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The development of the geological atlas of the United States, by Bailey Willis;
The American Association; Topography and scenery of Northern India, by Her-
bert M. Wilson; Greenland Scientific Expedition; The North Greenland Scien-
tific Expedition.
(571

AMERICAN GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY. Journal. Vol. XXVIII. 1886. New York, [1896]. 8vo. pp. (6), 467.

Maps.

Contains the following papers: Geographical notes in Alaska, by W. H. Dall; Work in North Greenland in 1894 and 1895, by R. E. Peary; The internal slave trade in Africa; The physical geography of New York State, by R. S. Tarr; The Alaskan boundary, by Marcus Baker; Geography from Nature, by R. E. Dodge; Mountaineering in Alaska, by Israel C. Russell; The Indians of British Columbia, by Franz Boas; A Graphic History of the United States, by Henry Gannett; The topographic work of the U. S. Geological Survey in 1895, by Henry Gannett; Mexico, by M. Romero, Mexican Minister at Washington; The utmost waters of the Missouri River, by J. V. Brower. (572 AMERICAN GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY. Journal. Vol. XXIX. 1897. New York. [1897]. 8vo, pp. (6), 494.

Contains the following papers: The influence of geographic environment, by Cosmos Mindeleff; Geographical work in Canada, 1896, by George M. Dawson; The physical geography of New York State, by Ralph S. Tarr; The consolidation of the Iroquois Confederacy, or What happened on the St. Lawrence between the times of Cartier and Champlain, by James Douglas; Economic importance of geological and physical conditions in tropical America, by Francis C. Nicholas; Settlement of the Mexico-Guatemala boundary question, by M. Romero; Recent foreign surveys under the direction of the U. S. Hydrographic Office, by G. W. Littlehales; The Sette Comuni; Teutonic survival on Italian soil, by W. D. McCrackan; Mountain structures of Pennsylvania, by A. P. Chittenden; The administration of the forests of the public domain, by Henry Gannett; Notes on some dangerous rocks off the Gulf of Darien, by Francis C. Nicholas; Omitlán, a prehistoric city in Mexico, by William Niven: Topography of Mexico, by Herbert M. Wilson; The prehistoric ruins of the Rio Tularosa, by U. Francis Duff; Explorations in the Cape Regions of Baja California, by Gustav Eisen; Mr. Blaine and the boundary question between Mexico and Guatemala, by M. Romero; Recent survey of Jiquilisco Bay and El Triunfo, the New Port of Salvador, by G. W. Littlehales; The true route of Coronado's march, by F. S. Dellenbaugh; Mr. Peary's plan and Capt. Sverdrup. (573 AMERICAN GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY. Journal. Vol. xxx. 1898. New York, [1898]. 8vo, pp. (8), 480. Illustrated.

Contains the following papers: Relations of irrigation to geography, by Herbert M. Wilson; From Cairo to Beni-Hassan, by D. Cady Eaton; Physical geography of New York State, by Ralph S. Tarr; Frobisher Bay revisited, by Russell W. Porter; Origin of the cliff dwellings, by Cosmos Mindeleff; Recent advances in geographic knowledge accomplished by the U. S. Hydrographic Office, by G. W. Littlehales; Copper river as a route to the Yukon Basin, by C. Willard Hayes; Some observations on prisons in Vladivostok and Sahkalin, by Benjamin Howard; Geography of the Laurentian Basin, by Israel C. Russell; United States Mid-Pacific supply station (Oahu island), by G. W. Littlehales; Geographic conditions that make great commercial centres, by A. F. Sears; The rivers of New York, by Ralph S. Tarr; Exploration of Aboriginal architecture in the United States, by Cosmos Mindeleff. (574 AMERICAN GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY. Journal. Vol. XXXI. 1899. New York, [1899]. 8vo, pp. (6), 525. Maps.

