minima chamaedryos folio, Sloane, Jam. i. 492 PROCEEDINGS OP TUE AMERICAN ACADEMY. 1 Ti.*. t . 107. Bvptis glandulota, Sieb. PL Mart. Kxs. no. 151, fide Benth. I.e. — Common in tropical and subtropical America, extending north to Vera Cruz. Vera Cruz, Bit. Orizaba (Botteri, no. 894) j Cordoba (Asa Gray): Vn \ia\, waste ground mar Merida, April, 1887 (Porfirio Willi, -. no. 55) : (ii \ i DiAi.A, ( ioban, Dept Aha Verapaz, alt. 1,820 m., Nov. 1886 i //. von Tuerckheim in exsicc. J. 1). Smith, mi. 1090); Santa Rosa, ah. 77<> to 920 m., May, Dec, 1892 (Heyde & Lux in ex-ice. J. I). Smith, nos. 3014, 43'J'J) : Honduras, San Pedro Sula, Dept. Sama Barbara, alt. 250 m., May, 1888 (C. Thieme in exsicc. J. 1 >. Smith, no. 5422) : Nicaragua. (Charles Wright) : Costa Rica, Qjaras (Oersted) ; Cartago, alt. 1,300 ra., Dec, 18s7 (Juan J. Cooper) in exsicc. .1. D. Smith, no. 5'JOl ; roadsides San Jose, dam. lS'.Kj (Ail. T<>iul»~, uo. 7280). +- +- Calyx-lobes subulatc-mucronate. ** Bracts deciduous. 2. S. MISELLA, HBK. 1. c 290 ; Benth. 1. c 297 ; Ilemsl. 1. c 561 : Briq. 1. c. — Described from near Acapulco: perhaps the same as the next. *+ +■* Bracts persistent. 3. S. obscura, Benth. Lab. 245, & in DC. 1. c. 297 : Millspaugb, Field Columb. Mas. Bot. ser. i. 43. S.privoides, Gray, Syn. PL I.e. 371, not Benth. S. occidentals, Millsp. 1. c, in part, not Swartz. S. oc i- dentalis, var. ? Garberi, Chapm. Bot. Gaz. iii. 10. — Range similar to that of S. occidentalis, extendiug north to Sinaloa and Lower California. Lower California, La Paz, 1890 (Edv>. Palmer, no. 10): Sinaloa, Blazatlan, Dec., 1894 (F. H. Lamby nos. 311, 317): Guerrero, Aca- pulco, 1895 (Edw. Palmer, no. 244): Vera Cruz, Vallej of Cordova, Dee. is, 1SC.5 (Bourgeau,no. 1504): Tucatan, roadside, near [zamal, dan. 11, 1895 (MUspaugh, no. 90); Island of Cozumel, 1895 (G. F. Gaumer, no. 394). • * Corolla G to 8 mm. long. ■*- CaljZ glandular. ++ Bracts caducous. = Stem villous: leaves ovate-lanceolate, rafous-tomentose beneath: verticels 4-6-flowered : calyx with obtuse lobeB. 4. S. inconspicua, Benth. Lab. 217, ec in DC. 1. c. 298; Elemsl. 1. c 558 ; Bri(|. 1. c. 278. — Described from Mexico. Not seen. = = Stem pubescent with long spreading gland-tipped hairs : leaves broad-ovate, sliglitlv paberulent beneath : verticels 2-flowered: calyx with acuminate lobes. 5. S. PODADENA, Briq. Ann. Conserv. Jard. But. (iem'-ve. ii. 1 ."- 1 . — Described from Oaxaca. Not seen. FERNALD. — MEXICAN SALVIAS. 493 ++ ++ Bracts persistent. = Leaves villous or long-pilose beneath. a. Leaves canescent on both faces, 1 to 3 cm. long, on slender naked petioles : calyx- lobes acutish. 6. S. serotina, L. Mant. 25; Jacq. Ic. Rar. i. 1, t. 3 ; Benth. 1. c; Heuisl. 1. c. iv. 107 ; Briq. in Engl. & Prantl, 1. c. S. dominica, Vahl. Enum. i. 233; Swartz, Obs. 18, t. 1. fig. 1, not L. — Florida and the West Indies. Reported from Cozumel Island, Yucatan. b. Leaves ferrugineous-villous beneath, 1 dm. or less long, cuneate to winged petioles : calyx-lobes setaceous-mucronate. 7. S. prtvoides, Benth. Bot. Sulph. 150, & in DC. I.e. 297 ; Hemsl. 1. c. ii. 563 ; Briq. 1. c. — Southern Mexico and Central America. Jalisco, Guadalajara, Sept., 1886 (Edto. Palmer, no. 498) ; cool shady places, barranca near Guadalajara, Nov. 5, 1888 (C. G. Pringle, no. 1727) ; San Sebastian, alt. 1,185 to 1,5 40 m., March 16, 1897 (E. W. Nel- son, no. 407 '2): Morelos, Cuernavaca, Nov. 14, 1865 (Bourgeau, no. 1239) : Oaxaca, Jayacatlan, alt. 1,320 m., Sept. 10, 1894 (L. O. Smith, no. 174). = = Leaves short-pilose or glabrate beneath. a. Inflorescence an oblong raceme, 4 to 7 cm. long, not secund : calyx tubulose- campanulate, in fruit 7 mm. long. 8. S. micrantha, Vahl. Enum. i. 235; Benth. 1. c. 298; Hemsl. 1. c. 561 ; Briq. 1. c. S. bullata, Ort. Dec. ix. 109 ; Jacq. Hort. Schoenb. iv. 41, t. 481. S. serotina, Vahl. 1. c. 232, not L. S. occi- dentalis, Millsp. 1. c. in part, not Swartz. — Tropical America, in Mexico known only from the Yucatan coast. Yucatan, streets of Dolores, Island of Mugeres, Jan. 1, 1895 (3fillspaugh, no. 18) ; without locality, 1896 (Porfirio Valdez, no. 31). S. orbicidaris, Benth. Bot. Sulph. 151, from Panama seems to differ from the species only in its fruticose base. 6. Inflorescence secund, loosely-flowered. 1. Calyx-tube bearing long straight spreading setiform glandless hairs mixed with the shorter gland-tipped ones ; upper lip entire : racemes simple, elongated, be- coming 1 to 1.5 dm. long. 9. S. setosa. Annual, 2 to 5 dm. high ; the stems slightly appressed- retrorse-setulose on the angles : leaves ovate or rhombic-ovate, thin, acute or blunt at tip, cuneate at base to winged petioles, crenate-serrate, 8 cm. or less in length, sparingly appressed-setulose above, paler and minutely puberulent or glabrate beneath : racemes stiff ; verticels mostly 2-flowered, all becoming remote, the lowest 1.5 to 2.5 cm. apart: bracts 494 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. lance-subulate, 5 to 7 mm. long : |n/•. Palmer, no. t'.l): Sonora, by shaded water-courses and in canons, Alamos, Sept., 1890 (Edw. Palmer, no. 680, 681). 2. Calyx pubescent with gland-tipped hairs; upper lip generally tridentate : racemes paniculate, ."> cm. or Less in length. 10. S. lateriflora. Bushy-branched annual, 2.5 to 8 dm. high : Btema sparingly retrorse-pilose: leaves ovate or rhombic-ovate, thin, blunt or acutish at tip, cuneate to slender petioles 5 cm. or less long, coarsely crenate-dentate, minutely setnlose on both faces or glabrate: flowers solitary or in 2's, all remote, the lowest <».7 to 1 cm. apart: bracts ovate. acuminate, 1 to 2 mm. long: pedicels 2 to -1 mm. long: calyx in anthesis 2 to 3 mm., in fruit 5 to G mm. long; the tube twice exceeding the broad blunt subulate-tipped lobes. — SONOBA, about abandoned gar- dens, Guaymas, Oct., 1887 (Edw. Palmer, no. 320). Ilabitally re- sembling Scutellaria lateriflora. A fragmentary specimen collected by Xantus at Cape St. Lucas, Lower California, may belong here. +- >•- Calyx not glandular. -♦Leaves thin, membranaceous, the primary ones 4 to 9 cm. long: verticels G- niany -flowered. 11. S. TILIAEFOLIA, Vahl. Leaves broad- or rhombic-ovate, cordate truncate or rounded-cuneate at base, sparingly pubescent on both fa dark green above. — Symb. iii. 7 ; Jacq. Hort. Bchoenb. iii. 2. t. 25 1 ; Benth. I.e. 299; Hemsl. 1. c. 566. S. Jimbriata, HBK. I.e. 299, t. 149. — Common in tropical America, extending northward through Mexico. Chihuahua, Valley of Chihuahua, Sept 17. 1885 (C. G. Pringle, no. 550 ; damp places, Canon de Pilares, Sept. 22. 1891 (0. I . Hartman, no. 749): Coahuila, Saltillo, 1848-49 (./. Gregg, no. 542); Soldad, Sept.. 1880 and in shaded places, Saltillo, Sept., 1880, 1898 ( Edw. Palmer, nos. 1062, 835) : DuBANGO, abundant in shade near Durango, Sept., 1896 (Edw. Palmer, no. 572): s.v\ Luia Potosi. in deep shade near the city, 1876 (S<-hafner. no. G74), alt. 1,850 to 2,460 m., 1878 {Parry & Palmer, nos. 748, 746$) : Aquas Camkntks (Hart- wcg, no. 169) : Mexico, Valley of Mexico, May 5, 18G5 (Bourgeau, no. FERNALD. — MEXICAN SALVIAS. 495 122) : Vera Cruz, Orizaba {Botteri, nos. 533, 869), Aug. 13, 1891 {Seaton, no. 304); Cordoba {Asa Gray): Oaxaca, Monte Alban, alt. 1,900 m., Oct. 11, 1895 (L. C. Smith, no. 949) : Guatemala, Santiago, Dept. Zacatepequez, alt. 2,000 m., 1891 {Rosalia Gomez in exsicc. J. D. Smith, no. 816) ; Castillas, Dept. Santa Rosa, alt. 1,230 m., Sept., 1892 {Heyde & Lux in exsicc. J. D. Smith, no. 4055): Costa Rica, Cartago, alt. 1,300 m., Nov., 1888 {Juan J. Cooper in exsicc. J. D. Smith, no. 5900) ; San Jose, July, 1892, and San Francisco de Guadalupe, Dec, 1893 {Ad. Tonduz, nos. 701, 8456). See note under S. Chia. S. flexuosa, Presl in Benth. Lab. 248, is perhaps only a glabrate form of this species, apparently represented by Botteri' s no. 395 from Orizaba. Var. cinerascens. Whole plant cinereous with fine puberulence. — Jalisco, barranca near Guadalajara, Oct. 3, 1891 {G. G. Pringle, no. 5176). ++ ++ Leaves firm, small, 1 to 2.5 cm. long : verticels 2-4-flowered. = Herbaceous, erect: leaves broad-ovate, cordate, minutely pubescent: lower verticels in axils of upper foliar leaves. 12. S. humilis, Benth. Lab. 247, & in DC. 1. c. 298; Hemsl. 1. c. 558 ; Briq. 1. c. — Described from " Mexico." Not seen. = = Diffusely branching from woody base : leaves narrowly rbombic-ovate, or oblong-ovate, cuneate, densely pilose-setulose beneath : racemes short-peduncled. 13. S. pusilla. Stems 1 to 2.5 dm. long, slender and wiry, puberu- lent and hoary with fine spreading setulose hairs ; more or less diffusely branched : leaves blunt or acutish, irregularly more or less serrate, green above, pale beneath, long-setulose on both faces or glabrate above, on short slender petioles: peduncles 1.5 to 4 cm. long: racemes 1 to 8 cm. long; the verticels all remote, the lowest becoming 2 to 2 J) cm. apart : bracts ovate, 3 to 4 mm. long, firm and essentially persistent : pedicels very short: calyx white-setulose, in anthesis 2 to 3 mm., in fruit 5 mm. long ; the tube once and a half longer than the acuminate lobes : corolla blue, 7 mm. long ; the tube short-exserted ; the pilose galea twice exceeded by the lip: style densely bearded. — Oaxaca, vicinity of Yalalag, alt. 1,230 to 2,400 ra., July, 1894 {E. W. Nelson, * no. 958); Sierra de San Felipe, alt. 2,160 m., Sept. 23, 1895 {G. Conzatti, in exsicc. L. C. Smith, no. 708). * * * Corolla 9 to 10 mm. long. -i- Leaves cuneate or rounded-cuneate at base : calyx subglabrous. ++ Leaves oblongdanceolate. 14. S. ourophtlla, Briq. Ann. Conserv. Jard. Bot. Geneve, ii. 126. — Described from Costa Rica. Not seen. 49G PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. — — Leaves ovate or ovate-elliptic. 15. S. pebmixta, Briq. 1. c. 129. — Described from Costa Rica. \ - n. *- +- Leaves hastate at base: calyx glandular. 1G. S. cosTARiCENsiB, Oersted in Kjoeb. Vldensk, Meddel. (1858) Hemsl. 1. c. 555. — Costa Rica, Cartago, alt. l,3 Juan ./. Cooper in exsicc. .1. D. Smith, no. 589.") i : San Ji Oct., 1892 i.!./. Tonduz, no. 71.38). <; 2. Membrana< bab, Benth. Flowers as in tin- Micranthat or a little larger. Bracts suborbiculate, persistent, membranaceous, veiny, equalling or exceeding the calyx. * Leaves narrow-ovate, cuneate or narrowed at base. ■>- Calyx glabrous, Buhtruncate, with very short teeth: verticals approximate. forming a Bpiciform raceme 1 to 8 cm. long: bracts and calyces blue or roseate. 17. S. lophantha, Benth. in DC. 1. c. 301; Bemsl. L c. 560, in part; Briq. ill Engl, & l'rantl, 1. c. — GUATEMALA, Santa Rosa, alt. 1,230 m., Oct., 1892 (Heyde &, Lux in exsicc. J. D. Smith, no. 4051 I. *- ■*- Calyx pubescent. *+ Calyx canescently short-pilose, not viscid : verticels remote, forming a raceme 1 to 2.5 dm. long. 18. S. M<>< i\oi, Benth. Lab. 271. & in DC. 1. c. 300; Ilemsl. 1. c. 561; Briq. I.e. — Guatemala, Laguna de Ayarza, Dept Jalapa, ;tlt. 2. 1 GO m., Sept., 1892 {Heyde k. Lux in exsicc. J. D. Smith, no. 4048). ++ +* Calyx viscid, short-pilose. = Branches pilose ; the hairs spreading. i: icemi - simple, or very slightly branched ; verticels tending to become remote ; the primary racemes becoming 0.8 to 2 dm. long: lowest bracts crenate-serrate. 19. S. rubiginosa, Benth. 1. c. 301. Mature leaves pubescent beneath only on the nerves. — Hemsl. 1. c. 565 ; Briq. 1. c. S. lophantha, Donnell Smith, Enum. PI. Gnat. ii. G2, not Benth. S. Mbcinoi, Dounell Smith, 1. c. iv. 12."), is*, in part, not Benth. — Southern Mexico ami Central America. Guatemala, Pinula, alt. 1,850 m., Feb., 1890 (./. Jh Smith, no. 1011) ; Chiapas, Dept. Santa Rosa, alt. 1.080 m., Dec, 1892' i Heyde & Lux in exsicc. J. D. Smith, no. 4400). Var. hebephylla. Leaves velutinous beneath. — & lophantha, Hemsl. 1. c. 560, in part, not Benth. — VERA CRUZ, region of Orizaba. Oct. 11, 1866 (Bourgeau, no. 3215): Chiapas, among the mountains (Gkiesbreght, no. 745): Guatemala, Yolcan Fuego, Zacatepecpiez. alt. 1,540 in., March, 1892 (/. D. Smith, no. 2597). FERNALD. — MEXICAN SALVIAS. 497 b. Inflorescences paniculate ; all the verticels remote : bracts entire. 20. S. cladodes. Stems glabrate below, sordid-pilose above : leaves oblong to narrow-ovate, 1 dm. or less long, 5 cm. or less wide, long- acuminate at tip, cuneate at base, finely crenate-serrate, sbort-velutinous or glabrate on both surfaces; petioles 2 cm. or less long: panicle with slender ascending densely pilose brauches 1 to 2 dm. long : bracts purp- lish, broad-ovate or suborbicular, acuminate, more or less pilose, ciliate : verticels 1 to 2.5 cm. apart, 3-9-flowered ; pedicels 4 to 7 mm. long, spreading and nodding at tips : calyx purplish, in anthesis 8 to 9 mm. long, broadened upward ; the tube glandular-pilose ; the glabrate limb with ovate-acuminate lobes : corolla-tube included ; the lips one half longer than the calyx. — - Northwestern Mexico. Without locality (See- mann) : Tepic, near Compostela, alt. 1,540 to 1,850 m., Apr. 7-8, 1897 (K W. Nelson, no. 4171). = = Branches canescent with appressed strongly recurved hairs: only the lowest verticels remote, the spicilbrm racemes 1 to 6 cm. long : bracts entire or un- dulate, ciliate. 21. S. saltuensis. Stems 1 to 1.5 m. high, bearing solitary ter- minal racemes or many inflorescences of 1 to 3 verticels on short leafy brauchlets : leaves 6 cm. or less long, acute, finely crenate-serrate, dull green and finely pubescent above, canescent-tomentulose beneath, on slender petioles 1.5 cm. or less in length : bracts reniform, acuminate, brownish or slightly rosy tinged, minutely pubescent on the nerves, 1 to 1.5 cm. long: calyx purple-tinged, appressed-hirsute, in anthesis 7 mm. long, with broad blunt or short-acuminate lobes : corolla 1.3 cm. long, blue, the pilose galea one half as long as the lip. — Morelos, in woods of Sierra de Tepoxtlan, alt. 2,310 m., Feb. 8, 1899 (<7. G. Pringle, no. 8035) : Jalisco, between San Sebastian and the summit of Mt. Bufa de Mascota, alt. 1,380 to 2,300 m., March 20, 1897 (E. W. Nelson, no. 4103). = = = Of close affinity to the preceding is 22. S. bupleuroides, Presl in Benth. Lab. 271, a glabrous plant with fascicled peduncles each bearing solitary many-flowered verticels. "Not identified. * * Leaves broad-ovate (narrow-ovate in S. nitida) or rhombic-ovate, rounded to the subcordate truncate or subcuneate base. -i- Verticels remote (approximate in a form of S. hyptoides) : leaves 5 cm. or less in length. •*-+ Leaves glabrous or only minutely puberulent. = Leaves ovate-lanceolate, glossy. vol. xxxv. — 32 198 PROCEEDINGS OF TMK AMERICAN ACADEMY. 23. S. mi 11. \. Benth. in DC. I.e. 800; Hemsl. I.e. 562; Briq. I.e. Hyptia nitida, Mart. & Gal. Bull. Acad. Unix. xi. pt. % 189. — De- ibed from < >axac.y. Not Been. = = Leaves rhombic-ovate, dull. 24. S. galinsogifolia. Sterna 1.5 to 6 dm. high, branching, minutely puberulent, the young parte canescent: leaves 5 cm. or less in length, blunt or acutish, minutely and sparingly puberulent or glabrous, the lowest shorter than the Blender petioles : peduncles 1.5 dm. or less in Length; wrticels from 1 to 5, the lowest becoming 3 to 5cm. apart; rhachis canescent: bracts reniform, short acuminate, pale-brown or roseate-tinged, puberulent, ciliate-margined : calyx white-villous, with bluntish ovate-lanceolate lobes: corolla 8 to 9 nun. Long, puberulent; the galea thrice exceeded by the lip. — 8. hyptoides, Gray in Wats. Proc. Am. Acad. xxi. 435 ; Rose, Contrib. U. S. Nat Herb. i. 1 10; not Mart, and Gal. — Northwestern Mexico. CHIHUAHl \. Hacienda San Miguel, 1885 (Edto. Palmer, no. 205): Sonoua, in shade, mountain- canon, Alamos, Sept., 1890 (Edw. Palmer, no. G82) ; Iluehuerachi. alt. 1,230 m., Dec, 1890 (C. V. Hartman, no. 323, F. E. Lloyd, no. 452). Resembling S. hyptoides. ** ** Leaves setulose-hirsute. = Calyx white-lanate, with short deltoid lobes. 25. S. LASiocEPnAi.A, Hook. & Am. Rot. Reech. 306; Benth. 1. c. ; Ilemsl. 1. c. 559; Briq. 1. c. — Tepic, Tepic (the type station). Feb., 1895 (F. II. Lamb, no. G21). = = Calyx-tube hirsute ; lobes lanceolate. 20. S. hyptoides, Mart. & Gal. l.e. 74; Benth. I.e.; Ilemsl. I.e. 558 ; Briq. I.e. S. elsholtzioides, Benth. Bot. Sulph. 152, t. 50. — Southern Mexico to Venezuela. Jalisco, bluffs of the Rio Grande de Santi near Guadalajara, Oct. 19, 1S89 (C. G. Pringk, no. 2297 I : Vi.ua ( i.-t /. dalapa. alt. 1,230 to 1,390 m., 1894 (C. L. Smith, no. 1664) : Oax m a. dry hanks, Sierra de San Felipe, alt. 2. ICO m., Oct. 11. 1894 ( 0. G. Pringle,no. 5624) ; Jayacatlan, alt. 1,320 m., Nov. 1, L894 I /,. C. Smith, no. 269); El Fortin, alt. 520 m., L897 (C. Conzatti & V. Gons ■ .-. no. 478): Guatemala, Coban, Dept. Alta Verapaz, alt. 1.320m.. March, 1880 tans, Jacq. Ilort. Schoen. iii. 38, t. 319. X virgata, Ort. Dec. i. 3. — Central and Southern Mexico. Za< \- TECA3, near Plateado, Sept. 2. 1897 (J. N. Rose, no. 2715): JALISCO, Valley of Mexico, Tizapan, June 2G, 1865-66 (Bourgeau, no. L25, in part) : Michoacan, Tlalpujahua 1828 {Graham) \ plains near Patzcuaro, A.ug. 7. 1892 (C. G. Pringle, no. U63). & linifolia, Mart. & Gal. 1. c. 70, and Benth. I.e. 302, from Michoacan is probably only a form with rose-colored corolla. Var. GLABRA, day. 1. c. Stems and leaves glabrous. S kptophylla, Benth. Lab. 2 19, & in DC. 1. c. 299. S. azurea, Torr. Bot. Mex. Bonnd. 131. in part. — From Texas through central and BOUthem .Mexico, of broader range than the hispid type. San Li is Potosi, in Band near the city of San Luis Potosi, 1876 (Schaffner, no. 672): Aguas Cai ienti - (Hartweg, no. 163); Jalisco, edge of swamp, Guadalajara, July, U /;///•. Palmer, no. 226): Chiapas, without locality. 1864-70 (Gi breght, no. 751) ; valley of Jiquipilas, alt. 650-1,100 in., Aug. 16, 1895 /;. W. Nelson, no. 2922). = = Glandular-hairy. 30. S. heterotricha. Stems erect from a rather woody base, 2.5 to L5 dm. high, puberulent, and. especially above, bearing slender jointed glandular hairs: leaves linear-attenuate, stronglj 1-8-nerved, •"> to * cm*. long, puberulent or glabrate or rarely with some shinier glandular hairs: raceme 2 cm. or less in length; verticels all remote, the lower 8 to I cm. apart, 8-9-flowered: bracts lanceolate to ovate-lanceolate, glandular- FERNALD. — MEXICAN SALVIAS. 501 ciliate, mostly shorter than the calyx : pedicels 2 to 4 mm. long : calyx tubular-campanulate, in an thesis 8 to 10 mm. long, glandular-ciliate on the strong nerves ; lobes about 3 mm. long ; the upper lip broadly ovate, bluntish, entire; lower lip with 2 slightly narrower and more pointed lobes : corolla blue or violet as in S. angustifolia, but the galea more pubescent : style bearded. — S. angustifolia, Gray in Wats. Proc. Am. Acad. xx. 445, in part, not Cav. — Jalisco, in bottoms, Rio Blanco, June, 18G6 (Edw. Palmer, no. 53) ; plains near Guadalajara, July 1, 1889 (C. G. Pringle, no. 2913). Var. multinervia. Leaves lance-linear to oblanceolate, mostly with 5 parallel nerves. — Ttcpic, foothills between Acaponeta and Pedro Paulo, Aug. 2, 1897 (J. N. Pose, no. 1934). ■w- ++ Raceme long-pedunculate: leaves confined to the lower half of the plant. = Upper lobe of the calyx tridentate. a. Calyx-tube pilose-hispid, not glandular : attenuate bracts glabrous or glabrate. 31. S. COMOSA, Peyr. Stem 2 to 6 dm. high, glabrous or glandular- pilose : leaves membranaceous, linear or lanceolate, the upper half crenate- serrate, generally pubescent beneath on the veins. — Linnaea, xxx. 32 ; Hemsl. I.e. 555. S. glechomaefolia, Wats. Proc. Am. Ac;nl. xviii. 137, in part, not HBK. — Central and southeastern Mexico. Without lo- cality (Coulter, no. 1115): San Luis Potosi, without locality, 1878 {Parry & Palmer, no. 761) : Mexico, Santa Fe, July 6, 1865-66 (Bourgeau, n. 396) : Vera Cruz, Mt. Orizaba, alt. 2,460 to 2,770 m., Aug., 1891 (Seaton, nos. 259, 323). Originally described from Toluca, Mexico. Var. hypoglauca. Similar, glabrous: leaves slightly petioled, very glabrous, glaucous beneath, entire or serrulate at tip. — S. hypoglauca, Briq. Ann. Conserv. Jard. Bot. Geneve, ii. 136. — Michoacan, moun- tains about Patzcuaro, July 30, 1892 (C. G. Pringle, no. 4155). A glabrous and glaucous extreme, not separable otherwise from S. comosa. b. Calyx and attenuate bracts glandular-hispid. 1. Leaves linear, revolute, with one conspicuous broad nerve. 32. S. unicostata. Slender, 2 to 4 dm. high : stem sparingly gland- ular-hispid : leaves 3 to 6 cm. long, 2 mm. or less wide, glabrous : pedun- cles 0.5 to 1 dm. long; raceme 1 to 1.5 dm. long, the lower verticels 0.5 dm. apart, the upper approximate ; verticels 3-6-flowered : bracts short, ovate, subulate-tipped : calyx in anthesis 5 mm. long, the tube equalling the lance-subulate lobes : corolla 1.3 cm. long, puberulent. — 502 PROCEEDINGS OF TIIF. AMERICAN ACADEMY. S. angufUfolia, v&t. glabra, Wats. Proc. Am. Acad, xviii. 13s, in part, not Gray. — San Luia Potosi, without locality, alt. 1,840 to 2,460 m., 1878 {Parry & Palmer, no. 7G0). 2. Leaves oblanceolate, pinnately nerved. 88. S. firma. Stems decambent at base, glabrous below, glandular- pabesceut in the inflorescence, 1 to 5 dm. high : leaves 1 to 8 cm. long. 0.5 to - cm. broad, acute or blunt at tip, cuneate at base, crenulate-8< rrate, thick ami firm, glabrous, above Bublucid : peduncles elongated, l 2-brao- teate; racemes becoming .'! dm. loDg; verticels all distinct, 3-6-flowered, the Iowerm08t 5 to 8 Cm. apart : bracts short, broad-ovate, subulate-tipped : pedicels short : calyx campanulate, in authesis 5 to G mm., becoming 1 cm. long; tube twice exceeding the lobes ; upper lip broad-ovate, the teeth subulate; lobes of the lower lip with long subulate tips: corolla 1.5 cm. long, the tube slightly exserted, the dark blue lower lip with a pule Bpol in its centre and twice exceeding the puberulent blunt galea: style bearded. — >S. glcchomaefolin, AVats. I.e. not 1I15K. — Jalisco, on hill- sides, Rio Blanco, June, 1886 (Edw. Palmer, no. 01). = = Upper lip of calyx entire. a. Glabrous : leaves oblong-lanceolate : bracts round, obtuse or sbort-mucronato. 34. S. lakvis, Benth. Lab. 251, & in DC. I.e. 303; Hemsl. I.e. 550; Briq. I.e. & in Engl, & Prantl, I.e. — Not seen. Described from Mexico and from near Tlalpujahua, MlCHOACAN. I. Pubescent: leaves elliptic-oblanceolato or narrowly obovatc : bracts ovate, long- attenuate. 35. S. sinaloensis. Stems slender, 2 to 2.5 dm. high. Blightly branched, below short- hirsute, above and in the inflorescence densely pubescent with long straight line viscid hairs: leaves acatish, the upper half appressed-serrate, the lower half subentire, subcuneate to a Best base or obscurely shorl petioled; those of the main stem 3 to 4 pairs, the uppermost largest, 3.5 to 6 cm. long, 1.2a to 2 cm. broad, above appressed short-setulose or glahrate, beneath pale, minutely sctulose on the nervi - : peduncle 6 to 9 cm. long, about equalling the leafy lower portion of the plant; raceme becoming 1 dm. or so long; verticels 8— 6-flowered, the lower 4 cm. apart, the upper rather approximate: bracts pilose-hispid, colored, soon deciduous: calyx densely pilose-hispid with fine viscid hairs, in anthesis 5 to 7 mm. long; the tube twice as long as the broad abruptly Bubulate-tipped lobes : corolla 1 . ") cm. long, the tube slightly exserted. the dark blue lip with a pale spot in its centre twice exceeding the puberu- FERNALD. — MEXICAN SALVIAS. 503 lent blunt oblong galea: style bearded. — Sinaloa, footbills of the Sierra Madre near Colomas, July 14, 1897 (J. N. Rose, no. 1727). +- -t- Leaves nearly all with definite petioles. (S. comosa and S. sinaloensis may be looked for here.) ** Annuals, more or less bushy-branched : racemes elongated, at least the lower verticals remote. = Leaves linear-lanceolate to oblong-linear, obscurely serrate : bracts lanceolate. 36. S. lanceolata, Brouss. App. Elench. PI. Hort. Monsp. (1805) 15; Willd. Enum. Hort. Berol. i. 37; Jacq.f. Eclog. i. 22, t. 13; Benth. I.e. 299; Gray, I.e. 369; Hemsl. I.e.; Briq. I.e. & reflexa, Horn. Hort. Hafn. (1807), i. 34. S. lanceifolia, Poir. Suppl. v. 49. S. aspidophytta, R. & S. Syst. Mant. i. 206. S. trichostemoides, Pursh, Fl. i. 19. S. aegyptiaca, Sesse & Moc. I.e. 6, not L. — Florida and S. W. United States to Central Mexico. Without locality, 1848-49 {Gregg, no. 541) : Chihuahua, low ground near Chihuahua, Oct. 1852 (Geo. Thurber, no. 821) ; plains near Chihuahua, Sept. 11, 1885 ( C. G. Pringle, no. 654); damp places near Pilares, Sept. 23, 1891 ( C. V. Hartman, no. 744) : Coahuila, abundant in abandoned fields and bottom-lands, Saltillo, Sept., 1898 (Edw. Palmer, no. 336) : Durango, abundant in rich bottom-lands, near Durango, July, 1896 (Edw. Palmer, no. 327) ; along arroyos, Santiago Papasquiaro, Aug., 1896 (Edw. Palmer, no. 446); between Cerro Prieto and La Providencia, Sept. 11, 1898 (E. W. Nelson, 4969) : San Luis Potosi, damp places about the city, 1876 (Schaffner, no. 673); alt. 1,840 to 2,460 m., 1878 (Parry & Palmer, no. 744) : Guanajuato, Presa de la olla, 1893 (A. Duges) : Queretaro, Nov. 19, 1827 (Berlandier, no. 1279). = = Leaves lanceolate or oblong-lanceolate, coarsely subincised-dentate : bracts broadly ovate. 37. S. subincisa, Benth. PI. Hartw. 20, & in DC. I.e. 303; Gray, 1. c. ; Hemsl. 1. c. 565 ; Briq. 1. c. — Texas to Central Mexico. Chihuahua, Pilares, Sept. 18, 1891 (C. V. Hartman, no. 776): Du- rango, rich low ground near Durango, July, 1896 (Edw. Palmer, no. 305): Aguas Calientes, in fields near the city (Hartweg, no. 160). Originally described from Hartweg's plant. = = = Leaves ovate or narrowly rhombic-ovate, crenate-serrate : bracts narrowly ovate with long attenuate barbulate tips. 38. S. Chia. Similar to the two preceding : about 6 dm. high, with long internodes (the lower 5 to 7 cm. long) : stem strongly quadrangular, puberulent with appressed white hairs, densely white-pilose at the nodes : •"(,1 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. leaves bluntish at tip, cuneate at 1 Kise to a long Blender petiole, coarsely crenate-serrate, especially above the subentire base; margin and petiole densely Bhort-pilose ; upper face dark green, puberulent or glabrate: lower face paler, minutely pubescent: racemes very Bhort-pedunculate, 0.5 !•> 2 dm. long; verticels 8— 6-flowered, the lower 1.5 cm. apart, the upper approximate: pedicels 8 mm. 'long, minutely white-pilose: calyx ciliate on the strong nerves, narrowly campanulate, in anthesis 8 mm. long; the tube twice exceeding the ovate acuminate lobes; upper lip entire: corolla 1.3 to 1.5 cm. long, the white tube somewhat exserted; lips blue, the lower pubescent beneath, twice as long as the pubescent upper one: style glabrous. — Coahuila, damp bottom-lands, Salt illo, Sept., 1898 [Edw. Palmer, no. 834). This as well as three other Bpecies, >'. luiirvoltit/i, S. tillarfoUa, and S.hispanica, arc called chia by the Mex- icans, and a cooling beverage known likewise by that name is prepared from the seed. (See Rose, Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. v. 225.) *+ *+ Perennials, mostly decumbent at least at base. = The lower verticels becoming remote. 'i. Corolla wlrite or pale: stem strongly decumbent or Bubrepent : leaves ovate- elliptic to oblong, glabrate: peduncle n.5 to 1.5 dm. long. 30. S. assurgens, HBK. Nov. Gen. & Spec. ii. 293; Bentb. I.e. 304; Ilemsl. 1. c. 553; Briq. I.e. — Michoacan, grassy hills near I'atz- cuaro, July 18, 1892 (C. G. Pringle, no. 4150); Oct. 20, 1898 ( /•;. II'. D. Hohoay, no. 3184) ; originally collected near the same town. alt. 2.100 in., by Humboldt & Bonpland. According to Kuntb the color of the corollae is " pallide violacea ? (carnea ex Bonpl.)," but neither of the recently collected specimens Bhows any violet tinge. b. Corolla blue or violet. 1. Pilose-hirsute : internodes sbort : leaves oblong to rhombic-ovate : calyx hispid below, in anthesis 6 to 7 mm. long; tube equalling the lobes; upper lip triden- tate or entire. 40. S. prunelloides, HBK. 1. c. 289; Benth. I.e. 30."): Hemsley, I.e. 563; Briq. I.e. 5. glechomaefolia, Wats. Proc. Am. Acad. wiii. L 37, not HBK. S. tricandra, Briq. Ann. Conserv. Jard. Bot Geneve, ii. 133. — Coahuila to Oaxaca. Coahuila, mountains 64 km. south of Saltillo, July, 1880 (Edw. Palmer, n<>. 1098) ; limestone hills. Cameras Pass, Sept 27, 1890 (C. G. Pringle, no. 3G81) : Nuevo Leon, Lerios, July. 1880 {Edw. Palmer, no. 1097) : Durango, Cacaria, Aug. 5, 1898 A'. W. Nelson, no. 1651): Mexico, without locality, 1848-49 (Gregg, no. 406); cool slopes, Sierra de las Cruoss, Aug. 21, 1892 (G. G. Prin- FERNALD. — MEXICAN SALVIAS. 505 gle, no. 4200) : Oaxaca, Cuilapan, alt. 1,840 m., June 27, 1895 (Z. G Smith, no. 778). Originally from Volcan de Jorullo, Michoacan. Briquet bases his species S. trichandra upon Pringle's no. 4200, stating in his description of the calyx that the upper lip is entire. In the speci- mens of this number, as represented in the Gray Herbarium, the upper lip is usually tridentate, thus placing the plant distinctly with S. pru- nelloides. 2. Puherulent: internodes longer : leaves oblong or narrowly ovate-oblong : calyx puberulent, tubular-campanulate, in anthesis 7 to 8 mm. long, the tube one half longer than the lobes ; upper lip entire. 41. S. oblongifolia, Mart. & Gal. 1. c. 79 ; Benth. 1. c. ; Hemsl. 1. c. 562; Briq. in Engl. & Prantl, I.e. S. reticulata, Mart. & Gal. I.e. 64, ace. to Benth. — Southern Mexico. Chiapas, without locality, July, Aug., 1864-70 (Gkiesbreght, nos. 61, 750); near San Cristobal, alt. 2,150 to 2,460 m., Sept. 18, 1895 (E. W. Nelso?i, no. 3191). Originally described from Oaxaca. = = Verticels congested in a long-peduncled head : stem pilose-hispid, 2 to 2.5 dm. high : leaves ovate-elliptic or ovate-oblong, obtuse : heads 1 to 1.5 cm. high. 42. S. Tatei, Briq. Ann. Conserv. Jard. Bot. Geneve, ii. 135. — Mexico, without indicated locality in herb. Delessert. Not seen. * * * Bracts deciduous: calyx cylindric, not becoming inflated, less conspicu- ously bilabiate : stems numerous from a woody base. -»- Bracts very early deciduous : calyx blue-tinged, conspicuously nerved, puberu- lent or short-pubescent. ++ Verticels, or all but the lowermost, aggregated, forming a rather dense head. = Stems 1 m. or less high, finely canescent : leaves 2 to 8 cm. long, soft-canescent beneath : heads simple or branched, 2 to 12 cm. long : calyx, in anthesis, 5 to 7 mm. long; the tube thrice exceeding the deltoid subulate-acuminate lobes : corolla blue rose or white. 43. S. lavenduloides, HBK. Leaves lanceolate, oblanceolate, or oblong-lanceolate, acutish or blunt, crenulate. — Nov. Gen. & Spec. ii. 287; Benth. I.e. 303; Hemsl. I.e. 559; Briq. I.e. S. Humboldtiana, P. & S. Syst. Mant. i. 183. S. lavendidaefolia, Spreng. Syst. i. 58, not Vahl. S. purpurina, La Llave, La Nat. vii. 82. S. stricta, Sesse & Moc. 1. c. 8. — Southern Mexico and Central America. Mexico, Valley of Mexico (Bourgeau, no. 1110, Schaffner, no. 410) : Michoacan, hills of Patzcuaro, Nov. 21, 1891 (G. G. Pringle, no. 3954) : Morelos, Cuer- navaca, alt. 2,300 m., Jan. 4, 1899 (G. G. Deam, no. 2) : Oaxaca, N. W. slope of Mt. Zempoaltepec, alt. 2,460 to 3,000 m., July 10, 1894 (E. W. Nelson, no. 701) : Cuyamecalco, alt. 2,000 m., Sept. 4, 1895 (Z. G. Smith, 506 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. no. 601): Chiapas, without locality, 1864-70 (Ghiesbregkt, nos. 788, 711.7l7i: near San Cristobal, alt 2,150 to 2,460 m., Sept 18, l- ( /■;. II. Nelson, no. .'11-12): Giaiimai.a. Santa Rosa, Depart Baja \ i rapaz, alt 1,530 m., April, 1887 I //. >•"/* Tuerckheim in exsicc. J. 1>. Smith, no. 1193); Santiago, Depart Zacatepequez, alt 2,000m., 1891 (Rosalio Gomez in exsicc. J. D. Smith, no. 823); Sacabaja, Depart Quiche, alt 1.230 m., March, 1892, and Castillas, Depart. Santa Rosa, alt. 1,230 in., Dec, 1892 (Ifryde & Lux in exsicc. J. I >. Smith. - 3128, 4395). Originally described from Patzcuaro, MlCHOA< w. Var. latifolia, Benth. Leaves elliptic-oblong, acute. — PL llartw. 21, & in DC. I.e. — Jalisco. Bolafios (Hartweg, no. 171). = = Similar: stems minutely retrorse-pubescent: leaves not canescent beneath. a. Leaves oblong or narrowly ovate-elliptic, 1.5 to ."» cm. long, thickish, rugose, green, sometimes a little pubescent on the nerves 1 eneath, obscurely crenate or re : lower vertieels a little reunite : calyx 6 t'> 6 nun. long the upper li]> I erj short, the lower with '1 ovate lobes 1 mm. lon^. 1 1. S. GUADALAJAEEN8I3, Briq. Ann. Conserv. Jard. Bot Geneve ii. 132. S. helianthemifolicL) var., Gray in "Wats. Proc. Am. Acad. xxii. 1 15, not S. helianthemifolia, Benth. — .Jalisco, among rocks, Rio Blanco, Sept.. 1886 (Ediv. Palmer, no. 556); dry rocky hills mar Guadalajara, Nov. 1, 1893 (C. G. Pringle, no. 4624). Ij. Leaves lanceolate or oblong-linear, bluntish, dull, minutely puberulent or gla- brate : deltoid acuminate calyx-lobes subequal. 1. Stems numerous, assurgent, 2 to 2.5 dm. high, leafy chiefly near the base : leaves entire, glaucous: calyx white-puberulent, in anthesis 8 mm. long. 45. S. Teresae. Leaves short-petioled, 2 to 2.5 cm. long. 0.25 to 0.5 em. hroad : peduncles 1 to 1.5 dm. long; raceme rather loosely flow- ered : the lower vertieels 1 cm. apart, 2-6-flowered : bracts ovate-lance- olate, acuminate : calyx dark blue : corolla 1.3 cm. long, the galea densely pubescent. — Tepic, near Santa Teresa, top of Sierra Madre, Aug. 13, 1897 i./. X. Rose, no. 2233). 2. Stems few, erect, 0 to 8 dm. high : leaves remote, serrate, not glaucous : calyx minutely pubescent, not whitened, in anthesis I to 6 mm. long. 40. S. rnuscarioides. Stems simple or sparingly branched ; Lnter- nodes 1 dm. or less long; leaves short-petioled, 5 to G cm. long. <».7."i to 1.5 cm. wide: peduncles 2 dm. or less long: bracts minute, caducous: lower vertieels 2 or 3 cm. apart, the others crowded, 8-20-flowered : pedicels spreading and drooping: calyx dark blue and green: corolla 1.2 cm. long; the lower lip much exceeding the pubescent galea: style slightly exserted, bearded. — Northwestern Mexico. Cuim aiii a. base FERNALD. MEXICAN SALVIAS. 507 of Mt. Mohinoru, 13 km. from Guadalupe y Calvo, alt. 2,150 to 2,310 m., Aug., 1898 (E. W. Nelson, no. 4850). Inflorescence, as also that of related species, suggesting Muscari botryodes. ++ ++ Verticels mostly remote, forming an elongate loose raceme. = Stem 5 to 6 dm. high : leaves oblong, blunt or acutish : racemes 2.5 dm. long or less ; verticels G-20-flowered, lower 4 to 5 cm. apart, upper approximate : calyces reflexed : corolla 1 cm. long, the tube included or short-exserted. 47. S. helianthemifolia, Benth. Lab. 254, & in DC. 1. c. 304 ; Hemsl. 1. c. 557 ; Briq. in Engl. & Prantl, 1. c. — South-central Mexico. Sax Luis Potosi, alt. 1,840 m., 1878 {Parry & Palmer, no. 729): Hidalgo, Sierra de Pachuca, alt. 3,000 in., Sept. 14, 1899 (CI G. Pringle, no. 8222): Michoacax, near Tlalpujahua {Graham). De- scribed from Graham's material from Tlalpujahua and from San Martin, PUEBLA. = = Similar: leaves oblong-lanceolate, acute, serrate: verticels subequally re- mote : calyces less reflexed : corolla-tube equalling the calyx. 48. S. remota, Benth. 1. c. ; Hemsl. 1. c. 5G4 ; Briq. 1. c. Described from Mexico without definite locality. f- -t- Bracts hardly persistent, lower verticels becoming slightly remote: nerves of calyx hidden by the long appressed silky pubescence. 49. S. cryptodonta. Resembling S. lavenduloides: stems canes- cent : leaves narrow-oblong, blunt, crenate-serrate, 2 to 5 cm. long, 0.5 to 1.5 cm. wide, rugose, green and appressed-setulose above, white-tomentose beneath, short-petioled : raceme 2 to 5 cm. long ; bracts ovate-lanceolate, acuminate, ascending : calyx blue, in authesis 5 mm. long, the short teeth obscured by the dense silky hairs : corolla 1 cm. long, the tube barely exserted ; galea pilose, half as long as the lip. — Duraxgo, Aug. 16, 1897 (J. N. Rose, no. 2338). -»— -*— -*— Bracts persistent through anthesis, their slender tips conspicuous : nerves of calyx somewhat hidden by long hairs : heads very dense. = Leaves lanceolate, slightly canescent: the long-peduncled heads 3 to 5 cm. in length : bracts ascending : calyx white-villous. 50. S. stachyoides, HBK. Let. 138; Benth. I.e. 303; Hemsl. I.e. 5G5 ; Briq. I.e. — Southern Mexico. Oaxaca, 29 km. S. W. of the city of Oaxaca, alt. 2,300 to 2,920 m., Sept., 1894 (E. W. Nelson, no. 1387). Originally from Los Joares and Santa Rosa. = = Leaves oblong, glabrous or slightly puberulent : heads 2 to 13 cm. long : bracts more spreading : calyx pilose-hirsute. 51. S. elongata, HBK. 1. c. t. 139 ; Benth. I.e. ; Hemsl. I.e. 55G. S. Betonica, R. & S. 1. c. 188. S. simplex, Spreng. Syst. i. 58. — South- 508 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. central Mexico. Mi sico, Valley of Mexico, Sept. 7. 1865-66 (Bour~ geau, n<>. 859)] w led caftans, Sierra de las Cruces, Oct. 2, 1892, and Serrania de Ajusco, alt. '■'."'■'> m., Sept. 11, 1*97 (C. G. Pringle, nos. 1278, 7 157). Originally from the region of Ario, Michoai an. /.'. Acaulae. Similar to Angustifoliae bu1 tending to be acauli Bubacaulescent, the obovate canescenl basal leaves forming a rosette: peduncle 0.5 to 2.5 dm. high ; raceme as lorn:; the verticals remote. 52. S. nana. BBK. I.e. 289; Benth. in DC. I.e. 304; Hemsl. I.e. 5G1 ; Briq. 1. c. S. prunelloides, Benth. PI. Hartw. 90, 351, not lll'.K. *S. rhombifolia, Sessd & .Moc. I.e. 8. — Northern Mexico to Central America. Durango, El Sal to, July 12, 1898 ( E. W. Nelson, no. 1566) : Za< \ i ecas, near San Juan Capistrano, Aug. 18, 1897 (/. X. Rose, no. 3534): San Luis Potosi, rare in the mountains, San Rafael, 1876 (Schaffner, no. 680) ; alt. 1,840 m. (Parry & Palmer, no. 745, 746) : (.i w\.it lto, 1*93 (A. Duges, no. 228 B) : OaxaCA, Boca de Leon, Telixtlahuaca, June 27, 1895 (L. C. Smith, no. 414). Originally from t . I WA.HATO. C. Vulgates, Benth. Branching or sometimes simple herbs, rarely half-shrubs : leaves petioled, ovate, rarely oblong, membranaceous, rounded round-cuueate or subcordate at base. (S. prunelloides and S. Martensii may be looked for here.) * Annuals. ■*- Coarse more or less canescent plant with long-petioled pale-green leaves ami peduncleil spiciform lieads with persistent foliaceous broad bracts. 53. S. hispanica, L. Spec. 25; Edw. Bot Keg. v. t. 3.39 ; Benth. in DC. I.e. 308; Hemsl. I.e. 558; Briq. in Engl. & Prantl. I.e. 279. S. tetragona, Moeneh, Meth. 373. S. prismatica, Cav. fide Hemsl. I.e. S. neo-kispanica, Briq. Ann. Conserv. Jard. Bot. Geneve, ii. 187. — From western Texas and Coahuila to northern South America and the We8t Indies. Introduced into southern Europe, whence the specific name. Coahcila, Carneros Pass, Sept. 27, 1890 ( C. G. Pringle, no. 3683): Durango, sides of arroyos, Santiago Papasquiaro, Aug., 1896 (Edw. Palmer, no. 967); bottom-lands, Durango, Oct., 1896 (Edw. Palmer, no. 7.">7) : San Li is Potosi, sand near the city, 1876 § xaffner, nos. 675, 1053): '. /Kilystuc/iyOf Ort. Described from Regla. Not seen. Bhort, Bimple, solitary, or paniculate, with some remote lower verticals in tin axils of the upper foliar leaves: calyx hispidulous, with short deltoid- BubulatG teeth. 