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Page i Page ii Table of Contents Page iii Introduction Page 1 Page 2 Page 3 Page 4 Part I: List of the fossil vertebrates Page 5 Page 6 Page 7 Page 8 Page 9 Page 10 Page 11 Page 12 Page 13 Page 14 Page 15 Page 16 Page 17 Page 18 Page 19 Page 20 Page 21 Page 22 Part II: Bibliography Page 23 Page 24 Page 25 Page 26 Page 27 Page 28 Page 29 Page 30 Page 31 Page 32 Page 33 Page 34 Page 35 Page 36 Page 37 Page 38 Page 39 Page 40 Page 41 Page 42 Page 43 Page 44 Page 45 Page 46 Page 47 Page 48 Page 49 Page 50 Page 51 Page 52 Page 53 Page 54 Page 55 Page 56 Page 57 Page 58 Page 59 Page 60 Page 61 Page 62 Page 63 Page 64 Page 65 Page 66 Part III: Index of localities Page 67 Page 68 Page 69 Page 70 Page 71 Page 72 Page 73 Page 74 Page 75 Page 76 Page 77 Page 78 Page 79 Page 80 Page 81 Page 82 Page 83 Page 84 Page 85 Page 86 Page 87 Page 88 Page 89 Page 90 Page 91 Page 92 Page 93 Page 94 Page 95 Page 96 Part IV: Taxonomic index Page 97 Page 98 Page 99 Page 100 Page 101 Page 102 Page 103 Page 104 Page 105 Page 106 Page 107 Page 108 Page 109 Page 110 Page 111 Page 112 Page 113 Page 114 Page 115 Page 116 Page 117 Page 118 Page 119 Page 120 Page 121 Page 122 Page 123 Page 124 Page 125 Page 126 Page 127 Page 128 Page 129 Page 130 Page 131 Page 132 Page 133 Page 134 Page 135 Page 136 Page 137 Page 138 Page 139 Page 140 Page 141 Page 142 Page 143 Page 144 Page 145 Page 146 Page 147 Page 148 Page 149 Page 150 Page 151 Page 152 Page 153 Page 154 Page 155 Page 156 Page 157 Page 158 Page 159 Page 160 Page 161 Page 162 Page 163 Page 164 Page 165 Page 166 Page 167 Page 168 Page 169 Page 170 Page 171 Page 172 Page 173 Page 174 Page 175 |
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STATE OF FLORIDA STATE BOARD OF CONSERVATION Ernest Mitts, Director FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Robert O. Vernon, Director SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 A LIST, BIBLIOGRAPHY, AND INDEX OF THE FOSSIL VERTEBRATES OF FLORIDA By Clayton E. Ray Museum of Comparative Zoology Harvard University Cambridge, Massachusetts Tallahassee, Florida 1957 STATE OF FLORIDA STATE BOARD OF CONSERVATION Ernest Mitts, Director FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Robert O. Vernon, Director SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 A LIST, BIBLIOGRAPHY, AND INDEX OF THE FOSSIL VERTEBRATES OF FLORIDA By Clayton E. Ray Museum of Comparative Zoology Harvard University Cambridge, Massachusetts Tallahassee, Florida 1957 TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction ................................................. 1 Part I List of the Fossil Vertebrates ........................ 5 Part II Bibliography........................................ 23 Part III Index of Localities ............................. .. ... 67 Part IV Taxonomic Index ................................. 97 A LIST, BIBLIOGRAPHY, AND INDEX OF THE FOSSIL VERTEBRATES OF FLORIDA By Clayton E. Ray Museum of Comparative Zoology Harvard University Cambridge, Massachusetts INTRODUCTION The present contribution consists of the following major parts: I. List of the fossil vertebrates II. Bibliography III. Index of localities IV. Taxonomic index Part I is intendedto provide a compact overallview of the fauna. For the sake of brevity, justificationfor inclusions and exclusions, synonyms, and annotations are relegated to the taxonomic index. Vernacular (not necessarily "common") names accompany scientific names wherever possible for the convenience of the nonspecialist. An attempt has been made to follow the usage of a limited number of comprehensive taxonomic sources, which are as follows: Chondrichthyes, Bigelow (and Schroeder), 1948, 1953; Osteichthyes, Jordan (and Evermann and Clark), 1930, Romer, 1945; Amphibia, Romer, 1945, Schmidt, 1953; Reptilia, 1 Love- ridge (and Williams), 1957 (genera of Testudininae), Romer, 1956 (supraspecific classification); Schmidt, 1953 (specific nomenclature), Williams, E.E., 1950 (species of Testudininae); Aves,2 Bock, 1956 (Ardeidae), Wetmore, 1956; Mammalia, Miller, G.S. (and Kellogg), 1955 (specific nomenclature), Simpson, G.G., 1945A (supraspecific classification). Entries in the list and taxonomic