Contains the following papers: Physical geography of New York State, by R. S. Tarr; Hawaiian ethnography, by Titus Munson Coan; Notes on meteorology, by Robert De C. Ward; The ruined city of Copan, by George Byron Gordon; Population and environment in western Massachusetts, by Roland B. Dixon; A new mountain aneroid barometer, by E. Whymper; The timber line, by Henry Gannett; The navy as a motor in geographical and commercial progress, by G. W. Littlehales; The influence of climate on governments, by Robert De C. Ward; Notes on oceanography, by William Libbey; The Granites of Carbon County, Montana: A division and glacier field of the Snowy Range, by James P. Kimball; The development of the Hanse towns in relation to their geographical environment, by Ellen C. Semple; Mr. Lang's theory of primitive monotheism, by Roland B. Dixon; Bibliography of geographical works

published in the United States in 1898, by J. M. Boutwell; The Harriman Alaska expedition, by Henry Gannett; Palestine as illustrating geological and geographical controls, by Reginald A. Daly.

(575

AMERICAN GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY. Journal. Vol. XXXII. 1900. New York, [1900]. 8vo, pp. ii, (1) 528. Maps.

Contains the following papers: Physical geography of New York State, by R. S. Tarr; The five civilized tribes, Indian Territory, by C. H. Fitch; Palestine as illustrating geological and geographical controls, by Reginald A. Daly; A dictionary of topographic forms, by Herbert M. Wilson; The Alaska boundary line, by T. C. Mendenhall; The climate of New York, by E. T. Turner; The Philippine Islands and their people, by J. G. Schurman; Peloponnesian journeys, by Clarence H. Young; Relics of the Nares expedition recovered by Mr. Peary; The Sundal drainage system in Central Norway, by R. L. Barrett; Porto Rico: its topography and aspects, by Herbert M. Wilson; Tropical hurricanes, by F. J. B. Cordeiro; The territory of Anadyr, from the Russian of E. Olssufjev, translated by E. Bondy; Results of the Cuban census, by Henry Gannett; Madagascar, by W. H. Hunt; The heaths and hollows of Holland, by Wm. Elliot Griffis; Korea's geographical significance, by Homer B. Hulbert; The census of Porto Rico, by Henry Gannett; British Honduras, by W. L. Avery; Through the silk and tea districts of Kiang-Nan and Che-Kiang province, by Emil S. Fischer; Geographical relief maps, their use and manufacture, by C. Mindeleff; Explorations in the central part of Baja California, by Gustav Eisen; The Lapps of Sweden, by E. D. Winslow; Explorations in the rubber districts of Bolivia, by H. Arnous de Rivière; The northwestern boundary between the United States and Canada, by Richard U. Goode; The science of the tides, by Alexander Brownlie; The population of the United States, by Henry Gannett. (576 AMERICAN GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY. Bulletin. Vol. XXXIII. 1901. New York, [1901]. Svo, pp. 490.

Contains the following papers: Norse discoveries in America, by Juul Dieserud; The siege of Peking: its causes and consequences, by W. A. P. Martin; Akarnania and Aeotolia, by Rufus B. Richardson; Captain Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshausen, 1819-1821, by F. A. Cook; St. Christopher, West Indies, by W. H. Alexander; Notes on climatology, by Robert De C. Ward; Physiographic notes, by Ralph S. Tarr; Cerros, or Cedros island, by Gustav Eisen; The Coosa river, by Frederick G. Bromberg; Notes on the recent progress of irrigation in the United States, by Albert Perry Brigham; Topographic notes on the Ural mountains, by Chester W. Purington; Conditions requisite to our success in the Philippine Islands, by G. F. Becker; Mountain passes, a study in anthropogeography, by Ellen C. Semple; Map notices, by Henry Gannett; Notes on Geographical education, by R. E. Dodge; Notes on climatology, by Robert De C. Ward; A little-known colony (Belize), by W. L. Avery; The Tananarive observatory, by W. H. Hunt; The flora of St. Christopher, by W. H. Alexander; Bermuda, by J. Maxwell Green and C. L. Bristol; Certain persistent errors in geography, by Henry Gannett; Recent censuses of population, by Henry Gannett; Topographic forms of the United States, by Herbert M. Wilson; Fetishism, a government, by Robert Hamill Nassau; The solution of the problem of the tidal bore, by Alexander Brownlie; Geographical notes from the year-book of the department of Agriculture for 1900, by Albert Perry Brigham; Fiords, by Geo. D. Hubbard; Some economic aspects of the heat and drought of July, 1901, in the United States, by Robert De C. Ward; The population of the United States, by sex, nativity, and race, by Henry Gannett; On the origin of fiords, by G. D. Hubbard; Peary's progress to the pole, by H. L. Bridgman; Census results, by Henry Gannett; Notes on American forests and forestry, by Albert Perry Brigham. (577 AMERICAN GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY. Bulletin. Vol. XXXIV. 1902. New York, [1902]. 8vo, pp. 476. Maps.

