No CrossRef data available.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 May 2009
For many years I have been deeply interested in the general history of the Brachiopoda, and I have enjoyed the acquaintance, correspondence, and friendly encouragement of most of the eminent biologists and palæontologists who have devoted themselves to the elucidation of the complex structure of this class. Here I must name with reverence Davidson, long my friend and master; Barrande, of Prague; James Hall, of Albany; William King; Eugène Deslongchamps, the Norman naturalist; Suess, of Vienna; Friele, of Bergen; Morse, of Salem; and Dall, of Washington; “all honourable men,” and many others of the fin du siècle school, whose names will be noted in the sequel.
Read at Chicago, August 24, 1893, before the Women's Auxiliary Branch of the World's Congress (Section Geology), Department of Science and Philosophy; also before the Brighton Natural History and Philosophical Society, November 13, 1893.
page 65 note 2 Geol. Mag. 1877, Dec. II. Vol. IV. pp. 145–155, and 199–208.Google Scholar
page 66 note 1 These numbers in parontheses, refer to the Bibliogrphy given the at the end of part II.—Edit. G.M.
page 70 note 1 These figures refer to Pl. V., which will accompany the conclusion of the article when the Bibliography will be given.—A. C.
page 71 note 1 I am glad to note that Prof. Alpheus Hyatt has reversed all the figures of the illustrations to his remarkable memoir “Phylogeny of an Acquired Characteristic,” a powerful argument opposed to the Weismannian hypothesis, issued in the Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, vol. xxxii. No. 143.
page 73 note 1 The italics are my own.