57. S. menthiformis. Tall herb, 6 to 8 dm. high : stems strongly _ular and furrowed, cinereous-puberulent, freely branching: leaves <>\;ue or orbicular-ovate, acuminate, round-cordate at base, crenulate- Berrate, 1.5 to 5 cm. long. 1 to 3.5 cm. broad, dark green and glabrate above, pale and minutely puberulent or glabrate beneath, on Blender cinereous-puberulent petioles 1 to 2 cm. long; raceme, excluding the remote axillary verticals, 2 to 5 cm. long; the crowded verticela 6-20- flowered : pedicels barelj 1 nun. long: corolla blue, pilose, 1.2 cm. long; the tube twice exceeding the calyx; the lip hardly equalling the galea: style glabrous or slightly bearded. — ».S. polystachya, Donnell Smith. Enum. PI. Gnat, iv. 12G, not Ort. S. purpurea, Donnell Smith. 1. c. in part, not Cav. — Costa Rica, Cartago, alt. 1.. '><>() in., Oct., iss7 [Juan ./. Cooper in exsicc. J. D. Smith, no. 5902); San Francisco de Guada- lupe, alt. 1,200 m., Jan., 1894 (A. Tonduz, no. 1781); Rio Turrialba, Prov. Cartago, alt. 500 m., March, 1894 (J. D. Smith, no. 4919). Ilabitally resembling forms of Mentha aquatica. c. Racemes simple, with no axillary lower verticels. 1. Raceme Bpiciform, densely flowered, 4 to 10 cm. long: leaves broad-ovate, 1 dm. long, 6 dm, wide, on long petioles: corolla white. 58. S. Cataria, Briq. Ann. Conserv. .laid. Bot. Geneve, ii. 1 12. Described from Costa Rica. No specimen seen. 2. Raceme elongate, loosely-flowered, at least the lower verticels remote. O Leaves broad-ovate, glabrous, coarsely and irregularly serrate: pedicels '-' to 4 mm. long. 59. S. BRACHYODONTA, Briq. 1. C. 1 19. S'. iilliijJurii, var. rurndes- cens, day in Wats. Proc. Am. Acad. xxii. 445, in part. — JALISCO, on Bides of cailons, Rio Blanco, Sept., 1886 (Ed to. P>tlmn\ no. 59* i : hillsides near Guadalajara, Sept. 27, 1889 (C. G. PringU^ no. 2468). Placed hv Briquet under the group Cordif<>l!u<\ lVnth., but the leaves are rounded-truncate at base, not cordate, and in habit as well the plant much more resembles members of the I ulgares. FERNALD. — MEXICAN SALVIAS. 511 O O Leaves narrow-ovate, lanate beneath in the axils of the nerves, finely and regularly serrate : pedicels 1 mm. long. 60. S. Ghiesbreghtii. Tall, 1 m. (?) or less high : stems puberu- lent, with long ascending branches : leaves long-acuminate, rounded at base, 3 to 6 cm. long, 1 to 3 cm. wide, puberulent above, pilose or glabrate beneath, except for the often densely lanate mid-nerve, on petioles 1 cm. or less in length : racemes slender, flexuous, 1 to 2.5 dm. long; verticels 10-20-flowered, the lower 1.5 cm. apart: bracts small, ovate-attenuate, caducous : calyx hispid, with short-deltoid ciliate subu- late-tipped teeth: corolla pale blue, pilose, 1.2 cm. long; the ventricose tube twice exceeding the calyx ; galea and lip subequal : style bearded. — S. polystachya, Hemsl. 1. c. 563, in part, not Ort. — Chiapas, among the mountains, July, 1864-70 (Ghiesbreght, nos. 129, 743). = = Calyx in anthesis about 5 mm. long. a. Lower surfaces of firm leaves the pedicels and the calyces permanently canes- cent with fine stellate pubescence. 61. S. Palmeri, Gray, Proc. Am. Acad. xxi. 408. — Chihuahua, hillsides at the Frailes, on the mountains above Batopilas, 1885 (Edw. Palmer, no. 259). b. Lower surfaces of leaves the pedicels and the calyces canescent with appresscd short hairs: racemes very elongated, the verticels subequally remote: broad lip of corolla much exceeding the galea. 62. S. lkptostachys, Benth. Lab. 258, & in DC. 1. c. 308; Hemsl. 1. c. 560 ; Briq. in Engl. & Prantl, 1. c. — South central Mexico. Jalisco, near Plateado, Aug. 31, 1897 (J. JV. Hose, no. 2682) : More- los, hills near Cuernavaca, Nov. 10, 1895 (C. G. Pringle, no. 7078). c. Lower surfaces of leaves canescent-tomentose, glabrate or glabrous: calyx vil- lous or hirsute : galea and lip of corolla subequal. 63. S. polystachya, Ort. Leaves broad-ovate, tomentose beneath : racemes panicled: calyx canescent, villous. — Dec. 55; Cav. Ic. i. 17, t. 27; HBK. I.e. 296; Benth. I.e.; Hemsl. I.e. 563; Briq. I.e. S. Unearifolia, Lag. Nov. Gen. & Spec. 2. S. Durandiana (as subspecies), Briq. Bull. Soc. Bot. Belg. xxx. 238, & Ann. Conserv. Jard. Bot. Geneve, ii. 138. — An extremely variable species, the typical form seen only from Michoacan, Tlalpujahua {Graham). Var. caesia, Briq. Leaves narrow-ovate to ovate-lanceolate, glaucous, glabrous or minutely pubescent, not tomentose, beneath : inflorescence as in the type but racemes more elongated, the lower verticels often remote : 512 PBOI EEDING8 OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. calyx generally with Bhorter pubescence. — Hull. Soc. Bot. Belg. xxx. 286 & Ann. Conserv. Jard. Bot. Geneve, I.e. S. caesia, Willd. Enum. i. 10; EiBK. 1. c 295. — Central .Mexico to Central America. Hidalgo, Guadalupe, Valley <>f Mexico, Aug., 1865-66 | Bourgeau, noe. 721, - : . Aug. 17, 1865 (Bilimek, no. 316): Mexico, Takubaya, Aug. 28, l- 'imek, no. 815) : Oaxaca, near Puebla, alt. 2,150 m., Nov. 9, l I.. ( . Smith, no. 908). Var. philippensis. Leave-, as in the species : racemes simple. elongated, 1 to 2 dm. long: calyx short villous. — Oaxaca, Sierra de Sail Felipe, ah. 2,300 m.. Sept. 1. 1894 (E. W. Nelson, no. 1 17-". . ( i. t. 5, l.s'.U (<7. G. Pringle, no. 1958). Var. seorsa. Similar to the last: leaves glabrate heneath : racemes simple, elongated ; verticels many-flowered, the lower 2 to 3 cm. apart. — Mexico, Valley of .Mexico, Sept. 19, 1889 (C. G. Pringle, no. 2818). Var. albicans. Leaves ovate, thinner than in the other forms, slightly canescent above, very white-tomentose heneath : racemes simple, 1 to 1.5 dm. long: calyx densely white-villous. — S. purpurea, var. pubens, Donnell Smith, I.e. iii. 67, not Gray. — Guatemala, Santa Rosa, Depart. Santa Rosa. alt. 920 m., Nov., 1892 (Heydi & Lux in exsicc. J. I). Smitli no. 4394). An extremely canescent plant. Var. POTOSINA, Briq. I.e. Leaves ovate-lanceolate or lanceolate, long-acuminate, pubescent as in the species: racemes simple, 1 dm. or less long: calyx hirsute. — San Luis Potosi, San Jose Pass, July 23, 1890 (C. G. Pringle, no. 3224). (I. Leaves pilose-hispid or glabrate beneath : stems and calyces pubescent with slender spreading glandular hairs. 6 1. S. aequidistans. Erect or ascending: stems 1.5 to 1 dm. high, glandular-hirsute : leaves rather remote, the lower small, the upper much larger, oblong-ovate to broadly deltoid-ovate, obtuse, the upper- most 3 to 4.5 cm. long, erenate-serrate, more or less setulose above: racemes slender, elongated, 0.5 to 2dm. long; the verticels 2 6-flowered, all remote, the lower equidistant, 2 to 3 cm. apart : pedicels filiform, 2 to I mm. long: calyx campanulate, Btrongly bilabiate, the tube twice or thrice as long as the ovate lips; upper lip entire, lower Bhort-cleft: corolla 1.3 cm. long, the pilose or glabrate tube ventrieose, nearly twice ■ ding the calyx; lip a little exceeding the pilose galea: style bearded. — Siwi.oa, between Rosario and Colomas, July 12, 1897 {J. X. Rote, no. 161 FERNALD. MEXICAN SALVIAS. 513 = = = Calyx in anthesis 6 to 8 mm. long. a. Leaves broad-ovate, crenate-serrate, obtuse: bracts large, broad-ovate: upper lip of purple glandular-hairy calyx tridentate : corolla dark-blue, with the calyx, bracts, &c, red-dotted. 65. S. tricuspidata, Mart. & Gal. I.e. 78 ; Benth. I.e. 311 ; Hemsl. 1. c. 56G. — Oaxaca, Sierra de San Felipe, alt. 3,080 m., Aug. 28, 1894 (C. G. Pringle, no. 4845). Originally collected by Galeotti in the same mountains. b. Leaves incised-serrate, acuminate: bracts minute, lance-subulate: calyx blue and green, minutely hispidulous, upper lip entire : corolla paler blue without red dots. 60. S. prasiifolia, Benth. Bot. Sulph. 151, & in DC. I.e. 310; Hemsl. 1. c. 563. S. aliena, Greene, Pittonia, i. 157. — Tepic, Maria Madre Island, April, 1877 (IF. T. Fisher), May, 1897 (E. W: Nelson, no. 4247). Originally described from Tepio. ++ ++ Five species are not identified with recent material. From the descriptions alone it is impossible to make out their exact relationships, or whether they are all distinct from the species here defined. These five plants are: — S. gracilis, Benth. Lab. 258, & in DC. 1. c. 307, described from " New Spain " ; S. protracta, Benth. in DC. 1. c. 309, described from Oaxaca ; S. membranacea, Benth. Lab. 259, & in DC. 1. c. 310, described from " Mexico " ; S. glabra, Mart. & Gal. 1. c. 68, Benth. I.e., described from Oaxaca ; S. herbacea, Benth. Lab. 720, & in DC. 1. c. 311, described from Tehuantepec, Oaxaca. ++ -t-v ++ Leaves cuneate at base, or at least attenuate to the petioles. = Leaves white-villous or pilose beneath. a. Herbaceous. 1. Raceme dense, 4 to 7cm. long: leaves densely villous beneath. O Leaves thick, crenulate-serrate. 67. S. xalapensis, Benth. I.e. 308; Hemsl. I.e. 566; Briq. in Engl. & Prantl, 1. c. S. polystachya, Mart. & Gal. 1. c. 77, not Ort. — Southern Mexico. Vera Cruz, Jalapa, alt. 1,230 to 1,380 m., Jan. 1 6, 1894 (C. L. Smith, nos. 1749, 1756) ; near Motzorongo and Omealca, Feb. 22, 1894 (E. W. Nelson, nos. 132, 177). O O Leaves thin, sharply serrate. 68. S. longispicata, Mart. & Gal. 1. c. 73 ; Benth. 1. c. 307 ; Hemsl. 1. c. 560 ; Briq. 1. c. — Southwestern Mexico. Guerrero, between vol. xxxv. — 33 51 1 PROCEEDINGS OF TIIK AMERICAN ACADEMY. Copala and Jnchitango, alt. Co to 185 m., Feb. 9, 1895 (A*. U\ NeU 1 1 • >. 2300). Originally collected by Oaleotti in MlGHOACAN. 2. Racemes looser, elongated, the terminal one 1 to 3 din. Long: leaves less densely villous. O Calyx in anthesis 4 to 5 mm. long : corolla 1 cm. long. S. CORDOBEN8I8, Briq. Ann. Conserv. Jard. Bot. Geneve, ii. 140. — Vera Cruz, Valley of Cordova, Aug. 24, 1866, and region of Orizaba, Aug. 12, 1866 {Bourgeon, nos. 1591, 2857); Cordova, alt. 790 in.. Aug. 20, 1891 (Seaton, no. 481) : Puebla, oear Bfetlaltoyuca, alt. 250 m., Feb. 27, 1898 (E. A. Goldman, no. 72). O O Calyx in anthesis 8 to 9 mm. long : corolla 2 cm. long. 70. S. monclovonsis- Stems sparingly pilose or glabrate: leaves ovate, acuminate, coarsely crenate-serrate, the primary ones 7 to 8 cm. long, unequally cuneate or rounded-cuneate at base, dark green ami mi- nutely puberulent above, canescent beneath, on petioles 3 to 4 cm. long : peduncles 1 dm. or less long: verticels -l-.S-llowered, the Lowest 1 .') to 3 cm. apart : bracts narrow-ovate, long-acuminate, tbe lowest 1.5 cm. long, sometimes leaf-like and slightly toothed : calyx minutely appressed* pubescent; the tube thrice exceeding the broad-ovate ciliate mucronate- short-acuminate lobes : corolla blue, sparingly pilose; the tube oue half longer than the calyx; the lip twice exceeding the galea: style bearded. — Coahtjila, Caracol Mts., 33.8 km. southeast of Mouclova, Aug., 1880 (Edw. I ■aimer, no. 109G). b. Shrubby at base : leaves thinly villous. 1. Stem erect, pubescent: leaves crenate-serrate: calyx-lobes broad ovate: galea of corolla glandular-pilose. 71. S. \Vakszewicziana, Kegel, Flora, xxxii. 184; Walp.Ann. iii.257; Ilemsl. I.e. 56G. — Described from Guatemala. No specimen Men. 2. Stem ascending, branches sordid-villous : leaves sharply serrate: lower calyx- Lobes lance-ovate, long-attenuate : galea villous not glandular. 72. S. Sanctae-Luciae, Seem. Bot. Herald, 827 ; Ilemsl. 1. c. ;>G5. — Western Mexico. Tepic, Tepic, Jan. & Feb., 1892 {Edw. Palmer, no. 19G4). Originally from Santa Lucia in the Siena Madre. = = Leaves glabrous or puberulent beneath, only the nerves sometimes hispid or pilose, or the youngest minutely eanescent-tomentulose. cm. long, the others shorter: racemes slender, flexuous, the terminal becoming 2 dm. long ; verticels 10-2<)-tlowered, the lower remote, the lowest 1 cm. apart: bracts ovate, acuminate : pedicels filiform, becoming 2 to 3 mm. long: calyx green, strongly bilabiate, the tube twice i seced- ing the lips; the upper lip ovate, acuminate, entire, the lower with narrower attenuate lobes: corolla deep blue, pilose, 1 cm. long; the tube Blightly exserted; galea about equalling the lip : style bearded. — Mo- belos, by streams near Caernavaca, alt. 1,540 m., May 16, 1898 ( C. G. JViiujle, no. 6850), Sept. 29, 1898 (A'. II'. A Holway, no. 3028). c. Calyx in anthesifl 7 to !• mm. long. 1. Stem and leaves glabrous . the latter 1 to 1.3 dm. long, serrate. 80. S. ALYAJACA, Oerst. Vidensk. Meddel. 1853, 38; Ilemsl. I.e. 552. — Described from Costa Rica. No specimen seen. FERNALD. MEXICAN SALVIAS. 517 2. Stems and leaves pubescent, the stems glandular above. O Primary leaves 4 to 5 cm. long, crenate. 81. S. rhombtfolia, Ruiz & Pav. Fl. Per. & Chil. i. 26, t. 36, f. b. ; Benth. 1. c. 310 ; Hemsl. 1. c. 564. — Doubtfully reported from Mexico by Benth. 1. c. O O Primary leaves 1 dm. long, serrate. 82. S. roscida. Herbaceous ? (only the top of the plant seen) : stem closely glandular-puberulent above, the tip sparingly pilose : leaves very thin, elliptic-ovate, acuminate at both ends, coarsely and irregularly serrate, setulose-pilose above, sparingly so and minutely glandular-puber- ulent below ; petioles slender, 5 cm. or less in length: racemes 1 to 1.5 dm. long; the verticels 6-12-flowered, all becoming remote, the lowest 3 to 4 cm. apart : bracts rhombic-ovate, long-acuminate, 6 to 8 mm. long : pedicels filiform, very glandular, 1 cm. or less in length : calyx glandular- puberulent, slightly setulose on the nerves, the long-attenuate lobes one half shorter than the cylindric-campanulate tube : corolla 1.8 cm. long, the tube exserted and slightly curved, glabrous, white ; the blue lower lip somewhat exceeding the pilose galea : style included, bearded. — Northern Mexico. Durango, Chacala, alt. 920 m., March 5, 1899 (E. A. Goldman, no. 340). -H- Generally branching from the base, the stems slender and mostly decum- bent: racemes long-peduncled. (Forms of S. prunelloides might be looked tor here.) ■w Stems and leaves very setulose with long straight slender hairs. = Leaves cuneate at base to short petioles or subsessile, obscurely crenate : bracts broad-ovate. 83. S. veronicaefolia, Gray in Wats. Proc. Am. Acad. xxii. 444. — Jalisco, on moist hillsides, Rio Blanco, June, 1886 (Edw. Palmer, no. 28) ; hillsides near Guadalajara, July 2, 1889 (0. G. Pringle, no. 2555). = = Leaves truncate at base, coarsely crenate-dentate, long-petioled : bracts ovatedanceolate. 84. S. oreopola. Stems repent at base, more or less assurgent, about 5 dm. long : leaves deltoid-ovate, dark green above, pale beneath, setulose on both surfaces, 2 to 3.5 cm. long, 1.5 to 3 cm. wide, on setulose petioles 1.5 to 2.5 cm. long: peduncles 7 to 10 cm. long; verticels 3-6- flowered, all becoming remote, the lowest 6 cm. apart : pedicels pubescent, 2 to 4 mm. long: calyx setulose, open-campanulate, strongly bilabiate ; the broad purple upper lip blunt or acute, the lower with narrower f.l> PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. ite-lanceolate :i<-iit .- lobes: corolla blue, 2 cm. long, the slightly pubes- cenl tube twice exceeding the calyx; the blunt pilose galea one third aa long as the broad lip: style densely bearded. — BIorelos, mountain Bide al 2,150 m. alt., near Cuernavaca, Aug. 9, L898 ( C. G. PringU, no. 7643). — *■* Stems and leaves glandular-pilose, hardly setulose. S. villosa. Stems 2. .3 to 3 dm. high, glandular-pilose below, deusely glandular-yillous above and on the rhachis: leaves thick, pale green or cinereous, deltoid-ovate, mostly blunt at tip, Bubtruncate at 1 entire or obscurely undulate, 1.5 to 3 cm. long, on cinereous-pubescent petioles 0.5 to 1.5 cm. long, the upper Bubsessile: peduncles <•.."> dm. loii-j: verticels 3-6-llowered, all becoming remote, the lowest 2.~> to 3 cm. apart: bracts ovate, acuminate, setulose: pedicels slender. 2 to 3 mm. long : calyx blue-tinged, viscid, pilose-setulose, in anthesis 6 to 7 mm. long; the tube slightly longer than the lips ; upper lips ovate, acumi- nate, entire, lower with two ovate acuminate lobes: corolla violet, 1.8 cm. long; the glabrous tube slightly exserted ; the puberulent galea one third as long as the broad lip : style bearded. — San Luis POTOSI, rare in the mountains, San Miguelito, 187G (Schaffner, no. 678). _»«.*+ Stems and leaves mostly glabrous or puberulent or only sparingly setulose. = Upper lip of calyx tridentate. (/. Calyx-tube hispid: leaves from orbicular to ovate-triangular, 3 to 6 cm. long, 2 to 4 cm. broad. 86. S. GLECIIOMAEFOLTA, IIBK. 1. c. 290, t. 141 ; Beiith. in DC. I.e. 306; Hemsl. I.e. 55G; Briq. I.e. — South central and southern .Mexico. San Luis Potosi, alt. 1,850 to 2,4G0 m., 1878 (Parr>/ oc Palmer, no. 756) : Oaxaca, near Reyes, alt. 2,060 to 3,070 m., Oct. 20, 1894 ( B. W. Nelson, no. JT'.'l). Originally from near Guanajuato. j. b. Calyx glabrous or minutely puberulent : leaves narrowly ovate-triangular, 1 to 1.76 cm. long. 87. S. Forreri, Greene, Pittonia, i. 15G. — Durango, Sierra Madre, west of Durango, alt. 2,500 m., Sept.. Oct., 1881 | A. Forrer). = = Upper lip of calyx entire, subulate-tipped ; calyx densely white-pubescent with long fine viscid Bpreading liairs. 38. S. prunifolia. Stems puberulent, decumbent, assurgent only at the tips, 3 to "» dm. long: leaves orbicular to obovate, rounded or acutish at tip. round or cuneate at base, crenate-serrate, the uppermost largest, 3 to 5 cm. long, 2.5 to 3.5 cm. broad, the lowest much smaller, dull green, FEIINALD. — MEXICAN SALVIAS. 519 minutely puberulent above and on the nerves beneath, on puberulent petioles 0.2 to 1 cm. long: peduncles 7 to 10 cm. long, pubescent above with long fine spreading hairs ; verticels 4-8-flowered, all becoming remote, the lowest 1.5 to 2 cm. apart: bracts narrow-ovate, acuminate: pedicels 2 to 3 mm. long : calyx in anthesis 5 to G mm. long, the tube twice exceeding the subulate-tipped lobes : corolla 1.3 to 1.5 cm. long, the glabrous tube one half exceeding the calyx ; galea puberulent, half as long as the dark blue lip. — Tepic, Santa Gertrudis, in the Sierra Madre, Aug. 8, 1897 (J. N. Rose, no. 3407). D. Axillijlorae, Benth. Small much branched and depressed suffru- tescent plants: the flowers borne in the axils of foliar leaves : corolla- tube scarcely ventricose. * Leaves oblong-linear oblanceolate or spatulate, 0.5 to 1.5 cm. long, entire, canes- cently rough-hispid. 89. S. axillaris, Moc. & Sess. in Benth. Lab. 270 ; Benth. in DC. I.e. 313; Hemsl. I.e. 553; Briq. 1. c. — South central Mexico. With- out locality (Coulter, no. 1118): San Luis Potosi, in the mountains, 187G (Schafner, no. 648), alt. 1,850 to 2,500 m., 1878 (Parry & Palm- er, no. G98): Guanajuato, 1893 (A. Duges, no. 228 A). * * Leaves cuneate-obovate, 5 to 7.5 mm. long, 3-toothed, appressed-setulose. 90. S. cuneifolia, Benth. Lab. 270, & in DC. I.e.; Hemsl., I.e. 555; Briq. I.e. — Southern Mexico. Hidalgo, bare hills above Pa- chuca, alt. 2,600 m., July 18, 1898 ( C. G. Prinyle, no. 6905). Orig- inally described from Oaxaca. E. Candicantes, Benth. Shrubs : leaves oblong or lanceolate, rarely cordate, or when ovate not cordate, beneath tomentose or densely fine canescent, rarely pale and glabrate. (Some species approaching the Scoro- doniae, others the Erianthae.) * Calyx canescent short-pubescent or tomentose, not densely woolly. t- Leaves entire or essentially so. (Reel need forms of S. chamaedryoides may be looked for here.) •w. Leaves sessile or subsessile, narrow-oblong, strongly revolute. 91. S. Coulteri. Branches ligneous, covered with gray-brown bark and numerous approximate leaf-scars: leaves densely cinereous- tomentulose with stellate hairs, strongly revolute, blunt at tip, truncate or subcordate at base, 1 to 1.5 cm. long, 2 to 4 mm. wide : racemes 2 to 3 cm. long ; the rhachis pilose with long branching hairs ; verticels about 6-flowered, slightly remote: calyx tubular-campanulate, glandular-pilose, 520 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. in fen thesis 6 to 7 nun. long; tin- tube twice or thrice exceeding the lance-Babul ate teeth; upper li|> tridentate: corolla 1.2 cm. long, short- pilose, the ■ about equalling the lip: stylo slightly bearded. — Mexico, without locality {Coulter, no. L120). — — I. ivea narrowly triangular-ovate, truncate or slightly cordate at base, on thickisfa winged petioles, closely and densely white-pubescent beneath. 92. S. i LNDICANS, Mait. & Gal. I.e. 61 ; Uenth. I.e. 815 ; II I.e. 554; Iii-iii. 1. c. — Puebla, limestone hills between Tehnacan ami Esperanza, alt. 2,000 m., Dec. 21, 1895 (C. G. Pringle, no. 6245). Essentially the type station of t lie species. ****** Leaves narrow-ovate or oblong, attenuate at base to short petioles, or the upper BubBessile. = Calyx ovate tubular, with short blunt lobes, glandular-pubescent, in anthesis 5 to 6 mm. long: leaves closely white-pubescent beneath. 98. S. THYMOIDES, Benth. Lab. 255, & in DC. 1. c. 31 1 : II. msl. I. c. 566; Briq. I.e. — Southern Mexico. Puebla, limestone hills between Tehuacan ami Esperanza, alt. 2,000 m., Dec. 21. 1895 (C. G. Prin no. G251) : Oaxaca, Mitla ( G. Andrieux, no. L50) ; vicinity of ('<>i\r- lahuaca, alt. 2,150 to 2,300 m., Nov. 12. 1894 {E. W. Nelson, no. 1915). Species based in part on Amlrieux's plant. = = Calyx tubular-campanulate, with acuminate lubes, not glandular-pubescent, in anthesis 6 to 8 mm. long: haves sparingly stellate puberulent or glab- rate. a. Leaves oblong. 1 to 2.6 cm. long, the uppermost subsessile. 1. Leaves finely stellate-puberulent at least when young. 94. S. coahuilensis. Freely branching mostly from the stout woody base; branches assm-;_rent, 0.5 to 7 dm. high; bark pale brown, finely -tellate-puberulent or glabrate: leaves confined mostly to the lower portions of the branches: racemes elongated, becoming 0.5 to :b5 dm. long, the rhachis often glandular-puberulent ; verticels mostly 2-flowered, all remote, the lowest 2 to 3 cm. apart: bracts ovate-oblong, acuminate, caducous: pedicels filiform, 2 to -1 mm. long: calyx granulose-puberu- lent ; tube twice exceeding the ovate-lanceolate subequal lobes ; upper lip entire: corolla 1.5 cm. long, blue with white centre; the glabrous tube nearly twice exceeding the calyx ; the slightly pilose galea one half as long as the broad lower lip. — S. chamaedryoides, Wats.. Pr c. Am. A id. xviii. 137, in part, not Oav. — COAHUILA, rocky hill. Sahillo, 1878 {Parry, no. 29), May, 1898 (Bdw. Palmer, no. 194); Parras, June. 1880, and Lerios, duly, 1880 (Edto. Palmer, nos. 1072, 1064). FERNALD. — MEXICAN SALVIAS. 521 2. Leaves glabrous. 95. S. lycioides, Gray, Proc. Am. Acad. xxi. 408. — Chihuahua, canons, Santa Eulalia Mts., May 1, 1885 (C. G. Pringle, no. 52). b. Leaves ovate or ovate-oblong, 3 to 7 mm. long, all slender petioled. 96. S. serpyllifolia. Erect (?), 5 or 6 dm. high, the ascending brandies brown, short-pubescent in decussating bands with minute white spreading or slightly recurved hairs ; leafy to the inflorescence, the internodes 1 to 1.5 cm. long: racemes becoming 1 to 2 dm. long; verti- cals 2-6-flowered, all becoming remote, the lowest t cm. or so apart : bracts ovate, acuminate, ciliate, caducous : calyx short-hispidulous on the veins ; tube thrice exceeding the ovate lobes ; upper lip blunt, entire, lower with 2 short acuminate lobes: corolla 1.2 cm. long; the glabrous tube one-half longer than the calyx; the lower lip slightly exceeding the pilose galea: style slightly bearded. — S. cltamaedryoides, Wats. Proc. Am. Acad, xviii. 137, in part, not Cav. — San Luis Potosi, with- out locality, alt. 1,850 to 2,460 m., 1878 (Parry & Palmer, no. 751). -t- +- Leaves crenate or crenate-serrate. (A form of S. scorodoniaefolia may be looked for here.) ++ Calyx lobes normal, not conspicuously broadened. = Stems chalky-white with very close hirsute indumentum : leaves ovate, thin, slender-petioled, minutely white stellate beneath: verticils 6-10-flowered : calyx stellate-tomentulose ; the tube thrice exceeding the short ovate lobes ; the upper lip blunt, erect. 97. S. cedrosensis, Greene, Bull. Cal. Acad. i. 212. — Lower California, Cedros Island, March, 1889 (Edw. Palmer, no. 684), March to June, 1897 (A. W. Anthony, no. 294) ; Magdalena Bay, Jan. 14, 1889 (T. S. Brandegee). = = Stems and leaves (at least beneath) more or less cinereous-tomentulose with stellate hairs : verticels 2-6-flowered : calyx-tube twice exceeding the acu- minate lobes. 98. S. chamaedryoides. Cav.1 Leaves elliptic-ovate or narrowly deltoid-ovate, green above, slender-petioled, 1 to 2.5 cm. long. — Ic. ii. 77, t. 197; Sims, Bot. Mag. t. 808; Benth. I.e. 314; Hemsl. I.e. 554; Briq. 1. c. S. chamaedri folia, Andr. Bot. Rep. vi. t. 416. S. Chamaedrys, 1 S. ramosissima. Similar to S. chamaedryoicles, very freely branching above : young branches slightly canescent with short spreading or somewhat re- curved hairs : leaves paler beneath than above, more or less scabrous on both faces with short stiff simple hairs : calyx with similar pubescence on the nerves. — S. chamaedryoides, Gray, Syn. Fl. I.e. 371, not Cav. — Canons of the Rio Grande, S.W. Texas, 1849 ( C. Wright, no. 472 a) : Organ Mts., New Mexico, 1881 (G. R. Vasey). 522 PROCEEDINGS "l THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. Willd. Bort Berol. i. 29, t. 29. — Central Mexico. Za< ah i as. plains. La Honda Station, Aug. 18, L890 (C. G, Pringle, do. .'HTu); Sam Luis Potosi, ;ilt. 1,850 to 2,460 in.. 1878 {Parry & Palmer, do. 71 Hidalgo, bare bills above Pachuca, alt. 2,600 ft., July 18, 1898 | ( . G. Pringle, no. 6907) : Mexico, mountains near Mexico and Guadalupe, Aug. 24, L865 i Bourgeau, do. 855 I. Var. isochroma. Leaves reduced, 0.5 t>> 1.5 cm. long, short-petioled or subsessile, mostly crowded, canescent on both faces. Sam Li is Potosi, in the mountains, Sao Rafael and San Miguelito,1876 (Schaff- ner, nos. 668, 664) ; without locality, alt. 1, *.".<» to 2.4(11) m.. 1*7* I'.m-y & J'd/mer, D08. 750, 75l£). = = = Stems with spreading puhescence : leaves 2 to 3 cm. long; blades little exceeding the petioles. 99. S. paui tii.ORA, HBK. I.e. 303; Benth. I.e. 815; Hemsl. I.e. oG3. — A doubtful species from " New Spain." = = = = Of this section but not identified. S. spicata, \l. & S. Syst. Mant i. 202 (S.pidcheUa, HBK. I.e. 288, t. 1 1". not DC. S. pomifera, Sesse & Moc 1. c. 7, ex. char., not L.) ami S. breviflora, Moc. & Sesse in Benth. Lab. 274, species descrihed from •• New Spain " are placed by Bentham in this section. S. spicata, Gray, Syn. Fl. 1. c. 461, is very different from the plate of S. pidchella, II BK. *+ ++ Calyx funnelform, the lobes becoming amnliate. = Leaves ovate or ovate-orbicular, dark green above, much paler beneath, regularly crenate. 100. S. ballotaeflora, Benth. Leaves rugose, densely white-tomentu- loso beneath, 0.5 to 3 cm. long, rarely larger: racemes <'••"' to 8 cm. long. — Lab. 27<>, & in DC. I.e. 313 ; Torr. Bot. Mex. Bound. LSI; Gray, 1. c. : Hemsl. I.e. 553 ; Briq. 1. c. .V h/.m. Benth. 1. c. — Texas t,, San Luis Potosi. Mexico, without locality {Gregg, no. 322): COAHUILA, Monclova. Aug.. isso, 1 'arras, dune. 1880, Lerios, .1 uly, ISSO. Saltillo, May. 1898 {Edvo. Palmer, nos. 10(59, 1067, 1068, 107): Tamaulipas, 1843 (Berlandier, no. 3186): San Luis Potosi, San Rafael, 1876, S haffner, do. 670) ; near Matehuala, June 18, 1898 (JZ. W. Nelson, no. 4527). Var. Eulaliae. Leaves large, 3 cm. long, broad-ovate, rugose very Blightly pubescent and hardly canescent beneath : racemes very numerous, 1 to 9 cm. long. — Chihuahua, Santa Eulalia Mts., Sept. 1, l (C. G. Pringle, do. 659). FERNALD. — MEXICAN SALVIAS. 523 Var. pinguifolia. Leaves large, as in the last, scarcely rugose, very pale beneath with a close very minute indumentum, not tomentulose, greasy to the touch : racemes all many-flowered. — New Mexico, 1851-52 (C. Wright, no. 1524) : Arizona, San Francisco Mts., back of Clifton, Sept. 3, 1880 ( E. L. Greene, no. 300). = = Leaves very pale on both surfaces, thick, hardly rugose, greasy to the touch, irregularly crenate. 101. S. platycheila, Gray, Proc. Am. Acad. viii. 292, & Syn. Fl. I.e. — Lower California, Carmen Island, 1870, Nov. 1890 (Ediv. Palmer, nos. 7, 878). * * Calyx densely woolly : verticels in short spiciform racemes : lip of corolla distinctly exceeding the galea (otherwise approaching the Erianthae). 102. S. confinis. Branches canescent with fine stellate pubescence, leafy to the inflorescence : leaves oblong, blunt or acutish, rounded-trun- cate or subcuneate at base, very short-petioled, thick and rugulose especially along the closely crenulate margin, closely canescent on both surfaces, or ferrugineous-tinged beneath, 1.5 to 4.5 cm. long, 0.5 to 2 cm. wide : spiciform racemes simple or slightly paniculate, 1 to 4 cm. long, lowest verticels slightly remote: bracts large, broad-ovate, acuminate, somewhat persistent, 0.5 to 1 cm. long, stellate-tomeutose : calyx dark blue, mostly hidden by dense white-lanate pubescence: corolla blue, scarcely 1 cm. long. — S. spicata, Gray, 1. c. 461, not R. & S. — Southern Arizona and adjacent Mexico. Arizona, mountain pass near Fort Huachuca, 1882 (Lemmon, no. 2861) : Sonora, Fronteras, alt. 1,400 m., Sept. 25, 1890 (C. V. Hartman, no. 43). F. Scorodoniae, Benth. Shrubs with ovate (in S. thyrsiflora ovate- lanceolate) rugose leaves generally cordate, rarely cuneate, at base. * Leaves white-tomentose beneath with simple hairs. ■i- Leaves very rough-rugose above, mostly broad-ovate (except in variety of the first species) with obtuse or blunt tips. •*-+ Pedicels very short, at most 3 mm. long : racemes rather dense, often branch- ing : calyx somewhat cuneate-campanulate, in anthesis 4 to 5 mm. long, with short flaring obtuse lobes. - = Pubescence of calyx glandular-villous. 103. S. scorodoniaefolia, Poir. Leaves ovate, subcordate. — Suppl. v. 46: Benth. I.e. 316; Hemsl. I.e. 565; Briq. I.e. S. melissodora, Lag. Gen. & Spec. Nov. 2. S. hirta, Schranck, Syll. PI. Soc. Ratisb. ii. 60 ? according to Benth. S. scorodonia, Benth. Lab. 264. — Central and southern Mexico. San Luis Potosi, alt. 1,850 524 PB0CEEDING8 OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. to 2,460 in., 1878 (Parry & Palmer, do. 730): Mixnn, Guadalupe June 21, 1865 (Bourgeau, do. 295): Oaxaca, Valley of Cuicatlan, alt. 2, to 2,460 in.. Nov. 10, 1894 (A'. II'. Nelson, no. 189*8); Sao Juan del Estado, alt 1,800 m., Oct 20, L895 (L. C. Smith, do. '.'• Papalo, Cuicatlao, alt 1,650 m., I tec. 9, 1895 | I'. Gonzalez, do. 42 Yar. crenaea. Leaves aarrower, oblong-lanceolate, blunt, rounded or subcuneate al base. — S. scorodonia, Benth. PI. Hartw. 20, not Bentb. Lab. 264 — A northern narrow-leaved extreme. AguAb Calientks i ffartweg, no. 1G4): CHIHUAHUA, southwestern section, without locality, 1885 I Edw. J '(timer). = = Pubescence of calyx long-villous, not glandular. 104. S. lasiantha, Beoth. Lab. 276, & in DC. I.e. 821; Hemsl. I.e. 559 5 Briq. I.e. — Range of the last from which it differs ooly in the more villous glandless calyx. Perhaps only a variety of that. Durango, Ramos to hide, Aug., 181)8 (E. W. Nelson, no. 4679): San I.i i- PoTOSi, in tin' mountains, San Rafael, 1876 (JSchqffiner, no. 671); without locality, alt. 1,850 to 2,460 m., 1878 (Parry & Palmer, no. 731); limestone ledges, San Jose Pass, .Inly 23, 1890, and limestone hills. La, Canoas, Oct. 8, 1890 ( C. G. Pringle, nos. 8206, 3278): BlDALGO, calcareous hills near Tula, alt. 2, 160 in., Oct. 5, 189G (C. G. Pringle, no. 6538) : Oaxaca, near Dominguillo, alt. 2,000 in.. Oct. ■">. 1894 (E. W. Nelson, no. 1595). Placed by Bentham and by Briquet in the section Erianthae. ++ .«. Pedicels longer, 3 to 0 mm. long : racemes loosely flowered; verticil- re- mote: calyx tubular-campanulate, in anthesis ij nun. or more Long. = Calyx purplish-violet, glandular-villous, in anthesis nearly 1 cm. long: Lower Lip of corolla almost black ; tulie and galea pale. 105. S. SEMIATRATA, Zucc. Abhandl. Uaier. Akad. WiSB. i. 298 j Benth. in DC. I.e. 316: Ilemsl. 1. c. 565; Briq. 1. c. — Oaxaca, with- out locality, June (Andrieux, no. 149); calcareous bills, Las Sedas, alt 1,850 m., Aug. 2, 1891 (C. G. Pringle, no. 4763), alt. 2,150 m., dune •27. 1895 (A. C. Smith, no. U3)s Dear city of Oaxaca, alt 1,600 to 2,100 in., Oct. 2, 1894 {E. W. Nelson, do. 1511). = = Calyx green (or blue-tinged), glandular-puberulent and minutely hispiduloua on the nerves, in antliesis about (i nun. Icing : coralla blue. 106. S. Gonzalezii. Branches very slender, BOmewhat villous, the youngest parts and tlie rhachises glandular-puberulent : leaves broad- ovate, bluntisb at tip, truncate or Bubcordate at base, green and very rugose, slightly pubescent above, white-villous beueath, crenulate, 1 to FERNALD. — MEXICAN SALVIAS. 525 2.5 cm. long, 0.75 to 1.75 cm. broad, on villous petioles 1 cm. or less in length : racemes simple, 0.5 to 1.5 cm. long ; verticels 3-8-flowered, all remote, the lowest 2 to 2.5 cm. apart: pedicels 3 to 5 mm. long, glaudular-puberulent : calyx tubular-campanulate ; the tube twice or thrice exceeding the ovate mucrouate lobes ; upper lip entire : corolla deep blue, 1.5 cm. long; the glabrate tube twice exceeding the calyx; the pilose galea slightly exceeding the dark lip : style bearded. — Oaxaca, El Parian-Etla, alt. 370 m., Nov., 1898 ( V. Gonzalez & C. Conzatti, no 903). •+- •*- Leaves less rugose, narrow-ovate, mostly acuminate at tip. ++ Flowers in small cymes forming a terminal thyrsus : leaves ovate-lanceolate. 107. S. TiirRSiFLORA, Benth. Bot. Sulph. 151, & in DC. I.e.; Hemsl. 1. c. 566 ; Briq. 1. c. — Southwestern Mexico, Tepic to Michoacan. Jalisco, vicinity of Masco ta and San Sebastian, alt. 1170 to 1540 m., March, 1897 (E. W. Nelson, nos. 4057, 4081): Michoacan, mountains near Patzcuaro, Nov. 10. 1890, Dec. 21, 1891 (C. G. Pringle, nos. 3593, 4097). Originally from Tepic. *+ *+ Flowers in simple or more or less branched generally paniculately or virgately disposed racemes. = Branches short-pilose with recurved spreading hairs. a. Calyx tubular, in fruit 5 mm. long, the tube four times exceeding the very short broad lobes. 108. S. alamosana, Rose, Contrib. U. S. Nat. Herb. i. 110. — Sonora, Sierra de los Alamos, 1890 (Ediv. Palmer, no. 345). b. Calyx campanulate, in fruit 6 to 7 mm. long, the tube twice exceeding the narrower lobes. 109. S. chapalensis, Briq. Ann. Conserv. Jard. Bot. Geneve, ii. 145. — Jalisco, rich wooded canons, mountains near Lake Chapala, Nov. 22, 1892 (C. G. Pringle, no. 4351). = = Branches pubescent with ascending soft hairs. 110. S. niultiramea. Stems about 1 m. high, freely paniculate- branched, the upper brandies leafless and bearing racemes : leaves narrow-ovate, acuminate, rounded or subcordate at base, somewhat rugose and scabrous-hispidulous above, densely tomentose beneath, short-petioled, 2 to 5 cm. long, 1 to 2.5 cm. broad : inflorescence paniculate ; lower branches leafy and axillary, upper naked; terminal racemes 1.2 dm. or less in length, the others shorter; verticels 2-12-flowered, all becoming remote : bracts lance-subulate, minute, early deciduous : pedicels 2 to 526 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMEBIC AN ACADEMY. 1 mm. long, spreading: calyx tubular, in anthesia 8.5 to 1 mm. long, appressed-pilose ; the tube 3 or 1 times as long aa the shorl blunt lobes: corolla blue, 1 to L.2 cm. long; the glabrous tube one half longer than the calyx; the pilose gal&a twice exceeded l>y the exteriorly pilose lip: Btyle bearded. — Southern Mexico. Oaxaca, mar city of Oaxaca, alt 2,300 to 2,920 m., Sept., 1894 (E. W. Nelson, no. 1 148), alt. 1,850 m., Oct. 25, 1894 (C. G. Prmgle, qo. 6018); near Reyes, alt 1,700 to 2,060 m., Oct. 20, 1894 (E. W. Nelson, no. 1783); mountains of Jaya- catlan, alt. 1,300 m., Nov. 1. 1894, alt. 2,000 m., Oct 18, 1895 (A. 0. Smith, nus. 272, 860) ; near Chilpancingo, alt. 2.77o to 3,140 m., Dec 24, 1894 (E. IV. Nelson, no. 2235): Chiapas, without locality | '■'/ many-flowered verticels later becoming a little remote, all the parts more or lesN red- punctate-: bracts ovate-acuminate, exceeding the calyx, white- tomentose at base, yellowish at tip. soon deciduous: calyx ovate-campanul densely tomentose with pale bine freely-branching hairs, with very short blunt inconspicuous lobes: corolla 1.2 cm. long, blue, red-punctate and whitened above with stellate tomentum ; tube somewhal exserted; ihe galea hardly equalling the lip: Btyle Kearded. — Oaxaca, El Parian - Ktla. alt. 370 m.. Nov. 1898 ( V. Gonzalez & C.Gonzatti, no. 902). = = Branchlets and lower faces of [eaves with white indumentum. ". Leaves broad-ovate, -harply erenale dentate : calyx-lobes blunt. 11 •"'. S. pruinosa. Rather stout shrub with pale brown hark, the younger parts densely pruinose with stellate hairs: leaves 2.5 to 5 cm. FERNALD. — MEXICAN SALVIAS. 527 long, 1.5 to 3.5 cm. wide, blunt at tip, rounded or subcuneate at base, green very rugose and glabrate above, very white beneath, irregularly crenate-dentate ; petioles 1.25 cm. or less in length: racemes 1 dm. or less long; verticels many-flowered, rather crowded, the lowest 1 to 1.5 cm. apart ; all the parts red-punctate ; rhachis pruinose-pubescent : bracts ovate-acuminate, bluish, finely stellate-pubescent: calyx ovate-campanu- late, closely pruinose-pubescent, bluish-tinged, in anthesis 4 to 5 mm. long; the tube twice or thrice exceeding the deltoid blunt lobes : corolla 1.2 cm. long, pruinose-stellate ; the tube one half longer than the calyx; the galea about equalling the lip : style bearded. — Jalisco, road between Mesquitec and Monte Escobedo, Aug. 26, 1897 {J. N. Rose, no. 2601). b. Leaves oblong-ovate, bluntly crenate : calyx-teeth subulate. 114. S. Goldmanii. Stem stout, 6 or 7 dm. high, herbaceous, or fruticose at base, puberulent, with numerous ascending branches above : leaves dull-green, slightly rugose above, cinereous and red-punctate be- neath, 1 dm. or less long, bluntish at tip, rouuded-cuneate to petioles 2 cm. or less in length: racemes 0.5 to 1.5 dm. long; verticels 6-12- flowered, the lower 2 cm. apart, the upper approximate ; rhachis lanate : bracts lance-ovate, caducous : calyx in anthesis 5 to 6 mm. long, lanate at base, the deltoid subulate-tipped lobes one half as long as the tube : corolla red-punctate, 1.5 cm. long; the tube somewhat exserted, glabrous below; the lips stellate-pilose without, the lower exceeding the galea: style barely exserted, bearded. — Northwestern Mexico. Chihuahua, near Batopilas, alt. 1690 to 2000 in., Oct. 4, 5, 1898 {E. A. Goldman, no. 214). ■<- -<- Calyx blue, invested in long white wool : leaves becoming glabrate, conspic- uously red-punctate beneath. 