Contents: Recent work of the U. S. Geological Survey in Alaska, by F. C. Schrader; The tides in the midst of the Pacific Ocean, by Alexander Brownlie; Geology and water resources of Nez Perce county, Idaho; The preglacial course of the middle portion of the Genesee river, by R. II. Whitbeck: The physiographic divisions of Kansas, by George I. Adams; The geography of Cuba, by T. Wayland Vaughan and A. C. Spencer; The Isthmian canal, by Arthur P. Davis; Note on the tidal bore, by J. V. V. Booraem; Manufactures of the United States, by Henry Gannett; Topography and the distribution of our

population, by W. F. Willcox; Maps and map making, by J. R. Torbert; The
forest people of British Guiana, by James Rodway; The ruined Pueblo in New
Mexico discovered by Vargas in 1692, by J. Walter Fewkes; Notes on the flora
of the West Indies, with special reference to the Island of St. Kitts, by W. H.
Alexander; Census statistics of agriculture, by Henry Gannett; The essential
needs of modern navigation, by G. W. Littlehales; The railroad to Mecca ;
The valley of the Upper Euphrates and its people, by Ellsworth Huntington;
The Uganda railroad; The Mississippi river from Cape Girardeau to the head
of the passes, by Robert Marshall Brown; Varieties of tides, by Alexander
Brownlie; Porto Rico, its climate and resources, by W. H. Alexander; Trans-
continental railroads in Australia; Life amid desert conditions, by Richard E.
Dodge; The population of China in 1902.
(578

AMERICAN GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY. Bulletin. Vol. xxxv. 1903. New York, [1903]. 8vo, pp. iv, (1), 596. Plates. Maps.

Contains the following papers: The Syrians of Persia and Eastern Turkey, by William A. Shedd; The Mississippi river from Cape Girardeau to the head of the passes, by Robert Marshall Brown; Varieties of tides, by Alexander Brownlie; The Panama canal, by George S. Morison; Co-operative topographic survey of New York; The cattle industry in the United States; The most northern railroad; Geographical record; Improvements to navigation in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, by Wm. P. Anderson; Forest reserve in the southern Appalachians; Earthquake and volcanic centers in the Philippines; The boundary between Chile and Argentina; Physiographic notes, by R. S. Tarr; The Huichol Indians of Mexico, by Carl Lumholtz; M. Froidevaux's Paris letter: Spiritual beings in West Africa: their classes and functions, by Robert Hamill Nassau; Culebra island, by A. C. Haeselbarth; The economic geography of the Argentine Republic, by J. Russell Smith; The northwest passage and the circumnavigation of America, by Andrew J. Stone; Geography and international boundaries, by Israel C. Russell; Hydrologic and hydrographic surveys of the United States; Comparison of distances by the Isthmian canal and other routes, by Emory R. Johnson; Cornell summer school of geology and geography: The geographical record; The Languages of Mexico, by Carl Lumholtz; Geography in the University of Chicago; Obituary: Paul Du Chaillu; Notes during a journey in Guatemala, March-December, 1892, by Gustav Eisen; The climate of the Philippines, by Walter S. Tower; Topographic surveys of New Jersey, Massachusetts, and Ohio; The new port of Vera Cruz; The earthquake and volcanic eruption in Guatemala in 1902, by Gustav Eisen; The climate of South America, by Robert De C. Ward; Guayaquil and Quito railway, by F. W. Bennett: Notes on the U. S. Geological Survey; Mr. Peary's expedition to the Arctic; Sheets of the U. S. atlas, by Henry Gannett; Latitude and longitude of Chengtu-fu; Two years in Argentine as the consulting engineer of national public works, by E. L. Corthell; The city of rocks, by U. Francis Duff; The island of Guam; Topographic survey of the United States; The Panama canal in its commercial aspects, by Emory R. Johnson; Explorations of the Russian hydrographic expedition in the Arctic ocean in 1902; Alaskan cables and telegraphs; Report of R. E. Peary on work in the Arctic, 1898-1902; Human bones found near Galveston-a letter; Obituary: Rear-Admiral Bancroft Gherardi. (579 AMERICAN GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY. Bulletin. Vol. XXXVI. 1904. New York. Svo, pp. iv, (1), 805.