115. S. rubropunctata, Robinson & Fernald, Proc. Am. Acad. xxx. 121. — Sonora, in the canon, Huehuerachi, Dec. 12, 1890 (F. E. Lloyd, no. 451). * * * Leaves glabrous, or the youngest slightly puberulent on the nerve3 beneath. 116. S. Nelsonii. Shrub with smooth reddish-brown bark, the younger branchlets slightly puberulent : leaves ovate, blunt or acutish at tip, rounded at base, 1.5 to 5 cm. long, 1 to 3 cm. broad, dull green and obscurely rugose above, paler beneath, crenate-serrate: petioles slender, puberulent, 1 cm. or less in length : inflorescence more or less paniculate ; the racemes 1 dm. or less long, the upper terminating leafless branches ; verticels 6-12-flowered, becoming a little remote, the lowest 1 to 2 cm. PROCEEDINGS OF I" 1 1 K AMERICAN ACADEMT. apart: calyx cuneate-campanulate, resembling that of S. icorodoniaefolia, . short white-villous, in antheaia 5 to 6 nun. Long ; the tube three or four tiin Bding the Bhort blunt lips: corolla blue, pilose, L.2 cm. long; the tube included or barely exserted; the lip Blightly exceeding the galea: style bearded. — Puebla, between Acatlan and Piaxtla, alt. 1,230 to 1,880 m., Nov. 22, 1894 (R II'. Nehon^o. 2005). The calyx has ;i Btrong ginger-like fragrance. * * * * Leaves pubescent beneath : plant not identified. 117. S. Kkkki.ii. Benth. Lab. 263, & in DC. Lc. 316, with ovate Cordate very rugose leaves canuseent tomeiitose beneatli, and with d( paniculate-branched racemes, the calyx pilose-hirsute, not canescent- toinentose, described from Tlalpujahua, Michoacan, and from Regla. G. Cordifoliae, Benth. Tall herbs or shrubs (ours herbs) with broad cordiform herbaceous leaves green or pale beneath and cordate al base, at least the lowermost long-petioled. (<& purpvrascens & S. Martensii might be looked for here.) * Stems pilose-hispid : leaves crenate, pale beneatli : calyx pilose-hispid, more or less glandular. 118. S. A.MARI3SIMA, Ort. Dec. 4; Edw. Bot. Reg. iv.t. 347; Benth. 1. C 317 j 1 leinsl. 1. c. 553 ; Briq. 1. c. 280. ,S. circinata, Cav. Ic. iv. 9, t. 318. S. amara, Jacq. Ilort. Schoenb., iii. 2, t. 255. S. hirsuta, Si & Moc. I.e. 8. S. amethyst i tut, Donnell Smith, Knuin. PI. Guat. i. 35, ii. 62, in part, not Smith. — S. cyanea, Donnell Smith I.e. iii. l'>7. iv. 125, not Benth. — A common species from Central Mexico to Central America and Panama. Without locality {Uhde, no. 7(JI): San Luifl Potosi, alt. 1,850 to 2,1C)0 m., 1878 (Parry iV Palmer, no. 752 ! Hidalgo, hills above Pachuca, alt. 2,550m., duly 18, 1898 {C. G. Pringle, no. 6914): Mexico, Guadalupe, Aug. 17. is f>5 (Bilimek, no. 804); Valley of Mexico, May 11, 1865 (Bourgeau, no. 125, in part), Sept. 19, L889 (C. G. Pringle, no. 2817); Rio Hondo Canon. Aug. 22, L890 (<'. G. Pringle, no. .')1 ">■">): Miciioacan, Tlalpujahua (Graham): Oaxaca, Monte Alban, alt. 1,790 m., duly 20, 1894 ( /.. O. Smith, no. 171); Valley of Oaxaca, alt. 1,540 to 1,790 m., L894 (A'. W. Helton^ nos. 1108, L289) : Guatkmai.a, Cohan, Dept. Aha Verapaz, alt. 1,320 ra., duly, 1885, and Santa Rosa, Dept. Baja Verapaz, alt. 1,540 m., duly. L887 ( //. <•.,„ Tuerckheim in exsicc. d. 1). Smith, nos. lid. l 192); San Lucas, Dept. Zacatepequez, alt. 1,700 m., April, 1890 (./. D. Smith, no. 2187); Estanzuela, Dept. Santa RoBa, alt. 77i»m., Aug., L892, Santa Rosa, alt. 925 in.. .May, 1893, and Laguna do Ayarza, Dept. da- FERNALD. MEXICAN SALVIAS. 529 Iapa, alt. 2,460 m., Sept., 1892 (Heyde & Lux in exsicc. J. D. Smith, nos. 4050, 4564, 4056 : Panama, Gatun (Sutton Hayes). * * Stems puberulent above and slightly short-pilose on the angles, densely woolly at the nodes : leaves crenate-serrate : calyx puberulent and minutely pilose. 119. S. sidaefolia, Mart. & Gal. I.e. 67; Benth. I.e. 318; Hemsl. I.e. 565 ; Briq. I.e. — Oaxaca, wet ravines, Sierra de San Felipe, alt. 2,600 ui., Jan. 3, 1895 (C. G. Pringle, no. 5643). Originally collected in the cordillera of Oaxaca. H. Rudes, Benth. Herbs with ovate leaves cordate at base, subsessile or very short-petioled. * Bracts ovate-lanceolate, 1 to 1.5 cm. long, firm and persistent : calyx in anthesis 1 cm. long : corolla crimson, 3 cm. long : plant weak, pilose-hispid, the leaves firm and lucid. 120. S. sessilifolia, Gray in Wats. Proc. Am. Acad. xxii. 445; Briq. Ann. Couserv. Jard. Bot. Geneve, ii. 152. — Jalisco, bottom of ravine, Rio Blanco, July, 1886 (Ediv. Palmer, no. 184) ; ravines near Guadalajara, July 1, 1889 (G. G. Pringle, no. 3058). In its corolla approaching the Fulgentes. * * Bracts minute, caducous. -i- Stems simple or subsimple from woody base, more or less pilose : leaves green on both faces, blunt or obtuse : calyx in fruit 7 to 8 mm. long. 121. S. platyphylla, Briq. 1. c. 50. S. amarissima, Wats. I.e., not Ort. — Jalisco, hills, Rio Blanco. July, 1886 (Edw. Palmer, no. 183) ; hillsides near Guadalajara, July 3, 1889 ( G. G. Pringle, no. 2560). •*- -*- Stem freely branching above, pilose with somewhat recurved hairs : leaves canescent, pilose beneath, acuminate : fruiting calyx about 5 mm. long. 122. S. nepetoides, HBK. I.e. 299, t. 150. S. amarissima, Benth. I.e. 317, as syn. ; Hemsl. 1. c. 553, as syn. ; not Ort. — South central Mexico. Morelos, mountain side near Cuernavaca, alt. 2,160 m., Aug. 9, 1898 (C. G. Pringle, no. 7612). Originally from Guanajuato. § 4. Erianthae, Benth. Shrubs generally with rugose leaves (not in S. populifolia). Calyx densely lanate. Lips of the corolla subequal or the galea longer ; the tube a little exserted, straight, veutricose or enlarged above. * Pubescence of calyx purple or rose-colored. i- Leaves lanceolate or linear-lanceolate, green above, white-lanate beneath: ra- ceme elongated, 4 dm. or less in length : corolla white, lanate. 123. S. leucantha, Cav. Ic. i. 16, t. 24; Hook. Bot. Mag. t. 4318; Benth. I.e. 321; Hemsl. I.e. 560; Briq. in Engl. & Prantl, 1. c. S. VOL. XXXV. 3-1 530 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. tricolor, S & Moc. I.e. 8. — Coahuila to Oaxaca, often cultivated. Without locality {Graham): Coahuila, garden at Saltillo, 1848 17): Zai itecas, in plaza, Monte Escobedo, Aug 27, 1897, and on tin* Siena de Ins Diorones, near Plateado, Sept 1,1897 (J. X. Rot , 2641,8627): San Li is Potosi, Dear Santa .Maria. L876 (Schajjher, no. 669). -•- i- Leaves ovate, sabcordate : corolla reddish. ■>-* Leaves very rugose, 2.5 to 1 cm. long, on -hurt petioles 1 to B mm. long. 124. S. LANTANAEFOLIA, Mart. .V Gal. I.e. 69 J Benth. I.e. .ll'l' ; Hemsl. I.e. 559 j Briq. 1. c. — Puebla, Ailixco, July 25- Aug. 1. 1 l /.'. W. Nelson). Originally from Pckula. Seaton's im. ~>nn if, ,m Maltrata, Vera CrUZ, is n. ar this species but not satisfactorily referable tO it. *+ *+ Leaves hardly rugose, 0.5 to 1 dm. long, on petioles 1.6 to 2 6 cm. long. 125. S. populifolia. Shrub with gray bark : branchlets and petioles lanate with yellowish white pubescence: leaves ovate, bluntly acuminate, crennlate, green ami puberulent above, \\ hite-velutinous beneath : raceme 1.5 dm. or less in length, simple or with a tendency to branch ; verticela about G-Howered, becoming a little remote : bracts ovate, acuminate. 1 cm. long, purple-lanate without, soon deciduous: calyx campanulate, in an- thesis 1.8 cm. long, the tube twice or thrice exceeding the deltoid acu- minate lobes; upper lip entire, lower 2— lobed: corolla pilose, reddish, 3.5 cm. long, the galea slightly exceeding the lip : long-exserted por- tion of style glabrous. — Jalisco, Bolaiios, Sept., 18i>7 <./. N. Rose, no. 2802). * * Pubescence of dorsal and ventral portions of calyx dark red, of the sides bril- liant yellow: corolla dark red ; the lip much shorter than the galea: leaves ovate-lanceolate, acuminate at base, very rugose above. 12G. S. Pittieri, Briq. Bull. Soc. Bot Belg. xx\. pt 1. 237. De- scribed from Costa Rica, and doubtfully referred by its author to this group. >i 5. Macrostaciiyak, lienth. Pubescent large-leaved shrubs or herbs. Racemes dense, thick, with large thick firm leaf like persistent bracts. Corolla blue or white, twice or thrice as long as the calyx. * Villous herb: leaves ovate, rounded or subcuneate to a winged petiole: verti- cals very many flowered, Bomewhat remote. 127. S. CLINOPODIOIDE8, HBK. I.e. 294,t 145; Benth. 1. c. ; Hems!. I.e. 554 j Briq. I.e. S. parquerensis, .Moc. & Sess. in Benth. Lab. 273; FERNALD. — MEXICAN SALVIAS. 531 Benth. in DC. I.e.; Hemsl. I.e. 562; Briq. I.e. S. patzcuarensis, Sess. & Moc. PI. Nueva Espaiia, ed. 2, 8. — Sierra Madre of Western Mexico. Chihuahua, 100 km. S. of Guadalupe y Calvo, alt. 2,300 to 2, GOO m., Aug., 1898 (E. W. Nelson, no. 4807). Michoacan, sandy fields, hills of Patzcuaro, Oct. 11, 1892 (6". G. Pringle, no. 4258). Originally collected by Humboldt & Bonpland near Patzcuaro. * * Canescent-puberulent shrub : the firm leaves pale beneath : corolla pale blue or whitish. 128. S. Siiannoni, Donnell Smith, Bot. Gaz. xix. 256. — Southern Mexico and Central America. Chiapas, top of ridge back of Tonala, alt. 370 to 770 m., Aug. 10, 1895 (R W. Nelson, no. 2898) : Guate- mala, Volcan Chiugo, Dept. Jutiapa, alt. 925 m., Oct., 1892 (IF. C Shannon in exsicc. J. D. Smith, no. 3612); Chupadero, Dept. Santa Rosa, alt. 1,540 m., Oct., 1892 {Heyde & Lux in exsicc. J. D. Smith no. 4052). The Chiapas plant has broader leaves and bracts than those from Guatemala, but they undoubtedly belong together. § 6. Longiflorae, Benth. Corolla from 2 to 12 cm. loug, of vari- ous colors. (See note under § Brachyanthae.) A. Ln.teae, Benth. Shrubs with axillary or racemose flowers : corolla yellow, ventricose below the throat. * Flowers axillary, solitary : corolla 2 to 3 cm. long : leaves cordate-ovate, 2.5 cm. or less long, very rugose, canescent-tomentose beneath. 129. S. aspera, Mart. & Gal. I.e. 71; Benth. in DC. I.e. 327; Hemsl. 1. c. 553 ; Briq. 1. c. — Southern Mexico. Puebla, dry calcare- ous hills, Tehuacan, alt. 1,700 m. [the original station of Galeotti], Nov. 27, 1895 (C. G. Pringle, no. 6240): Oaxaca, Jayacatlan, alt. 1,320 m., June 3, 1894, and Nov. 18, 1895 (L. O. Smith, nos. 17, 897) ; near Dominguillo, alt. 2,000 m., Oct. 3, 1894 (E. W. Nelson, no. 1587). * * Flowers racemose. -i- Calyx invested with yellow or yellow and reddish tomentum : corolla yellow, red within, 2 to 3 cm. long: leaves rugose, canescent-tomentose beneath. 130. S. CHRysantha, Mart. & Gal. 1. c. 72 ; Benth. 1. c. 326 ; Hemsl. I.e. 554; Briq. I.e. — Southern Mexico and Central America. Guer- rero, between Tlapa and Tlaliscatilla, alt. 1,200 to 1,380 m., Dec. 5, 1894 (E. W. Nelson, no. 2049) ; Oaxaca, Monte Alban, alt. 1,850 m., Sept. 4, 1894 (C. G. Pringle, no. 4862), Oct. 11, 1895 (L. C. Smith, no. 950); Valley of Oaxaca, alt. 1,540 to 1,630 m., Sept. 25, 1894 (E. W. Nelson, no. 1244): Chiapas, without locality (Ghiesbreght, no. PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. 765) ; between San Cristobal and Teopisca, alt 2,060 to 2, COO m., Dec. l. i id between Hacienda Junoana and San Vincente, alt 1,800 to 1,850 id., Dec 12, L895 (E. W. Nelson, nos, 8429, 8507). *- «- Calyx glandular-puberulent : corolla 8.6 to \ cm. long: leaves cordate, acu- minate, the lowest often 8 dm. long. 181. S. MADRENSis, Seem. Bot Herald, 827, t. 70; Hemsl. I.e. 560. — Described from the Sierra Mad re of northwestern Mexico. Not Been. />'. Tnflaiae, Benth. Shrubs: calyx inflated-companulate, brightly col- ored: corolla scarlet; the tube subventricose. (Calyz and corolla by rare exception white.) * Leaves ovate-lanceolate to oblong, cuneate or narrowed at base, -t- Calyx and corolla glabrous or merely pubemlent : style glabrous. 132. S. Skssei, Benth. Lab. 288, & in DC. I.e. 832 j Hemsl. l.c. 5G.3; Briq. l.c. 282. S. Roezli, Scheidw. Fl. des Serres. xiv. 81, t 1407. S. semperflorens, La Llave in La Nat. vii. Apehd. 81, ex cbar. S.fastuosa, Sesse &. Moc. I.e. 7. Rhodochlamys tpecioea, Schaner, Lin- uaea, xx. 7'»7. — Southern Mexico. Mouklos, Cuernavaca, Nov. 11. 1865 i Bourgeau, no. 1238). -*-■ +- Calyx and corolla glandular pilose : style pilose. 133. S. TVaoneriana, Polak. Linnaea, xli. 591. — Described from Costa Rica. Not seen. * * Leaves ovatedanceolate, cordate at base : stems viscid-hirsute. l-'ll. S. apgi.utinans, Lair- Gen. iV Spec. Nov. 2; Benth. I.e.; Hemsl. l.c. 552; Briq. La — Described from "New Spain." Not Been. * * * Leaves ovate, acuminate, rounded at base, white-tomentose beneath, 1 dm. or less in length : branches tomentose: shrub or small tree (1 to 6 m. high). 1 35. S. PUBE8CKN8, Benth. Lab. 728, *V in DC. I. e. ; Hemsl. I. c 568 ; Briq, i#c, — Southern Mexico. Morelos, near Cuernavaca, Oct '-'7, 1895, and Nov. 0, 1895, calyx and corolla white (C. G. Pringle, nos. 708<>. 7065): Oaxaca, San Dionicio (Andrieux, no. 1 18) : Jayacatlan, alt 1 880 m., Se,,t. 10, 189-1 (L. C. Smith, no. 170); Monte Alban, alt 1,790 m., Oct 4, 1894 (C. G. Pringle, no. 4960) ; near Oaxaca, alt. l.dOO to 1,930 in., Oct. 2. 1894, near Huajuapam, alt. 1,470 to 2,000 m., Nov. 19, 1894, and near Tlapancingo, alt 1,850 to 2,460 m., Dec. 7, 1894 (A'. II. . uos. 1972, 1521, 2091). FERNALD. — MEXICAN SALVIAS. 533 * * * * Leaves deltoid-ovate to orbicular, coriaceous, pubescent on the nerves beneath, 4 cm. or less long: brandies slender, purplish, glabrous or glabrate. 136. S. Regla, Cav. Ic. v. 33, t. 455 ; Benth. Lab. 288, & in DC. I.e., 333; Lindl. Bot. Reg. xxvii. t. 14; Hemsl. I.e. 564; Briq. I.e. S. deltoidea, Pers. Syn. i. 28. S. negla, Pers. 1. c. as syn. S. erenata, Mart. & Gal. 1. c. 74 ; Benth. 1. c. 348 ; Hemsl. 1. c. 555 ; Briq. Ann. Conserv. Jard. Bot. Geneve, ii. 157. — Central and southern Mexico. Without locality (Coulter, no. 1099, Gregg, no. 340) : Coahuila, Lerios, July, 1880 (Edw. Palmer, no. 1079) ; shaded gulches of limestone hills, Carneros Pass, Sept. 1, 1889 (C. G. Pringle, no. 2384): Durango, Santiago Papasquiaro, 1896 (Edw. Palmer, no. 404), Aug. 7, 1898 (E. W. Nelson, no. 4663) : San Luis Potosi, in woods, San Rafael, 1876 (Schaffner, no. 665) ; without locality, 1878 (Parry & Palmer, no. 741); San Luis Potosi, 1898 (Edw. Palmer, no. 726) : Agtjas Calien- tes, by brooks (Hartweg, no. 165): Guanajuato, 1880 (A. Duges): Oaxaca, near Coixtlahuaca, alt. 2,150 to 2,300 m., Nov. 12, 1894 (E. W. Nelson, no. 1917). C. Fulgentes, Benth. Shrubs, rarely herbs : calyx tubulose-campan- ulate : corolla scarlet or crimson ; the tube straight, ventricose. * Freely branching shrubs (rarely herbs) with leaves 1 to 4 cm. long. f- Flowers axillary. 137. S. disjuncta. Branches ferrugineous-pubescent: leaves cordate, ovate, blunt or acuminate, 4 cm. or less long, rugose, crenulate, dark green and hispid above, canescent and pilose beneath, on slender petioles : verticels mostly 2-flowered, in the axils: pedicels 6 mm. or less in length, usually twisted : calyx pilose on the nerves, in anthesis 1.2 to 1.5 cm. long ; the tube twice exceeding the ovate acuminate lobes ; upper lip entire : corolla 3 to 4 cm. long, minutely pilose, the ventricose tube twice exceeding the calyx ; galea and lip subequal : style bearded. — Chiapas, among rocks, Aug., Sept. (Ghiesbreght, nos. 76,753); near San Cristobal, alt. 2,150 to 2,460 in., Sept. 18, 1895 (E. W. Nelson, no. 3166). A unique species. ■*- i- Flowers in terminal racemes. •w. Leaves ovate or broad oblong. = Pubescence of branches and leaves simple. a. Calyx hispidulous on the nerves. 1. Leaves glabrous or at least glabrate beneath. 138. S. Grahami, Benth. Bot. Reg. xvi. t. 1370, & in DC. 1. c. 335 ; Lodd. Bot. Cab. xviii. t. 1798; Ortgies, Gartenfl. vii. t. 242; Hemsl. 534 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. I.e. 557; Briq. in Engl. & Prantl La S. microphylla, Gray, Proc. Am. Acad. \\i. I"7. in part, not Benth. — Northern and central Mexi '. not clearly separable from S. microphyUa. Chihuahi \. 100 km. south of Guadalupe y Calvo, alt. 2,800 to 2,620 m., Aug., 1 ( /.'. W. Nelson,x\o. 1812'); Batopilas, alt. 1,690 to 2,1 m., Oct 1 i /•:. .1. Goldman, no. 212) : Coahuila, hillside, Saltillo, Mas. 1898 Edw. Palmer, no. 161): Durango, by Btream, Durango, Nov. 1896 (Edw. P'llnwr, no. 811); near El SaltO, duly 12, L 898, and in the Si Madre, 25 km. north of Guanacevi, alt. 2,800 to 2,620 m., Aug. 17. 1898 (E. W. Nelson, nos. 4557, 17.").")) : Za< atecas, hills of Zacatecas, Oct. 26, 1888 1 G. G. Pringle, no. L764) ; in the Sierra Madre, Aug. 18, 1897, and near Plateado, Sept. 1. 1897 (/. N. Rose, nos. 2402, 2804): San Luis Potosi, in the mountains about San Luis Potosi, 1876 | >- ; ffher, no. 660), 1878 (Parry & Palmer, nos. 7 17. 748): Vera Cruz, Mt. Orizaba, alt. 2.770 ra., Aug. 8, 1891 (Seaton, no. 260) : Hidalgo, Zima- pan (GoitUer, no. 1093): Mexico, ledges and hanks. Sierra de las Cruces, Oct. 23, 1892, and Serrania de Ajusco, alt. 2,770 in., .May 28, 1898 (G. G. Pringle, nos. 4298, 7548). 2. Leaves pubescent beneath. O Shrubs. + Leaves mostly less than 2 cm. long. 130. S. MICROPHYIXA, HBK. I.e. 295. Leaves rounded at tip, slightly pubescent. — Benth. 1. c. ; Ilemsl. 1. c. oGl ; Gray, 1. e.. in part : Briq. 1. c. — Central and southern Mexico. San Luis Potosi, San Miguelito, 1876 (Sehaffner, no. GG2) ; in market of San Luis Potosi, 1898 (Edw. Palmer,no. 640£) : Mexico, Valley of Mexico (Schaffner, no. 394); Toluca, Sept. 17,1898 (E. W. D. Holway, no. 3136): Oaxaca, Tehuacan, alt. 615 m., June 21. 1896 (C.Conzatti, no. 163). Var. CANE8CENS, Gray. I.e. Leaves and branehlets denselj caues- cent-pubescent. — Chihuahua, in shade of cliffs, hills near Chihuahua, Oct. 17. 1885 (C. G. Pringle, no. 637): Zacatecas, hills near Zacate- cas. Mar. 17. 1885 (C. G. Pringle, no. 239), alt. 2,460 m. Dec. 8, L898 (O.G.Deam, no. 139). Var. Wislizeni, day. I.e. 408. Puherulent : leaves narrowed to acutish tips. — ( IhiHUAIRA. Sierra Madre wi-.-t of Chihuahua ( Wislizt THIS, no. 102); north of Batopilas, 1885 (Edw. Palmer, no. 379). + + Leaves larger. X Leaves subsessile or short (8 mm.)-petioled. 140. S. tricolor, Lemaire, 111. Hort. iii. Misc. 71, t. 120, & Fl. des FERNALD. — MEXICAN SALVIAS. 535 Serres, xii. 109, t. 1237; Hemsl. I.e. iv. 81. — Introduced iuto culti- vation from Mexico. X X Leaves long-petioled. -ff- Corolla 2.5 to 2.75 cm. long. □ Leaves thin, hardly rugose, with subacuminate tips, pubescence rather sparse. 141. S. Lemmoni, Gray, Proc. Am. Acad. xx. 309, & Syn. Fl. 1. c. 461; Hemsl. I.e. — Arizona and Chihuahua. Chihuahua, Canon de San Diego, Sept. 17, 1891 (C. V. Hartman, no. 738) ; foothills of Sierra Madre, near Colonia, Aug. 29, 1899 (K W. Nelson, no. 6315). □ □ Leaves rugose, mostly rounded at tips : pubescence more abundant. 142. S. neurepia. Freely branching shrub: branches puberulent, the younger parts pilose or densely villous : leaves ovate or round-ovate, truncate or subcordate at base, coarsely crenate, thick, rather densely short-pubescent on both faces, 2.25 to 2.75 cm. long, twice exceeding the slender petioles : racemes 1 dm. or less in length ; verticels mostly 2-flowered, all becoming a little remote : bracts ovate, ciliate, caducous : calyx glandular-puberulent, a little hispidulous on the nerves, tubular- campanulate, in anthesis 1 to 1.3 cm. long ; the tube twice exceeding the ovate-acuminate lobes : upper lip entire : corolla-tube pale, glabrous, twice exceeding the calyx ; the pilose galea hardly equalling the red lip : style bearded. — Central Mexico. San Luis Potosi, in woods near Morales, 1876 (Schaffner, no. 661) ; without locality, alt. 1,850 to 2,460 m., 1878 (Parry & Palmer, no. 754) ; in the market of San Luis Potosi, 1898 (Edw. Palmer, no. 640). Graham's no. 1096 without locality apparently belongs here, and Bourgeau's no. 856 from near Guadalupe, Mexico, though with larger thinner leaves, may be an extreme form. This species, as well as S. microphylla, is sold in the market of San Luis Potosi as a Mirto, decoction from them being used to allay fever, head- aches, and nervous irritations. -H- -ff- Corolla 3.25 to 3.5 cm. long. 143. S. Schaffneri. Branches glandular-puberulent and slightly pilose : leaves thickish, rugose, deltoid-ovate, acuminate, rounded-trun- cate at base, puberulent on both faces, 2.5 to 4 cm. long, 1.5 to 3 cm. wide, irregularly crenulate, on slender petioles 1 to 2.5 cm. long : racemes becoming 1 to 1.5 dm. long; verticels mostly 4-flowered, all becoming remote, the lowest 2.5 cm. apart: bracts 5 mm. long, ovate, long-acuminate : pedicels 3 to 5 mm. long : calyx tubular-campanulate and minutely hispidulous, in anthesis, 1 to 1.2 cm. long; the tube twice 536 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. ing the lobes; upper lip oblong-ovate, entire, blunt, lower with two acuminate narrower lobes: corolla-tube glabrous, twice exceeding the calj \ : galea Blightly pilose at tip, Bhorter than the lip. — San Li is Potosi, in the mountains near Morales, 1876 (Schqffher, no. 61 called " mirto grande." Habitally this plant suggests S. fulgent ^ var. Boncheana, Benth., but it is readily distinguished by its less pubescent leaves, shorter calyx and Blightly pilose galea. O O Pubescent herb with ovate obtiiM leaves canescent beneath. ill. S. OBTD8A, .Man. & Gal. I. c. 72 j Benth. in DC. I.e. 334 1 "\';m Houtte, Fl. des Serres, xiv. t. 1412 (?) ; Hemsl. I.e. ii. 562. — Described from Oaxaca. Various plants are cultivated under this name, but the figure above cited perhaps best represents the Bpecii s. b. Calyx glabrous or barely puberulent at base. 145. S. oresbia. Small shrub, 2 to 3 dm. high : branches purplish, puberulent in lines or glabrate: branchlets short, leafy mostly at the tip: leaves firm, ovate, acute at each end, appressed-serrate, glabrate, 1 to 2.5 cm. long: racemes 1 dm. or less in length; verticels 2-1- fiowered: bracts firm, ovate, acuminate, 1 em. or less long, persistent: pedicels 3 to 7 mm. long, puberulent: calyx purple-tinged, in antic 1 to 1.2 cm. long, puberulent within; the tube thrice exceeding the broad ovate mucronate-acuminate lobes: corolla 2 cm. long; the gla- brous Btrongly ventricose tube one half longer than the calyx : the pilose galea hardly equalling the lip: style glabrous. — San Luis POTOSI, in the mountains, San Rafael, 1870 (Schqffher, no. 000) ; without lo- cality, alt. 1,850 to 2,400 m., 1878 (Parry & Palmer, no. 740). = = Pubescence of branches and leaves stellate. 140. S. oaxacana. Very branching shrub : the bark pale gray, the VOune brunches and branchlets white with stellate tomentum : lea ovate, truncate or cordate at base, 1 cm. or less in length, pale green and strongly rugose above, white-tomentose beneath, crenate, one-half longer than the tomentose petioles: racemes 6 cm. or less long: the verticels mostly 2-flowered, 1 to 1.5 cm. apart : bracts ovate-lanceolate, caducous : pedicels 3 to 0 mm. Ioult, glandular-pil : calyx open-campanulate, glandular-pilose, in anthesis 8 to 10 mm., in fruit becoming 1.3 to 1.5 cm. long: the upper lip broad-ovate, mucronate, somewhat bidentate, the lower lip with 2 ovate-lanceohite acuminate lobes: corolla somewhat idular-pilose ; the strongly ventricose tube twice exceeding the calyx; the gal. -a anil lip subequal : style bearded. — Oaxaca, La Iloya Canon, FERNALD. — MEXICAN SALVIAS. 53T alt. 1,380 in., Nov. 2, 1894 (O. G. Pringle, no. 5654). Resembling S. aspern, Mart. & Gal., from which it differs in its short terminal racemes of red flowers. ++ ++ Leaves from narrow oblong to linear-oblanceolate. 147. S. Greggii, Gray, Proc. Am. Acad. viii. 369, & Syn. Fl. 1. c 368; Hemsl. I.e. 557, & iv. 81 ; Hook. Bot. Mag. t. 6812. S. micro- phijUa, Torr. Bot. Mex. Bouud. 131, not HBK. — Texas to Durango. Coahuila, canon above Palomas, 1848-49 (Gregg, no. 335) ; high dry ridge, battlefield of Buena Vista (Gregg); Saltillo, 1878 (Parry, no. 26) ; Lerios, July, 1880, and near Saltillo, May, 1898 (Edw. Palmer, nos. 1071, 153): Durango, shady hillsides and river-banks, Santiago Papasquiaro, Aug., 1896 (Edw. Palmer, no. 417). * * Branching or subsimple shrubs or half-shrubs or tall herbs, leafy nearly or quite to the inflorescence : leaves larger, only the smallest 4 cm. long. -t- Leaves pubescent beneath. *+ Calyx-lobes with long setaceous-acuminate tips: corolla 2.5 to 4 cm. long: branches densely tomentose, viscid above. = Leaves densely tomentose beneath, minutely so above. 148. S. Lindenii, Benth. in DC. I.e. 333; Hemsl. I.e. ii. 560; Briq. 1. c. — Southern Mexico and adjacent Central America. Oaxaca, between Pluma and Sau Miguel Suchistepec, alt. 2,460 to 3,070 m., March 21, 1895 (E. W. Nelson, no. 2508) : Chiapas, without locality * (Ghiesbreght, nos. 122, 755): Guatemala, Volcan de Agua, Dept. Zacatepe'quez, alt. 2,770 m., Apr., 1890 (J. D. Smith, no. 2169). = = Leaves greener, thinly pubescent beneath, becoming glabrate above. 149. S. rectiflora. Vis. Sem. Hort. Pat. 1839, ex ejusd. Ort. Bot. Pad. 145; Benth. I.e. 334; Hemsl. I.e. 564, excl. syn. — South-central Mexico. Guanajuato, rocky mountain-slopes, 1880, 1894 (A. Duges). +*• ++ Calyx-lobes blunt or mucronate or merely short-acuminate. = Corolla 4 to 6 cm. long. a. Leaves densely white-tomentose beneath, finely crenate-serrate, and with sharp- acuminate tips : calyx glandular-puberulent. 150. S. fulgens, Cav. Leaves cordate-ovate. — Ic. i. 15, t. 23; Sweet, Brit. Fl. Gard. ser. 2, i. t. 59; Lindl. Bot. Reg. xvi. t. 1356; Benth. 1. c. 333 ; Hemsl. 1. c. 556; Briq. 1. c. S. cardinalis, HBK. 1. c. 300, t. 152. S. grandi 'flora, Sesse & Moc. I.e. 7. — Central Mexico. Zacatecas, on the Sierra de los Morones, near Plateado, Sept. 1, 1897 (/. Ar. Pose, no. 2743) : Jalisco, between San Sebastian and the sum- 538 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. mil of Mt. Bufade Mascota, alt. 2,150 to 2,800 m., Man], 20, 1897 /.'. W. NeUon, do. 4093): Mighoacan, TIalpujahna ( Graham) : Mexico, Toluca (Andrieux, no. ill): Desierto Viejo, Sept. 7, 1865, and San Nicolas, Oct 26, L865 (Bourgeau, dob. 858, L106); Valley of Mexico (Schaffiner, no. 896) j cool forests. Sierra de las Cruces, alt. 8,230 m.. An-.. L892 (C. G. Pringle, no. 1227) ; Amecameca, Feb. 8, L893 (E. II'. Kelson, do. 6); foothills, Mt Ixtaccihautl Jan. 5, 1899 (G. C. Deam, no. 124): Morelos, Serrania de Ajusco, alt 2,460 m., Maj 26, L898 (C. G. Pringle, no. 6862). Var. Boucheana, Benth. I.e. 384. Leaves narrowly deltoid-ovate, truncate or subcordate at base. — S. Boucheana, Kuntli, Ind. Sem. Hort. Berol. 18-45. — Michoacan, TIalpujahna (Graham): Puebla, calca- reous hills near Telmacan, Aug. 80, 1897 (O. G. Pringle, no. 7 1 19). b. Leaves merely pilose on the nerves beneath, coarsely crenate, and with blunt tips: calyx not at all or very minutely glandular-puberulent 151. S. orizabensis. Branches short-pilose with recurved hairs, minutely glandular above : leaves ovate, thin, minutely pilose above, 1 to 8 cm. long; the base subcordate with a short acumination at the junc- tion with the slender retrorse-pilose petiole: raceme 1 dm. or so long; verticels 4-10-flowered, all remote, the lowest 4 to 5 cm. apart : bracts ovate-lanceolate, acuminate: pedicels 3 to 5 mm. long, sordid-viscid: calyx in anthesis 1.5 to 1.75 cm. long, slightly pilose on the nerves; the tube nearly twice exceeding the ovate blnntish lubes; upper lip entire: corolla-tube glabrate, twice exceeding the calyx ; galea, long bearded, equalling the lip: style somewhat bearded. — Vera Ceuz, Mt. Orizaba (Botteri, no. 1168). = = Corolla 2.5 to 2.75 cm. long. 152. S. adenophora. Shrub (" sarmentose " according to Smith) with brown bark; the branches glandular-pilose: leaves cordate-ovate, acuminate (rarely blunt), crenate-serrate, green and sparinglv pubescent above, more or less white tomentose beneath, 1 to 10 cm. long, on slender petioles 3 cm. or less in length : racemes 3 dm. or less in length ; the rhachis very glandular-hairy; verticels 6— 20-flowered, all rem< the lowest 2 to 3 cm. apart : bracts ovate, glandular, caducous: pedicels 6mm. or less in length, glandular: calyx campanulate, very glandular, in anthesis 8 to 10 mm. long, the tube twice exceeding the broad ovate mucronate or short-acuminate lobes; upper lip entire: corolla glandular- pilose, the tube ODce and a half longer than the calyx : galea and lip Bub- equal: style bearded. — Oaxaca, Jayacatlan, alt. L;280 in., Sept. 11, FERNALD. MEXICAN SALVIAS. 539 1894, and Nov. 17, 1895 (L. C. Smith, nos. 168, 875) ; between Tlapan- cingo and Tlalixtaquilla, Guerro, alt. 1,600 to 1,230 m., Dec. 9, 1895 (E. W. Nelson, no. 2093, in part) ; El Parian-Etla, alt. 1,200 m., Nov., 1898 ( V. Gonzalez & C. Conzatti, no. 900). = = = Kelated to the above, but not identified, is 153. S. lineata, Benth. Lab. 724, with the branches pubescent in lines, obtuse leaves slightly pubescent, truncate at base, and with the flowers somewhat smaller than in S.fulgens, in 4-6-flowered verticels. ■*- •*- Leaves glabrous beneath. *+ Calyx herbaceous ; the tube becoming corrugated ; the 3 acuminate lobes large and subequal, long-ciliate on the margins. 154. S. Pringlei, Robinson & Greenman, Proc. Am. Acad. xxix. 391. — Jalisco, under cliffs, barranca of Tequila, Oct. 2, 1893 (C. G. Pringle, no. 4564). *+ ++ Calyx less herbaceous ; the tube sub-inflated, not corrugated ; the lobes unequal. = Leaves cuneate at base. 155. S. involucrata, Cav. Ic. ii. 3, t. 105; Lindl. Bot. Reg. xiv. t. 1205 ; Bot. Mag. t. 2872; Benth. 1. c. 333; Hemsl. 1. c. 558, in part; Briq. 1. c. S. laevigata, HBK. 1. c. 295, t. 147. S. Tonduzii, Briq. Ann. Conserv. Jard. Bot. Geneve, ii. 157. — Southern Mexico and Cen- tral America. Guatemala, Coban, Dept. Alta Verapaz, alt. 1,320 m., Nov. 1886 (H. von Tuerckheim in exsicc. J. D. Smith, no. 345) ; Jumay- tepeque, Dept. Santa Rosa, alt. 1,850 m., Jan., 1893 (Heyde & Lux in exsicc. J. D. Smith, no. 4397). = — Leaves cordate-ovate. a. Calyx in anthesis 0.6 to 1 cm. long. 156. S. pulchella, DC. Cat. Hort. Monsp. 142 ; Colla, Hort. Ripul. 125, t. 16; Benth. 1. c. 334; Hemsl. 1. c. 563 ; Briq. in Engl. & Prantl, 1. c. — Southern Mexico and Central America. Chiapas, with- out locality (Ghiesbreght, nos. 71, 758) ; near San Cristobal, alt. 2,150 to 2,460 m., Sept. 18, 1895, and between San Cristobal and Teopisca, alt. 2,060 to 2,610 m., Dec. 4, 1895 (K W. Nelson, nos. 3171, 3427) : Guatemala, Purula, Dept. Baja Verapaz, alt. 1,540 m., Apr. 1887 (H. von Tuerckheim in exsicc. J. D. Smith, no. 1194). b. Calyx in anthesis 1.5 to 2 cm. long. 157. S. puberula. Stem herbaceous, simple, 8 dm. high, from a woody base, minutely cinereous-puberulent : leaves 7 to 10 cm. long, 540 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. acuminate, appressed-serrate < juite to tlie base, e: corolla •'! to I cm. long, the moderately ventricose glabrous tube twice as long as the calyx ; the pilose galea equalling the lip: style bearded. — S. involucraia, Hemsl. 1. c. 558, in part, not Cav. — Sab Luis Potosi, alt. 1,850 to 2,<1G0 m., 1878 I Parry &. Palmer, no. 755 I. * * * Stoloniferous herb ; the subdeltoid or cordiform leaves confined chiefly to the lower half: peduncle elongated, simple; verticels 2-6-flowered, remote: corolla 5 cm. long. L58. 8. btolonipeea, Benth. PI. Hartw. 70, & in DC. 1. c. 333; Ileinsl. 5G5; Briq. 1. c. — Oaxaca, Sierra de San Felipe, alt. 2,300 to 3,080 m., June 23, 1894 (C. G. Pringhs, no. 1705,7;. W. Nelson, no. L183); Telixtlahuaca, alt. 2,300 m., July l'7, 1895 (Z. O. Smith. no. 177). D. Cyaneae, Benth. Calyx tubulose-cainpanulate : corolla blue \ or rose, straight ; the tube ventricose. * Corolla rose or rose-purple. t- Leaves hispid or pilose beneath. *+ Leaves rounded-cuneate at base : corolla 1.5 to 1.8 cm. long. 159. S. PURPUKASCENS, Mart. & Gal. 1. c. G9 ; Benth. in DC. 1. c. 335; Ilemsl. 1. c. 564 ; Briq. 1. c. 283. — Described from Mt. Orizaba, Vera Cbuz. Not seen. *+ -«■ Leaves cordate at base. = Verticels C-flo\vered : calyx 1.3 cm. long : corolla 3 cm. lot 100. S. IOUOCHBOA, Briq. Ann. Couserv. Jard. Bot. Geneve, ii. 1G1. — Described from COSTA RlCA. Not seen. = = Verticels 10-30-flowered : mature calyx 8 mm. long: corolla 1.5 cm. long. 161. S. irazuensis. Tall and freely brandling, the stem purple. jhtly crisp-pilose in lines, or glabrate : the branchlets glandular-pilose : Lnternodes long (1 dm.): leaves cordate-ovate, acuminate, serrate, the FERNALD. — MEXICAN SALVIAS. 5-11 larger 5 to 6 cm. long, green and glabrate above, pale and appressed- pilose on the nerves beneath : racemes elongated, 3 to 4 dm. or less long ; verticels all remote : pedicels becoming 6 to 8 mm. long, glandular-pilose : calyx puberulent, short pilose on the nerves ; the upper lip ovate, short- acuminate, one half as long as the tube, the lower lip with 2 lance- ovate setaceous-acuminate lobes : corolla-tube once and a half longer than the calyx ; the pilose galea shorter than the lip : style bearded. — S. tiliaefolia, Donnell Smith, 1. c. v. 71, in part, not Vahl. — Costa Rica, Volcan Irazu, Prov. Cartago, alt. 3,000 m., Mar., 1894 (J. Donnell Smith, no. 4920). Near the last species, but with much smaller Howers, in denser verticels. 4- -*- Leaves glabrous or merely puberulent beneatli, rounded or subcordate at base: corolla 1.3 to 2.5 cm. long. 1G2. S. Martensii, Gal. Bull. Acad. Brux. 1. c. 77 ; Benth. 1. c. ; Hemsl. 1. c. 560; Briq. 1. c, & in Engl. & Prantl, 1. c. S. membranacea, var. villosa, Benth. Lab. 720. S. villosula, Benth. in DC. 1. c. ; Briq. Ann. Conserv. Jard. Bot. Geneve, ii. 160. — Southern Mexico. Oaxaca, Sierra de San Felipe, alt. 3,170 m., Aug. 8, 1894 ( G. G. Pringle, no. 4772), alt. 2,920 to 3,380 m., 1894 (E. W. Nelson, no. 1100), alt. 3,000 in., Nov. 14, 1897 (C. Conzatti and V. Gonzalez, no. 539) : Chiapas, among the mountains (Ghiesbreght, no. 742). Ghies- breght's plant with rounded, not subcordate leaf-bases and corolla only 1.3 cm. long, probably represents S. villosula which Briquet maintains at least as a subspecies. * * Corolla blue or violet. +- Leaves cuneate or narrowed at base. *+ Leaves lanceolate or oblong-lanceolate. — Leaves oblong-lanceolate, acuminate, crenate-serrate, more or less pubescent beneath : corolla-tube and galea white ; lip dark blue. 1G3. S. albo-CAErulea, Linden, Belg. Hort. vii. 199, & Gart- enfl. vii. 55, 97, t. 221 ; Hemsl. 1. c. iv. 80. — South-central Mexico. Morelos, wet mountain canon above Cuernavaca, alt. 2,000 m., May 15, 1898, Feb. 15, 1899(0. G. Pringle, nos. 7615, 8020), distributed under an unpublished manuscript name. Originally from Michoacan. = = Leaves elliptic-lanceolate, caudate-acuminate, sharply dentate-serrate, glabrous beneath : corolla violet-purple. 164. S. pansamalensis, Donnell Smith, Bot. Gaz. xxiii. 249. — Guatemala, Pansamala, Dept. Alta Verapaz, alt. 1,230 m., June, 1886 (H. von Tuerchheim in exsicc. J. D. Smith, no. 933). 542 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. *♦ — Leaves ovate or ovate-oblong, crcnate-serrnte : corolla deep blue. = 1. thin, glabrous beneath : raceme Blender, lax; the remote verticels 2-8- Qowered: lower lip of calyx entire. 165. S. phabnostemma, Donnell Smith, 1. c. 1 •">. — Guatehala, be- tween Rodea and Malacate, Dept. San Marcos, alt. 480 to 1,080 m., Jan. 81, 1896 (E. II'. Nelson, no. 8736). = = Leaves tomentolose beneath i raceme rather dense, the verticels many-flow- ered : lower li]i of calyx 2-lobed, a. Bracts ovate-acuminate, herbaceous, cinereous-pubescent, 8 mm. or less in length: corolla-tube glabrous; galea Bhorl pilose. L66. S. mexicana, L. Racemes becoming lax, 1 dm. or less long: calyx cinereous- pubescent on the nerves, in anthesis 1.5 cm. long. — Sp. •_':; ; Cav. Ic. i. 1G, t. 25 ; Benth. in DC. I.e. 337 ; Hemsl. 1. c ii. 561 ; Briq. in Engl. & Prantl, 1. c. S. melissifolia, Deaf. Cat. Hurt. Par. Ed. .;, :'l. Jungia altissima, Moeuch, Metb. 379. Sclarea mexicana, Dill. Hort Kith. 839, t. 254, f. 330. — Central Mexico. Without locality {Coulter, no. 1100): Guanajuato, 18*0 (A. Duges): Zacatecas, near Monte Escobedo, Apr. -it',, 1897 (J. N. Hose, no. 2635) : Mexico, To- kobaya, Aug. 10, 1865 (Bilimek^no. 308); Valley of Mexico, July 21, 1865, and Aug. 1. 1865 (Bourgeau, nos. 993, 619), Sept. 19. 1889 (C. G. Pringle, no. 2824); Rio Hondo Canon, 1890 (C. G. Pringle, no. 3157). Var. majou, Benth. 1. c. Similar but with glabrate calyx. — X pa- pilionacea, Cav. Ic iv. 9, t. 319. S. nitidifolia, Ort. Dec. 53. — Without locality (Coulter, no. 1101): MEXICO, near City of Mexico ( Graham). Var. minor, Benth. I.e. Racemes shorter: calyx pubescent, in anthesis 0.9 to 1..') cm. long. — Ocimum micranthum, Wats. Proc. Am. Acad. xxi. 435, not Willd. — Extending further north than the Bpeci Chihuahua, Frayles, 1885 (Edw. Palmer no. 290): nearBATOPii is, alt. 1,690 to 2,000 m., Oct. 4-5, 189s ( /•;. A. Goldman, no. 205): Sam I.i i- Potosi, near Morales, 1876 (Schqffher, no. 677) ; without local- ity. 1878 (Parry & Palmer, nos. 757, 758): Zacatecas, Plateado, Sept. 3. 1897 (./. N. /Aw. no. 8688): Mr.xico, Toluoa (Andrieux, no. 148); San Angel, May 31, 1866 (Bourgeau, no. 126); Amecameca, dan. 5, 1899 (O. C. Deam); Tiaapan, alt. 2,310 m., Sept. 23, 1899 (C. <:. Pringle, no. 7930). /. Bracts oblong-ovate, acuminate, membranaceous, veiny, glabrate, 2 cm. long: corolla long-pilose. 167. S. lupulina. Stems cinereous-puberulent : haves ovate or FERNALD. — MEXICAN SALVIAS. 543 rhombic-ovate, acuminate at tip, rounded-cuneate at base, about 1 dm. long, appressed-serrate, greeu and sparingly puberulent above, canescent- puberulent beneath, on slender canescent petioles 8 cm. or less in length : racemes in bud resembling the fruit of the hop (Hamulus lupulus) ; the membranaceous veiny bracts caducous : racemes becoming 1.5 dm. long; the verticels 10-many-flowered, the lowest a little remote : pedicels 1 cm. or less long, puberulent : calyx hispidulous at base, glabrate above, violet-tinged, in anthesis 1.3 to 1.7 cm. long; the tube 3 or 4 times exceeding the lobes ; upper lip broad-ovate, short-acuminate, entire, lower with 2 narrower acuminate lobes : corolla 3 to 4.5 cm. long, the tube once to once and a half longer than the calyx ; galea slightly ex- ceeding the lip: style exserted, densely bearded. — Oaxaca, mountains of San Juan del Estado, alt. 2,310 in., Sept. 11, 1894 (L. C. Smith, no. 167) ; near Tlapancingo, alt. 1,850 to 2,400 m., Dec. 7, 1894 (E. W. Nelson, no. 2068). 4- ■*- Leaves round round-truncate or cordate at base. ■*-* Leaves glabrous beneath. = Bracts somewhat persistent, lasting through anthesis : calyx in anthesis 2 cm. long : corolla 5 cm. long, violet. 168. S. ianthina, Otto & Dietr. Allgem. Gartenz. xv. 362; De- caisne, Fl. des Serres, ix. 73, t. 884. — Habitat unknown, supposed to come from Mexico or Peru. = = Bracts caducous. a. Calyx villous. 1. Corolla violet, 3.75 to 5 cm. long, three or four times exceeding the calyx : leaves thin, long-acuminate, glandular-punctate. 169. S. recurva, Benth. in DC. I.e. 336 ; Hemsl. 1. c. 564; Briq. I.e. — Chiapas, very rare in the forests (Ghiesbreg/U, nos. 24, 756). Originally collected in the Sierra de San Pedro Nolesco. 2. Corolla twice as long as the calyx. 170. S. CONCOLOR, Lamb, in Benth. Lab. 297; Benth. in DC. 1. c. ; Hemsl. 1. c. 555. — Described from " Mexico." b. Calyx glabrate, with acuminate-attenuate lobes : corolla 2.5 cm. long, thrice exceeding the calyx. 171. S. glabrata, HBK. 1. c. 299 ; Benth. 1. c.; Hemsl. I.e. 556.; Briq. 1 c. — Described from Venezuela, but reported from "Mexico" by Benth. 1. c. 5 ! I PROCEEDINGS OF Tin: AMERICAN ACADEMY, — -* Leaves pubescent beneath. = Stem gland ular-setulose : leaves Betulose-bispid above, coarsely and Irregularly Berrate: calyx setulose-hispid : corolla barely - cm. long. 17i'. S. biserrata, Mart. & Gal. I.e. 66; Benth. I.e. 335 ; Bemsl. I.e. 553; Briq. I.e. — Chiapas (Ghiesbreghtj no. 763). Described from Bit. Orizaba, = = Stem villous above, glabrate below : leaves minutely pubescent above, finely and regularly crenate-serrate : calyx pilose: corolla 2.6 to 8 cm. li 17.;. S. ctanea, Benth. Lab. 296, ov in DC. I.e. 336; Hemsl. I.e. ."> <■>. S. cyaniflora, Dietr. in Otto & Dietr. I.e. i. 301. S. cyanifera, Otto in Benth. I.e. ;is >yn. — Central Mexico. MEXICO, De.sierto Viejv), Sept. 7, 1865 (JJoitri/euu, no. N37). E. Tubiflorae, Benth. Shrubs (rarely herbs) with tubulose-cainpanu- late calyx : corolla scarlet crimson flesh-colored or purple, rarely blue- violet ; the tube straight or curved, cylindric or arupliate (not ventricose) above. * Leaves cuneate or narrowed at base. (Forms of S. cinnabarina, elegans, and nervata may be looked for here.) +- Leaves pubeseent beneath, corolla rose-purple. *+ Leaves softly canescent-tomentose or cinereous-pilose beneath. = Calyx minutely pilose, in anthesis 0 to 10 mm. long; the tube once and a half exceeding the ovate-lanceolate acuminate lobes : corolla 2.5 to 4 cm. i 171. S. curviflora, Benth. Lab. 28-1, & in DC. I.e. 310; Hemsl. I.e. 555; liriij. I.e. — Hidalgo, Zimapan ( Coulter, nos. 1088,10*'.), 1090): Michoacan, Tlalpujahua (Graham). = = Calyx hispidulous: corolla 1.5 to 1.8 cm. long. 175. S. chiapensis. Fruticose (?), the tall Bimple branches puber- ulent below, pilose-hispid above: leaves thick, ovate or oblong-ovate, appressed-serrate, acuminate at tip, subcuneate at base, 5 to 12 cm. long, green and minutely pilose above, canescent and sul>\ elutinooa beneath, on puberulent petioles 3.5 cm. or less in length: raceme '■'• to 1 dm. or less long; the verticels G-10-ilowered, all becoming remote, the lowest 3 to ■1 cm. apart : bracts oblong-ovate, acuminate, .short-pubescent, 1.5 cm. or less iii length, caducous: pedicels becoming 5 nun. long: calyx in anthesis 7 to 8 mm. long; the tube nearly twice exceeding the ovate- lanceolote acuminate lobes: corolla-tube aboul twice exceeding the calyx ; the densely villous galea about equalling the lip: style bearded. — Chiapas, without locality (Ghiesbreght, nos. 57, 761); near San Cris- tobal, alt. 2,150 to 2,460 in.. Sept. 18, 1895 (E. II". Nelson, no. 8201). FERNALD. — MEXICAN SALVIAS. 545 = = = Calyx long-pilose : corolla 2.5 to 3 cm. long. 17G. S. venosa. Herbaceous, with erect branches ; stem hollow, strongly quadrangular, pilose : leaves thin, ovate or rhombic ovate, cren- ulate-serrate, short-acuminate at tip, rounded-cuueate at base, 3.5 to 8 cm. long, green and short-pilose above, conspicuously veiny and cine- reous-pilose beneath ; the upper most often sessile, the others on slender pilose petioles 2.5 cm. or less in length: racemes 0.6 to 1.2dm. long; the rhachis white-pilose, densely so in the axils ; verticels 2-8-flowered, all remote, the lowest 1 to 2 cm. apart : pedicels filiform, white-pilose, becoming 5 mm. long : calyx in authesis 7 mm. long ; the tube thrice exceeding the ovate short-acuminate lobes : corolla villous : the tube twice longer than the calyx ; the galea 5 mm. long, arcuate-cucullate above the short lip : style bearded. — Chiapas, on plains, Aug. (G/riesbreght, no. 749) ; near San Cristobal, alt. 2,150 to 2,460 m., Sept. 18, 1895 (E. IF. Nelson, no. 3138). ++ -w- Shrub with oblong-lanceolate leaves green and sparingly pilose beneath : rhachis and calyx glandular-pilose ; the upper calyx-lip 3-dentate, the middle tooth nliform-appendiculate : corolla 1.5 cm. long. 177. S. antennifera, Briq. Ann. Conserv. Jard. Bot. Geneve, ii. 168. — Described from Chiapas. Not seen. •*- -i- Leaves glabrous beneath or merely puberulent on the nerves. ++ Leaves ovate : corolla scarlet or carmine. 178. S. TUP.IFERA, Cav. 1c. i. 16, t. 25 ; Liudl. Bot. Reg. xxvii. t. 44 ; Benth. I.e. 341; Hemsl. I.e. 566; Briq. in Engl. & Prantl. I.e. S. longiflora, Willd. Spec. i. 141. — Described from Mexico. Not seen. -w- -m- Leaves oblong, 2 cm. long : corolla blue-violet. 179. S. zacualpensis, Briq. Ann. Conserv. Jard. Bot. Geneve, ii. 166. — Described from Chiapas. Not seen. ++++++ Leaves oblong-lanceolate, 1.5 to 2 dm. long. = Verticels 2-flowered : calyx 1.7 cm. long: corolla crimson-violet. 180. S. bella, Briq. I.e. 169. —Described from Costa Rica. Not seen. = = Verticels 4-G-flowered : calyx in anthesis 9 mm. long : corolla vermilion. 181. S. miniata. Glabrate shrub: branches very slender, deeply furrowed: leaves thin, minutely puberulent on the nerves above, other- wise glabrous, long-acuminate at both ends, sharply serrate ; petioles 1 to 2 cm. long: peduncle 1 dm. long; raceme slightly longer; verticels vol. xxxv. — 35 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. remote, the lowest 8 to 1 cm. apart: pedicels puberulent, 8 mm. long: calyx minutely puberulent or glabrate; the tube thrice longer than the lip-; upper lip broad-ovate, blant or Bhort-mucronate, lower with two Bhort incurved subulate teeth : corolla 8 t<» 8.25 cm. long, slightly curved, ; the tube twice longer than the calyx ; the galea and lip sub- equal : style glabrous or very slightly bearded. — Chiapas, in the fort flowering in June (Ghiesbreght, no. 760). * » Leaves rounded or cordate at base. (S. atrviflora may be looked f<>r here.) *- Leaves rounded or rounded-truncate at !>ase, not definitely cordate. +♦ Leave? lanceolate, 1 to 1.5 dm. long. 182. S. perlonga. Shrub with pilose-hispid branches : leaves thick, with long-attenuate tips, crenulate-serrate, rugose and covered with Bhort dense plush-like indumentum above, canescent-velutinous beneath, on canescent petioles 2 cm. or less long: racemes 1 to 2 dm. long ; verti 2-8-flowered, all remote; pedicels and rhachis sordid glandular-pilose: calyx purplish, glandular, pilose-hispidulous, iu anthesis 1.8 cm. long, the tube twice exceeding the blunt ovate entire lips: corolla vermilion, 3 cm. long, the slightly ventricose tube twice exceeding the calyx : the minutely pilose lips Eubequal : style slightly bearded. — Gri:uuEBO, northeast slope of Sierra Madre, near Chilpancingo, alt. 2,150 to 2,620 in.. Dec. - 1. 1891 (A'. IT. Xelsnn, no. 2180). Further material may show this to belong with the Fulgentes. *+ *+ Leaves ovate or ovate-lanceolate, shorter. = Corolla purple rose-purple or flesh-colored. a. Leaves glabrous or only minutely puberulent beneath, not pilose (except slightly so in var. of S. purpart cm. long. 184. S. itrituea, Cav. Minutely puberulent or glabrous. — Tc. ii. 52, t. 166; Jacq. Hort. Schoenb. iii. 2, t. 258 ; Benth. I.e. 311 ; Hemsl. I.e. 564; Briq. I.e. S. affinit, Cham. & Bchl. Linnaea, v. 99; Benth. I.e.; Hemsl. I.e. f>")2: Briq. I.e. — Southern If exico and Central Amer- ica. Jalisco, Bolafios (// m. high, the branches puber- nlent: leaves 0.3 to 1.2 dm. long, 1 to G cm. broad, long-acuminate, minutely pilose or glabrate above canescent or glabrate beneath, Blender- petioled: racemes dense, 1.5 dm. or less long; the lower verticela often in the axils of the upper leaves: calyx in an thesis I mm. long, others as in the last: corolla villous, Blender, 2 to 2.5 cm. long; the galea ceeding the lip: Btamens and style ezserted, glabrous. — Micboai w. dry wooded hills near Patzcuaro, Nov. 12, 1890, and Nov. 24, 1891 G. Pringle, nos. 3600, 3946) : Jalisco, between San ian and the summit of Mt. Bufa de Mascota, alt. 1,380 to 2,150 m., March 20, 1897 (R W. Nelson, nos. 4102, 4104). O O Leaves velutinous or lanate beneath. -f Leaves serrate: calyx setulose-hispid or glabrate, with short broad inucron- ate loin (8. 188. S. nervata, Mart. & Gal. I.e. 77; Benth. I.e. 330; Hemsl. I.e. 501 ; Briq. I.e. S. monochila, Donnell Smith, Bot. Gaz. xxiii. 13. — Southern Mexico and adjacent Central America. GUATEMALA, Tondos Santos, Dept. Iluehuetenango, alt. 3,080 m., Dec. 26, 1895 (E. W. Nel- son, no. 3035). Originally from Oaxaca. Capt. Smith distinguishes his S. monochila from S. nervata by its pubescent calyx and Bcarlet cor- olla. In the specimen of Nelson's no. 3635 at hand, however, the corolla i< distinctly purple, not scarlet, and there seems little else to keep the two apart. + + Leaves crenate : calyx glandular-villoua ; the lobes long-acuminate. 189. S. Karwinskii, Benth. Lab. 725, & in DC. I.e. 845; Hemsl. I.e. 558; Briq. I.e. — Described from " Mexico." Not seen. O O O Of close affinity to the preceding hut not identified is 190. S. excklsa, Benth. Bot. Reg. xxvii. Misc. 90. & in DC. I.e. ."12, described from Guatemala and said to be near 8. tubifera but witli the 2-4-flowered verticels in an elongated loose raceme. 2. Pubescence stellate. 191. S Rosei. Shrub with dark gray bark ; branches canescent with minute stellate pubescence: leaves ovate, appressed-serrate, blunt or FERNALD. — MEXICAN SALVIAS. 549 acute, 3.5 to 6 cm. long, dull and sparingly puberulent above, closely canescent-puberuleut beneath; petioles canescent, 2 cm. or less long: racemes simple, 1dm. or less in length ; verticels 2-G-flowered : pedicels slender, 2 to 4 mm. long: calyx canescent, in anthesis 1.2 to 1.3 cm. long, the tube becoming corrugated at base, broadened above, twice ex- ceeding the ovate-lanceolate acuminate subequal lobes : corolla 2.5 to 3 cm. long, purple-violet, villous, the tube twice exceeding the calyx j the lip one half as long as the galea : style long-exserted, villous. — Ja- lisco, between Colotlan and Bolanos, Sept. 8, 1897 (J. N. Rose, no. 2844). — = Corolla scarlet or vermilion, without purple tinge. a. Upper lip of calyx prolonged into a subulate awn, nearly or quite equalling the calyx-tube ; lower lip with 2 short subulate teeth. 192. S. cinnabarina, Mart. & Gal. 1. c. 63 ; Benth. 1. c. ; Hemsl. 1. c. 554 ; Briq. 1. c, & Ann. Conserv. Jard. Bot. Geneve, ii. 169 (including varieties). — Southern Mexico and Central America. Oaxaca, near Oaxaca, alt. 2,310 to 2,920 m., Sept., 1894 (E. W. Nelson, no. 1345) Sierra de San Felipe, alt. 460 m., Oct. 5, 1894 (C. G. Pringh, no. 4947) ; San Juan del Estado, alt. 2,300 m., Nov. 4, 1894 (Z. . 1891 (Seaton, no. -"'11): Crew Verde, near Jalapa, alt. 2,130 in., 1894 (C. L. Smith, no. 148<>) : Gikkki i:<>, near C'hil- pancingo, alt. 2,770 to 8,140 m., Dec. 24, 1894 (E. W. Nelton, no. 2245): Oaxai \. Sierra de San Felipe, alt. 3,080 in., Aug. 8, 1894 (C. G. Pringle, no. 5779). Var. sonorensis. Leaves long-acnminate, mostly cnneate a1 base, about 1 dm. long: rhachis and calyces pilose, only Blightly glandular. — SonorAj Alamos, 1890 (Edw. Palmer, no. 292)j Huehuerachi, alt 1,230 in.. I >>'•• 0, 1890 (C. T. Hurt,, i, in, no. 312): (lamp canon, Rin- canardo Mts., Dec. 27, 1890 (E. E. Lloyd, no. 449): Chihuahua, Hacienda San Miguel, 1885 (Edw. Palmer, no. 270) ; near Batopilas, alt. 1,690 to 2,000 m., Oct. 4, 5, 1898 (E. A. Goldman, no. 20C). 2. Calyx-lobes not subulate-tipped. O Bracts 2 to 3 cm. long, persistent. 194. S. mollissima, Mart. vV Gal. I.e. 71 ; Benth. 1. c. 342; Hemsl. 1. c. 561. — Described from Oaxaca. Not seen. O O Bracts smaller, deciduous. 1 '.».">. S. coccinea, Juss. Stems canescent-puberulent. — Juss. ex. Murr. Comm. Gott. i. (1778) 86, t. i. ; Benth. I.e.; Regel, GartenB. vii. t. 232; .Morreu, Belg. llort. ix. t. 5; Gray, Syu. Fl. I.e. 368; Hemsl. I.e. o55 ; Briij. I.e. S. rosea, Vahl, I.e. 244. S. glaucescens, Pohl, Fl. Bras. Ic. ii. 136, t. 192. — Of broad range in the Southern United States, the West Indies, South America, and India, rare in Mexico. Reported by Benth. I.e. from Matamoros, TAMAULTPA8. Var. PSEUDO-COCCINEA, Cray. Stems conspicuously hirsute. — Syn. Fl. I.e. S. pseudo-coccinea, Jacq. Coll. ii. 302, & Ic. Bar. ii. 2. t.209; Hook. Bot. Mag. t. 2864; Benth. I.e.; Paxton, Fl. Card. ii. t. 1"; Briq. I.e. S.ciliata, Benth. Lab. 286. S. Galeottii^ Mart., in .Mart. & Gal. I.e. 75. - Central and southern Mexico and Central America. Nui \ 0 Leon, Papagallas, Dec, 1852 (Geo. Thwrber, no. 872) ; Guajuco, March, 1880 (Edw. Palmer, no. 1074): San Luis Potosi, near Tancanhuitz, alt. 370 m., May 1, 1808 (E. W. Nelson, no. 437G) ; Oaxaca, Chiqui- huitlan, alt. 1.230 m., Aug. 16, 1895 (L. C. Smith, no. CI!)): Chiapas (Glileshrn/lit. no. 752) ; valley of Jiquipilas, alt. 675 to 820 m.. Aug., 1895 ( /.'. W.Nehon, no. 2042): Yucatan, Chichen Itza. dan. 18, 1895 (C. F. MUkpaugh, no. 116); Iramal, 1895 (G. F. Gaumer, nu. 403^. FERNALD. — MEXICAN SALVIAS. 551 Var. minima. Low, subsimple, resembling the last, but the leaves very small, rarely exceeding 2 cm. in length, densely long-setulose above. — Chiapas, table-land about Ocuilapa, alt. 1,040 to 1,170 m., Aug. 21, .1895 (E. W. Nelson, no. 3062). •<- f- Leaves cordate. (S. coccinea may be looked for here.) ++ Corolla purple or flesh-colored : calyx in anthesis 2 to 2.5 cm. long, with elongate setiform tips to the lobes. 196. S. aristulata, Mart. & Gal. I.e. 67; Benth. I.e. 340; Hemsl. I.e. 553, Briq. I.e. S. longistyla, Benth. I.e. 344; Hemsl. I.e. 560; Briq. I.e. — Southern Mexico. Jalisco, mountains near Lake Chapala, Dec. 16, 1889 (C. G. Pringle, no. 2421): Oaxaca, Valley of Oaxaca, alt. 1,570 m., Nov. 14, 1894 (L. C Smith, no. 306); near Tlapancingo, alt. 1,850 to 2,460 m., Dec. 7, 1894 (E. W. Nelson, no. 2085). ++ ++ Related to the above but of doubtful affinity is 197. S. Ottonis, Lehm. in E. Otto, Hamb. Gartenz. vi. 350; Regel, Gartenfl. vii. 129, & Bot. Zeit. xi. 335. ++++++ Corolla scarlet or vermilion. = Calyx in anthesis 1.75 to 2 cm. long. a. Leaves white-tomentose beneath. 198. S. incana, Mart. & Gal. I.e. 68; Benth. I.e. 344; Hemsl. 1. c. 558. — Described from Puebla. Not seen. b. Leaves slightly pilose on the nerves beneath. 199. S. tubiformis, Link, Kl. & Otto, Ic. Rar. 70, t. 28 ; Benth. I.e. 334, under S. recti flora. S. recti flora, Hemsl. 1. c. 564, in part, not Vis. — Described and figured from garden specimens. Perhaps native of Mexico. = = Calyx in anthesis 1 cm. long. 200. S. cyclophylla. Shrub with dark brown bark ; branches glandular-hispid : leaves from suborbicular to broad-ovate, rounded or bluntish at tip, crenate, 6 to 7 cm. across, minutely pilose above, more densely so beneath, all but the uppermost on slender petioles 3 to 4 cm. long: raceme 5 to 6 cm. long, the 4-8-flowered verticels 1.5 to 2 cm. apart: pedicels 3 mm. long, hirsute : calyx glandular-hirsute on the veins ; the tube twice exceeding the lobes; upper lip suborbicular, blunt or mucronate, lower with ovate mucronate-acuminate lobes: corolla pilose, 2.5 to 2.75 cm. long; the tube once and a half longer than the calyx; 552 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. the Bhorl blonl galea equalling the lip: Btyle barely exserted, bearded. — Bel een Tlapancingo, Oaxaca and Tlallxtaquilla, Guerrero, alt 1,240 to 1,600 in.. Dec 9, L894 (E. W. Nelson, do. 2098, in part.) *_ ++ ++ ++ Related to the above is 201. S. i.i.i mac] \. lir>K. I.e. 298, a very <]■ .ul.tf ul Bpeciea probably ol this group, the corolla, however, being unknown. Described from •• New Spain." F. flustiifae. P>rntli. Perennial herbs: leaves mostly or entirely basal, hastate or aneulate-cordate : racemes simple or commonlv branchiner. glutinous-villous : corolla blue; the tube ventricose, ampliate above. * Calyx in anthesis 1.3 to 1.8 cm. long: corolla 4.6 to G cm. long: leaves from broad-hastate to rounded at base, pubescent on both faces. 202. S. patens, Cav. [c. v. 33, t. 454 ; Lindl. Hot. Reg. xxv. t. 2:: ; Book. Bot. Mag. t. 3308; Paxton, Mag. vi. 1; Benth. Lc. 848 \ Planch. Fl. *les Serres, v. t. 503; Hemsl. I.e. 562; Briq. I.e. 284. S. grandijlora, Nee ex Cav. I.e. 8. spectabilis, III5K. I.e. 3oi. S. macrantha, Schl. Ind. Sem. Hort. Hal. 1841. S. decipiens, Mart, cc Gal, I.e. 04. S. sfaminea, Mart. & Gal. I.e. G5. S. glutinosa, S. ■--•'• >x Mm'. 1. c. 7, not L. — Central Mexico. Without locality (Coulter, no. 1102) : San Liis Potosi, mountains of San Miguelito, 1 87<*> (Schoo- ner, no. 676); without locality, alt. 1,850 to 2,460 m.. 1876 (Parry St Palmer, no. 759) : Guanajuato, rocky hillsides, Guanajuato, Aug., L894 (A. Duges, no. 228). * * Calyx in anthesis 5 to 8 mm. long. ■•- Leaves villous beneath ; the margins crenate. ++ Calyx-lobes elongated, Bubulate-aristate : leave- angulate-lobed. 203. S. vttifolia, Benth. Lab. 72 1. & in DC. I. c. ; Hemsl. 1. c. 566 ; Briq. I.e. — Southern Mexico. Vera Cruz, Maltrata, alt 1,700m., Aug. 1G, 1891 (Seaton, no. 376) : Oaxaca, Sierra de San Felipe, alt 2,310 m., May 26, 1894 (C. G. Pringle, no. 4659), Sept. 1. 1894 (E. II". Nelson, no. 1169) ; San Juan del Estado, alt. 2,160 m., June 4, 1894 /.. C. Smith, no. 169); Canada de San Gabriel, Etla, alt. 600m., June 13, 1897 (O. Conzatti, no. 328). ** — Calyx-lobes short-aristatc: leaves generally slightly or not at all an- gulate-lobed. 204. S. CACALTAEFOLIA, Benth. I.e.; Hemsl. I.e. 554; Briq. I.e. — CHIAPAS, in pine forests ( Ghiesbreght, no. 75 1): near San Cristobal, alt. 2,160 to 2,700 m.. Sept. 18, 1895 (/;. W. Nelson, nos. 3230, 3230 g). FERNALD. — MEXICAN SALVIAS. 553 i- -«- Leaves short-pilose beneath ; margins subentire. 205. S. atriplicifolia. Tall, 1 m. high : stem glandular-pilose, especially above, leafy nearly to the inflorescence : leaves broadly augu- late-deltoid, acuminate, glabrate above, pale beneath, mostly 1 dm. long and broad, on pilose petioles 5 cm. or less in length : inflorescence pan- iculate, 2.5 to 3 dm. long ; the verticels mostly 2-flowered, a little remote : bracts linear, glandular-hispid, 2 mm. long : pedicels 5 mm. long : calyx glandular-puberulent, with ciliate margins, in anthesis 5 mm. long, the ovate-lanceolate lobes with short-subulate tips ; upper lip 2-3-dentate : corolla pilose, dark blue, 3 cm. long: style glabrous. — Chiapas, among the mountains, flowering in October (G/iiesbreght, no. 759). Section IX. PYCNOSPHACE, Benth. Bracts imbricated. Calyx ovate ; the upper lip tridentate, the lower bifid, all the teeth spinescent. Corolla-tube pilose-annulate within; the galea erect, emarginate-bifid ; the lip with small lateral lobes, the larger middle one lacerate-fimbriate or dentate. Herbs with flowers in dense glomerules or verticels. * Leaves deeply pinnatifid : verticels 1 or 2. 206. S. Columbariae, Benth. Lab. 302, & in DC. I.e. 349; Gray, Syn. Fl. 1. c. 367; Briq. 1. c. — Southwestern United States and adjacent .Mexico. Lower California, San Quentin, 1889 (Edw. Palmer, no. 620). * * Leaves crenate. 207. S. Leonia, Benth. Lab. 303, & in DC. 1. c. ; Hemsl. 1. c. 559 ; Briq. I.e. Leonia salvifolia, Llav. & Lex. Nov. Veg. Descr. fasc. 2, 6. — Described from " Santa Rosa." Section X. HETEROSPHACE, Benth. Calyx tubulose, the upper lip truncate, tridentate. Corolla-tube pilose-annulate within or rarely subnaked; the galea short, erect, the lower lip with small somewhat spreading lateral lobes. Herbs with loose racemes of few-flowered verticels. * Corolla scarlet : stems hirsute : leaves petioled, reniform-cordate, repand-toothed or pinnatifid. 208. S. Roemeriana, Scheele, Linnaea, xxii. 586 ; Torr. Bot. Mex. Bound. 132; Gray, Syn. Fl. 1. c. 367 ; Hemsl. 1. c. 564 ; Briq. I.e. 285. S. porphyrantha, Decne. Rev. Hort. ser. 4, iii. 301, t. 16; Planch. Fl. des Serres, xi. t. 1080. S. porphyrata, Hook. Bot. Mag. t. 4939. — Texas and adjacent Mexico. Chihuahua, Sta. Eulalia Mts., March 27, 1885 (C. G.Prinyle): Coahuila, mountains near Saltillo, July, 1880 554 (CEEDINGS OF TIIK AJfEBICAN ACADEMY. 'mer, do. 1073 : Nui vo Leon, limestone bills, Dear Monterey, July if. L889 ' '. G. Pringle, no. 2869 ** Corolla blue: stems lanate: leaves sessile, coarsely and pungentl; dentate. 209. S. cai ii"i;\icA, Brandegee, l'roc. C:il. Acad., scr. 2, ii. 197. — Lower California, Calmalli, Cardon Grande, Apr. 28, 1889 i /'. 8. Brandegee). Index to the Numbered Specimens of Salvia cited in this paper. (The first number indicates the specimen ; the second, in parentheses, the num- ber of the species in the preceding synopsis.) Andrieux, 143 (186) ; 144(150); 148(100); 149(105); 150(93); 151(111). Anthony, 294 (97). Berlandier, 1246 (193) ; 1279 (30); 1819 (193); 3180 (100). Bilimek, 304 (118); 308 (166); 316 (03); 316 (63). Botteri, 394 (1); 396 (11); 533 (11); 631 (63); 676 (184); 578 (193); 80!' (11); 1168 (151). Bourgeau, 122 (11) ; 125 (29, 118) ; 120 (100) ; 295 (103) ; 396 (31) ; 489 (198) ; 490 (28); 619(166); 721 (63); 837(173); 863(150); 854(03); 855(98); 866(142); (51); 993(166); 1100(150); 1109(53); 1110 (43); 1111 (193); 1288 (132); 1289(7); 1244 (184); 1504(3); 1591(0'.'); 2857(69); 8162(184); 8216(19). Conzatti, 103 (139) ; 328 (203) : 717 (184). Conzatti & Gonzalez, 478 (20) 539 (102) ; 900 (152) ; 902 (112) ; 003 (106). Coulter, 1088 (174); 1089(174); 1090 (171): 1093 (188); 1097 (198); 1099 (li 1100 (166) ; 1101 (1GG) ; 1102 (202) ; 1 116 (81) ; 1118 (89) ; 1120 (91). Deam,2 (48); 57 (76); 124 (150); 189 (189). Dim. s, 228 (202) ; 228 A (89) ; 228 B (52). Ganmer, 894 (8); 153 (196). Ghiesbreght, 24(169); 57(175); 01(41); 71 (166); 72(192); 76(137); 122(148); 128 (184); 129 (60) ; 738 (48); 7 11 (43); 712 (162) ; 743 (60); 715 (19) . 7 17 (43); 7C (176); 750 (41); 751 (29); 752 (196); 75:; (187); 751 (204); 766 (148); 75>; (169); 757 (192); 758 (166); 759 (205); 760 (181); 701 (175); 768 (172); 764 (110); 765 (130). Goldman, 72 (69) ; 205(166); 200(193); 212 (138) ; 214 (1 1 I) : 840(82). Gonzalez, 12 (108). Graham, 1096 (1 12). (ir. -'. 322 (UK)) ; 336 (1 17) ; 340 (130) ; 400 (40) ; 511 (36) : 512 (11) ; 597 (121 Greene, 800 (100). Bartman, 18(102); 812(193); 328(24); 788(141); 744(86); 719(11); 770 (:;7). Bartweg, 169 (11); 100 (37) ; 101 (184); 162 (193); If,;; (29); 104 (103); 105 (136); 171 (43). Holway, 8028 (79) : 8136 (189) ; 3184 (39). Lamb, 811 Co ; 817 (8); 351 (74); 355 (74); 395 (74); 621 (25). iAinmon, 2861 (102). FERNALD. — MEXICAN SALVIAS. 555 Lloyd, 449 (103) ; 451 (115) ; 452 (24). Millspaugh, 18 (8) ; 90 (3) ; 116 (195). Nelson, 6 (150) ; 132 (67) ; 177 (67) ; 189 (184) ; 701 (43) ; 958 (13) ; 1100 (162) ; 1103 (118); 1169 (203); 1175 (63); 1183 (158); 1244 (130); 1289 (118); 1342 (185); 1345(192); 1387 (50); 1448(110); 1501 (184); 1511 (105); 1521 (135); 1587 (129); 1595 (104); 1782 (53); 1783 (110); 1794 (86); 1898 (103); 1915 (03) ; 1917 (136); 1972 (135) ; 2005 (116) ; 2049 (130) ; 2064 (55) ; 2068 (167) ; 2085 (190); 2086 (27); 2087 (184); 2091 (135); 2093 (152, 200); 2146 (55); 2186 (182); 2220 (55); 2235 (110) ; 2245 (193); 2300 (08); 2508 (148); 2668 (70); 2898 (128); 2922 (29); 2942 (195); 3062 (195); 3138 (176) ; 3142 (43) ; 3166 (137); 3171 (156); 3191 (41); 3201 (175); 3230 (204); 3236 g (204); 3374 (54); 3401 (184); 3427 (156); 3429 (130); 3478 (184); 3484 (184); 3507 (130) ; 3035 (188); 3736 (165); 4037 (107); 4072 (7) ; 4081 (107); 4093 (150); 4012 (187); 4103 (21) ; 4104 (187); 4171 (20); 4247 (66); 4376 (195); 4527 (100); 4557 (138); 4566 (52); 4651 (40); 4603 (136); 4679 (104); 4755 (138); 4807 (127) ; 4812 a (138) ; 4850 (46) ; 4969 (36) ; 6315 (141). Palmer [1870], 7 (101). Palmer [1880], 1002 (11); 1064 (94); 1067 (100); 1068 (100); 1069 (100); 1072 (94); 1073 (208) ; 1074 (195); 1079 (130) ; 1096 (70) ; 1097 (40) ; 1098 (40). Palmer [1885], 64 (9) ; 96 (75) 154 (75) ; 157 (75) ; 205 (24) ; 259 (61) ; 270 (193) ; 290 (166); 379 (139). Palmer [1886], 28 (83); 53 (30); 01 (33) ; 183 (121); 184 (120); 220 (29); 488 (75) ; 498 (7) ; 556 (44) ; 598 (59) ; 059 (53) ; 602 (184). Palmer [1887], 320 (10). Palmer [1889], 020 (206) ; 684 (97). Palmer [1890], 10 (3) ; 292 (193); 345 (108); 080 (9); 681 (9); 682 (24); 878 (101). Palmer [1892], 1964 (72). Palmer [1895], 244 (3). Palmer [1896], 305 (37); 327 (36); 404 (130) ; 417 (147) ; 446 (36); 451 (28); 572 (11) ; 757 (53) ; 844 (138) ; 967 (53). Palmer [1898], 107 (100) ; 153 (147) ; 161 (138) ; 194 (94) ; 334 (38) ; 335 (11) ; 336 (36) ; 640 (142) ; 640^ (139) ; 726 (136); 1071 (147). Parry, 26 (147) ; 29 (94). Parry & Palmer, 698 (89) ; 729 (47) ; 730 (103) ; 731 (104) ; 736 (28) ; 740 (145) ; 741 (130) ; 743 (11) ; 744 (36) ; 745 (52) ; 740 (52) ; 746| (11) ; 747 (138) ; 748 (138); 750 (98); 751 (96); 751J (98); 752 (118); 753 (98); 754 (142); 755 (157) ; 756 (86) ; 757 (166) ; 758 (166) ;'759 (202) ; 700 (32) ; 761 (31). Pringle, 52 (95) ; 239 (139) ; 556 (11) ; 637 (139) ; 654 (36) ; 659 (100) ; 1727 (7) ; 1704 (138); 1708 (75); 2297 (26); 2384 (136); 2421 (196); 2458 (184); 2463 (59); 2555 (83); 2560 (121); 2817 (118) ; 2818 (63) ; 2824 (166) ; 2869 (208) ; 2913 (30) ; 3058 (120); 3153 (118) ; 3157 (166); 3170 (98) ; 3206 (104) ; 3224 (63) ; 3273 (104) ; 3593 (107) ; 3600 (187) ; 3681 (40) ; 3683 (53) ; 3946 (187) ; 3954 (43) ; 3981 (193) ; 4097 (107) ; 4150 (39) ; 4155 (31) ; 4163 (29) ; 4200 (40) ; 4227 (150); 4258 (127) ; 4278 (51); 4298 (138); 4351 (109) ; 4504 (154); 4624 (44) ; 4659 (203) ; 4705 (158) ; 4763 (105) ; 4772 (102) ; 4845 (65) ; 4862 (130) ; 4947 (192); 4953 (63); 4960 (135); 4991 (185); 5176 (11); 5624 (26); 5643 (119); 5654 (146); 5779 (193); 6013 (110); 0240 (129); 0245 (92); 6251 (93); 556 PROCEEDINGS OF 1 1 1 K AMKIilfA.N ACADEMY. 3 (lmi. L60); 6905 (90) : 6907 | I L86J : 7078 F080 I LS5J : 7449 (160); 7457 (61 1 : 7 761 7711 (193) ; 7936 (166); 7991 (28) j onon naa\ . anon , t- \ 6905 ('.»i) ; I - 1 ; '-.'.'11 (118 \ 1 (188); 7612(121 I (168J . (123 677 (166) : 678 (85) ; 680 (62) ; 1063 Seaton, 269 (31); 260(138); 304 (11); 828(31); 376 (208); 181 (69); 600 (124); .Ml (193). C J. 1 5'.»01 (1); 5002 (57). j. C. Smith, 17 (129) ; 167(167); 108(152); 169(203); 170(186); 171(118); 174 (7); 208 (53); 269 (26); 272 (110) : 273 (192) ; 306 (196); 113 (106) ; 111 (52) ; 177 (168); 001 (43); 619(195); 698 (185); 708 (18); 778(40); 860(110 477 (158); G01 (43); 619(195); 698 (185), (162) ; 897 (129) ; 908 (63] ; 930 (103) ; 949 (11); 960 (130). Thurber, 821 (86) ; 872 (195); 907 (76). Tonduz, 7ii] (11); 1781 (57) ; 7158 (10); 7228 (20); 7280 (1); 845G (11). Dhde, 701 (118). ValdezSl (8) ; 55 (1). C. Wright, 1524 (100). W. <.. Wright, 1298 (71). Wislizenue, 152 (139). FERNALD. — MEXICAN SOLANUMS. 557 II. — A REVISION OF THE MEXICAN AND CENTRAL AMERICAN SOLANUMS OF THE SUBSECTION TORVARIA. Dunal's subsection Torvaria of the genus Solanum has never been understood in America. Almost without exception the many diverse forms from equally diverse regions have been in American herbaria placed under the type species Solatium torvum, Swartz. This treatment as a single polymorphous species of all the plants of similar subgeueric character, — a course by no means without precedent in other sections of Solanum and scores of other tropical American genera, — has been due to a lack of authentic material and of any more concise statement of the specific characters than can be found in the rather ponderous mono- graph of Dunal. An accumulation of specimens from many sources has made it possible to divide the Mexican material passing in the Gray Herbarium as Solanum torvum into species of marked morphological characters and restricted geographical ranges. Most of these plants thus separated are found to agree very well with the descriptions of different species recognized from Mexico by Dunal in his monograph, though three species there characterized have not yet been identified with modern herbarium material. Doubtless these identifications of modern Mexican specimens with the old descriptions cannot all be taken as final, and a study of the type specimens, when it is possible to examine them, may prove the present conclusions to be in some cases inaccurate. Yet confidence is felt that the present understanding of the group is much clearer than that which has prevailed among recent students of Mexican botany. With the hope of simplifying the future study of the group the following synopsis is presented of the Mexican species of the section as now interpreted. * Pubescence of flowering brandies densely stellate-tomentose, hairs short and fine. ■)- Pedicels bearing simple gland-tipped hairs among the stellate ones. (See also S. ochraceo-ferrugineum.) S. torvum, Swartz. Branches slightly armed, canescent-ochraceous, the young parts, especially, ochraceous : leaves subcordate-ovate, shal- lowly sinuate-lobed, olive-green and stellate-scabrous above, canescent and stellate-tomentose beneath, 1 to 1.5 dm. long, 6 to 12 cm. broad, often sparingly armed on the midrib beneath, more rarely so above : '"••'s PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. corymb generally bifid or trifid, many-flowered, cymose, tlie fruiting pedicels mostly ascending. — Prodr. 17; Dunal, SoL 208, t. 28, & in DC. Prodr. xiii. 260. — Originally described from the Wesl Indies, where if is common. In Mexico known only from the South. Chiapas, Dear Huehuetan, alt. 150 to 615 in., Feb. 22, L896 ( /.'. W. Nelson, no. 10). Var. rubiginosum, Dunal. I.e. 201, described from Guatemala, ap- parently differs from the species only in its more ferrngineous pubescence. — (ii am. mm. \, Rio Dulce, Depart. Livingston, March, 1889 (J.DonneU Smith, no. 1840): Nicaragua (0. Wright). S. Hernandesii, Moc. & Sess& More spiny throughout, the branches more loosely faordid-toinento.se: leaves deeply and sinuately 5-7-lobed, the lubes sometimes pinnatifid : inflorescence at first Bubcorymbose, Bi'mple or bifid, becoming distinctly racemose: fruiting pedicels spreading. — Moc. «5c Ses8o in Dunal, I.e. 266. — Chiapas, mountains near Tonala, alt. 600 to 1,050 m., Aug. 14, 1895, table land about Ocuilapa, alt. 1,050 to 1,170 in., Aug. 21, 1895 (K W. Nelson, nos. 2901, 3029): Gi vi I - MALA, San Miguel Uspantan, Depart. (Quiche, alt. 1,850 in., April, 1892 | IUijdc ec Lux iu exsicc. J. D. Smith, no. 3440) : NlCARAGTJ \ < ' '. Wright). S. madrense. Shrubby, the young branches loosely stellate-tomentose with canescent or ochraceous hairs, and armed with straight or slightly curved prickles : leaves thick, ovate to ovate-lanceolate, acuminate, un- equally subcordate at base, subentire or bluntly and Bhallowly sinuate- angulate, without the petiole (1 to 3 cm.) 5 to 15 cm. long. 1 to IS cm. wide, above olive-green, stellate-scabrous, beneath a little paler and tomentulose, sometimes slightly armed; young haves often aureate- tinged, and velutinous: inflorescences extra-axillary, in maturity 1 to 9 cm. long, simple or bifid, scorpoid-racemose ; the pedicels glandular hairy, spreading and reflexed in fruit: calyx-lobes lanceolate, long- acuminate: corolla 2 cm. long, 3 cm. broad, whitish, deeply lohed, the lobes lanceolate or lance-ovate, acutish: filaments very short ; anthers Bubequal, slender, 8 or lo mm. long: the style somewhat longer: berry apparently black, glabrous, 1 to L.5 cm. in diameter. — S. rf i versifolium, Wats. Proc. Am. Acad. xxi. 134, not Schl. S. torvum, Wats. 1. c. .\xii. 111. not Swartz. — The common representative of the group in the Sierra Madiv and westward to the Pacific. SONORA, Siena de los Ala s, March 25 to Apr. 8, 1890 (Edv>. Palmer, nos. 868, 864): Chi- huahua, Hacienda San Miguel. 1885 {Edw. Palmer, no. 22) : Tkpio, San l'.las, June 0, 1897 (/•,'. W. Nelson, no. 4335): Sinaloa, Mazatlan, FERNALD. — MEXICAN SOLANUMS. 559 Dec. 1894, and Isla Piedra, uear Mazatlan, Dec. 31, 1894 (Frank II. Lamb, nos. 336, 33Ga); Rosario, June 20, 1897, and foothills of the Sierra Madre, near Colomas, July 20, 1897 (/. N. Rose, nos. 1402, 1777) : Jalisco, barranca near Guadalajara, June, 1886 (Edw. Palmer, no. 106); near Guadalajara, Nov. 14, 1888, May 27, 1891 (C. G.Pringle, nos. 2193, 5140 [type]) ; mountains uear Talpa, alt. 1,200 to 1,540 m., March 7, 1897, Maria Madre TsL, May 3-25, 1897 {E. W. Nelson, nos. 4040, 4185): Colima, Colhna, Jan. 9-Feb. 6, 1891 (Edw. Pal- mer, no. 1179): Guerrero, Acapulco, Nov. 1894 (Edw. Palmer, no. 148). +- -t- Pedicels not glandular. ++ Pubescence of branches and lower face of leaves vvhitishdanate. S. Hartwegi, Benth. Essentially unarmed, branches rarely with a few spines: leaves from oblong-lanceolate to ovate, entire or siuuate- repand, acuminate, pale green above, the younger stellate- velutinous, the older scabrous: cymes many-flowered, the branches scorpoid; peduncles pedicels and calyx white-lanate ; fruitiug pedicels mostly erect: ripe fiuit red, glabrous, 1 cm. or more in diameter. — PI. Hartw. 68; Dunal, I.e. 262. S. torvum, var. lanatum, Dunal, I.e. 261. — Hart- weg's original specimen was from Hacienda del Carmen. Dunal's variety was based upon a Guatemala specimen. The following are referred here: Mexico, Valley of Mexico, Nov. 27, 1865 or 1866 (Bourgeau, no. 725): Vera Cruz, Valley of Cordova, Jan. 16, 1865 or 1866 (Bourgeau no. 1671) ; region of Orizaba, May to July (Bour- geau, nos. 2408, 2556, Botteri, nos. 82, 1083, Sealon, no. 142); Santa Lucretia, Isthmus of Tehuantepec; Feb., 1895 (O. L. Smith, no. 1071) : Oaxaca, hills near Oaxaca, alt. 1,850 in., Sept. 8, 1894 (C. G. Pringle, no. 4891) ; Monte Alban, alt. 1,690 m., Nov. 24, 1894 (L. C. Smith, no. 341) ; near Totontepec, alt. 1,690 m., vicinity of Choapam, alt. 1,170 to 1,385 m., viciuity of Yalalag, alt. 1,230 to 2,400 m., July, 1894 (E. W. Nelson, nos. 788, 835, 952); Tillantongo, Dec. 12, 1895 (Ed. Seler, no. 1591): Guatemala, San Siguan, Depart. Quiche, alt. 1,785 m., May, 1892 (Heyde & Lux in exsicc. J. D. Smith, no. 3446) : Costa Rica, Cartago, Prov. Cartago, alt. 1,300 m., Nov., 1887 (Juan J. Cooper in exsicc. J. D. Smith, no. 5872). Palmer's no. 637 from San Luis Potosi, 1878, may be an attenuated form of this. ++ ++ Pubescence ochraceous or fuscous. = Branches more or less armed. S. Fendleri, Van Heurck & Mull. Arg. Sparingly armed : pubes- 560 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. ica of young branches leaves and calyx ochiaceo-ferrugineoas, pul- verulent: leaves rhombic-ovate, shallowly sinuate-angled, 6 to 8 cm. long, 1 to 5.5 cm. broad: inflorescence closely flowered. — Van Heurck & Miill. Arg. in \'an lli'invk. Obs. luU. — Panama, Chagres, Feb., .M irch, L850 (A. Fendler, no. 254). S. ochraceo-ferrugineum. Stem- 1.5 to S in. high, armed with stout broad-based deltoid prickles: young branches leaves and calyces ochraceo-ferrugineous, densely velutinous fcomentose rarely a little gland- ular: leaves oblong-ovate, Bhallowly Binuate-angled or lobed, 7 to 16 cm. long, 4.5 to 12 cm. broad, paler and more tomentose beneath than above: inflorescence loosely many-flowered: calyx in anthesis 8 or 10 mm. long, deeply 5-parted into deltoid-lanceolate acuminate lobes: corolla 3 cm. broad: anthers slender, Bubequal, 6 or 7 mm. long: berries glabrous, 1 cm. or more in diameter. — S. obtusifolium, Benth. PI. llartw. 20, not 1115K. S. torvnm, var. vrhrnrm-i'm-iiijiiiriini, Duual, 1. c. 200. — Guanajuato, Guanajuato, 1837 (Hartweg, no. 204), 1880, 1883 (J. Duges): Tamaulipas, San Luis Potosi to Tampico, Dec., 1878 to Feb., 1879 (Edw. Palmer, no. 639£) ; Vera Ceuz, old fields and recently cleared grounds, Wartenburg, near Tantoyuca, 1858 (JSrvendberg, nos. 285, 485). S. DIVER8IFOUUM, Schleeht. Sparingly armed: branches petioles and inflorescences cinereous Btellate-tomentulose : leaves oblong-ovate, bluntly acuminate, with rounded bases, olive-green and stellate-scabrous above, cinereous-tomentulose or pulverulent beneath, 7 to 20 cm. long, 1 to 12 cm. broad, subentire or slightly undulate, rarely Bhallowly sinuate: inflorescence subaxillary, simple or branched, becoming G to 9 cm. lung. extremely floriferous, the pedicels after anthesis mostly strongly reflexed or drooping. — Linnaea, six. 297 ; 1 hinal, 1. c 262. — ( Originally described from Papantla, Vera Cruz. The following are referred lure; .Mexico, without locality (Coulter, no. 1245): San Luia Potosi, bills, Las Canoas,Aug. 21, 1891 (C. G. Pringle, no. 3901, doubtfully referred here) : Vera Cruz, Valley of Cordova, Dec. 26, 1865 or 1866 I Boitr- geau, no. 1608); Orizaba (Botteri)\ near Motzorongo, Feb. 22, 1894 ( E. W. Nelson, no. 1 19) : Oaxaca, Paso de Canoa, Tuxtepec, alt. 150 m., Aug. 2S, ls'j.3 (Cutizaf/i, no. 188, L. ('. Smith no. 669). = = Branches unarmed. S. Hayesii. A small tree: bhe young branches finely but densely invested with short ochraceo-cinereoos stellate hairs : upper leaves gemi- nate and unequal, ovate to ovate-obloiig, acuminate, unequal and sub- FERNALD. MEXICAN SOLANUMS. 561 cordate or rounded at base, entire or slightly undulate, the larger 1.7 to 2.4 dm. long, 1.1 to 1.4 dm. wide, at first stellate-pubescent above, soon quite glabrous and lucid, cinereous-tomentose beneath ; primary nerves 5 to 7 pairs; petioles thick, 2 to 4 cm. long: inflorescence extra-axillary, bifid or trifid, becoming 6 or 8 cm. long, the branches scorpoid-racemose, densely flowered, ochraceo-cinereous ; pedicels in fruit becoming strongly deflexed : calyx in anthesis 2 mm. long, with short rounded lobes : corolla densely stellate without, G or 7 mm. high, barely 1 cm. broad, with long lanceolate lobes : anthers subequal, lanceolate, truncate, 3 or 4 mm. long: style slightly longer, sparingly stellate-pubescent : berry glabrous or sparingly puberulent, 1 cm. or more in diameter. — Panama, Chagres, Jan., 1850 (A Fendler, no. 24G) ; near Gatun, Dec, 1859 {Sutton Hayes). * * Short stellate pubescence of flowering branches mixed with long slender naked hairs. S. erythrotrichum. Strongly armed with deltoid mostly hooked stout prickles : branches densely reddish-tomentose with appressed stellate hairs and longer naked jointed trichomes : leaves oblong, acumi- nate, rounded at the base, subentire, 1 to 1.7 dm. long, 3 to 8 cm. wide, ferrugineous-green sparingly stellate and strongly rugose above, toment- ulose beneath, at first rufescent, later cinereous, rarely armed on the midrib beneath; primary nerves 5 to 7 pairs; petiole 1.5 to 2.5 cm. long, rufescent: peduncle extra-axillary, 3.5 cm. long, few-flowered, rufescent ; pedicels short (7 mm.), thickish : calyx in fruit deeply cut into lanceolate lobes 6 or 7 mm. long: fruit puberulent, becoming glab- rate, about 1 cm. in diameter. — Guatemala, Coban, Depart. Alta Vera- paz, alt. 1,325 m., Feb., 1888 (H. von Tuerckheim in exsicc. J. D. Smith no. 1381). * * * Branches clothed with long stellate-tipped hairs with broad bases. S. hispidum, Pers. Armed with long stout hooked-prickles, and densely pubescent with ochraceous or fuscous distinct stiff trichomes : leaves ovate, subcordate or attenuate at base, 0.5 to 2 dm. long, subentire or with 5 to 11 sinuate lobes; above ferrugineous with distinct stipitate stellate hairs, or glabrate, and often with long sharp prickles on the nerves ; beneath cinereous with similar hairs, the nerves often spiny. — Syn. i. 228 ; Dunal, 1. c. 275. S. stellatum, Ruiz & Pav. Fl. Per. ii. 40. t. 176. S. ckrysotrichum, Schlecht. Linnaea, xix. 304; Dunal, 1. c. 276. — from the variable material now at hand it seems impossible to vol.. xxxv. — 30 562 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN Al ADEMY. keep 8. chrysolrichum separate from Persoon's Bpecies. Vera Cruz, Cordoba, alt 830 m., Aug. 20, 189] I //. /-'. Section, do. 895) ; Jico, July 16, I- 18 ( B. II'. Nelson, do. 24): Orizaba, Jau. 28, L894 I B. W. Net- , . i, o. 15)'. Oaxai v. Calderoo, alt. 1,850 m., San Juan del Estado, Junr 18, L894 (/.. 