Contains: The questions settled by the award of the Alaskan Boundary Tribunal, by Robert Lansing; River surveys in the United States; Base maps of the United States; Martin Waldseemuller and the early Lusitano-Germanic cartography of the New World, by E. L. Stevenson; Annual report of the Coast and Geodetic Survey for 1903; The projected new barge canal, New York, by Thomas W. Symons; Aboriginal pottery of the eastern United States; Round Mt. McKinley, by Frederick A. Cook; The influence of geographic environment on the lower St. Lawrence, by Ellen Churchill Semple; The Pan-American Railway; The Hudson River described by W. M. Davis; The Eighth International Geographic Congress; Notes on topographic surveys in Alaska; Good roads in the United States, by A. P. Brigham; Topographic surveys in the Western United States; Transactions of the Society. (580

AMERICAN GEOGRAPHICAL AND STATISTICAL SOCIETY. Carl Ritter. the American Geographical and Statistical Society. By Princeton, 1860.

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8vo, pp. 25–63.

(581

AMERICAN GEOGRAPHICAL AND STATISTICAL SOCIETY. Charter, by-laws, and list of members of the Society, March, 1860. New York, 1860. Svo, pp. 31.

(582

AMERICAN GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY. The polar exploring expedition. A special meeting of the American Geographical and Statistical Society, held March 22, 1860. New York, 1860.

Svo, pp. 30. Map.

(583

Treats of the proposed expedition to the Arctic regions by Dr. I. I. Hayes. AMERICAN GEOGRAPHICAL AND STATISTICAL SOCIETY. Progress of statistics; read before the American Geographical and Statistical Society, at the annual meeting in New York, Dec. 1, 1859. By Jos. C. G. Kennedy. New York, 1861.

8vo, 1 p. 1., pp. 29.

(584

AMERICAN GEOGRAPHICAL AND STATISTICAL SOCIETY. Prospects of the Atlantic telegraph. Paper read before the Society May 1, 1862. By Cyrus W. Field. [New York, 1862.]

8vo, pp. 14 (1).

(585

AMERICAN GEOGRAPHICAL AND STATISTICAL SOCIETY. [Report of the select committee appointed to devise a system of taxation, and in connection therewith a financial plan, which shall be adapted to the present state of public affairs.] [New York, 1862.]

8vo, pp. 29.

Running title: The finances and revenues of the United States. AMERICAN GEOGRAPHICAL AND STATISTICAL SOCIETY.

Proceedings.

(586

1862-1863.

New York, 1862-1863.

Svo, pp. 117. Maps.