0. Smith, do. 86); Dear Reyes, alt. 1,785 to 2,060 to., Oct. 24, 1894 ( A'. W. Nelson,no. L785) : Chiapas, Dear Tumbala, alt. 1,230 to 1,690 m., Oct. 20, L895 I E. W. Nelson, do. 8381 l: Gi \n- mala, Saota Rosa, alt. 925 m., June, 1892, Sao Miguel Qspantan, alt. 1,850 in.. Apr., 1892 {Heyde & Lux in exsicc. J. D. Smith, dos. 3441, 8448): Costa Rica, Cart:.-", alt. 1,650 m., Dec., 1887 (Juan J. Cooper, in exsicc. J. D. Smith, do. 5S70). Three species of the subsection Torvaria, described from Mexico, are still obscure and perhaps nut recently collected. These are S. amictum, Moric. in DunaJ 1. c. 203; S. rude-pannum, Dunal, 1. c. 20 1; »S'. Lam- berth, Dunal, 1. c. 2G3. III. — SOME UNDESCRIBED MEXICAN PHANEROGAMS* CHIEFLY LABIATAE AND SOLANACEAE. Pelexia Pringlei. Roots clustered, cylindric, whitish, tuberiform, 0.5 to 1 dm. long: leaves 3, at the base of the bracteate scape, Iong- petioled, with smooth entire oblong to ovate-lanceolate acuminate blades 8 to 12 cm. long, about 4 cm. wide: scape about 3 dm. high, sparingly pubescent above, with about 8 sheathing lanceolate bracts: spike 1 dm. long, rather loosely flowered : bracts lance-acuminate, 3 cm. long, much exceeding the ovary : sepals greenish, lanceolate, acuminate, two of them free and somewhat drooping, 2 cm. long, the others united to form a blunt galea; lip short and rounded, exceeded by the beak of the stigma ; spur adnate to the ovary : anther ovate, bluntish, 5 m. long. — Vera Cruz, wooded hills Dear Jalapa, alt. 1,230 m., April, 1899 (O. G. Pringh, no. 8122). Habitally resembliDg P. setacea, Lindl. (Neottia calcarata, Hook. Bot. Mag. t. 3403), but with adnate spur, and shorter blunter sepals galea and lip. Scutellaria distans. Stems slender, flexuous, 3 to 4 dm. long, Bomewhat recurved-pilose on the angles; internodes rather loog (3 to ."> cm. ) : leaves firm, sparingly appressed-pubescent or glabrate, fan- shaped, broader than long, upper from deltoid-ovate to rhombic-ovate. FERNALD. — MEXICAN PLANTS. 563 short-acuminate, coarsely crenate above the rounded or truncate base, 2 to 5 cm. long, 2 to 3.5 cm. wide: flowers solitary in the axils, on slightly pilose pedicels 0.5 cm. long : calyx pilose in lines, in anthesis 4 to 5 mm. long : corolla dark blue, arcuate, 2 to 2.5 cm. long, puberulent without ; the lower lip slightly longer thau the upper, with a white spot in the middle. — Jalisco, in the Sierra Madre, west of Bolailos, Sept. 15-17, 1897 (J. N. Rose, no. 2951). Related to the northern S. galericulata, L. S. Rosei. Apparently tall (upper portions of plants at hand 6 to 7 dm. high) : stem short cinereous-pubescent : lower leaves suborbicular, rounded at tip, upper ovate, acuminate, coarsely crenate-dentate, rounded or subcordate at base, minutely soft-pubescent on both sides, 4 to 6 cm. long, 3 to 4 cm. wide, on very short pubescent petioles 1 to 3 mm. long : raceme elongated, 2 to 2.5 dm. or more in length : the flowers irregularly scattered, alternate, opposite or fascicled : bracts lanceolate, about equalling the glandular-hirsute pedicels : calyx somewhat glandu- lar-hirsute, in anthesis 3 to 4 mm. long: corolla 2 to 2.5 cm. long, rose-purple above ; the pubescent tube pale ; the lower lip somewhat exceeding the upper. — Sinaloa, foothills of the Sierra Madre, near Colomas, July 20, 1897 (J. N. Rose, no. 1784). Ghiesbreght's nos. 88 and 803 from Chiapas are probably forms of the species, though with smaller corollas. S. Pedicularis. Stems slender, minutely cinereous-puberulent : leaves oblong or ovate-oblong, coarsely crenate-dentate, short-acuminate and blunt at tip, rounded or subtruncate at base, sparsely pubescent above with short appressed hairs, glabrous beneath, 2 to 3.5 cm. long, 1 to 2 cm. wide, on slender finely-puberulent petioles 1.5 to 2 cm. long : raceme 15-25-fiowered, at first dense, resembling Pedicularis canadensis : bracts linear or lanceolate, equalling the pedicels (3 to 5 mm. long) : calyx puberulous, in anthesis 3 to 3.5 mm. long, in fruit becoming 8 to 9 mm. long: corolla yellowish, 2.5 cm. long, the tube barely 2 mm. in diameter nearly to the slightly broader throat ; lower lip a little longer than the upper: seeds roughish, not margined. — Chiapas, near Tum- bala, alt. 1,230 to 1,700 m., Oct. 20, 1895 (E. W. Nelson, no. 3342). The specimens are rather fragmentary, so that the base of the plant can- not now be described. Nearly related to the showy S. Mociniana, Benth., which has much longer scarlet corollas. Stachys (Stachyotypus) flaccida. Ascending or spreading, freely branched, 4 dm. high or more (?) : stems minutely pilose or glabrate ; internodes 1 dm. long: leaves thin and flaccid, glabrous or minutely appressed-pubescent beneath, the lower on slender petioles, the upper 50-i PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. becoming sile, deltoid-ovate to oblong, cordate at base, coarsely crenate, 8 to 7 cm. long: verticels 3-6-flowered, remote, only the lower conspicuously leafy-bracteate : pedicels very short : calyx minutely puber- alent, in anthesis 6 mm. long, cleft half why to the base into lance-subul- ate teeth: corolla apparently pale, 1.1 to 1.3 cm. long; the tube once and a half as long as the calyx ; the 8-lobed lower lip twice as long is the entire short pubescent galea. — Oaxai \. Elacienda de Caciques, Dis- trict of Cuicatlan, A.ug. I, 1895, alt. 2,150m. ( L. 0. Smith, no. 612). Apparently related to S. Drummondii, Benth. S. (Calostachys) oaxacana. Stems slender, 2.5 to 6 dm. high, densely retrorse-hispid below, sparingly so or only glandular-puberalent above: leaves deltoid-ovate to deltoid-lanceolate, coarsely crenate, cordate or truncate at base, 1.5 to 3.5 cm. long, above Bomewhat stri- gOBe-pubescent, beneath more or less pubescent, often white with appressed longitudinally spreading stillidi hairs ; petioles Blender, the lower equalling the blades, the upper shorter: verticels 4— 6-flowered, rather remote, only the lowest conspicuously bracteate : pedicels about equalling the calyx: calyx green, glandular-puberuleut, in anthesis 5 mm. long, in fruit becoming as broad as long, with 5 deltoid-subulate teeth : corolla scarlet, 2 to 2.5 cm. long, minutely puberulent or glabrate without; the 3-lobed lower lip slightly exceeding the entire or emargi- nate galea. — Oaxaca, near Reyes, alt. 2,060 to 3,080 m , Oct. 1894 (E. W. Nelson, no. 1795); Sierra de San Felipe, alt. 2,150 m., Sept. 23, 1895 (C.Conzatti, in exsicc. L. C. Smith, no. 709) ; mountains of San Juan del Estado, alt. 2,300 in., Oet. 21, 1895 (L. C. Smith, no. 921); Cuicatlan, alt. 1,675 in., Dec. 9, 1895 (V. Gonzalez, no. 47). Closely related to S. coccinea, Jacq., with which it has formerly been confused, but from which it is distinguished by its very slender habit, smaller calyx and different pubescence. Calamintha oaxacana. Shrub with smooth brown bark, and very slender minutely puberulent or glabrate branchlets : leaves thin, elliptic- ovate, 1 to 1.5 cm. long, finely and sharply serrate, acute at tip, nar- rowed or rounded at base: petioles filiform, about equalling the leaf- blades : flowers solitary, axillary, on slender 2-bracteate pedieels ."> to 8 mm. long: calyx tubular. 18-costate, in anthesis G to 7 mm. long; the tube twice exceeding the lance-subulate lobes; the upper lip with 3 upturned lobes, the two lobes of the lower straighter: corolla red, 8 to 8.25 cm. long, short-pubescent without. — Oaxaca, El I'arian- Ktl.i. alt. 1,200 m.. Nov. 1898 | V. Gonzalez & O. Conzatti, no. 901 >. Near< Bl n lated to C. coccinea of the southern United States. Habit- FERNALD. — MEXICAN PLANTS. 565 ally somewhat resembling Gardoquia mexicana, but with the definitely bilabiate lip of Calamintha. Cunila tornentosa. Stem tall (probably 8 dm. high), sharply quad- rangular, freely paniculate-branched, densely tomentose above and on the younger parts: leaves lanceolate to ovate-lanceolate, acuminate, sessile of short-petioled, entire or sparingly appressed-serrate, above puberulent, beneath densely white-tomentose, 2 to 5 cm. long, 1 to 1.5 cm. wide : racemes dense, spiciform, 1 to 4 cm. long, solitary or in o's, ter- minating the short branches: pedicels slender, about equalling the calyx : calyx 2 to 3 mm. long ; the tube twice or thrice as long as the lance-sub- ulate teeth, densely villous especially within the throat : corolla villous, slightly exceeding the calyx : stamens mostly included. — Oaxaca, between Pluma and San Miguel Suchistepec, alt. 1,850 m., March 21, 1895 (E. W. Nelson, no. 2495). Hyptis (Cephalohyptis) madrensis. Stems procumbent, puberu- lent (densely short-pilose-hirsute on the younger parts), freely brandling ; iuternodes 0.5 to 1 dm. long : leaves thickish, oblanceolate to elliptic- obovate, coarsely crenate-dentate above, the subcuneate entire base nar- rowed gradually to a short petiole, appressed-pilose on both faces, dark green above, pale beneath, 2.5 to 5 cm. long, 1 to 2 cm. broad : peduncles axillary, 3 to 5 cm. loug: fruiting head 2 cm. in diameter : bracts folia- ceous, lanceolate to oblong, eutire or coarsely dentate, I cm. or less long : calyx villous, the long subulate teeth setulose. — Tepic, foothills of the Sierra Madre, near Pedro Paulo, Aug. 3, 1897 (J. N. Rose, no. 1958). Resembling, apparently, II. Parkeri, Benth., of South America but dif- fering from that in its pubescent leaves and calyx. H. (Minthidium) Pringlei. Stem 1 m. (?) high, freely branching, more or less pubescent with pilose or somewhat strigose hairs: leaves lanceolate, acute, subsessile or short-petioled, entire, essentially glabrous, 2 cm. or less long : flowers axillary, 2 to G in a fascicle: pedicels slender, glabrous, becoming 2 mm. long in fruit: calyx glabrous, campanulate, in anthesis 1.5 mm., in fruit 3 to 4 mm. long, cleft one-third to the base into narrowly deltoid subacuminate lobes: corolla slightly exceeding the calyx. — San Luis Potosi, Tamasopo Canon, Aug. 5, 1890 ( 0. G. Pringle, no. 3223). Related to H. verticillaris, with which it has been confused, but with axillary flowers. H. (Minthidium) axillaris. Similar to the preceding: leaves lan- ceolate or rhombic-lanceolate, 7 cm. or less in length, acuminate, coarsely and irregularly serrate above the middle, entire below and cuneate to petioles 1 cm. or less long, puberulent above, pilose beneath on the 566 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMEBICAN A.CADEMT. nerves: caly* sparingly pubescent or glabrate, salverform, with shorter broader lobes. — Pi ebla, near Metlaltoyuca, alt. 250 m.,Jan. 81, 1898 i /.'. .1. Goldman, uo. 18). H. (Hypenia $ Laxiflorae) Nelsonii. Tall. Btem smootli and -v below, minutely puberulent above: Leaves thick, glabrouB, rather glaucous, lance-acuminate, slightly auriculate-claspicg at base, ihose of the stem 1.-") to - dm. long, with line short teeth along the margin, the upper much shorter and entire : panicle 4 to 5 dm. long, dichotomous; the lower ascending branches •"> dm. long: bracts ovate-lanceolate, acum- inate, puberulent, 1 cm. or less long: ultimate pedicels 0.5 to 1 cm. long: calyx puberulent, campanulate, in anthesis 5 to G mm., in fruit 1 cm. long, strongly 13— nerved, slightly bilabiate ; the deltoid acuminate lobes one-half as long as the tube: corolla 2 to 2.25 cm. long; tin- tube constricted below, tubular and slightly enlarged upward; the blunt lobes only 3 or 4 mm. long: styles and anthers exserted, glabrous : nut oblong-obovate. — Jalisco, between San Sebastian and the summit of Mt. Bufa de Mascota. alt. 1,850 in.. March 20, 1807 (J.\ W. Nelton, no. 4108). A unique plant among the Mexican species, belonging to a section hitherto known only from Brazil and adjacent South America. Lycium geniculatum. Branches slender, geniculate, covered with pale gray bark: spines slender, on the flowering branches about spread- ing lance-subulate teeth 1 to 1.5 mm. long: corolla 1.2 cm. Ion-, funnel- form, with broad-cordate lobes 4 to 5 mm. long, pubescent within the tube: stamens slightly unequal, a little exserted : filaments pubescent below: fruit 5 to 8mm. in diameter, red withabloom.— Pdebla, near Tehuacan, Nov. 27, 1895 {C. G. Pn,/;,l<>. no. 7000). Nearest relate, 1, apparently, to L. cestmidrs, Schl., of Brazil. Margaranthua sulphureus. Annual, glabrous ; stem stout and rather fleshy, 4 dm. high, branching above: lower leaves alternate, the upper and those of the branches geminate and unequal, from ovate to broadly rhombic-obovate, subentire or shallowly and bluntly sinuate, the larger 3 to 6 cm. long, 3 or 4 cm. wide, narrowed below to winged pe- DO' tioles varying from 1 to 4 cm. long; upper leaves smaller, sometimes subsessile: flowers generallv single from each of the upper axils ; pe- FERNALD. — MEXICAN PLANTS. 567 duncle slender, somewhat arcuate, in fruit becoming 0.5 to 1.5 cm. long: calyx in anthesis 3 or 4 mm. long, sparingly pilose, with 5 short deltoid ciliate lobes : corolla campanulate-urceolate, 7 to 10 cm. long, nearly as broad, sulphur-yellow, with purple patches at base : fruiting calyx gla- brate, globose, 1 to 1.5 cm. in diameter, the short calyx-tips closely con- nivent. — Mexico, borders of ditches, Valley of Mexico, July 10, 1865 or 1866 (Bourgeau, no. Ill), Valley of Mexico, alt. 2,250 m., Oct. 4, 1899 (C G. Pringle, no. 8215), A much coarser plant than the similar 31 solanaceus, with larger yellower corolla. Athenaea Nelsonii. Stems petioles and pedicels glandular-villous, fuscous : leaves solitary or geminate and very unequal, on petioles 8 cm. or less in length, broadly ovate, acuminate, equally or unequally cordate at base, entire, undulate or slightly sinuate-toothed, the larger 2 dm. long, thin, dark green aud minutely pubescent above, pale and appressed-pilose beneath, especially on the nerves : flowers in fascicles of 5 to 15 : pedi- cels at first rather short, in fruit becoming 2 to 3 cm. long : calyx thin, glandular-pilose, short-campanulate, in anthesis 5 to 6 mm. high aud broad, rounded or subtruncate at base, the tube hardly equalling the 5 deltoid lobes: corolla yellowish, 1.5 to 2 cm. long, deeply cut into oblong ciliate lobes 1 cm. long : filaments broad at base, inserted midway up the throat of the corolla, rather shorter than the oblong anthers (3.5 to 4 mm. long) : fruiting calyx becoming 1 cm. in diameter, inclosing the scarlet berry. — Chiapas, between Tumbala and El Sal to, alt. 460 to 1,385 in., Oct. 29, 1895 (E. W. Nelson, no. 3395). A large-leaved species habit- ally resembling A. viscosa, Benth. & Hook. (Saracha viscosa, Schrad., Sweet, Brit. Fl. Gard. ser. 2, t. 323), but with smaller more regular calyx, more deeply lobed corolla and much shorter filaments. Physalis subintegra. Perennial from a very slender root-stock 3 or 4 dm. long, ascending, slightly branching from near the base : stems tough, dark green, sparingly appressed-pubescent with simple hairs or glabrate, about 3 dm. high : leaves from ovate-lanceolate to broadly ovate 3 to 6 cm. long, 1.5 to 3 cm. broad, entire or slightly repand-dentate, somewhat appressed-pubescent on both surfaces, tapering above to a blunt tip and slightly rounded below to a petiole 0.5 to 2 cm. long : peduncle short, 0.5 to 1 cm. long: calyx in anthesis 7 to 10 mm. long, pubescent, with triangular-lanceolate or ovate acute lobes : corollas pubescent with- out, the earlier 2.5 cm. broad, the later smaller, sulphur yellow with large dull brown markings at base : one filament slightly exceeding the others, 5 mm. long; anthers oblong, purplish, 2 or 3 mm. long: fruiting calyx globose-ovoid, a little sunken at base, slightly 5-augled, firm aud 568 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. ngly veiny, S to 8.5 cm. long.- Mexico, Sierra de las Cruces, alt, .... Sept. 19, L899 (O. G. Pringle, no. 8225); Vera Cbcz, Orizaba ('■ , no. 207): 0 ax ac a, slopes of .Mt. Zempoaltepec, alt 2,400 to 3,080 m.. July 5-10, 1894 (J2. \l. Nelson, nos. 587, 681): Jalisco, between Huejuilla and Monte Escobedo, Aug. 25, 26, 1897 (./. X. Rose, ii"-. 2577, 2606). Nearly related to P. arenicola, Kear- ney, of the southeastern United States. P. philippensis. Freely branching from a stout woody eaudex : the slender branches somewhat ligneous at base, about 1 din. in length, lone- pilose with crisp white jointed hairs: leaves appressed-pubescenl abo pilo.se beneath on the veins and ciliate on the margins, broadly rhombic- obovate, coarsely and bluntly angnlate-sinuate, I to •'! cm. long, 1 to 2.5 cm. wide, broadly subcuneate below to a broad long-pilose petiole 1 to 1.5 cm. long: peduncles 1 cm. long, pilose: calyx during anthi about 8 mm. long, white-pilose, cleft into narrowly ovate acutish or blunt lobes: corolla short-cainpanulate, 1.5 cm. long, 2 to 2.5 cm. broad, whitish or pale yellow, with very broad purplish markings : 2 filaments longer than the others, 7 mm. long; anthers short-oblon_r. purple and yellow, 3 or 4 mm. long: fruit not seen. — Oaxa< \. Sierra de San Felipe, alt. 2,G17 in., dune 1, 189-4 ( C. G. J,r>'u>/l>-) no. 5621). P. sordida. Perennial, densely pubescent all over with short sordid glandular-pilose hairs: the stems depressed, 4 or 5 dm. long, freely branching: leaves from suborbicular to ovate, coarsely but bluntly sinuate-dentate, subcordate or truncate below, pubescent on both fa 1 to 5 cm. long, 1 to 3 cm. broad, on slender glandular-pilose petioles 1 to 3 cm. long: peduncles short, barely 1 cm. long in fruit: calyx in anthesis 0 or 7 mm. long, sordid-pubescent, with triangular-lanceolate acute lobes: earlier corollas 1.5 cm. broad, sulphur-yellow, with small drab or brownish patches at base : filaments somewhat unequal; anthers yellow and green, narrowly oblong. .'J or 4 mm. long: fruiting calyx broadly short-ovate, glandular-pilose, not conspicuously angled. 1.5 to L' cm. long. — Apparently in sand (the entire plant coated with fine sand), Oaxaca, Boca de Leon, Telixtlahuaca, alt. 2,810 m.. Aug. 8, 1895 (Albert L. Smith, no. 637). Nearest related, apparently, to P. mlu/n/ata, Rydberg, of the southwestern United States. P. saltillensis. I'uberulent throughout with fine white stellate hairs: branches slender, terete below, Bub-angulate above: bases elliptic ovate, coarsely and bluntly sinuate-dentate, the upper unequal and geminate, 3 to •; ,ni. long, 2 to 1 em. wide, unequally subcuneate or rounded at base FERNALD. — MEXICAN PLANTS. 569 to a slender petiole 1.5 to 3.5 cm. long: peduncle filiform, usually curved at tip, in fruit 2 to 3.5 cm. long : calyx in anthesis 6 mm. long, with short narrowly triangular acutish or blunt lobes: corolla 1 to 1.5 cm. broad, sulphur-yellow, with purple patches at base: fruiting calyx ovate, 1.5 to 2 cm. long, obscurely 5-angled, the tips counivent : mature berry orange, edible. — Coahuila, in shade, Saltillo, Sept. 1808 (Edw. Pitlmer, no. 332). P. Rydbergii. Perennial (?) : stem slender, tough, much branched, finely glandular-puberulent : leaves lanceolate to ovate-lanceolate, sub- entire or shallowly sinuate-dentate, finely glandular-pubescent on both faces, 0.5 to 1.5 cm. long, 3 to 5 mm. broad, acute at tip, tapering un- equally at base to slender petioles about half as long : peduncle filiform, in fruit becoming 1 to 1.5 cm. long: calyx open-campanulate, the lobes not connivent at tip, in anthesis 0.5 cm. long, with ovate-lanceolate blunt lobes : corolla barely 1 cm. in diameter, yellow, with 5 acute lobes : fruiting calyx broadly open-campanulate, 1 cm. long, 5-10-angled, strongly reticulate. — Mexico, Ymala, Sept. 25-Oct. 8, 1891 {Edw. Palmer, no. 1713). Dedicated to Per Axel Rydberg, whose critical studies of this genus have greatly cleared the confusion which prevailed in the American species, and to whose unique section Crasslfoliae the present species is an addition. Solanum (Anthoresis) plumense. Shrub with cinereous smooth- ish bark: young branches finely pulverulent: leaves ovate-lanceolate, long-acuminate, acutish or rounded at the base, 1 to 1.8 dm. long, 4 to 6 cm. wide, entire or slightly undulate, minutely cinereous-stellate on both faces ; petioles slender, 2 to 5 cm. long : corymb on a long cinereous- pulverulent peduncle, in fruit 1 to 1.5 dm. broad, many-flowered: calyx 2 mm. high, cinereous-stellate, with 5 ovate-deltoid bluntish lobes : cor- olla white, stellate-pulverulent without, 0.5 cm. high, 1.5 cm. broad, with ovate-lanceolate lobes: stamens subequal, oblong, truncate, 2 to 2.5 mm. long: fruit subglobose, sparingly pulverulent, 1 cm. in diameter. — Oaxaca, about Pluma, alt. 925 to 1,480 m., March 17, 1895 (E. W. Nelson, no. 2493). S. 'Polymeris) dejectum. Branching a little above the stout woody root: stems slender, herbaceous, ascending, decumbent at base, branching, cinereous-pilose above with fine stellate hairs: upper leaves geminate, unequal, from subreniform to broadly ovate, rounded or taper- ing to a bluntish tip, subtruncate or gradually tapering below to a petiole 1 to 3.5 cm. long, finely and closely cinereous-stellate on both faces, more strongly so beneath, entire or slightly undulate, 2 to 5 cm. long: 570 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. peduncles Blender, in anthesis erect, 0.5 to 1 ■ r r xt + 2,- aj Xj xt + \ 1. 54 a j ak Xj Xk + etc.* For assigned values of the a's the transformation defined by these equations may be denoted by T„. * Lie: Transformationsgruppen, I. pp. 61, 02. VOL. XXXV. — 37 578 PBOCEl DINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. Among the transformations of this family is an cxr_1 of infinitesimal transformations (tha! is, of transformations infinitely near the identical transformation), obtained by making the fir's infinitesimal. Thus let • • • *»> «i S /, • . . Orlt) — xt + St 1 a, A', . r, (i = 1, 2, . . . n). For assigned values of the a's, the continued applications to the mauifold (xux.2, . . . x„) of the infinitesimal transformations r xt + $t 2, a, .X) . a:,, r of which 'SjdjXj is said to be the symbol, generates a group GVn) with a single parameter t of transformations (3) x'i=fi(xl, . . . xn,tai, . . . to,,) (1 = 1,2,. . . B). Thus, if (4) x", =f( (x'u . . . x'u,t'ai, . . . ,'a,,) 0 = 1,2,. . . n), we derive by the elimination of the x"s (5) x"i - ft (xu . . . X,„ t" alf . . . t" u„) (* = 1,2,. . . n), where t" = / + t' '. In particular, if <' = — ., x", = x,- for » = 1, 2, . . . ». Therefore, each transformation of GV"' is paired with its inverse and. for t = 0, we have the identical transformation.* In accordance with the notation adopted, the general transformation of G1(") is denoted by T,a ; and. by what precedes, if rf/a~l denotes the transformation inverse to T/a. we have Tterx = T_/a. A.8 t approaches infinity the transformation of group Ol{n) defined by (•"») may approach a definite finite transformation T. But, although for t infinite, T,a = T may be non-illusory, it nannot be said to be generated by the infinitesimal transformation of GVa)- The conception of the * Lie: Transformntionograppen, I. pp. 52, 56. TABEB. — ON SINGULAB TBANSFOBMATIONS. 579 generation of a finite transformation by an infinitesimal transformation is not applicable in this case. Moreover, for t — go, the resulting trans- formation of GVa) has properly no inverse. For assigned finite values of the a's, the transformation Ta of the family defined by equations (1), if not illusory, belongs to the group 6Va) with a single parameter generated by the infinitesimal transformation whose symbol is % a5 Xr Thus the totality of transformation with finite parameters of the family (1) separate into an oo'"-1 of groups GJa). In consequence of what has been said relative to the group G^a\ it follows that each transformation of the family (1) with finite parameters is paired with its inverse, and we have Ta~x = T_a. As the a's approach certain limiting values, of which some are infinite, the transformation Ta may approach a definite finite transforma- tion f as a limit. This transformation may be equivalent to a transformation Tb of the family (1) with finite parameters bt, b2, . . . br. In this case T is generated by an infinitesimal transformation of the r family, namely IjbjXj, but not otherwise.* i The composition of two arbitrary transformations Ta, Tb of the family, defined, respectively, by the equations (6) x'i=fi(xl, . . . xn,a1} . . . O (t = l,2, . . . n), (7) *"« =/«(**. . . x'^b,. . . b,) (i = l,2,. . . n), gives a transformation which may be denoted by Tb Ta, and is defined by (8) x"t =ft (/x (:r, a), . . . fn (x, a), bu . . . br) {i=\,2,. . . n). This transformation is not, in general, a transformation of the family. It will, however, be assumed throughout this paper that * Let ax = ax t, a2 = a«t, . . . ar = art. It is obviously necessary to distin- guish between the equations of transformation which result from assigning definite finite values to the a's, and then increasing t without limit, and those which result when «lt a2, . . . ar (without preserving the same ratio) approach severally cer- tain limiting values some of which are infinite. The transformation which results in the first case has properly no inverse. It transforms every point on any one of the path curves of the group Gx(<>-) into invariant points of such curves. The trans- formation which results in the second case if non-illusory may possess an inverse. .", SO PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. r \ \ A A', = 2,c,M A', [j,k = 1,2 r), the <-'s being quantities independent of the x>. In which cuse, from ('"•) ■'■', =ft(xu . . . X^Ou . . . O^) (»' = 1,2,... n), (7) s^i=/i(*i.. ■ • x'hJju. . .br) (1 = 1,2,. . . rt), we shrill obtain (by the chief theorem of Lie's theory) (9) x"t=ft(xu . . . av cu . . . c,.) (« = 1,2,... »), where (10) c> = • ' • /» fa — «)» «1 + 8«!, (i = l,2, . . . n) ar + 8 ar) From this system of equations, which hold for all values of the x's, we derive, for the determination of bu b2, etc., r equations independent of the x's and linear in 8au 8a2, etc., namely, (12) Stbj = Aji 8«i + AJ2 8a2 + . . . + Ajr 8ar U = 1,2 r), where the A's are functions of ax, a2, . . . ar. in Cayley's " abbreviated notation " are (12 a) St (bu b2, . . . br) = (^lu J12 . . . ^4lr$Sai, k2, -^21 -^22 • • • -^2 -^*rl -^-* r2 * These equations written . s«,.)* * In this paper I employ the notation of Cayley's "Memoir on the Theory of Matrices," Philosophical Transactions, 1858, with the exception that the identical transformation will be denoted by /, whereas Cayley denotes this transformation by the symbol 1. In the notation and nomenclature invented by Cayley a linear substitution and a bilinear form is each represented by the square array of its coefficients, the matrix of the bilinear form or of the linear substitution. In accordance with Cayley's theory, if A denotes the matrix of the linear substitution x'i — 2i* aiv xi (i = 1, 2, . l and B the matrix of the linear substitution n), 582 ■ EEDINGS mk THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. Let a denote the matrix of the bilinear form — -M-, (5 " c , M) vM :>■ i i i namely, / V 2a,e,u, — S%ein, . " — " i c i LSI — ", '', IS) • — - «j Cjr 1 — "( '"; Irt — "., '') ^ r« ^ il r I J i r ! Let /denote the matrix unity (the identical transformation), and let e*" denote the series / + <£ „ + A a* + . . ., which is convergent for any matrix <£„. Then it will be found that fAu, AV1. . . . AA e*a _ j .l.j!, A.,.,, . . . AnJ " = /+i^.+ . Let now Aa denote the determinant of 4>a vanishes it' and only if the a's^are so chosen that 2 12 , 2 a j Cj.,., — '2kTr\/— 1 where k is some integer not zero. The values of the parameters a f<>r which A„ vanishes may be termed critical values of the parameters. The critical values of the parameters u are, therefore, those values of the a's for which one or more of the roots of the characteristic equation of the matrix <£„ is an even multiple, not zero, of it y/~^\. If A„ 4= 0, we may take the i's arbitrarily, and then, from equations (1 2). derive expressions for 8au8tr„, . . . 8«,., as linear functions of b1} b,, . . . br. Thus, if A„ 4= ^- we have 2, b v .r, (» = 1, 2, . . . n), l A ± B denotes the matrix of the linear substitution x'i= S" (a,v±l,v)n (»= 1,2, i and A B the matrix of the linear substitution »), S, = 2^ 2v (Zip 6^ *» (' = li 2, . . . n). l l V7e shall thm have .1 [B C) = (.1 B) C, A (B ± C) = A B + A C, etc., but in general .1 B '.. BA. TABER. — ON SINGULAR TRANSFORMATIONS. 583 (13) (Sa1} 8«2, . . .8ar) ia -I (h1} b2, . . . bT) 8t(a 11) tl12) • -WuK • • -K)> Aa X a21 a22) • • X X or (18a) where a 8* So, = •— - (an hi + a,-2 62 + A„ JUV • + a?, 4r) (J = 1, 2, . . . r), is the first minor of Aa relative to AVfL The quantities 8 «i, 8 a2, 8 «r, as determined by these equations, are infinitesimal if Aa 4= 0, since then the constituents aM„ A(,_1 of the matrix <£„ (e a — I) ~l are finite. Therefore, if the parameters a are so chosen that Aa 4= 0, we may take bly b2, . . . br, arbitrarily, and, if 8 al} 8a2, ... 8 a,., are determined by equations (13), we have Tub Ta = Ta + Sat where 8 a^ S r?2, . . . 8 ar are infinitesimal. On the other hand, if the values assigned to the parameters a are critical values of the parameters, that is, if A„ = 0, it will certaiuly in general, for arbitrary values of the 5's, be impossible to determine infin- itesimal increments 8 av 8 a2, ... 8 ar, of the parameters a to satisfy the symbolic equation Tub Ta — Ta _|_ h,l- In this case, it may, nevertheless, be possible to find a finite system of values cu c2, . . . c,., of the parameters such that Tub Ta= Tc; but group G may be such that, for at least special systems of values of the b's, no finite system cu c2, . . . cr, of the parameters can be found to satisfy this c) C/ C/ symbolic equation. E.g., let r = 2 and Xl = = — ,X2 = ^ h a?2^ — • d x.2 d xx dx2 Then, if a2 = 2 tt V^T, X = 0 ; and if ^ $ 0, b2 = 0, 77a 7^ is essen- tial singular for all values of t 4= 0. From what precedes we have therefore the following theorem : If T is an arbitrary transformation of G for which A„ =j= 0, the trans- formation TtbT„, the parameters bx, b2, . . . br, being arbitrary, can be generated by an infinitesimal transformation of the group, provided t is 584 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. sufficiently small.* On the other hand if A„ Oj and the b's are prop- erly chosen, the transformation TttTa may be essentially singular however small \ mini be taken. Such a transformation T„ I term non-essentially singular. It '/', is non-essentially Bingular, that is, if /',. '/'„ is essentially singu- lar however small / may be, a system of values //',, //._,. . . . b',, of the parameters can be found such that, however small t may he. 'J1., 7',b, is utially singular; ami conversely. § 8. Let au a.2, . . . ttr, and b\, />.,, . . . br, be any two systems of finite arbitrarily chosen values of the parameters of G, and let the transforma- tion T„ be defined by the symbolic equation (II) Ta= Tlf,Tri. where / is a variable quantity independent of the j's. We then have (15) aj = q>j(au . . . ar, tbu . . . tbr) 0 = 1,2, . . . r). The differential equations satisfied by the a's are nr, fdai da* d«r\ a n , , , (1G) \di* dT> - - • di) = j7irI{Kh' ■ ■ • b-y See Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society for February, 1900, p. 202. Two groups G and G{1) are of the same structure (Zusammensetzung) if the structural constants (Zusammensetzungconstanten) <-iU and c%t are identical. For two groups of the same structure, the system of differ- ential equations satisfied by the r dependent variables a, = <$. (a, t b) are the same. But the equations of the group may restrict the number of systems of the functions ar which differ in the initial values of the a ,'s, in certain cases so that there shall be but one system of functions (/. Consequently, in the. case of two groups of the same structure, one may contain essentially singular transformations ami the other may contain no essentially singular transformation. Two such groups cannot properly be said to be isomorphic, since one is continuous ami the other discontinuous. * If a„ -\. 0, 7', i, '/'„ may be essentially Bingular for an infinite number of values of /. L5ut this assemblage of values of/ has no derived assemblage. TABER. — ON SINGULAR TRANSFORMATIONS. 585 It will be found that one or more of the roots of the characteristic equation of the matrix e^tb e™ is equal to unity, irrespective of the value of t. If Ta is non-singular, and for every value of t each root of this equation is equal to unity, TtbT& is non-singular for every value of t. Let it be assumed that Ta is non-singular, and that just 5 < r of the roots of the characteristic equation of the matrix e^lb e^a are equal to uuity, irrespective of the value of t. Then the values of t for which Ta =■ Ttb Ta is singular (essentially or non-essentially) are included among those for which one, or more, of the remaining r-s roots of this equation is equal to unity. §4. The infinitesimal transformation 2 cij Xj of group G, where the «'s are quantities independent of the x's, is said to be derived lineally from the r independent infinitesimal transformations Xu %>, . . . Xr which gene- rate G. The r infinitesimal transformations a^ Xi + an'*1 X„ + . . . + arw ^ (k = 1, 2, ... r) are independent if the determinant a;<*» 0. (j,k=l,2,. ..r) Any r independent infinitesimal transformation derived linearly from the Xs also generates group G and may be substituted for the X's.* Group G may contain an infinitesimal transformation 2 a, Xj commu- tative with each of the r infinitesimal transformations Xj which generate G, and, therefore, commutative with every infinitesimal transformation of G. Such a transformation Lie terms an ausgezeichnete infinitesimale Transformation.^ In what follows it will be termed an extraordinary in- finitesimal transformation. Let G contain just s independent extraordinary infinitesimal transfor- mation. In this case, from what has been said, we may suppose the Xs so chosen that (j =1,2,..'. s k = 1, 2, . . . r), but that * Lie : Transformationsgruppen, I. p. 276. t Lie : Continuinerliche Gruppen, p. 465. PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. X A A Y (j,/: = s + l,i h2, . . . r) We then have rikl = 0 For ./ L, 2, . . . s, and /■. / -- 1,2, ...?•. Ami. as a <■ osequence of the differential equations satisfied by the funo- tions ", • i), (a, tl>), it will be found that 3 vj («, J) _ Q - ''■ '"• /m -o 5 a* 9 ft, (; = i + 1, i + 2, . . . r jfc = 1, 2, . . . ■). Moreover, we shall have ■i , (a, b) = a, + b, + fo fe+l, . ..^i,+1... 6r) 0 = 1,2, . . . »). From the differential equations satisfied by the functions a = m, (a, t b) it also follows that, if cjkl = 0 for/, £ = 1, 2, . . . r, we then may put y Mr. Rettger in the American Journal of Mathematics, XXII p. 7:1. A.8 ui example of tins theorem let A', = r, -5 — , A", : , A'. = .r. Then c/n = 0, c>K = 0 (././■ = 1,2,8). And if / / '/' . i ■, Oj f &, 4- 2/- 7T .y/ -1. ro = «., + 6a + 2/''7r V~~*> wluTC * ;1'"1 /' are integers which may both be taken equal to zero. : I g-j A', - ' . A'. . r, ' . .V. -,' ■ . it 1 , ,1 1 , it 1 1 TABER. — ON SINGULAR TRANSFORMATIONS. 587 the infinitesimal transformation %a.j Xj is commutative with no other in- finitesimal transformation of G. But, if r = 3 and this determinant van- ishes, it is alway possible to find two distinct infinitesimal transformations 2", X; and 2 bj Xj which shall be commutative. Again, if r > 3, it is always possible to find two distinct infinitesimal transformations of G which shall be commutative. The condition necessary and sufficient that two infinitesimal transfor- mations 2 ctj Xj and 2 bj Xj shall be commutative is that (17) a(bub2, . . . br) = 0; or, what is the same thing, that (18) „ (au a2, . . . ar) = 0. If A(( ^p 0, the necessary and sufficient condition that every transforma- tion of the group G^ with a single parameter t shall be commutative with Ta, that is to say, that Ta Tlb = Ttb Ta for every value of t, is that the infinitesimal transformations 2 Oj Xj and 2 b} X, shall be commutative. In certain groups G, whatever the transformation Ta, provided A„ = 0, it is always possible to find an infinitesmal transformation 2 bj Xj< not commutative with 2 ctj Xj, which shall, nevertheless, generate a group G7'7) with a single parameter t, every transformation Ttb of which shall be commutative with T„. In other groups this is possible for certain transformations Ta for which Aa = 0. As an example of the former we have the group v d „ d v d „ d Al==?1^' X* = X*d^' Xs = Xsd^> X' = X*J^2 For this group Aa = 0 if al or a.2 is an even multiple, not zero, of tt \/ — 1. Let av as, a4 be arbitrary, and a.2 = 2w — Ta and 2 fy Ay is commutative 2 a'j Xj. If Af, = 0, the necessary and sufficient condition that T„ Ttb — Ttb Ta for all values of t is (19) (e*« -I$bub2, . . . b,.)=0. It is to be noted that this condition is always satisfied if 2 cij Xj and 2 bj Xj are commutative. For then 0„ (&!, 62, ... J,.) = 0 . • . \ (bx, b,, . . . 6r) = 0 <£3,( (bu b,, . . . b,) = 0 ■>S PROCEEDINGS OP TIIF AMERICAN ACADEMY. Consequently, if Aa | 0, and every transformation of the group G{'" is commutative with /',. the :il>o\<- condition is satisfied Lei (20) Ta=Ta,. Then every transformation of the sub-group , a?\ . . . a,/2') = (e+Pfa*, <\ • • ■ «ra% we have (25) «», «2,2), • • . «r'21) = (e*e e^au a,, . . . ar). Thus the general transformation of the adjoined may he represented by the matrix e^a ; and the result of the two successive transformations e/a and e^ is represented by the matrix e^P e®a obtained hy their com- position. If yn y2» • . . yr are so chosen that (26) Ty = Tp Ta, that is, if (27) Vj '— % (ai» • • • "r, /?i, U = 1, 2, . . . r) then (28) e4>y _ e. respectively in the functions -^ of p. f)83. If the group G is continuous, the adjoined group r is continuous. Therefore, if T is discontinuous, group G and every group of the same structure is discontinuous. TABER. — ON SINGULAR TRANSFORMATIONS. 591 §8. For certain types of structure every root of the characteristic equation of the matrix <£a is zero irrespective of the values of the parameters a. In this case Aa = 1, and the group is continuous. For two groups of the same structure, but such that A(t ± 1, one may be continuous and the other discontinuous. As remarked above, if the adjoined is discontinuous, group G and every group of the same structure is discontinuous. I give below a table exhibiting the result of an investigation by my pupil, Mr. S. E. Slocum, of the continuity of all types of groups with either two, three, or four parameters. It will be seen that for every type of structure for which Aa eje 1, there is at least one group which is discontinuous. Mr. Slocum has found that every real group is continu- ous which possesses any one of the several structures distinguished in the table by an asterisk ; and that the real group which possesses the struct- ure marked in the table thus (f ) is discontinuous. Also that every real group of the structure (Xu X2) = 0, (Xu X3) — — X2, (X.,, X-s) = — Xi} is discontinuous. For this group _ (««■ f^1 — 1) (e~as V~l _ i) [In what follows (Xj, Xk) denotes Xj Xk — Xk A7,.] Groups with two Parameters (r = 2). Type I. (X., X2) EE Xx.* A„ = e «2 Adjoined group continuous. Parameter group discontinuous ; also group 9 9 9 X2^— + 9 a?2 9 Xo, 9 xx Type II. (X^X^EEO* Aa = 1. All groups pf this type are continuous. Groups with three Parameters (r = 3). Type I. (X1} A2) = Xx, (X_, Xs) = 2 A2, (X, X3) = A3.f e V "22^-r4 ~a^T3 j e — V «22 — i (.YI..V, I = A',. « A . X,) = 0 Xt (fi * 0, 1).* (c"3- 1) (e"'p— 1) Oa/8 Adjoined group - a, — , — a3 /? ■=— , a, ^ \- a, 0 — , discontinuous. Therefore, all groups of this type are discontinuous; e. g., group 9 9*9,99 d xx d Xi d x2 c ' ■.; c?x2 Type III. (X,, A'2) = 0, (A',. A'3) = A'„ (A . A , = X,.* Adjoined group continuous. Parameter group discontinuous ; also group 9 9,9 9 9 <9 xi "5 a:a 9 x3' 5 x^ 3 i Type IV. (X„ X2) = 0, (X1? *8) = Xu ( A'.. A,) = A, + A Adjoined group 9 9 9 . .9 9 ~ > "8 ~ "3 S » I'M T "■./ -> i '"-J •> > CV «l d «i & " C "i C' "j discontinuous. Therefore, all groups of this type are discontinuous; e. g., group n 9 9 9 ? ? 9 9 5 Xj p X3 9 X, C x2 9 X:! 0 fC] c> x3 Type V. ( A,. X) = 0, ( A,. A';i) = Xu (A,. A.) = 0.* - 1 X= • Adjoined group continuous. TABER. — ON SINGULAR TRANSFORMATIONS. 593 Parameter group discontinuous ; also group *1 ~ T- 3 Xi 9 x2 9 xx d x3 Type VI. (X1} X%) = 0, (Xu X3) = 0, (X, Z8) = Xv* All groups of this type are continuous. Type VII. (Xlt X2) = 0, (X1} X3) = 0, (X2, X3) = 0* All groups of this type are continuous. Groups with four Parameters (r = 4). A. Without three-parameter involution group. lype l- 1 (X,, Xj = 0, (X, XJ = 0, (X3, XJ = 0. e V a2- — 4 ctj a-, j e — v «22 — 4 a, as j Aa = ==r-. — . V a2" - 4 «! a3 — v A;) ^ a ^ (A.25 XJ = ^ ^ (Xs} A;) = X2 + ft X3* (a 4= £). "4 Au = [ - e'"a a4 a / \ «4 p" Adjoined group 9 0 9 9 a 9 9 -aia^->-aift^—,-ai^—~aift^—, cha 4 3 ^1 5 «2 5«2 5 «3 9 Hi 1 1 + (a2 0 + o3) ^- + a3 /3 5 "-j 5 a3 discontinuous. Therefore, all groups of this type are discontinuous ; e. g., group 9 9 9 9 9 ( J_ _9_\ ±_ tt 5^' 9x~; X39x~2 + aXl9x1 + l^ V2 9 x2 + x* 9 xj+ 9 xj l (Xu X2) = (X2, X) = (X3, xo = 0, lype ill. | (x^ ^ _ ^^ (X2j A;) _ ^ + A% (^ 1;) = x2 + X Adjoined group 9 9 9 9 9 ... 9 9 ax 9 ax 3 a2 3«2 c/ «s ^ "1 + («, + a3) ^- + a3 ^- discontinuous. Therefore, all groups of this type are discontinuous; e. g., group 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 2 Xo 7. + Xo ■= + Xx 7. [- X2 7: + X3 7: , _ 5 7> , 7s • 5 J"i 5 x0 9 xx 9 x2 9 x3 d xx d x2 9 x3 >96 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY. T .... M \ i, -V. V- .V, = (XvX1) = Oi A.= 1. All groups of this type arc continuous. ... TV ( (Xlt Xs) = (Xa, X8) = (Xz Xx) = 0, •1,0iV' ((-V, A',) = aA1( (A,. I4) = ala ,.\ , A\) E y A ',.« (" 1 y) \ ". a / \ ". y J Adjoined group 9 9 9 9 9.9 C"l C", C ":, 5'/, 9 "... C ".; discontinuous. Therefore, all groups of this type arc discontinuous; 6. g., group 9 9 9 (9 9 \ , 9 9 9% tt TO a V1 9^ +x*9^)+y X:i 9 xt + 9 x4' _ ((A^X)E(X.A)E(A,.V,)En. lyi,° V- 1 (Xx, X4) EE A",. (Xs, Z4) = Z2, (A";, Z4) = Za +A .' . « * — A„ Adjoined group "«- IV "4 / 5 5 5 5 3 ,, , 5 , 3 — "j T~ , — «4 « — 1 — «4 ^- — (U n- j °i tTT + ("2 + "s) TT + " 9 Oj' 45a2' 45«., 45"8' V": v - 8 c"1", ' S discontinuous. Therefore, all groups of this type are discontinuous; e. g., group 9 9, 9 9 9 9 9 TO P"x2 TO ^S^^^^i^^Sar^^S*,' TV™ V ^ ( A"" ^ = (A^' A':) - ( *• A"' ) - °' lype V- t (A". A\) = 0, (A,. AY) = 0. ( A . A,) = X,.* A„ = 1 . All groups of this type are continuous. T VI << v„ xo = (X* *.) = (X8, Xx) = 0, • '"' L I ( A, . A,) EE A',. ( X,, A,) = X,, (A, A\ ) EE Xs* (e°*- 1 \ "' Adjoined group continuous. TABER. — ON SINGULAR TRANSFORMATIONS. 597 Parameter group discontinuous ; also group 9 9 9 9 9 3d 9 Xi 9 x2 9 x3 9 x1 "9 x2 9 xs 9 x± t« Pvr'i &» X^ = ^ Xs) = (X» X^ = °' lype i. | ( Yij A;) ^ ^ ^ a;) ^ Qj (^ ^ __ a Aa = 1. All groups of this type are continuous. P. S. Since what precedes was written, I have found that the infin- itesimal transformations of the parameter group, given in equations (13), § 2 (from which follow the differential equations (16), §3), had already been obtained by Schur and Engel ; and that to Engel is due the deter- mination of the values of the o's for which Aa = 0. See Lie : Trans- fermationsgruppen, III, pp. 7 GO, 794. June 8, 1900. Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Vol. XXXV. No. 27. — June, 1000. PROCEEDINGS OF THE ACADEMY, 1899-1900. A TABLE OF ATOMIC WEIGHTS. By Theodore William Richards. REPORT OF THE COUNCIL: BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES. Epes Sargent Dixwell. By Charles P. Bowditcil John Cummings. By William II. Niles. John Codman Ropes. By John Fiske. John Lowell. By Thornton K. Lothrop. OFFICERS AND COMMITTEES FOR 1899-1900. LIST OF THE FELLOWS AND FOREIGN HONORARY MEMBERS. STATUTES AND STANDING VOTES. INDEX. (Title-Page and Table of Contents.) PROCEEDINGS. Nine hundred and eighth Meeting. May 10, 1899. — Annual Meeting. Vice-President Hyatt in the chair. In the absence of the Recording Secretary, William E. Story was elected Recording Secretary pro tempore. The Chair announced the death of Alvan Wentworth Chap- man, of Appalachicola, Associate Fellow in Class II., Section 2. The Corresponding Secretary read letters from Felipe Valle, announcing his appointment as Director of the Astronomical Observatory of Tacubaya ; from Angel Anguiano, announcing his appointment as Director of the Mexican Geodetic Commis- sion ; from the Geographical Society of Madrid, announcing the death of its President, Francisco Coello de Portugal y Quesada ; from H. P. Talbot and O. F. Wadsworth, accepting Fellowship in the Academy ; from Charles D. Walcott, acknowledging his election as Associate Fellow ; and from Oliver Heaviside, acknowledging his election as Foreign Honorary Member. A letter from the University of Cambridge inviting the Academy to appoint a delegate to the jubilee of Sir George Gabriel Stokes, Bart., in June, 1899, was read, and, on motion of Charles R. Cross, it was Voted, That the President and Corresponding Secretary send a letter of congratulation to Sir George G. Stokes. A letter from the Commission on Atomic Weights of the German Chemical Society, inviting " Chemical Societies and similar Institutions of all countries to assist in the formation of an International Commission," was read, and, on motion of the Corresponding Secretary, it was PROCEEDINGS OF TBE AMERICAN ACADEMY V ted, That a committee of three be appointed to represent the Academy in the Internationa] Commission on Atomic Weights. The Chair appointed Theodore W. Richards, Wol- cott Gibbs, and [ra Remsen members of this committee. The Corresponding Secretary announced that the Committee in select a delegate to the International Cong] >f Orient- alists at Rome in October next had appointed Charles Rock- well Lanman of Cambridge, and that he had accepted. The Corresponding Secretary read the report of the Council.* The Treasurer presented his annual report of which the following is an abstract: — General Find. Receipts. Balance, April 30, 1898 $3,481 Assessments ".»<>. 00 Sale of publications 48.52 $1,038.52 Income from investments 1,850.63 Return of bank tax 45.00 Donations 105.00 6.039.15 $9,521.10 Expenditures. General expenses $2,023.69 Library expenses 1,559.70 Publishing expenses 2,071.95 $5,655.34 Investments 8,883.15 Balance, April 29, 1899 32.61 ,521.10 Rum ford Fund. Receipts. Balance, April 30, 1898 $1,778.44 [ncome 2,266.08 Return of bank tax 98.58 .11 of [nvestmenl 1,08 l 99 $5,172.99 ■ See Proceedings, XXXI V. p 839. OP ARTS AND SCIENCES. 603 Expenditures. Books $57.01 Publishing 790.88 . Investigations 400.00 Rent 10.00 $1,257.89 Balance, April 29, 1899 . . . 3,915.10 $5,172.99 Warren Fund. Receipts. Balance, April 30, 1898 $925.95 Income 853.48 $1,779.43 Expenditures. Investigations $630.00 Balance, April 29, 1899 1,149.43 $1,779.43 Building Fund. Receipts. Balance, April 30, 1898 $1,268.14 Income 504.83 $1,772.97 Expenditures. Investment $1,466.94 Balance, April 29, 1899 306.03 $1,772.97 The annual report of the Librarian was presented and showed that 3284 books and pamphlets had been added to the Library during the year, of which 2432 were obtained by gift and ex- change and 852 purchased, and 317 volumes were bound at an expense of $419.70. The total expenditure for books, periodicals, and binding amounted to $1004.17. There were borrowed 235 books by 30 persons, of whom 18 were Fellows of the Academy. The following reports were also presented: — 604 PROCEEDINGS "I Jlli: A. M KIM (AN ACADEMY REPOH i "i i in Rl MFOED COHIOTTI I , Boston, Mav 10, 1809. During the pasl year the Rumford Committee has made the following appropriations from the fund of $1000 placed al its disposition at the last Annual Meeting, for the furtherance of researches in ligh! and heat. To Professor Theodore W. Richards of Harvard University, $200 for the construction of a micro-kinetoscope, the immediate application of which is to be the study of the birth and growth of crystals. To Professor W. C. Sabine of Harvard University, $200 for the con- tinuation of his researches on the wave-lengths of ultras iolet radiations. To Professor Henry Crew of the Northwestern University, a sum not exceeding $200 for the continuation of his researches upon the spectrum of the electric arc. To Professor Arthur G. Webster of Clark University, $200 for a research upon the distribution of energy in various spectra by means of the Michelson interferometer and the radiometer. At a meeting held on April 12, 1899, it was voted that the Committee recommend to the Academy thai the volumes necessary to complete the set of the " Fortschritte der Physik" in the library of the Academy, be purchased from the Rumford Fund. At the same meeting it was also voted that the Committee recommend to the Academy the appropriation of one hundred and twenty dollars from the Rumford Fund for the purchase and binding of the usual peri- odicals of the current fiscal year. At a meeting held on May 3, 1899, it was voted that the Academy be asked to make the usual appropriation of $1000, at the Annual Meet- ing, to be expended at the discretion of the Committee in furtherance of research. At the April meeting of the Committee it was voted for the first time, "that the Rumford Committee recommend to the Academy the award of the Rumford Medal to Mr. Charles F. Brush, for the Practical Develop- ment of Electric Arc Lighting." At the May meeting of the Committee the same resolution was voted for the second time. In order to ascertain the stage of advancement of the various re- searches in aid of which appropriations have been granted from the Rumford Fund, a request for information was sent to such grantee- as were understood not to have made a final report, together with the fol- lowing extracts from the records of the Committee: — Nov. 10, 18'.»7. "It was voted that, in future, recipient.- of grants for OP ARTS AND SCIENCES. 605 investigations be requested to make a report annually as to the state of the work for which the grant was made." June 8, 1898. " It was voted that in the judgment of the Committee, persons carrying on researches with the aid of the Rumford Fund should submit to the Academy an account of their researches not less complete than that published elsewhere. These researches may be published in any place or form, with the proviso that due recognition be made of the grant, and the presentation of the paper to the Academy." In answer to this request, reports have been received of which the following are summaries : — Professor Henry Crew has published a paper " On the Sources of Luminosity in the Electric Arc " in the Proceedings of the Academy for June, 1898. He expects to continue the prosecution of his research during the coming summer with the aid of the further appropriation made by the Rumford Committee for that purpose. Professor B. O. Peirce reports that a continuation of his work upon the thermal conductivity of poor conductors is in progress, the substance vulcanite being at present a particular subject of study. An extended paper " On Thermal Conductivities of Certain Poor Conductors " was published in the Proceedings of the Academy for August, 1898. Professor E. H. Hall is pursuing his studies upon the thermal con- ductivity of wrought iron, having published in the Proceedings for February, 1899, a paper " On the Thermal Conductivity of Cast Iron." Professor Edward L. Nichols reports that his research upon the radia- tion from carbon at high temperatures is making good progress. The study of the acetylene name as a standard of light, the calibration of thermo-elements, and the application of the platinum-rhodium thermo- element to the determination of the actual temperature of the carbon, have occupied much time. Measurements with the spectro-photometer are now in progress upon the visible radiations from carbon rods as com- pared with those of like character with the acetylene flame. A study of the distribution of energy in the spectrum of the acetylene flame and in that of incandescent carbon will follow. Professor W. C. Sabine says with regard to his investigation upon the study of very short light waves : " In order to explain the advance which he has made [Mr. Theodore Lyman, who has made the actual measure- ments], it will be necessary to refer to the work of Schumann. This work was done with a fluorite prism, and wave lengths were found by extrapolation, the statement being made that speculum metal would not reflect the shorter waves. Mr. Lyman has been using a concave grating 606 PROCEEDINGS 01 Mil. AMERICAN ACADEMY with success, and h as low a> wave length 900 tenth-meters, Schumann's estimated limit being 1000. The latter worked entirely with the Bpectra of gases, and Btated thai he could not go below wave length l 600 for metals." Professor I I'.. Hale states that the Bpectro-heliograph, in the d of which he has been aided by a grant from the Bnmford Fund, is approaching completion. He write- that "devices have been introduced whereby photographs of prominences or facnlae can be taken simultaneously in two different lines of the Bpectrum. In the case of eruptive prominences the comparison of photographs made in this way may prove to be Lnstructivi ." Professor Theodore W. Richards states that he lias begun his investi- gation of the birth and growth of crystals as studied by the micro- kinetoscope, and has already obtained various excellent photographs illustrating these phenomena, which also give promise of interesting results as to the rate of growth of different crystals. Chable8 R. Cross, Chairman. Report of the C. M. Warren Committee. 10 May, 1899. At the last Annual Meeting of the Academy the sum of SC00 from the income of the Warren Fund, was granted to Professor C. F. Mabery, of Cleveland, Ohio, in furtherance of his researches on petroleum. Several papers explanatory of Professor Mabery 's results have been published during the year; and it is well understood that his work is being prosecuted all the while with ardor and success. A research by Professor F. C. Phillips, of Allegheny City, in aid of which a <:rant of $200 was made in 18'.H'>, has been in so far completed that an account of it was published, in November last, in the Proceed- ings of the Academy, under the title "On Fluctuations in the Composi- tion of Natural (las." A grant in the sum of $200 made to Professor II. O. Ilofnian. of Boston, in 1897, and supplemented in 1898 by an additional grant of . lias also borne good fruit. Professor Hofman's subject was "The Fusibility of Slags." He has explained to me that interesting and important results have been obtained, which he intends to publish in the near future. F. II. Storek, Chairman, OF ARTS AND SCIENCES. 607 Report of the Committee of Publication. Boston, May 10, 1899. The Publishing Committee begs leave to report that there have been issued during the last academic year ten numbers of Vol. XXXIII. and the first twenty numbers of Vol. XXXIV. of the Proceedings, aggregat- ing 796 pages and 17 plates; besides one number of Vol. XII. of the Memoirs containing 36 pages and 7 plates. Five numbers of the Pro- ceedings have been printed at the cost of the Rumford Fund. The expenditure for the remaining publications was $2334.14. The appro- priation from the General Fund was $2500 and the sales $48.52, making a sum available for publication of $2548.52, and leaving therefore an unexpended balance of $214.38. The Academy has never before pub- lished so many pages in a single year. Samuel H. Sccdder, Chairman. On the recommendation of the Committee of Finance, it was Voted, To make the following appropriations from the income of the General Fund for the ensuing year : — For general expenses $2000 For the library 1500 For publishing 2400 Voted, That the assessment for the ensuing year be five dollars. Voted, That the Treasurer be authorized to pay from the funds of the Academy any bills approved by the Librarian in- curred on account of the expense of moving the library. On the recommendation of the Rumford Committee, it was Voted, That the sum of one thousand dollars ($1000) from the income of the Rumford Fund be placed at the disposal of the Rumford Committee to be expended in aid of investigations on Light and Heat, payments to be made on the order of the Chairman of the Committee. Voted, That the volumes necessary to complete the set of the " Fortschritte der Physik " in the library be purchased at the expense of the income of the Rumford Fund ; also, that one hundred and twenty dollars ($120) be appropriated from the 608 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY income of the Rum ford Fund for the purchase and binding of periodicals. ( )n the recommendation of the C. M. Warren Committee, it was Voted) That the sum of six hundred dollars C$600) from the income of the Warren Fund be granted to Charles I". Mabery, of Cleveland, Ohio, in aid of his researches on the chemistry of petroleum. In accordance with the recommendation of the Rumford Committee, it was Voted) To award the Rumford Premium to Charles F. Brush for the practical development of electric arc lighting. The annual election resulted in the choice of the following officers and committees : — Alexander Agassiz, President. John Trowbridge, Vice-President for Clans I. Alpiieus Hyatt, Vice-President for Class II. Augustus Lowell, Vice-President for Class III. Samuel H. Sctjdder, Corresponding Secretary. William Watson, Recording Secretary. Francis Blake, Treasurer. A. Lawrence Rotch, Librarian. Councillors. Henry Taber, \ Theodore W. Richards, | of Class I. Harry M. Goodwin, ) Benjamin L. Robinson, \ William T. Councilman, | of Class II. John E. Wolff, ) Barrett Wendell, ^ Edward Robinson, [-of Class III. James B. Ames, ' Meml-T "f th,' Committer <>f Finance. Augustus Lowell. OF ARTS AND SCIENCES. 609 liumford Committee. Erasmus D. Leavitt, Amos E. Dolbear, Edward C. Pickering, Arthur G. Webster, Charles R. Cross, Theodore W. Richards, Thomas C. Mendenhall. C. M. Warren Committee. Francis H. Storer, Henry B. Hill, Charles L. Jackson, Leonard P. Kinnicutt, Samuel Cabot, Arthur M. Comey, Robert H. Richards. The Chair appointed the following standing committees : — Committee of Publication. Samuel H. Scudder, Seth C. Chandler, Crawford H. Toy. Committee on the Library. A. Lawrence Rotch, Henry W. Haynes, Samuel Hens haw. Auditing Committee. John C. Ropes, Eliot C. Clarke. The following gentlemen were elected members of the Academy : — William Elwood Byerly, of Cambridge, to be a Resident Fellow in Class I., Section 1 (Mathematics and Astronomy). William Henry Pickering, of Cambridge, to be a Resident Fellow in Class I., Section 1. Henry Lefavour, of Williamstown, to be a Resident Fellow in Class I., Section 2 (Physics). Charles Russell, Baron Russell of Killowen, of Tadworth, to be a Foreign Honorary Member in Class III., Section 1 (Philos- ophy and Jurisprudence). vol. x.xxv. — 39 610 PROCEEDIN< THE .\Mi:iM< AN A.CADEMY The following papers were presented by title: — On the Thermal Conductivity of Vulcanite. By B. O. Peirce. Ferrous [odide. By C. Loring Jackson and Ira II. Derby. Nine hundred :in«l Dlntb Meeting. June 14, 1899. The President in the chair. The Corresponding Secretary read letters from W. E. Byerly and W. II. Pickering, accepting Fellowship, and from Lord Russell of Killowen, acknowledging his election as For< Honorary Member. Letters from Marion T. Eosmer, soliciting a subscription on behalf of the Rumford Historical Society, and from the University of Pennsylvania, the American Philo- sophical Society, and other Philadelphia Societies, inviting at- tendance at the presentation of the Franklin Btatue, were referred to the Corresponding Secretary. The Chair announced the death of Francis Minot, Resident Fellow in Class II., Section 4, and of Manning Ferguson Force, Associate Fellow in Class II L, Section 3. The Rumford Medal awarded to Janus Edward Feeler at the annual meeting of 1898 was presented, Edward C. Picker- ing acting as Professor Keeler's proxy. The President spoke of the proposed exploring expedition to the mid-Pacific under his direction, the United States Commis- sion of Fish and Fisheries having placed the Albatross at his disposal. The vessel will be thoroughly equipped with the newest apparatus for deep-sea investigations, and special ap- pliances will be constructed for use in vrery deep water. The expedition will leave San Francisco aboul the middle of Augusl for Tahiti, in the Society Islands, which will be the headquarters during the six or eight weeks required for exploration of the Paumoto Islands. Afterwards a week or ten days w ill be spent among the Tonga or Friendly Islands, and the expedition will then proceed to the Fiji Islands, where a short stay will be made. After visitine some of the Ellis and Gilbert Islands, six or even we< ks will be devoted to the exploration of the Mar- OP ARTS AND SCIENCES. 611 shall Islands. Between these islands and the Hawaiian Islands, and between the latter and San Francisco, a distance of four thousand miles, a line of deep-sea dredgings will be run, deep-sea tow-nets being used while the dredging is going on. The Albatross is expected to return to the United States in April next. The following papers were presented by title : — The Development and Application of a General Equation for Free Energy and Physico-chemical Equilibrium. By Gilbert Newton Lewis. Presented by T. W. Richards. The Electro-chemical Equivalents of Copper and Silver. By T. W. Richards, E. Collins, and G. W. Heimrod. A Revision of the Atomic Weight of Calcium. By T. W. Richards. Short Studies of North American Tryxalinae. By Samuel H. Scudder. The Recording Secretary read the agreement with the Mas- sachusetts Historical Society in regard to quarters for the Academy in the new building of the Society. Remarks on this subject were made by the President and Augustus Lowell. Nine hundred and tenth Meeting. October 11, 1899. — Stated Meeting. The Academy met at Ellis Hall. Vice-President Hyatt in the chair. The Corresponding Secretary read letters from Henry Lefa- vour, accepting Fellowship in the Academy ; from the Royal Academy of Sciences of Turin, announcing the death of Pro- fessor Cesare Nani ; from the National Society of Horticulture of France, announcing the death of its first Vice-President, Henri Le'veque de Vilmorin ; from the Students' Union at the Polytechnic School at Zurich, inviting attendance at the twenty-fifth jubilee of Professor A. Heim ; from Captain Con- stantin Edler von Pott, announcing his appointment as Director of the Hydrographic Bureau of the Imperial and Royal Navy at Pola ; and from Charles R. Lanman, reporting his inability 1_ PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY to represent the Academy at the International Congress of Orientalists. A Letter from the Secretary of the organizing committee of the International Congress of Physics at Paris in L900, enclosing a prospectus and requesting that it be brought to the notice of members, was referred to the members of the I unci! from Class I. The Corresponding Secretary reported that, in response to Letters of invitation received during the Bummer, the President had appointed George 1'. Fisher, Associate Fellow, as a delegate to the celebration of the one hundredth anniversary of the Connecticut Academy of Arts and Sciences, and Vice-President Trowbridge had appointed T. C. Mendenhall, Resident Fellow, to represent the Academy at the celebration of the seventy-fifth anniversary of the founding of the Franklin Institute. The Chair announced the death of John Harrison Blake, of Boston, Resident Fellow in Class I., Section 2; and of Robert Wilhelm Hansen, of Heidelberg, Foreign Honorary Member in Class L, Section 3. On the motion of the Corresponding Secretary, a quorum for business not being present, it was Voted, To meet on adjournment on the second Wednesday in November. Arthur G. Webster read and explained a paper presented by A. A. Michelson on the Echelon Spectroscope. The following papers were read by title : — Peripheral Distribution of the Cranial Nerves of Spelerpes bilineatus. By Mary A. Bowers. Presented by E. L. Mark. Note on the Finite Continuous Groups of the Plane. By F. P>. Williams. Presented by Henry Taber. Two Genera of North American Decticinae. By S. II. Scudder. Nine hundred and eleventh Meeting. November 8, 1899. — Adjourned Stated Meeting. In the absence of the regular presiding officers, Henry P. Bowditcb was chosen President pro tempore. OF ARTS AND SCIENCES. 613 The Chair announced the death of John Codman Ropes, Res- ident Fellow in Class III., Section 3. Samuel H. Scudder tendered his resignation as Corresponding Secretary, to take effect in January, and it was accepted. The Chair appointed from the next retiring Councillors Theodore W. Richards, of Class L, Benjamin L. Robinson, of Class II., Barrett Wendell, of Class III., a committee to nominate a candidate for the office of Corre- sponding Secretary. On the motion of the chairman of the C. M. Warren Com- mittee, it was Voted, To grant permission to H. O. Hofman to publish in the Transactions of the American Institute of Mining Engineers or elsewhere the results of his research, for which aid was granted by the Academy from the C. M. Warren Fund. On the motion of the Librarian, it was Voted, To authorize the expenditure of a sum not exceeding two hundred dollars ($200) for furniture for the Library. The following gentlemen were elected members of the Academy : — Maxime Bocher, of Cambridge, to be a Resident Fellow in Class I., Section 1 (Mathematics and Astronomy). William Fogg Osgood, of Cambridge, to be a Resident Fellow in Class I., Section 1. John Singer Sargent, of London, to be an Associate Fellow in Class III., Section 4 (Literature and the Fine Arts). Sir Benjamin Baker, of London, to be a Foreign Honorary Member in Class I., Section 4 (Technology and Engineering), in place of the late Sir Henry Bessemer. Rudyard Kipling, of Rottingdean, to be a Foreign Honorary Member in Class III., Section 4 (Literature and the Fine Arts). Arthur G. Webster described Maxwell's electric top and exhibited it in operation. The following papers were presented by title : — Contributions from the Cryptogamic Laboratory of Harvard 614 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY University, XLI. Preliminary Diagnoses of New Species of Laboulbeniaceae. — 1. By Roland Thaxter. Note on the Chief Theorem of Lie's Theory of Continuous Groups. By S. E. Slocum. Presented by Henry Taber. Nine hundred and twelfth Meeting:. December 13, 1899. The Corresponding Secretab? in the chair. Letters were received from the Royal Academy of Sciences of Turin, announcing the death of Domenico Perrero ; from the International Congress of Ethnographical Sciences, enclosing programmes and an invitation to attend its meetings at Talis during the summer of 1900; from Maximo Bocher, John S. Sargent, and Rudyard Kipling, accepting membership. A Letter was read from the Royal Prussian Academy of Sciences of Berlin, announcing the celebration of the two hun- dredth anniversary of its foundation on the 19th and 20th of March, 1900, and inviting the American Academy to send dele- gates. It was accordingly Voted, To appoint .John Williams White and John Eliot Wolff, delegates to this celebration. The chair announced the death of Epes Sargent Dixwell, Resident Fellow in Class III., Section 2. The following papers were read : — Experimental and Statistical Studies on the Influence of Cold on the Bacillus of Typhoid Fever and its Distribution; with special Reference to tee Supply and the Public Health. By William T. Sedgwick and Charles-Edward A. Winslow. The Electrical Resistance of the Human Body. By William L. Hooper. The following papers were presented by title: — A Revision of the Atomic Weight of Iron. By T. W. Rich- ards and C. P. Baxter. Note "ii the Constitution of Diparabrombenzylcyanamide. I5y Jackson and R. \V. Fuller. OF ARTS AND SCIENCES. 615 On Certain Colored Substances Derived from Nitro Com- pounds. Third paper. By C. Loring Jackson and F. H. Gazzolo. Certain Derivatives of Metadibrombenzyl. By C. Loring Jackson and W. P. Colioe. Nine hundred and thirteenth Meeting. January 10, 1900. — Stated Meeting. Vice-President Hyatt in the chair. The Corresponding Secretary read letters from Sir B. Baker and William Fogg Osgood, acknowledging election. He also read circulars from the Royal Academy of Sciences of Turin, announcing the terms of award of the Vallauri prizes, and from the International Congress of Comparative History and the International Congress of Horticulture, Arboriculture, and Pomology, enclosing programmes. A letter was received from Seabury C. Mastick, Secretary of the committee on the modification of the Federal Legacy Tax, enclosing a petition setting forth the desired modification of the law. On the motion of William E. Story, it was Voted, That the Acting President be instructed to sign this petition on behalf of the Academy. The Chair announced the following deaths : — Sir John William Dawson, of Montreal, Associate Fellow in Cluss II., Section I. William Alexander Hammond, of Washington, Associate Fellow in Class II., Section 4. Sir James 'Paget, Bart., of London, Foreign Honorary Mem- ber in Class II., Section 4. The vacancy occasioned by the resignation of Samuel H. Scudder was filled by the election of William M. Davis, Corresponding Secretary. On the motion of Augustus Lowell, it was Voted, That the thanks of the Academy be tendered to 616 PROCEEDINGS OP THE AMERICAN ACADEMY I Hubbard Scudder for his faithful and efficient services as ( Jorresponding S< cretary. The following gentlemen were elected members of the A idemy : — jam, ,n Crafts, of Boston, 'as Resident Fellow in Class I.. Section 3 ( Chemistry). Joseph Hodges Choate, of New York, as Associate Fellow in i tss III., Section 1 (Philosophy and Jurisprudence), in place of tin' late Thomas Mclntyre Cooley. William Wirt Howe, of New Orleans, as Associate Fellow in Clas> III., Section 1. William Mitchell, of Saint Paul, as Associate Fellow in Class III.. Section 1, in place of the late Ezekiel Oilman Robinson. Sir George Otto Trevelyan, Bart., of London, as Foreign Honorary Member in Class III., Section 3 (Political Economy and History). The vacancies in the Auditing Committee occasioned by the resignation of Fliot C. Clarke and the death of John C. Ropes were filled by the appointment of the following Auditing Committee : 1 1 i:\hy G. Denny, William L. Richardson. On the recommendation of the Rumford Committee, it was Voted, That the Academy appropriate one hundred dollars ( -100) to Theodore W. Richards for the prosecution of a re- search on the transition point of crystallized salts. Voted, That the Treasurer be authorized to make arrange- ments for the sale to the public of the Life and Works of Count Rumford. John S. Kingsleyread a paper entitled "The Ancestry of the Mammalia." The following papers were presented by title: — itributions from the Gray Herbarium of Harvard Univer- New Series. — No. Will. I. New Species and Varieties of Mexican Plants. By .1. .M. ( rreenman. OP ARTS AND SCIENCES. 617 II. Synopses of the Genera Jaegeria and Russelia. By B. L. Robinson. III. New Dioscoreas from Mexico. By E. B. Uline. IV. New Phanerogams chiefly Gamopetalae from Mexico and Central America. By B. L. Robinson. Nino hundred and fourteenth Meeting. February 14, 1900. In the absence of the regular presiding officers, Samuel H. Scudder acted as President pro tempore. The chair announced the death of the following Foreign Honorary Members : — James Martineau, of London, Class III., Section 1. Carl Friedrich Rammelsberg, of Berlin, Class II., Section 1. John Ruskin, of Coniston, Class III., Section 4. The following letters were received : from Mathilde Rammels- berg, announcing the death of Carl Friedrich Rammelsberg, Foreign Honorary Member of the Academy in Class II., Section 1 ; from W. M. Davis, accepting his election as Corresponding Secretary ; from John Williams White, accepting his appoint- ment as Delegate to the celebration of the 200th anniversary of the foundation of the Royal Prussian Academy of Sciences. The following papers were presented by title : — The Metamerism of the Hirudinea. By W. E. Castle. Pre- sented by E. L. Mark. The Freshwater Tertiary Formations of the Rocky Mountain region. By W. M. Davis. On the Determination of Sulphuric Acid in the Presence of Iron : a Note on Solid Solutions. By Theodore William Richards. The Species of the Orthopteran Genus Derotmema. By Samuel H. Scudder. Crawford H. Toy gave an informal account of a new theory of totemism. PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY N.m- hondred and ftiteentta Meeting. March 14, 1900 — Stated Meeting. The A • by invitation of John E. Hudson, at the mquin ( Hub. Vice-President Trowbridge in the chair. The Corresponding Secretary read letters from Joseph II. ate and Sir G. O. Trevelyan acknowled their election into the Academy. He also exhibited a bronze copy of the medal struck in honor of Sir G •• C Stokes's Jubilee in 1899, presented to the Academy l»v the University of Cambridge. < >n motion of the Recording - • tary, it \\ /'"/"/, To meet, on adjournment, on tl ond Wednesday in April. The following gentlemen were elected members of the Academy : — Arlo B on, to be a Resident Fellow in Class III., ion 1 ( Literature and the Fine Arl Liberty Hyde Bailey, of Ithaca, to be an Associate Fellow in Class II., Section 2 I Botany), in place of the late Alvan Went- worth ( lhapman. Friedrich Kohlrausch, of Berlin, to he a Foreign Honorary Member in Class L, Section 2 (Physics . The Chair appointed the following Councillors to act as Nominating Committee: — Theodore W. Richards, of Class I., Benjamin L. Robinson, of Class II., Barrett Wendell, of Class III. At the request of the Chair. Charles R. Cross, Chairman of the Rumford Committee, stated the grounds for the award of the Rumford Premium to Charles F. Brush for his researches in electric arc lighting. The Acting Presidenl then presented the medal to Mr. Brush, who, in respons an account of his early experiments in tricity. Elihu Thomson described new electric apparatus for high OF ARTS AND SCIENCES. 619 potentials, and exhibited an improved form of his dynamo-elec- tric machine. The following papers were presented by title : — View of the Carboniferous Fauna of the Narragansett Basin. By A. S. Packard. Contributions from the Gray Herbarium of Harvard Univer- sity. New Series. — No. XIX. By M. L. Fernald. Presented by B. L. Robinson. I. Synopsis of the Mexican and Central American Species of Salvia. II. Revision of the Mexican and Central American Solanums of the Subsection Torvaria. III. Some Undescribed Mexican Phanerogams, chiefly Labiatae and Solanaceae. Historical Notes relating to Musical Pitch in the United States. By Charles R. Cross. Nine hundred and sixteenth Meeting* April 11, 1900. — Adjourned Stated Meeting. The President in the chair. The Chair announced the following deaths : — Silas WhitcombHolman, Resident Fellow in Class I., Section 2. Edward John Phelps, Associate Fellow in Class III., Sec- tion 3. The Rumford Committee made a preliminary announcement that it would recommend, at the next annual meeting, the award of the Rumford Premium to Carl Barus, of Providence. The following motion was offered by W. E. Story : — • That a committee consisting of the President and two others selected by him be appointed to consider the propriety of amend- ing the first section of Chapter I. of the Statutes, with refer- ence to the classification of the Fellows and Foreign Honorary Members. The following recommendation was offered by the Rumford Committee : — The Rumford Committee recommends that the Academy 620 PROCEEDINGS OP III i: AMERICAN ACADEMY appropriate the sum of two hundred and fifty dollars *:io0) from the income of the Rumford Fund to Arthur L. Clark, of Worcester, to aid in the prosecution of researches on the prop- erties of vapors, near the critical point. W. M. Davis read a paper entitled "The Freshwater Tertiary Formations of the Rocky Mountain Region." The following papers were presented by title: — Contributions from the Cryptogamic Laboratory of Harvard University XLII.: Preliminary Diagnoses of New Species of Laboulbciiiacea'. — II. By Roland Thaxter. The Driving Energy of Physico-chemical Reaction and its Temperature Coeilicient. By Theodore W. Richards. Supplementary Note on the Chief Theorem of Lie's Theory of Finite Continuous Groups. By Stephen Elmer Slocum. Pre- sented by Henry Taber. On the Singular Transformations of Groups generated by Infinitesimal Transformations. By Henry Taber. RICHARDS. A TABLE OF ATOMIC WEIGHTS. 