Contains the following papers: On the flow of the Mississippi river, by John Banvard; Abstract of a paper on some Arctic discoveries, and the remains of Frobisher's expedition, by C. F. Hall; "On the Sea of Galilee," by John Banvard; Western equatorial Africa, by Albert Bushnell; Remarks upon the present condition and prospects of the Suez canal, by J. P. Thompson; On the past and future topography of the United States, by R. P. Stevens; The physique of different nationalities as ascertained by inspection of government recruits, by William H. Thomson; The production of gold and silver throughout the world, especially in the new territories of the United States, by J. Smith Homans. (586а SOCIETY. Proceedings. Session

AMERICAN GEOGRAPHICAL AND STATISTICAL

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Contains the following papers: The geography, topography and resources of the northwestern territories of the United States, by John Mullan; On the proposed Pacific Railroad, by Henry V. Poor; On the statistics of counterfeit ing, defects in our paper currency, by W. L. Ormsby, jr.; Central Asia, by Bayard Taylor; Description of a voyage of three hundred and fifty miles up the Pearl or Canton river in China, by W. P. Jones; Siam, by George B. Bacon; On the production and consumption of cotton, by Fred A. Conkling. (587 AMERICAN GEOGRAPHICAL AND STATISTICAL SOCIETY. Objects and plans of the Society. [New York, 1864 (?).] 8vo, pp. 5 (1).

(588

AMERICAN GEOGRAPHICAL AND STATISTICAL SOCIETY. Course of lectures on the currency, resources, and indebtedness of the United States, delivered before the Society. Lecture II.-On cotton. By Edward Atkinson, esq., of Boston, Mass. Delivered December 14, 1865. [New York, 1865.]

8vo, pp. (1), 34–55.

(589

AMERICAN GEOGRAPHICAL AND STATISTICAL SOCIETY.

The resources of the Union. Lecture read December, 1865, before the Society. By H. C. Carey. Philadelphia, 1866.

8vo, pp. 26.

(590

AMERICAN GEOGRAPHICAL AND STATISTICAL SOCIETY. Charter, by-laws and list of members of the American Geographical and Statistical Society. Revised December 9, 1869. New York, 1870.

Svo, pp. (2) 34.

(591

AMERICAN GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY. Annual address by Chief Justice Daly, the president, before the American Geographical Society. Delivered February 17th, 1873. Subject: The geographical work of the world in 1872. New York, 1873.

8vo, pp. 60.

Reprinted from: Journal of the American Geographical Society of New York, 1873. v. 4, p. 63-118.

(592

...

[New York?

AMERICAN GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY. Address of Lieut. Geo. M. Wheeler
December 23, 1874, before the American Geographical Society.
1874?]

Svo, cover-title, pp. 19.

On geographical surveys west of the 100th meridian.

(593

AMERICAN GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY. By-laws and list of fellows, honorary and corresponding members of the Society. Revised January 19, 1874. New York, 1874.

8vo, pp. 20.

AMERICAN GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY.

(594 Memorial bulletin of the Society, April 23, 1874. The life and services of Dr. David Livingstone. New York, 1874. 8vo, pp. 47.

(595 AMERICAN GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY. Address at the annual meeting of the American Geographical Society, held February 25, 1875, by Chief Justice Daly. Subject: The geographical work of the world for 1874, Comprising-Physical phenomena of the year. Scientific expeditions and their results. Explorations of the far West. Arctic discoveries. African discoveries. Ancient inhabitants of North America. Researches in Europe, Asia, Africa, South America and Australasia. New York, Printed for the Society, 1875.

Svo, 40 pp.

Reprinted from: Journal of the American Geographical Society of New York, 1874, v. 6, p. 53–92.

(596 AMERICAN GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY. The topography and physical resources of the state of New York. An address delievered by Egbert L[udovickus] Viele before the American Geographical Society, April 29, 1875, New York [1875].

8vo, 23 pp. Cover-title.

(597

AMERICAN GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY. Remarks on the centers of ancient civilization in Central America and their geographical distribution. Address read before the Society, July 10, 1876, by C. Hermann Berendt. New York, 1876. 8vo, pp. 14. Folded map.

Reprinted from the Bulletin of the Society.

(598

AMERICAN GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY. The discovery of the ancient city of Norumbega. A communication to the president and council of the American Geographical Society at their special session in Watertown, November 21, 1889. By Eben Norton Horsford.

One volume, with 1 portrait and 21 photographic copies of maps, landscapes, views, original charts, etc.

Edition, 750 copies; two editions.

Stereotyped.

(599

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