621 A TABLE OF ATOMIC WEIGHTS of Seventy-four Elements. Compiled in April, 1900, from the most Recent Data. By Theodore William Richards. Name. Symbol. Atomic Weight. Name. Symbol. Atomic Weight. Aluminium . . Al 27.1 Molybdenum Mo 96.0 Antimony . . Sb 120.0 Neodymium . . Nd 143.6 Argon . . . A 39.9? Nickel .... Ni 58.70 Arsenic . . As 75.0 Niobium . . . Nb = Cb 94. Barium . . Ba 137.43 Nitrogen . . . N 14.04 Beryllium . Be=Gl 9.1 Osmium . . . Os 190.8 Bismuth . . Bi 208. Oxygen (standard) O 16.000 Boron . . . B 11.0 Palladium . . . Pd 106.5 Bromine . . Br 79.955 Phosphorus . . P 31.0 Cadmium . . Cd 112.3 Platinum . . . Pt 195.2 Caesium . . Cs 132.9 Potassium . . . K 39.14 Calcium . . Ca 40.1 Praseodymium . Pr 140.5 Carbon . . . C 12.001 Rhodium . . . Rh 103.0 Cerium . . Ce 140. Rubidium . . . Rb 85.44 Chlorine . . CI 35.455 Ruthenium . . Ru 101.7 Chromium Cr 52.14 Samarium ? . . Sm 150. Cobalt . . Co 59.00 Scandium . . . Sc 44. Columbium Cb = Nb 94. Selenium . . . Se 79.2 Copper . . Cu G3.G0 Silicon .... Si 28.4 " Didymium " Nd + Pr 142± Silver .... Ag 107.93 Erbium Er 1G6. Sodium . . . Na 23.05 Fluorine . F 19.05 Strontium . . . Sr 87.68 Gadolinium Gd 156.? Sulphur . . . S 32.065 Gallium . Ga 70.0 Tantalum . . . Ta 183. Germanium Ge 72.5 Tellurium . . . Te 127.5? Glucinum . Gl = Be 9.1 Terbium ? . . . Tb 1G0. Gold . . Au 197.3 Thallium . . . Tl 204.15 Helium He 4.0? Thorium . . . Th 233. Hydrogen . II 1.0075 Thulium ? . . . Tu 170.? Indium . . In 114. Tin Sn 119.0 Iodine . . I 126.85 Titanium . . . Ti 48.17 Iridium Ir 193.0 Tungsten . . . W 184. Iron . . . Fe 55.9 Uranium . . . U 240. Lanthanum La 138.5 Vanadium . . V 51.4 Lead . . Pb 206.92 Ytterbium . . Yb 173. Lithium Li 7.03 Yttrium . . . Yt 89.0 Magnesium Mg 24.36 Zinc Zn 65.40 Manganese Mn 55.02 Zirconium . . Zr 90.5 Mercury . Hg 200.0 AMERICAN ACADEMY OF ARTS AND SCIENCES. Report of the Council. — Presented May 9, 1900. BIOGRAPHICAL .NOTICES. Epes Sargent Dixwell Charles P. Bowditch. John Cummings William H. Niles. John Codman RorEs John Fiske. John Lowell Thornton K. Lotheop REPORT OF THE COUNCIL. The Academy has lost nineteen members by death since the annual meeting of May 10, 1899, as follows : Six Resident Fel- lows,— John Harrison Blake, Epes Sargent Dixwell, Charles Franklin Dunbar, Silas Whitcomb Holman, Francis Minot, John Codman Ropes ; eight Associate Fellows, — Albert Nich- olas Arnold, Frederic Edwin Church, Sir John William Dawson, Manning Ferguson Force, Daniel Rajmes Goodwin, William Alexander Hammond, Edward John Phelps, George Clinton Swallow; and five Foreign Honorary Members, — Robert Wil- helm Bunsen, James Martineau, Sir James Paget, Carl Fried- rich Rammelsberg, and John Ruskin. EPES SARGENT DIXWELL. Epes Sargent Dixwell was born in Boston, on the 27th of Decem- ber, 1807, and died in Cambridge, on the 1st of December, 1899. He was the son of Dr. John Dixwell, who graduated from Harvard College in 1796 and received the degree of INI. D. in 1811, and of Esther Sargent, his wife. Dr. Dixwell was a descendant of the resdcide. Mr. Dixwell was educated at the Boston Latin School, and entered Harvard College when he was not yet sixteen years old. In college he was recognized as an admirable scbolar, and the interest which he then showed in literature and music continued through his life, and afforded a solace to his declining years. Graduating from college in the class of 1827, he turned his attention to teaching, though perhaps not then realizing that this was to be the profession of his life. The two years during which he was sub-master of the Boston Latin School were fol- lowed by several years spent in the study of law in the office of one of the most eminent lawyers of Boston, Charles G. Loring. He was admitted to the bar in October, 1833, and for three years he practised VOL. xxxv. — 40 EPES SARGENT DIXWELL. his | . l)nt in the autumn of 1836 be v. d head-master of the Boston Latin School, and at once t< >< »k op his work a- an instrui ci youth, a work which was to occupy bis best thoughts and efforts for ,(ii. In 1851, owing to certain municipal regulations, he felt railed upon to his position, and at once opened "The Prii Latin School" in Boylston Place, which from its start became very popular. Here he labored for twenty-one years, and when in 1872 he • ■ up the Bchool with which his name bad been bo 1 < • i i •_: associated, he found that he had taken part during the course of his teaching in preparing betv ur and five hundred graduates of Harvard for admission to college, besides teaching many others whoso lives bear witness to his instruction. After relinquishing the active duties of bis school, Mr. Dixwell led a quiet and retired life in Cambridge, which lie- had chosen for his l dence in 1*1"-'. Here he spent the remainder of his long life, except during two trips to Europe and his summer outings in the mountains or at the seashore. II*- found in Cambridge the congenial literary atmos- phere which he enjoyed, and he contributed his share to the social and scientific life of Cambridge and of Boston. He was a member of various ieties, and among others of the Auk rican Oriental Society, the Har- vard Musical Association, and of our own Society, having been elected to the Academy in August, 1848. But in "The Scientific Club" of Cambridge he took more pleasure, perhaps, than in any other, for h< re he enjoyed the social intimacy of Agassiz, Peirce, Gray, Quincy, Sparks, Walker, Hill, Everett, Felton. Wyman, and of many others who have held distinguished rank in literary, professional, and scientific circles. With President Felton he had the still closer tie which came from their having been roommates in college. Though Mr. Dixwell's life was a quiet one by choice, he did Dot neglect his duties as a citizen and church-goer. He early saw the necessity of manual training in the public Schools, and served for many years as a trustee of the Parish fund of his church. lie thoroughly enjoyed his travel- in Europe, as it gave him the opportunity which he had long wished for, of wandering through classic ind of seeing the wonders of classic and modern art, with which he had already become acquainted through his studies. He 18 said to have been more familiar with the topography of Rome than were many who had lived there for many years. He was an admirable classical scholar, and his translations into Latin evidence of his thorough knowledge of the language and of EPES SARGENT DIXWELL. G2T his ready skill in its use. A little volume of these verses called " Otia Senectutis," published in 1885, is a proof that old age had not dulled the critical keenness of his mind. English verse also flowed freely from his pen, and the lines which for many years he was accustomed to write for the annual family gatherings, in which he always took the greatest interest and pleasure, will long be remembered by those who had the privilege of listening to them, for their tender pathos, their wit and their humor. But it is as a teacher that Mr. Dixwell is best known. As an assis- tant instructor in the public schools of Boston, as the head-master of the Boston Latin School, and as the master of his own private school for many years, his influence over the education of young men was very wide. His comincr to the Latin School was welcomed as a si graduated at Harvard in L857 and soon afterwards entered the Law School, where he received his 1. 1.. I'., in 1861. While he was proficient in the work of the Law School, it is interesting to Observe that in that early time he also took a deep interest in quest of philosophy ami religion. He was always a man of profoundly ivli- is nature, with all the strength and earnestness of Puritanism, hut without its ascetic features. In the year of his graduating at the Law School he received the Bowdoin prize for an essay on "The Limits ,,f Religious Thought," — a title which Strongly suL.r,_rests that his mind had been exercised by the famous hook of Dean Manse) which we were all then reading. For a short time Lopes studied in the office of 1' W. Chandler and (ieorjje O. Shattuck, He was admitted to the l'ar November 28, 1861, and continued to practise law in Loston until the time of his death. In 1865 he formed a partnership with .John C'hipmaii ( rray of die class of 1859 : and thirteen years later W. V. Loring of the clas8 of 1872 was added to the firm, which has since heeii known as Ropes, Gray and Loring. Ropes' professional work was almost entirely confined to the office. Possibly Ids physical difficulty may have had something to do with this. He had all the qualities which might have placed him in the very highest ranks as an advocate before the court. He had an- almost infallible scent for the essential points in a case, lie could disentangle the most complicated details, he could hunt for evidence with a kind of cosmic patience that took everything with the utmost deliberation but never let slip the minutest detail, and he could marshal his arguments with a logical power that was equalled only by the artistic beauty ment. To hear him argue any point was a genuine delight both to one's reason and to one's aesthetic Bense. With all these rare endowments a- an advocate, Ropes confined himself principally to busi- ould be done in the office, especially to the care and manage- ment of truftl estates. At the time of his death there were more than a hundred trust estates, large and small, in his hands. He had long ago established his reputation as a safe person lor taking care of money. He JOHN CODMAN ROPES. 631 always showed sound judgment in making investments, and I suspect that one secret of liis success was that minute and systematic attention to detail which characterized everything that he did. The high qualities which might have made him a great advocate found a rich field for their employment in work done outside of office hours ; and it is after all hy that literary work that he will be longest and most widely known. The recollection of his professional work will of course pass away or be confined to very few persons after the present genera- tion. But his contributions to history have excellences which are likely to secure for them a very long life. I lis published writings relate almost entirely to military history, in which his two chief topics were the career of Napoleon and the Civil War in America I think there was in Ropes' nature an infusion of the true soldier. Had he been physically competent for service, he would probably have taken part in the Civil War, like his younger brother Henry, whose brief life was ended at Gettysburg. I fancy that the incapacity for service was a real grief to John Ropes, but it never seemed to disturb his serenity of spirit. If he could not be useful in one way he could in another. If he could not follow in the footsteps of Alexander, he might at least in those of Arrian. The thought of writing a history of the Civil War was one which grew with him into a settled purpose, and very admirable was the sort of prep- aration which he made for it. It was natural that the subjects upper- most in his mind should come up for discussion in the pleasant evening hours at the club. Gradually there grew up a habit of holding meetings at his house, meetings in which veterans of whatever rank could compare their experiences and discuss mooted questions. Ropes strongly encour- aged the preservation of every scrap of experience that could be put upon record, and thus grew up the habit of preparing historical papers to be read and discussed at these informal meetings. In this way Ropes became the founder of >a most valuable institution, — the Military His- torical Society of Massachusetts. For several years this body held its meetings at Ropes' house, where the speaker of the evening was apt to dine before the meeting and where the sessions were sure to end with a social glass and abounding good-fellowship. The publications of this Society, though few in number, are of great value. In recent years it has found a permanent habitation in one of the rooms of the Cadet Armory where Ropes, some time ago, placed the larger part of his valu- able historical library. One of the first literary results of these studies was an elaborate exam- ination of the Virginia Campaign of General Pope in 1862, a summary IHN CODMAN BOP] of which was furnished by Ropes in his volume entitled "The Army under Pope," being one of the volumes of Scribner's Beries on the (i\il \\ ar, Among other thing- it may be Baid of this book that it complete ly .[ l-'iiz John Porter from the charges brought against him after the second battle of Bull Run ;mni delight and live laborious days.*' He was always extremely fond of society ; no man more keenly enjoyed a dinner-party or an evening the club, and I can testify that sometimes alter club hour- were over we US d to I njoj prolonging our friendly chat quite into the morning hour- ; JOHN CODMAN ROPES. 633 but in these latter days Ropes became much more chary of his time and subjected himself to a kind of discipline in order that his work might be finished. In another direction and in dealing with a more limited theme, he achieved a finished piece of work. He had always entertained a warm admiration for the First Napoleon. It was natural that such an acute military critic should admire such transcendent military genius. But Ropes carried his admiration to an extent with which not all his friends found it easy to sympathize. In his little book entitled "The First Napoleon" Ropes appears as the great Corsican's advocate, and his case is presented with consummate skill. It has all the more weight because the author is far too skilful to weaken his case by over statement or by any too conspicuous warmth of enthusiasm. It is a masterly piece of writing, although in its philosophic grasp of the man and the period it is surely far inferior to the book published about the same time by the late Sir John Seeley. It was in relation to the Waterloo Campaign that Ropes produced the completely finished work already alluded to. No battle of the nine- teenth century has called for so much discussion as Waterloo ; and most of the discussion has centred about the question, " Why did Napoleon lose the battle? " The books on this subject are legion, and they present us with an English view of the situation and a Prussian view, and ever so many French views, according to the political and personal predilections of the writers. Usually we find some particular antecedent selected as explaining the mighty result, while other antecedents receive inadequate attention or are passed over. One writer is impressed with the ineffi- ciency of Grouchy, another one traces the catastrophe to the aimless wanderings of Erlon's corps on the sixteenth of June, and so on. But in Ropes' monograph what chiefly impresses us is the fact that he weighs every circumstance with the greatest care and puts real mental effort into the work of estimating the precise share which each circumstance took in the general mass of causation. In the first place the quality of the French army is duly considered and compared with the quality of the allied forces. Then such facts as the Emperor having Soult for Chief of Staff, an unaccustomed position for that able marshal, his feeling it nec- essary to leave at Paris the invincible Davoust, and other like circum- stances, receive due attention. The mysterious movements of Erlon, which prevented his being of any use either to Ney at Quatre Bras or to Napoleon at Ligny, are more acutely analyzed than in any other book. Then the consequences of the very incomplete defeat of Blucher on the JOHN LOWJ LL. sixteenth are carefully considered. Then Napoleon's great and unusual blunder in assuming an eastward retreat for the Prussians and act i us upon the assumption without verifying it. is properly characterized. 1 Bhare wrought by the muddy roads and the rain- is not forgotten, nor the physical weakness) - which hampered the great general and allowed him now and then to be caught napping for a moment ; the masterly position taken by Wellington ; the effects of the topography ; the extent to which the Emperor's attention was diverted early in the afternoon in the direc- tion of Plancheuoit, — not one of these points is forgotten or Blurred 01 er. ii is this minute quantitative consideration of detail.- that impresses upon Ropes' historical writings their truly scientific character, and no theme could have been better calculated t<> exhibit it in its perfection than the ■ npaign of Waterloo. One cannot read the book carefully without feeling that for once in the world something has been done bo exhaust- ively that it will not need to be done again. It would seem almost impossible for the most fertile mind to offer a Buggestion of anything actual, probable, or possible about Waterloo that our author has not already brought forward and considered. Those who write Buch bonks are lew. and to study them is a great and profitable stimulus. As this monograph on "Waterloo related to a subject already well understood in Europe, it immediately gave Ropes a high reputation in European circles, and I believe he i-> regarded by experts as one of the soundest military critics since the days of Jomini. JOIIX FlSKE. JOHN LOWELL John Lowell' the fourth of that name in direct descent from the first minister of Newburyport, who died in 17<">7, was born in Boston on the 1 8th of October, L824. lie was elected, in October. 1 s 7 7 . a Fellow 0!' this A.cademy, of which his great-grandfather had been one of the original incorporators in 1780, and both his father and grandfather Fellows. At the time of his birth his lather was living on the lower (southerly) corner of what are now Bedford and Chauncy Btreets; but at that time, between P.edford and Summer streets, at the points where Chauncy Street now turns oil', there was on Summer Street a place called Chauncy Place, running about two-thirds of the way through, and then closed by a brick wall with two openings for foot passengers, but none for vehicles, and turning up from Bedford Street a similar place called Bedford Place, On the upper side of which and next to the wall stood the house "I Judge Charles Jackson, having a large garden and pear JOHN LOWELL. 635 orchard extending down the place until it touched the garden of Judge Prescott, which stretched from there up Bedford Street towards Wash- ington. The lower side of Bedford Place was occupied by a row of brick houses, and in the one at the corner, as has already been said, John Lowell was born. In Chauncy Place, next to the dividing wall between that and Bedford Place, stood the Chauncy Hall School, then under the management of a well-known teacher, Gideon F. Thayer. To this school, partly perhaps from its nearness as well as for its reputation, Judge Lowell was sent, as soon as he was old enough to go to any man's school. He was fitted for college in the private school of Daniel G. Ingraham, who kept for more than twenty years the leading private classical school in Boston, and graduated at Harvard in 1843 at the age of eighteen years, with high distinction in Greek, Latin, Philosophy, and History, — indeed it would seem that he must have been recognized as especially proficient in Greek, as at the Sophomore Exhibition in October, 1841, he was one of the speakers in A Greek Dialogue, " Extract from Shakspeare's Henry the Fourth : Glendower and Hotspur ; " and at the corresponding Exhibition in his Junior year, had a Greek oration, " Bvpwv iv 'EX.Xo.8l." He was among the first scholars in his class : of his Commencement part, an English oration, the Rev. Dr. John Pierce wrote in his diary : " The subject of this oration was ' The Battle of the Nile,' — eight minutes in length, a summary of the principal facts." * After leaving college Lowell entered the Dane Law School, and remained there for the full course of two years. He was then for a year in the office of Mr. Charles G. Loring, and was admitted to the bar in 1846. Directly afterwards he went to Europe with his father and family, and was absent about a year. On his return he formed a connection with his brother-in-law, Mr. William Sohier, and began the practice of the law. This connection lasted until 1857, when he took an office by himself. The business in Mr. Solder's office was mostly chamber practice, and largely connected with the management of trust estates, and Mr. Lowell's work there was not such as to give him the opportunity for any especial display of ability, or to attract any one's attention. His name, I think, appears oidy twice in the Massachusetts Reports for this period. In the autumn of 1857 he separated from Mr. Sohier almost at the moment when the financial difficulties of that time were reaching their * Mass. Hist. Soc. Proceedings, Series II., V. p. 237. 6; >HN LOWELL. crisis. These difficulties al very Beriously the manufacturing in;' of this part of tin- Commonwealth, and many of the large rcantile linns who 1 1 .- 1 < 1 been the agents of the factories. The family and bu ions of Mr. Lowell and his father naturally causi I liim to consulted in some of these matters, and he thus became interested in the consideration of questions arising in bankruptcy and insolvency, a branch of the law in which as a judge he subsequently acquired a well-deserved and widespread reputation. lie continued in the practice of the law until 1865. During part of this time he had charge of the " Law Reporter," a monthly journal then published in Boston. From May, L 85 6, he was for two years its Bole editor, and afterwards until April, 1860, joint editor with Mr. Samuel M. Quincy of the Boston bar. Four volumes (Vols. 19, 20, 21, and l'l') were published while he was editor. Upon the resignation of Judge Sprague of the United States District Court of Massachusetts, in March, 1865, Mr. Lowell was appointed his successor. The appointment was wholly unsolicited by Mr. Lowell. It was made upon the recommendation of a few of the leaders of the Suffolk har. The letter which they addressed to the President was written by Mr. Charles G. Loring, and was signed by himself, Mr. Charles 15. Goodrich, Mr. Sidney Bartlett, Judge Josiah G. Abbott, Mr. Samuel E. Sewall, Mr. Edward D. Sohier, Mr. George Bemis, and Mr. Dwight Foster. It was carried to Washington at the same time with Judge Sprague's resignation by Mr. Richard II. Dana, Jr., who was then the United States attorney here. The nomination was sug- gested to Mr. Lincoln by Mr. Sumner and Mr. Dana, and was made and confirmed on the same day. The appointment was one peculiarly gratifying to Mr. Lowell, for his ■ t.-grand father, Judge John Lowell, bad been appointed in 1789 by General Washington to this same office, and was the first District Judge of the United States for the District of Massachusetts, and Mr. Lowell felt a natural and proper pride and pleasure in succeeding to the honor- able position and duties of his ancestor. In L878, on the death of the Honorable George F. Shepley, Judge of the Circuit Court of the United for the First Circuit, he was made Circuit Judge, thus again suc- ceeding his great-grandfather, who had been appointed by President John Adams to a similar position in the court which the Federalists created in the last year of President Adams's administration, only to have the act iting it repealed and the court destroyed by the Democrats under Jeffers as the simplest mode of getting rid of the Federalist judges whom Adams had appointed, JOHN LOWELL. 637 la May, 1884, a little more than nineteen years after his first appoint- ment to the bench, Judge Lowell resigned his position as Circuit Judge, and resumed the practice of the law in Boston. His long period of ju- dicial service had given the public ample opportunity to recognize his legal ability and wisdom, and from the time he returned to the bar until his last short illness, he was fully occupied with professional work. He served as arbitrator, or sat as a commissioner or special master in many causes and matters of importance ; he was retained as counsel in litiga- tions involving large interests and difficult questions, and his advice was constantly sought in solving the perplexities that arise in the administra- tion of the law of bankruptcy. Fortunately for him this professional work was interesting and stimulating and sufficiently engrossing to dis- tract his mind from domestic griefs and anxieties, which weighed upon him heavily at intervals. During these years he two or three times visited Europe in the summer with his family, before a severe accident to his wife rendered it difficult for her to travel. He married, in 1853, Lucy Buckminster, the only daughter of Mr. George B. Emerson and of Olivia Buckminster, his wife, daughter of the Rev. Joseph Buckminster of Portsmouth, N. H., and sister of the Rev. Joseph Stevens Buckminster of Brattle Square Church, Boston. For some time after his marriage Judge Lowell lived at No. 11 Chest- nut Street, in the house in which his wife was born, but in 1858 he purchased a farm lying between Chestnut Hill and Hammond's Pond, where he lived until his death on the 14th of May, 1897. He had inherited a taste for country life and an interest in trees and plants, shrubs and flowers, from which he derived during these years great enjoy- ment ; and the time which he passed in going about his place, in looking at the improvements he had made, and considering those which he pro- posed to make, undoubtedly contributed to the preservation of his health and the prolongation of his life. He was not a man of remarkable physique, yet until his last illness it is doubtful whether he was ever detained from his office for two days at a time by any physical ailment. In addition to the labors of his profession, he filled during these latter years many positions of importance and responsibility. In 1896 he was appointed by Goveimor Wolcott chairman of the commission to revise the laws of Massachusetts on the subject of taxation, and held this office at the time of his death. He was also Vice-President of the Massachu- setts General Hospital, of which he had been for many years one of the Trustees ; was President of the Trustees of the Peabody Fund, an Overseer JOHN LOWELL. of Harvard D 7, and a Member of the Massachusetts Historical iety. He received the degree of I factor of Law- from William- Col- . and from I larvard in 1*7 1 . bis appointment as District Judge, Mr. Lowell's work at the bad been chie ■ practice. His clients, if not very numen ittached to him, were continually demanding his com ami had the most implicit confidence in the opinions he gave them. When consulted by any one oi them be rarely looked at a book; but after hear- what the client had to say, would sit perfectly quiet, until he had sufficiently considered the question, and then advise him in a way Bhow- intuitive sagacity and familiarity both with the fundamental principles of the law and their application by the courts. He was always a diligent student, reading carefully, dig 3ting slowly, and assimilating thoroughly what was new or seemed to him important in the volumes of reports from time to time appeared, so that when his judicial work began be was well equipped for the duties that devolved upon him. 'The District Court of the United : of which he was at first ap- pointed Judge, is a court of limited and peculiar jurisdiction ; it bas the ilusive cognizance of admiralty and maritime cases, and of all crimes committed upon the high seas; it is also a prize court, ami sits a criminal court, for the trial of offence- against the laws of the United State-, such as violations of the post-office laws, reveuue laws. etc. The number of jury trials in this court is, however, very limited and mo-tlv confined to criminal cases, usually of great simplicity. Judge Lowell's want of experience in practice before a jury, and in dealing with juries, was for this reason a source of much less embarrassment to him in this court than it would have been in most others. He had, in fact, before his appointment tried only one jury case, and was perfectly aware of the difficulties under which he labored in public speaking. Time and con- stant practice diminished these difficulties, and made it more easy for him to preside at jury trials, as he gradually overcame the obstacles which Bprang largely from his want of training and experience, and a lack of confidence in himself. The civil war was not over when he was appointed be bench, and the effect of the destruction of our merchant marine by the guns of the Confederate cruisers, and of the transfer of our ships to foreign owners, now so evident in many other ways besides that of the sadly diminished number and importance of the suits in Admiralty, had not then made themselves thoroughly felt. At the time of his appoint- ment there were many causes pending which Judge Sprague'a long illm hail prevented his hearing, and Judge Lowell had at first no lack of JOHN LOWELL. 639 Admiralty suits of all kinds, including some difficult questions in prize causes. The principles and practice of the Admiralty Courts were espe- cially congenial to him. He was in lull sympathy with the tenderness which that court has always shown for the ignorant and improvident sailor ; and the cardinal rule of the Admiralty that no error of statement, or technical defect, or mistake in the kind of relief asked for, should inter- fere with or prevent such a decision of a cause as would work substantial justice between the parties, was in entire harmony with his view as to what should be the aim of all courts and judges so far as the established rules of law and the decided cases would permit, — au opinion which he held so strongly, that for his efforts to attain this end, he was at times called " wayward " in his decisions. At the time of Judge Lowell's appointment, there was no national bankrupt act in force, although there was an insolvent act in Massachu- setts with which and its operation he was very familiar ; two years after he became the judge of the District Court, Congress passed the National Bankrupt Act of 1867, in the administration of which he won a distinc- tion which placed him among the foremost, — it is perhaps not too much to say, at the head of the judges in this country, having original juris- diction of cases in Bankruptcy and charged with the administration of this law. As has already been said, the subject of Bankruptcy had interested him many years before his appointment to the bench ; he had begun the preparation of the treatise on this branch of the law which since his death has been published by his son, and the work he had done on this book had made him unusually familiar with the underlying principles of the Bankrupt Laws and the adjudicated cases. The purposes of a bankrupt act, — to secure the equitable distribution of an insolvent debtor's assets among his creditors, to grant him his discharge from his antecedent lia- bilities if he has honestly surrendered his property to be distributed for the payment of his debts, — and, on the other hand, to prevent such a debtor, who has fraudulently concealed for his own advantage a part of his estate, or unfairly preferred some of his creditors, from receiving the benefit of the act, — these purposes equitable in both aspects, and the simplicity and directness of the methods of procedure under the practice iu Bankruptcy, were all in harmony with his convictions of the useful and beneficent purposes of the law and the courts of justice, and made the administration of this law a congenial task, which he discharged not merely to the satisfaction of the bar, but to the approval of the mercantile class of the community whose interests are most affected by this law, who 640 JOHN LOWELL arc perfectly able to understand it and to judge whether it is wisely ad- ini: . and in the spirit of justice and fair dealing upon which it is founded. Upon Judge Lowell's retirement from the lunch in May, I 88 I. the merchants of Boston invited him to m public dinner, that they might have an opportunity of testifying their high esteem and affectionate con- eration l'<>v him as an administrator of the laws which most nearly con- cerned them in their business relations, whose decisions and interpretations of these laws had received the approval of the mercantile community throughout the land. This unusual tribute, coming from the source from which it emanated, was most gratifying to Judge Lowell as a proof that his administration of the Bankrupt Law had not only been in accord with the strong common sense of the businessmen of the community, but also with the principles of justice and equity which it has been the aim of every well-intended law of Bankruptcy to carry out. The mercantile community still further showed its appreciation of him by requesting him at a later date to prepare a new Bankrupt Act to be laid before Cong] But this act was unfortunately not passed. The jurisdiction of the Circuit Court of the United State- for the First Circuit, of which Judge Lowell was appointed Judge in 1878, includes the Slate- of Maine. New Hampshire, and Rhode Island, as well as Massachusetts, and his duties as Circuit .Judge brought him in contact with the members of the bar and the people of all these States; that he discharged these duties to their satisfaction was shown by the attendance of lawyers from every State iii the circuit, at the bar meeting in Boston after his death, and by the abundant testimony they gave of their recog- nition and thorough appreciation of his worth and ability, both as a mag- istrate and a man. The business of the Circuit Court and the class of cases tried there is quite different from that of a District Court. It has no original jurisdiction in Bankruptcy or Admiralty, bul in these matters sits only as a Court of Appeals. It deals more largely with cases at common law and with civil suits for violation of the revenue law. It has also jurisdiction of patent causes, a branch of the law which is thought to require some special aptitude for and knowledge of mechanics as well as of the physical sciences. Neither Judge Lowell's professional work at the bar nor on the bench bad ever brought him to the study of tins branch of the law, ami he was at the out-e| and continued to be unduly distrustful of his ability to master and properly decide the patent cases that were brought before him. As he occasionally jocosely expressed it. '•he was afraid of only one thing in the law. — those infernal machines." But he applied himself with the conscientiousness and thoroughness that JOHN LOWELL. 641 distinguished all his work to the study and investigation of these cases, and by the common consent of the counsel practising in patent cases, proved himself an excellent patent judge. His judicial opinions are marked by clearness of thought, and the direct, terse, and vigorous expression of it, with no digressions, no dis- cussions or dicta not absolutely necessary to the determination of the precise points before him. In deciding a cause he took the line of least resistance ; if it were a short cut he availed himself of it, and this not so much because this course saved him labor, as because he intended his judgment to be confined to the determination of the case actually before him. He was careful, therefore, not to stray from the real questions at issue, and to avoid being beguiled into by-paths of interesting legal investigation which had but little or no tendency to enlighten or aid him in arriving at his conclusions, and were not important in determining his final results. He had a natural aptitude for the law, one might almost say a legal instinct, and this was strengthened and quickened by thought and study ; he possessed as a judge a remarkable intuition " for perceiving on which side lay the justice of any case and an equally remarkable ingenuity in showing that a decision in favor of that side was in accordance with the settled rules of law." When he found himself obliged to yield to precedents which prevented what justice seemed to him to require, he did so with a reluctance which he never tried to conceal and sometimes openly expressed. His quiet humor not infrequently enlivened the trial of a cause, and occasionally appeared in his Opinions, as when in denying a motion to set aside a verdict because one juror had been asleep during part of the trial, he said : " If one of the jurors was asleep, the defend- ant should have called attention to the fact at the time. There is no suggestion that it is newly discovered, and I cannot now say that the defendant may not have thought his interests were promoted by the actual course of the trial in this respect." Or, to quote one more instance, — in a suit where a ship owner contended that the master had forfeited his wages by taking on board some casks of Madeira wine, the ship articles prohibiting him from carrying distilled spirits under penalty of forfeiting his pay, Judge Lowell demolished the elaborate argument of the counsel for the ship owner by saying, " Wine is not distilled spirits, and cannot be made so by a usage of the port of New Bedford or any other process that I am acquainted with, except distillation." Any attempt to characterize Judge Lowell's judicial qualities would be imperfect if it failed to recognize and call attention to the fact that vol. xxxv. — 41 642 >HN LOWELL. he had do! merely the res] t, bul the warm affection of the members of the bar. His Bimple aud unassuming manner claimed nothing, yet no one ever thought of treating him with discourtesy. His natural kind: led him to treat the youngest members of the bar and to listen to their however crudely presented, with a never-failing patience and sideration ; and both on and off the bench, he was always, in his itions with them, cordial, friendly, and ready to give them the ii lit of bis wisdom and learning in any difficulty in which they might ask his advice, lining this in such a manner that Fie rather seemed to he receiving than conferring a favor. He was not inertly a lean lawyer; he \\;. a lover of books, a great reader, catholic in hi.s tastes, and spending in his library many of his hours of rest and recreation. In private life he was an agreeable companion, a loyal friend, a most devoted husband and lather. He was not a demonstra- tive person, but "a quiet, self-contained, thoughtful, com affectionate man, who kept his eye single for the right and the true, who did every duty with keen thoroughness, and who found his greatest pleasure in the companionship of those nearest and dearest to him." Thornton K. Lotiirop. Other notices are postponed. The number of new. members elected during' the year is as follows: Resident Fellows, 4; Associate Fellows. 5; Foreign Honorary Members, 4. The roll of the Academy at present includes 194 Resident Fellows, 89 Associate Fellows, and 66 Foreign Honorary Meiribi * By transfer of an Associate Fellow to Resident Fellowship, and by election of new members at the annual meeting, the roll Btands al date of publication 198 Resident Fellows, 93 Associate Fellows, and 69 Foreign Honorary Members. American Academy of Arts and Sciences. OFFICERS AND COMMITTEES FOR 1899-1900. PRESIDENT. Alexander Agassiz. Class I. John Trowbridge. VICE-PRESIDENTS. Class II. Alpiieus Hyatt. Class III. Augustus Lowell. CORRESPONDING SECRETARY. Samuel H. Scudder, William M. Davis, May, 1899 — January, 1900. January — May, 1900. RECORDING SECRETARY. William Watson. * TREASURER. Francis Blake. LIBRARIAN. A. Lawrence Rotch. COUNCILLORS. Class I. Class II. Henry Taber, Benjamin L. Robinson, iDORE W. Richards, William T. Councilman, Harry M. Goodwin. John E. Wolff. Class III. Barrett Wendell, Edward Robinson, James 15. Ames. Alexander Agassiz, COMMITTEE OF FINANCE. Francis Blake, Augustus Lowell. Erasmus D. Leavitt, Amos E. Dolbear, RUMFORD COMMITTEE. Edward C. Pickering, Charles R. Cross, Arthur G. Webster; Theodore W. Richards, Thomas C. Mendenhai.l. C. M. WARREN COMMITTEE. Francis H. Storer, Charles L. Jackson, Henry B. Hill, Leonard P. Kinnicutt, Robert H. Richards. Samuel Cabot, Arthur M. Comey, COMMITTEE OF PUBLICATION. Samuel H. Scudder, Seth C. Chandler, Crawford H. Toy. COMMITTEE ON THE LIBRARY. A. Lawrence Rotch, Henry W. Haynes, Samuel Henshaw. AUDITING COMMITTEE. Henry G. Denny, William L. Richardson. L I ST ul' Till, FELLOWS AND FOREIGN HONORARY MEMBERS. (Corrected to May 20, 1000.) 12 KS I I) l-'.XT FEL LOWS. — 198. (Number limited to two hundred.) Class I. — Mathematical and Physical Sciences. — 79. Section I. —20. Mathematics and Astronomy. SoIod I. Iiailey, < lambridge. Maxime Bdcher, Cambridge. William E. Byerly, Cambridge. Seth ('. Chandler, Cambridge. J. Rayner Edmands, Cambridge. Gustavus I lav, Boston. Henry Mitchell, Nantucket. William F. Osgood, Cambridge James Mills Peirce, Cambrii I Edward C. Pickering, Cambridge. William II. Pickering, Cambridge. John Ritchie, Jr., Boston. John I). Runkle, T. II. Saflford, Edwin F. Sawyer, Arthur Searle, William E. Story, I [enry Taber, 0 C Wendell, P S. JTendell, Cambridge. Williamstown. Brighton. ( lambridge. Worcester. Worcester. ( lambridge. Dorchester. S ection II. — "_' 1 . ics. A Graham Bell, Washington, D.C mce J. Blake, ton. Francis Blake, Weston. Charles R. Cross, Brookline. Amos E. Dolbear, Somerville. II. M. ( roodwin, Boston. Edwin II. Hall, ( lambridge. Hammond V. Hayes, Cambridge. William L. Hooper, Somerville. W i 1 1 i:t 1 1 1 W. Jacques, Newton. Frank A. Laws. Bi iston. Henry Lefavour, Williamstown. T. ('. Mendenhall, Worcester. Benjamin 0. Peiree, Cambridge. A. Lawrence Rotch, Boston. Wallace ('. Sabine, Cambi idge. John S. Stone, Boston. Elihu Thomson, Swampscott. .John Trow bridge, ( lambridge. A. G. Webster, Worcester. Robert W. Willson, Cambrid S, CTION III.- 24. ('In mistry. Samuel < labot, ton. Arthur M. Comey, Cambridge. James M Crafts. Boston. Thos. M. 1 >rown, So. Bethlehem, Pa. Charles W. Eliot, Cambridge. Thomas Gaffield, Boston. I Lii i ■ \ B. 1 Iill. ( ambridge. RESIDENT FELLOWS. 645 Charles L. Jackson, Cambridge. Walter L. Jennings, Worcester. Leonard P. Kinnicutt, Worcester. Charles F. Mabery, Cleveland, O. Arthur Michael, Boston. George D. Moore, Worcester. Charles E. Munroe, AVash'gton, D.C. John U. Nef, Chicago, 111. Arthur A. Noyes, Boston. Robert II. Richards, Boston. Theodore W. Richards, Cambridge. Charles R. Sanger, Cambridge. Stephen P. Sharpies, Cambridge. Francis II. Storer, Boston. Henry P. Talbot, Newton. Charles II. Wing, Ledger, N. C. Edward S. Wood, Boston. Section IV. — 14. Technology and Engineering. Eliot C Clarke, Boston. Ira N. Ilollis, Cambridge. Gaetano Lanza, Boston. E. D. Leavitt, Cambridgeport. William R. Livermore, Boston. Hiram F. Mills, Lowell. Cecil H. Peabody, Boston. Alfred P. Rockwell, Manchester. Andrew II. Russell, Wash'ton, D.C. Peter Schwamb, Arlington. Charles S. Storrow, Boston. George F. Swain, Boston. William Watson, Boston. Morrill Wyman, Cambridge. Class II. — Natural and Pliysiological Sciences. — G4. Section I. — 13. Geology, Mineralogy, and Physics of the Globe. II. II. Clayton, Milton. Algernon Coolidge, Boston. William O. Crosby, Boston. William M. Davis, Cambridge. Benj. K. Emerson, Amherst. (). W. Huntington, Newport, R. I. Robert T. Jackson, Boston. William II. Niles, Cambridge. John E. Pillsbury, Boston. Nathaniel S. Shaler, Cambridge. Robert DeC. Ward, Cambridge. John E. Wolff, Cambridge. J. B. Woodworth, Cambridge. Section II. — 11. Botany. Geo. E. Davenport, Medford. William G. Farlow, Cambridge. Charles E. Faxon, Boston. Merritt L. Fernald, Cambridge. George L. Goodale, Cambridge. II. II. Hunnewell, John G. Jack, B. L. Robinson, Charles S. Sargent, Wellesley. Boston. Cambridge. r.rookline. Arthur B. Seymour, Cambridge. Roland Thaxter, Cambridge. Section III. — 25. Zoology and Physiology. Alexander Agassiz, Cambridge. Robert Amory, Boston. danics M. Barnard, Milton. Henry P. Bowditeh, Boston. William Brewster, Cambridge. Louis Cabot, Brookliue. William E. Castle, Cambridge. Samuel F. Clarke, Williamstown. W. T. Councilman, Boston. Charles B. Davenport, Chicago, II! Harold C. Ernst, Boston. J. Walter Fewkes, Washington, D.C. Edward G. Gardiner, Boston. Samuel Henshaw, Cambridge. Cambridge. Alpheus Hyatt, G [ i RES] ELLOWS. .1 q - i; oerville. i I,. Mark, bridge. M in. -t. Boston. I : S. MOI Hi. ( , II. Pari Cambri Jan* 3 •'■ Putnam, »ton. ,, I II. Scudder, Cambridge. \\ illiamT. Sedgwick, Boston. Jai ■ V-, bon. \\ UliamM. Woodworth, Cambridge. Si < i eon IV. — 15. M, dicine and Sun/, ry. tuel L. AMiot, ton. Edward II. Bradford, Arthur T. ( iabot, l>a\ id \V. ( Jheever, Frank W. Draper, Thomas Dwight, ii. iM II. Fitz, Charles F. Folsom, Frederick I. Knij Samuel .1 Mix \Y. L. Richardson, Theobald Smith, o. F. Wadsworth, Henry P. Walcott, John C. Warren, ■M. •II. on. Boston. ! bon. : on. ! m. Boston. ! m. m. m. on. Cambri bon. Class III. — Moral and Political Sciences. — 55. i riON I. — 11. Philosophy and Jurisprudence. James B. Ames, ibridge. Charles C. Everett, Cambrid II irace Gray, B< 3ton. John ('. Gray, on. ( i. Stanley Hall, Worcester. lanielHol ai 3, Cambridge. John E. Hudson, Boston. Francis C. Lowell, Boston. .1 siah Royce, Cambridge. Ji remiah Smith, Cambridge. James B. Thayer, Cambri riON II.— J I. Philology ami A rcha o William S. Appleton, Boston. Charles P. Bowditch, Boston. Lucien Cai r, Cambrid mklin Carter, Williamstown pli T. Clarke, m. II G. D any, on. Willi;*' it. Quincy. William W. ' roodwin, Cambridge. II in W. Haynes, B iston. Charles R. Lanman, I>a\ id ( i. Lyon, Bennetl II. Na Frederick W. Putnam, Edward Robinson, F. B. Stephenson, Joseph 1 1. Thayer, Crawford II. Toy, John W. White, John II. Wri rht, Edward J. Young, < larabridge. Cambridge. m. Cambrii bon. bon. Cambrii Cambridge. ( lambri Cambridge. Waltham. 'I UN III. 11. Political Economy Charles F. Adams, Edward Atkinson. Andrew M. I';i\ i-. Join, Fiske, A. (' G Lell, Henry C. Lod \ l.:iv rence Lowell Augustus Lowell, James F. Rhodi 1 liiiinaii ^\'. Ro Charles C. Smith, ami History. Lincoln. Boston. Cambridge. Cambridge. m. Nal bon. B ton. B ton. ( iambridge. Bo ton. RESIDENT FELLOWS. 047 Section IV. — 13. Literature and the Fine Arts. Francis Bartlett, John Bartlett, Arlo Bates, George S. Boutwell, J. Elliot Cabot, Boston . Cambridge. Boston. Groton. Brookline. T. W. Higginson, George L. Kittredge, S. R. Koehler, Charles G. Loring, Percival Lowell, Charles Eliot Norton, Horace E. Scudder, Barrett Wendell, Cambridge. Cambridge. Boston. Boston. Boston. Cambridge. Cambridge. Boston. 64fc ASSOCIATE FBLLOWB. AS SO CI ATK FELLOWS. — 03. (Number limited to one hundred. Elected as vacancies occur.) Cj^sb I. — Mathematical and Physical Sciences. — 34. M ( 1 [ON I. — 14. Mathematics and Astronomy. Edward E. Barnard, Williams Bay, S. W. Burnhani, Chicago. [Wis. rge Davidson, San Francisco. Fabian Franklin, Baltimore. Asaph Hall, Cambridge, Mass. rge W. Hill, W. Nyack, X.Y E. S. Holden, Washington. James E. Keeler, Mt. Hamilton, Cal Emory McClintock, Morristown.X.J Simon Newcomb, Washington. Charles L. Poor, ( reorge M. Searle, J. X. Stockwell, ( 'has. A. Ebung, Baltimore. Washington. Cleveland, 0. Princeton, N. .J. Section II. — G. Physics. Carl Barus, Providence, R.I. ,F. Willard Gibbs, Xew Haven. S. P. Langley, Washington. A. A. Michelson, Chicago. Ogden X. Hood, New fork. II. A. Rowland, Baltimore. Section III. — 7. Chemistry. Wolcott Gibbs, Newport. R.I. Prank A. Gooch, New Haven. S. W.Johnson, New Haven. J. W. Mallet, Charlottesville, Va> E. W. Morley, Cleveland. I ). ,T. M. Ordway, Xew Orleans. Ira Remsen, Baltimore. Section IV.— 7. Technology and Engineering. Henry L. Abbot. New York. Cyrus B. Comstock, New York. W. P. Craighill, Charlestown, W. F. R. Hutton, New York.[Ya. George S. Morison, Chicago. William Sellers, Edgemoor, Del. Robt. S. Woodward, Xew York. Class II. — Natural and Physiological Sciences. — 30. Section I. — 14. Geology, Mineralogy, and Physics of the Globe. CI v.land Abbe, ' Brush, Edward S. I lana, r < ;. I (avis, Washington. New Haven. New Haven. Cordova, Arg. I M Dawson, Ottawa. G. K. Gilbert, ( llarence King, Joseph LeConte, J. Peter Lesley, S. L. Penfield, J. W. Powell, K. Pumpelly, A. K ( '. Selwyn, Charles D.Walcott Washington. New York. Berkeley. Cal Milton, Mast New Haven. Washington. Newport, R.I. Ottawa. Washington. ASSOCIATE FELLOWS. G49 Section II. — 5. Botany. L. H. Bailey, D. H. Campbell, J. M. Coulter, John D. Smith, W. Trelease, Ithaca. Palo Alto, Cal. Chicago. Baltimore. St. Louis. Section III. — 5. Zoology and Physiology. Joel A. Allen, New York. W. K. Brooks, Lake Roland, Md. S. Weir Mitchell, A. S. Packard, A. E. Verrill, Philadelphia. Providence, R.I. New Haven. Section IV. — 6. Medicine and Surgery. John S. Billings, New York. Jacob M. Da Costa, Philadelphia. William Osier, Baltimore. Alfred Stille, Philadelphia. Wm. H. Welch, Baltimore. II. C. Wood, Philadelphia. Class III. — Moral and Political Sciences. — 29. Section I. — 7. Philosophy and James C. Carter, Joseph II. Choate, Melville W. Fuller, William W. Howe, William Mitchell, Charles S. Peirce, T. R. Pynchon, Jurisprudence. New York. New York. Washington. New Orleans. St. Paul. Milford, Pa. Hartford, Conn. Section II. — 8. Philology and Archaeology. Timothy Dwight, New Haven. B. L. Gildersleeve, Baltimore. D. C. Gihnan, Baltimore. T. R. Lounsbury, New Haven. Rufus B. Richardson, Athens. E. E. Salisbury, New Haven. Thomas D. Seymour, New Haven. A. D. White, Ithaca, N.Y. Section III. — 6. Political Economy and History. Henry Adams, Washington. G. P. Fisher, New Haven. H. E. von Hoist, Chicago. Henry C. Lea, Philadelphia. Henry M. Stevens, Ithaca. W. G. Sumner, New Haven. Section IV. — 8. Literature and the Fine Arts. James B. Angell, Ann Arbor, Mich. L. P. di Cesnola, New York. H. H. Furness, Wallingford, Pa. R. S. Greenough, Florence. Augustus St. Gaudens, New York. John S. Sargent, London. E. C. Stedman, Bronxville, N.Y. W. R. Ware, New York. 650 FOREIGN HONORARY MEMBERS. FOREIGN H O NO R A R Y I\r E M II E R S. — C9. (Number limited to seventy-five. i- vacancies occur.) CLASS I. — Mathematical e, London. Julius Thomson, Coponha Section IV. — 4. Technology and Engineering. Sir Benjamin Baker, London. Lord Kelvin. Largs. Maurice Levy, Paris. William C. Unwin, London. Class II. — Natural and Physiological Sciences. — 23. Section I. — G. Geolny//. Mineralogy, and Physics of the Globe. Sir Archibald Geikie, London. Albeil Hciiii, Zurich, sir John Murray. Edinburgh. A. E. Nordenskiold, Stockholm. Henry C. Sorby, Sheffield. Heinrich Wild, Zurich. Section II. — 6. Botany. J. G. Agardh, Lund. E. Hornet. Paris. Sir Joseph I>. Hooker, Sunningdale. W. Pfeffer, Leipsic. II. Graf zu Sobns- Laubach, Strassburg. Eduard Strasburger, Bonn. FOREIGN HONORARY MEMBERS. 651 Section III. — 7. Zoology and Physiology. Sir Michael Foster, Cambridge. Carl Gegenbauer, Heidelberg. Ludimar Hermann, KSnigsberg. A. von Kolliker, Wiirzburg. A. Kovalevsky, St. Petersburg. II. de Lacaze-Duthiers, Paris. Elias Metschnikoff , Paris. Section IV. — 4. Medicine and Surgery. W. Kiihne, Lord Lister, F. v. Recklinghausen, Rudolph Virchow, Heidelberg. London. Strassburg. Berlin. Class III. — Moral and Political Sciences. — 23. Section I. — 5. Philosophy and Jurisprudence. Ileinrich Brunner, Berlin. F. W. Maitland, Cambridge. Sir Frederick Pollock, Bart., London. Baron Russell of Kil- lowen. Tadworth. Henry Sidgwick, Cambridge. Section II. — 7. Philology and Archceology. Ingram Bywater, Oxford. W. Dorpfeld, Athens. Sir John Evans, Hemel Hempstead. J. VV. A. Kirchhoff, Berlin. G. C. C. Maspero, Paris. Max Miiller, Oxford. Karl Weinhold, Berlin. Section III. — 6. Political Economy and History. Due de Broglie, Paris. James Bryce, London. Herman Grimm, Berlin. Theodor Mommsen, Berlin. William Stubbs, Oxford. Sir G. 0. Trevelyan, Bart., London. Section IV . — 5. Literature and the Fine Arts. Georg Brandes, Copenhagen. F. Brunetiere, Paris. Jean Leon Gerome, Paris. Rudyard Kipling, Rottingdean Leslie Stephen, London. STATUTES AND STANDING VOTES. STATUTES. Adopted May 30, 1854 : amended September 8, 1857, November 12, 1862, May 21, 1864, November 9, 1870, May 27, 1873, January 26, 1876, June 16, 1886, October 8, 1890, January 11 and May 10, 1893, April 11, A/«iy 9, and October 10, 1894, anc? March 13, J^rtV 10, cm Honobary Membebs. 1. Elections shall be made by ballot, and only at stated meetin 2. Candidates for election as Resident Fellows must be pro- posed by two or more Resident Fellows, in a recommendation signed by them, specifying the Section to which the nomination is made, which recommendation shall be transmitted to the Corresponding Secretary, and by him referred to the Council for Nomination. No person recommended shall be reported by the Council as a candidate for election, unless he shall have received a written approval, signed at a meeting of the Council by at least seven of its members. All nominations thus approved shall be read to the Academy at a stated meeting, and shall then stand on the nomination list during the interval between two stated meet- ings, and until the balloting. No person shall be elected a Resident Fellow, unless he shall have been resident in this Commonwealth one year next preceding his election. If any person elected a Resident Fellow shall neglect for one year to pay his admission fee, his election shall be void; and if any Resident Fellow shall neglect to pay his annual assessments for two years, provided that his attention shall have been called to this article, he shall be deemed to have abandoned his Fellowship; but it shall bo in the power of the Treasurer, with the consent of the Council, to dis- pense (sub silentio) with the payment both of the admission fee and of the assessments, whenever in any special instance he shall think it advisable so to do. 3. The nomination of Associate Fellows shall take place in the manner prescribed in reference to Resident Fellows; and after such nomination shall have been publicly read at a stated meeting previous to that when the balloting takes place, it shall be referred to the Council for Nomination; and a written approval, authorized and signed at a meeting of said Council by at least n of its members, shall be requisite to entitle the candidate to I"- balloted for. The Council may in like manner originate nominations of Associate Fellows, which must be read at a stated meeting previous to the election, and be exposed on the nomina- tion List during the interval. OP ARTS AND SCIENCES. 661 4. Foreign Honorary Members shall be chosen only after a nomination made at a meeting of the Council, signed at the time by at least seven of its members, and read at a stated meeting previous to that on which the balloting takes place. 5. Three fourths of the ballots cast must be affirmative, and the number of affirmative ballots must amount to eleven to effect an election of Fellows or Foreign Honorary Members. 6. Each Section of the Academy is empowered to present lists of persons deemed best qualified to fill vacancies occurring in the number of Foreign Honorary Members or Associate Fellows allotted to it ; and such lists, after being read at a stated meeting, shall be referred to the Council for Nomination. 7. If, in the opinion of a majority of the entire Council, any Fellow — Resident or Associate — shall have rendered himself unworthy of a place in the Academy, the Council shall recommend to the Academy the termination of his Fellowship ; and provided that a majority of two thirds of the Fellows at a stated meeting, consisting of not less than fifty Fellows, shall adopt this recom- mendation, his name shall be stricken off the roll of Fellows. CHAPTER XI. Of Amendments of the Statutes. 1. All proposed alterations of the Statutes, or additions to them, shall be referred to a committee, and, on their report at a subsequent meeting, shall require for enactment a majority of two thirds of the members present, and at least eighteen affirma- tive votes. 2. Standing Votes may be passed, amended, or rescinded, at any stated meeting, by a majority of two thirds of the members present. They may be suspended by a unanimous vote. CHAPTER XII. Of Literary Performances. 1. The Academy will not express its judgment on literary or scientific memoirs or performances submitted to it, or included in its publications. 662 BTATUTES OF THE a.MKRICAN ACADEMY STANDING VOTES. 1. Communications <>f which notice had been given to the etary shall take precedence of those not so notified. 2. Resident Fellows who have paid all fees and dues chat able to them are entitled to receive one copy of each volume or article printed by the Academy, on application to the Librarian personally or by written order, within two years from the date t-t publication. And the current issues of the Proceedings shall be supplied, when ready for publication, free of charge, to all the Fellows and members of the Academy who desire to receive them. 3. The Committee of Publication shall fix from time to time the price at which the publications of the Academy may be Bold. But members may be supplied at half this price with volumes which they are not entitled to receive free, and which are needed to complete their sets. 4. Two hundred extra copies of each paper accepted for publi- cation in the Memoirs or Proceedings of the Academy shall be placed at the disposal of the author, free of charge. 5. Resident Fellows may borrow and have out from the Library six volumes at any one time, and may retain the same for three months, and no longer. <'.. I'pon special application, and for adequate reasons assigned, the Librarian may permit a larger number of volumes, not exceed- ing twelve, to be drawn from the Library for a limited period. 7. Works published in numbers, when unbound, shall not be taken from the Hall of the Academy, except by special leave of the Librarian. 8. Rooks, publications, or apparatus shall be procured from the income of the Rumford Fund only on the certificate of the Rum- ford Committee that they, in their opinion, will best facilitate and encourage the making of discoveries and improvements which may merit the Rumford Premium. 9. The Animal Meeting and the other stated meetings shall be holden at eight o'clock, P. M. lit. A meeting for receiving and discussing scientific commu- nications may be held on the second Wednesday of each month not appointed for stated meetings, excepting July, August, and September. OF ARTS AND SCIENCES. 6G3 RUMFORD PREMIUM. In conformity with the terms of the gift of Benjamin, Count Rumford, granting a certain fund to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and with a decree of the Supreme Judicial Court for carrying into effect the general charitable intent and purpose of Count Rumford, as expressed in his letter of gift, the Academy is empowered to make from the income of said fund, as it now exists, at any Annual Meeting, an award of a gold and silver medal, being together of the intrinsic value of three hundred dollars, as a premium to the author of any important discovery or useful improvement in light or in heat, which shall have been made and published by printing, or in any way made known to the public, in any part of the continent of America, or any of the American islands ; preference being always given to such discoveries as shall, in the opinion of the Academy, tend most to promote the good of mankind ; and to add to such medals, as a further premium for such discovery and improve- ment, if the Academy see tit so to do, a sum of money not exceeding three hundred dollars. INDEX. Acentetus, 44. carinatus, 45. Agassiz, A., Proposed Exploring Ex- pedition to the Mid- Pacific, 610. Amorphomyces obliqueseptata, 431. Anthracomya arenacea, 400. Arbutus glandulosa, 309. Aster jalapensis, 57:2. Athenaea Nelsonii, 567. Atomic Weight of Cobalt, 59 ; of Iron, 251. Atomic Weights, Table of, 641. Aulocara, 54. elliotti, 56. femoratum, 55. rufum, 55. parallelum, 57. Baxter, G. P. See Richards, T. W., and Baxter, G. P. Biographical Notices, List of, 623. John Cummings, 628. Epes Sargent Dixwell, 625. John Lowell, 634. John Codman Ropes, 629. Bowers, Mary A., Peripheral Distri- bution of the Cranial Nerves of Spelerpes bilineatus, 612. Bruneria, 49. Cacopteris, 87. aequalis, 92. ephippiata, 91. femorata, 93. fuscopunctata, 89. inermis, 89. nevadensis, 91. sinuata, 90. Calamintha oaxacana, 564. Cantharomyces Platystethi, 415. Carboniferous Fauna of Narragansett Basin, 397. Castle, W. E., The Metamerism of the Hirudinea, 2S3-303. Ceratomyces acuminatus, 447. Californicus, 448. cladophorus, 444. denticulatus, 445. elephantinus, 446. Floridanus, 444. ornithocephalus, 448. reflexus, 447. rhynchophorus, 446. Cestrum Bourgeauianum, 572. elegans, 571. fulvescens, 572. Chemical Laboratory of Harvard College, Contributions from, 1, 59, 121, 211, 229, 251, 261, 375. Chitonomyces aethiopicus, 430. Floridanus, 430. Chloealtis, 47. Clematomyces, 439. Pinophili, 440. Clinocephalus, 47. Cobalt, Atomic Weight of, 59. Cobaltous Chloride, 59; Oxide, 59. Cohoe, W. P. See Jackson, C. L., and Cohoe, W. P. Collins, E. See Richards, T. W., Collins, E , and Heimrod, G. W. Committee of Publication, Report of, 607. Committees, List of, 643. Compsomyces Lesteri, 439. Continuous Groups, 95, 237, 481. Copper, Electrochemical Equivalents of, 121. Coreopsis rhyacophila, 313. Corethromyces Brazilianus, 432. purpurascens, 433. Correspondence, 601, 610, 911, 614, 615, 617, 618. Council, Report of, 623. Cross, C. R., Historical Notes relating to Musical Pitch in the United States, 451-467. Cunila tomentosa, 565. fififi INDEX. Cryptogarnic Laboratory of Harvard University, Contributions from, 151, KT7. * Cuphea Reipublicae, 325. Datura rillosa, 571 . Davis, w . M . The Freshwater Terti- ary Formations of the Rocky Mountain Region, 843-373. 1 feci icinae, 81 Derby, I. II. .S'-e Jackson, C. L., ami Derby, I. II. Devotmema, 385. cupidineum, 391. delicatulum, 390. haydeni, 392. laticinctnm, 889. l'-ntiginosum, 393. lichenosum, 394. rileyanum, 392. saussureanuni, 391. Dichomyces Angolensis, 421. biformis, 422. Cafianos, 425. dnbius, 426. exilis, 420. hybrid us, 423. insignis, 421. Javanus, 420. Madagascarensis, 424. Peruvianas, 426. vulgatus, 121. Dichromorpha, 46. Dimprphomyces Myrmedoniae, 409. nanomasculus, 411. pinnatus, 4K). Thleoporae, 110. Dioscorea lobata, -523. oazacensis, 322. pnmicicola, 322. Diparabrombenzylcyanamide, 229. Dysodia Seleri, 314. Echelon Spectroscope, 109. Electrochemical Equivalents of Cop- per and Silver, 121. Encelia Pringlei, 573. Energy, Free, 1. Eucautharomyces Africanus, 418. CalUdae,418. noniae, 117. Catascopi, H9. I Kaphori, 4 16. intharomyces Euprocti, 417. Bpinosus, U6. I iucoret hromyces, 133. Apotomi, 133. Eupatoriuin adenachaenium, 329. adspersum, 329. aegirophyllum, 329. albicaule, 880. amblyolepis, 830. areolare, 380. badium, 331 , Bertholdii, 831. brickelloides, 331 . capnoresbium, 331. cardiophyllum, 831. chapalense, 882. chiapense, 332. crassirameum, 332. crenaeum, 333. desquamans, 333. glaucum, 333, 335. neterolepis, 3:55. I [eydeanum, 335. lanicaule, 336. Loesenerii, 336. micranthum, 334. Nelsonii, 337. Oerstedianum, 337. oresbium, 337. papacanum, 338. phaenicolepis, 338. photinum, 338. platyphyllum, 339. Saltivarii, 339. scabrellunx, 839. scorodonioides, 340. Selerianum, 340. Smithii, 340. Thieleanum, 341. Valverdeanum, 311. Vitalbae, 341. Euzodiomyces, 449. Lathrobii, 449. Fellows, Associate, deceased, — Alvan Wentworth Chapman, 801. Sir John William Dawson, <>15. Manning Ferguson Force, 610. William Alexander Hammond, 615. Edward John Phelps, 619. Fellows, Associate, elected, — Liberty Hyde Bailey, 818. Joseph Hodges Choate, i>16. INDEX. 667 Fellows, Associate, elected, — William Wirt Howe, 616. William Mitchell, 616. John Singer Sargent, 613. Fellows, Associate, List of, 648. Fellows, Resident, deceased, — John Harrison Blake, 612. Epes Sargent Dixwell, 614. Silas Whitcomb Holman, 619. Francis Mi not, 610. John Codman Ropes, 613. Fellows, Resident, elected, — Arlo Bates, 618. Maxime Bocher, 613. William El wood Byerly, 609. James Mason Crafts, 613. Henry Lefavour, 609. William Fogg Osgood, 613. William Henry Pickering, 609. Fellows, Resident, List of, 644. Fernald, M. L., A Synopsis of the Mexican and Central American Species of Salvia, 489-556; A Revision of the Mexican and Central American Solanums of the Subsection Torvaria, 557-562 ; Some Undescribed Mexican Phan- erogams, chiefly Labiatae and Solanaceae, 562-573. Ferrous Iodide, 211. Finite Continuous Groups, 95, 237,481. Foreign Honorary Members, de- Robert Wilhelm Bunsen, 612. James Martineau, 617. Sir James Paget, 615. Carl Friedrich Rammelsberg, 617. John Ruskin, 617. Foreign Honorary Members, elected, — Sir Benjamin Baker, 613. Rudyard Kipling, 613. Friedrich Kohlrausch, 618. Baron Russell of Killowen, 609. Sir George Otto Trevelyan, 616. Foreign Honorary Members, List of, 650. Free Energy and Equilibrium, 1. Freshwater Tertiariesof Rocky Moun- tains, 343. Fuller, R. W. See Jackson, C. L., and Fuller, R. W. Galium triflorum, 313. Gazzolo, F . II. See Jackson, C. L., and Gazzolo, F. H. Gomphocerus, 49. Gray Herbarium of Harvard Univer- sity, Contributions from, 305, 487. Greenman, J. M., New Species and Varieties of Mexican Plants, 307 -315. Hechtia sphaeroblasta, 323. Heimrod, G. W. See Richards, T. W., Collins, E., and Heimrod, G. W. Hirudinea, Metamerism of, 283. Hooper, W. L., The Electrical Resist- ance of the Human Body, 614. Horesidotes, 48, 49. cinereus, 49. Hosackia oaxacana, 309. repens, 308. Ilyptis axillaris, 565. madrensis, 565. Nelsonii, 566. Pringlei, 565. Infinitesimal Transformations, 575. Iodide, Ferrous, 211. Iron, Atomic Weight of, 251. Jackson, C. L., and Cohoe, W. P., Certain Derivatives of Metadi- brombenzole, 615. Jackson, C. L., and Derby, I. H., Ferrous Iodide, 211-227. Jackson, C. L., and Fuller, R. W., Note on the Constitution of Di- parabrombenzylcyanamide, 229- 236. Jackson, C. L., and Gazzolo, F. H., On Certain Colored Substances derived from Nitro Compounds, 261-281. Jaegeria, 315. discoidea, 318. gracilis, 319. hirta, 317. macrocephala, 317. minioides, 317. pedunculata, 317. petiolaris, 316. prorepens, 318. purpurascens, 316. Kingsley, J. S., The Ancestry of the Mammalia, 616 INDKX Labonlbeni nis, 164. adunca, 154. Aerogenidii, 155. iplogenii, 1 Anchonoderi, 15ft. angularis, 157. anomala, ]■•!. aquatica, i anstete, 158. \ -i.itica. 1 • Assamensis, 159. barbate, 160. bicornis. 160. bidenteta, 161. Brachionychi, 162. Cafii, 162. celestialis, 163. ceratopbora, 163. ( eylom asis, 164. Chiriquensis, 164. Clivinalis, 165. coarctata, 165. i olpodis, 166. itricta, 167. I ipteae, 167. corethropsis, 16S. corrugate, 168. Cubensis, 169. dactylopbora, 169. Darwinii, 170. denticulate, 170. 1 1 ■ rt-vlii, 171. Dineutis, 171. distincte, 172. drepaualis, 173. I ae, 17:5. equatorialis, 171. eivct.'i, 17."). falcate, 175. Eallax, 17»;. tiiiitiiiKi. 17'i. ftasa, 177. forficulate, 178. geniculate, 178. gibbifera, 179. beterocheila, 179. imitens, 180. iiisiil.nis, 181. intermedia, 181. [telica, 1 -•_'. Javana, 182. leucopbaea, 1 - I. sandri, I maculate, 184. Madagascarensis, 184. Laboulbenia Afadeirae, 185. Malayenais, 1 35. melanopus, 187. melanaria, 186. microscopica, microaoma, 187. ininiinalis. 188. .Misc. I i. 189. obtuaa, 189. Oedodactyli, 1 39. Oopteri, 190. Ophoni, 190. Orectochili, 191. orientalis, 121. Orthomi, 192. pallida, 193. Papuana, 193. Pericalli, 194. platystoma, 194. Polyhirmae, 195. prominens, 195. protrudens, 1!"!. Pseudomasci, 19G. pnnctete, 197. punctulate, l!»7. pygmaea, 198. rhinopliora. 199. rostellata. 199. separate, 200. Serrimarginis, 201. speciosa, 201. spiralis. 202. strangulate, 21 12. subconstricta. 203. Sumatrae, 203 Tacnodemae, 204. tenuis, 204. Thyreopteri, 2' 15. tibialis, •_*( >.">. tortuosa, 2uti. Trichognathi, 206. triordinate, 207. tuberculifera, 208. uncinate, 2ns. verrucosa, 209. Laboulbeuiaceae, 151, -107. Lamourouxia Conzattii, 312. t « -i 1 1 1 i f < ili.i . 818 Lewis. <;. X.. The Development ami Application of a General Equation lor Free Energy and Physico - chemical Equilibrium, l-:;s. Liabum Pringlei, ">12. Librarian, Report of, G03. INDEX. 669 Lie's Theory of Continuous Groups, 237, 481. Limnaiomyces, 428. Hydrocharis, 429. Tropisterni, 428. Lycium geniculatum, 566. Lygodesmia raniosissiraa, 315. Magaranthus sulphureus, 566. Mermiria, 41. alacris, 43. bivittata, 42. intertexta, 42. neomexicana, 43. rostrata, 44. texana, 42. vigilans, 43. Metamerism of Hirudinea, 283. Mexican plants, 305. Michelson. A. A., The Echelon Spec- troscope, 109-119. Mikania eriophora, 341. Mimosa Deamii, 324. Psilocarpa, 325. Misgomyces, 143. Dyschirii, 443. Stomonaxi, 443. Monoicomyces, 412. Britannicus, 413. Homalotae, 412. invisibilis, 414. St. Helenae, 413. Musical Pitch, 451. Napaia. 48. Narragansett Basin, 397. Nitro Compounds, 261. Nominating Committees, 613, 618. Oeonomus, 47. altus, 47. Officers elected, 608, 615; List of, 643. Opeia testacea, 46. Orphulella, 46. Ostrakichnites carbonarius, 403. Packard, A: S., View of the Carbon- iferous Fauna of the Narragan- sett Basin, 397-405. Peirce, B. ()., On the Thermal Con- ductivity of Vulcanite, 73-80. Perezia Nelsonii, 342. Perlexia Pringlei, 562. Peyritschiella Amazonica, 427. protea, 427. Physalis acuminata, 311. philippensis, 568. Pringlei, 811. Bydbergii, 569. saltillensis, 568. sordida, 568. subintegra, 567. Physical Laboratory of the Massachu- setts Institute of Technology, Contributions from, 451. Physico-chemical Equilibrium, 1 ; Re- action, 469. Piptothrix Goldmanii, 328. Pitch, Musical, 451. Platybothrus, 49. Polyascomyces, 414. Trichophyae, 415. Polygonum Meisnerianum, 324. Porophyllum brachypodum, 341. Protichnites narragansettensis, 402. Psoloessa, 51. Rhachomyces Canadensis, 436. Cayennensis, 438. Cryptobianus, 437. Philonthinus, 435. stipitatus, 438. tenuis, 437. Thalpii, 436. velatus, 435. Zuphii, 436. Rhizomyces crispatus, 434. Richards, T. W.,On the Determination of Sulphuric Acid in the Presence of Iron, 375-383; The Driving Energy of Physico-chemical Re- action and its Temperature Coeffi- cient, 469-480 ; A Revision of the Atomic Weight of Calcium, 611 ; A Table of Atomic Weights, 621. Richards, T. W., and Baxter, G. P., A Revision of the Atomic Weight of Cobalt ; third paper : The An- alysis of Cobaltous Chloride and Oxide, 50-72 ; A Revision of the Atomic Weight of Iron, 251-260. Richards, T. W., Collins, E., and Heimrod, G. W., The Electro- chemical Equivalents of Copper and Silver, 121-150. 670 IMH'X Q8on, B. L., Synopsis of th( era Jaegeria and Russelia, 815- 821 ; New Phanerogama, chiefly i imopetalae, from Mexico ana Central America, 328-842. Rocky Mountain, Tertiariea of, 848. Rumiord Committee, Report of, 604. Romford Fund, Paper published by Aid of, 109. Rumford Premium, Award of, 60S, 610, 618, 619. Russelia, 319. alata, 319. equisetiformis, 319. floribunda, oi20. jabscensis, 819. inultiHora, 821. polyedra, 820. rotundifolia, 821. sarmentosa, 320. subcoriacea, 319. Byringaefoba, 320. tepicensis, 321. ternifolia, 320. verticillata, 320. Salvia, species of, 489. adenophora, 538. adglutinans, .r>:'>-. aequidistans, ">12. alamoaana, 525. albiflora, 515. albo-caerulea, 541. alvajaca, 516. aniarissima, 528. angustifolia, 500. antennifera, 545. aristulata, 551. aspera, 531. irgens, 504. atripbeifolia, 553. axillaris. 519. ballotaeflora, 522. bella, 545. biserrata, 544. brachyodonta, 510. brevicalyx, '<"'.). bupleuroides, 197. cacali tefi ilia, 552. californica, •">•"> 1. candicans, 520. ('alalia. ">10. Lrosensis, 521 . chamaedryoide8, 521. Salvia chapalcnsis, 525. C'liia, 503. chiapensis, 544. chrysantha, 531. cinnabarina, 519. cladodes, 197. clinopodioides, 580. is, 520. cocci nea, 5.">m. Columbariae, 553. coin" a. 501. concolor, 548. confiiiis, 523. Conzattii, 526. cordobensis, 514. costaricensis, 196. Coulteri, 519. cryptodonta, 507. cuneifolia, 519. curviflora, 544. cyanea, 544. cyclophylla, 551. disjuncta, 533. elegans, 5 19. elongate, 507. excelsa, .>18. filipes, 510. firma, 502. fiaccitla, ">09. Iluviatilis, 516. Forreri, 518. fruticulosa, 526. fulgens, 537. gahnsogifolia, 498. Gliiesbreghtii, 511. glabra ta, 543. glechomaefolia, 51 8. glumacea, 552. ( roldmanii, 527. Gonzalezii, 524. graciliflora, 546. Grahami, 533. Greggii, 537. guadalajarensis, 506. belianthemifolia, 507. heterotricha, 500. hirsuta, 499. bispanica, 508. humilis, 495 byptoides, 498. iaiitliina. 5 13. incana, 551. inconspicna, 192. involucrata, 539. iodantha, 547. INDEX. GT1 Salvia iodochroa, 540. irazuensis, 540. jaliscana, 515. Jurgensenii, 514. Karwinskii, 548. Keerlii, 528. laevis, 502. lanceolata, 503. lasiantha, 524. lasiocephala, 498. lantanaefolia, 530. lateriflora, 494. lavenduloides, 505. Lemmoni, 535. Leonia, 553. leptostachys, 511. leucantha, 529. Lindenii, 537. lineata, 539. Littae, 547. longispicata, 513. lophantha, 496. lophanthoides, 499. lupulina, 542. lycioides, 521. madrensis, 532. Martensii, 541. mazatlanensis, 515. menthiformis, 510. mexicana, 542. michoacaua, 548. micrantha, 493. microphylla, 534. miniata, 545. misella, 492. mocinoi, 496. mollissima, 550. monclovensis, 514. multiramea, 525. nmscarioides, 506. nana, 508. Nelsonii, 527. nepetoides, 529. nervata, 548. neurepia, 535. nitida, 498. oaxacana. 536. oblongifolia, 505. obscura, 492. obtusa, 536. occidentalis, 491. oreopola, 517. oresbia, 536. orizabensis, 538. Ottcnis, 551. Salvia ourophylla, 495. Palmeri, 511. pansamalensis, 541. patens, 552. pauciflora, 522. perlonga, 546. permixta, 496. phaenostemma, 542. Pittieri, 530. platycbeila, 523. platypbylla, 529. podadena, 492. polystachya, 511. populifolia, 530. prasiifolia, 513. Pringlei, 539. privoides, 493. pruinosa, 526. prunelloides, 504. prunifolia, 518. pteroura, 516. puberula, 539. pubescens, 532. pulchella, 539. purpurascens, 540. purpurea, 546. pusilla, 495. ramosissima, 521. rectiflora, 537. recurva, 543. Kegla, 533. remota, 507. rhornbifolia, 517. Pioemeriana, 553. roscida, 517. llosei, 548. rubigiuosa, 496. rubropunctata, 527. saltuensis, 497. Sanctae-Luciae, 514. Schaffneri, 535. scorodoniaefolia, 523. Seemannii, 516. semiatrata, 524. serotina, 493. serpyllifolia, 521. Sessei, 532. sessilifolia, 529. setosa, 493. Shannoni, 531. sidaefolia, 529. sinaloensis. 502. spicata, 522. stachyoides, 507. stolonifera, 540- • •.Ti- ls i >r.x. Salvia Bubiocisa, 608. Tatei, G tli viii. 20. thyrsiflora, B25. tiliaefolia, 494. tricolor, 584. tricuspidata, 518. tubifera, 5 15. tubiformis, 551. unicostata, 501. renosa, 5 15 veronicaefolia, 517. \ illosa, 51 \ it i!i 'I ia, 552. Wagneriana, 532. Warszew icziana, 514. zalapensis, 518. zacualpensis, 545. Scudder, S. II-, Short Studies of North American Tryxalinae, 39-57 ; Two Genera oi North American Decticinae, 81-93; The Species of the ( hthopteran Genus Derot- mema, 385-395. Scutellaria distans, 562. pedicularis, 503. ltosei, 503. Sctljrwii-k, W. T., and Window, C. E. A., Experimental and Statisti- cal Studies on the Influence of Cold on the Bacillus of Typhoid Fever and its Distribution, with Special 1 Inference to Ice Supply and the Public Health, 614. Silver, Electrochemical Equivalents of, 121. Slocum, S. E., Note on the Chief 'Theorem of Lie's Theory of Con- tinuous ( ; roups. 287-250, 481-485. Smilax domingensis, 323. Solanum azureum, 570. dejectum, 569. diversifolium, 500. erythrotrichum, 561. Fendleri, 559. I [artwegi, 559. 1 [ayesii, 560. I [ernandesii, 558. hispidum, 56 1 macroscolum, 570. madrense, 558. nocl urnum, ">70. ochraceo ferrugineum, 660. pluill'li Solanum torvnm, 557. Solid Solutions. 375. Sj>ectroscope, Kchelon, 109. Sphaleromycee atropurpureus, 441. Brachyderi, 1 12. obtusus. 1 In. propinquus, 111. Spilanthea nlipes, 814. Spirant hes .Wlsonii, 307. Pringlei, .".07. tenuillora. :i()S. Stachya Baccida, 503. oaxacana, 564. statutes and Standing Votes, 052. Steminadenia lnaerophylla, 310. tomentosa, 810. Stevia arachnoidea, 326. Asclienlioniiana. 320. bicreuata. 326. elatior. 326. madreiisis. 326. monaidaefolia, 326. neurophylla, 327. Rosei, 327. Seleriana, 327. serrata, :!28. tephra. 328. Stira pleura, 51. pusilla, 52. tennicarina, 53. Styraz Ramirezii, -">09. Sulphuric Acid, 375. Taber, II., On the Singular Transfor- mations of Groups generated by I ntinitesimal Transformations, 575-597. Telanthera mollis, 824. Teratomyces Philonthi, 432. vulgaris. 431. Thaxter, 11., Preliminary Diagnoses of New Species of I.ahoull 'eniaceae, 151-209, 4II7-15H. Thermal Conductivity of Vulcanite, 73. Thomson, P., New Electric Appara- tus for Bigh Potentials, 618 Tmetodera, 888. T( in aria. 557. Toy, C. II., A \'cw Theory of Totem- ism. 017. Treasurer, Report of, 602. Tropizaspis, 83. castanea, 84. INDEX. 673 Tropizaspis diabolica, 86. ovata, 84. picturata, 85. steindachueri, 86. Tryxalinae, 39. Uliue, E. B., New Dioscoreas from Mexico, 322-323. Vernonia liatroides, 325. serratuloides, 313. Viburnum microcarpum, 313. Vulcanite, Thermal Conductivity of, 73. Warren (C. M.) Committee, Report of, 606. Warren (C. M.) Fund, Aid from, 608. Webster, A. G., Maxwell's Electric Top, 613. Williams, F. B., Note on the Finite Continuous Groups of the Plane, 95-107. Winslow, C. E. A. See Sedgwick, W. T., and Winslow, C. E. A. Zoological Laboratory of the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Har- vard College, Contributions from, 283. New York Botanical Garden Library _ III lilllllillllil 111 I'lllllllllll II I Ml Ml llllllllll 3 51 85 00257 8936