index are not restricted to specifi- cally identified forms since imperfect records sometimes suggest the most provocative areas for future research [e.g., Daeodon, Felis (Noctifelis or Herpailurus), and true Ursus]. It will be noted that the dates of description cited herein for certain species differ from those cited by some previous authors. These are with one exception (Geochelone IAuffenberg (1956, ms. )will undoubtedly become the standard refer- ence on fossil snakes of Florida. ZFor a differing taxonomic treatment of certain birds (especially Ardeidae, Laterallus, Coturnicops, and Porzana) see Blair, W.F., Blair, A.P., Brodkorb, P., Cagle, F.R., and Moore, G.A., 1957, Vertebrates of the United States: McGraw-Hill Book Co., Inc., New York, Toronto, London, 819 p. This publication was not seen in time for consideration. 1 0.10 FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY louisekressmanni) descriptions published in the Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. Previously the dates generally cited have been those of the oral presentation before the Academy, not those of publication. In many cases the inclusion or exclusion of a record from the list has had to be decided on inadequate evidence. Such questionable deci- sions are usually revealed by a "see index" note. Certain genera under which a plethora of specific names exists have been entered in the list only on the generic level, references to the reported species being available in the taxonomic index. Such treatment seems preferable to creating the impression that, for example, some 10 species of Pseudemys or five of Mylohyus can be recognized from the Pleistocene of Florida. It is not intended to thus summarilydiscardthe named species, but their status remains to be clarified by revisionary studies. The treatment of the Miocene Artiodactyla of the Thomas Farm is based upon an unpub- lished list of the Thomas Farm mammals prepared byProfessor Bryan Patterson and on the present author's studies in progress. Previous bibliographies of the fossil vertebrates include the general ones of Hay (1902a, 1929, 1930c) and Camp (1940, 1942, 1949, 1953) and the exclusively Floridian one of Sellards (1916d). Sherman (1952) treats both fossil and Recent mammals of Florida. Rouse (1947, p. 72- 79, 165-169) and Sellards (1940, 1947, 1952) are valuable guides to the literature on early man. An introduction to the general geological literature of Florida is available from Sellards (1908c) and Cooke (1945, p. 315-326). Although a few titles from the extra-North American literature are included others undoubtedly exist for a systematic search of the foreign literature was not made. The index of localities includes such names as "Alachua clays" and "Bone Valley'3which are strictly speaking stratigraphic rather than geographic entities. However these terms designate particular regions, and much of the material collected in the early years bears no further data. With these exceptions a stratigraphic index has not been compiled since it would necessarily parallel the index of localities very closely. Also included are a few important extra-Floridian localities, with which Floridian faunas have been or should be closely compared. The term "Bone Valley" should be used to define a geographic boundary, rather than a stratigraphic unit, as beds ranging from the Miocene through the Pleistocene are known to occur in the "Bone Valley, " as defined by earlier workers. Terrestrial vertebrates, known else- where from the Pliocene, have been recorded as occurring in the Bone Valleybeds. There has been considerable confusionandaltered opinions among previousworkers as to age determinations of thesebeds. Evalu- ation of the work by state and federal agencies is in progress at this time and it is hoped that a solution to this problem will be forthcoming in the near future editor. SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 The taxonomic index is arranged alphabeticallyby genus and species or to the narrowest higher taxon to which the fossil has been identified. Synonyms, nomina nuda, and nomina vana, as well as valid names are indexed. Under those localities or species having an inordinately large literature (e. g., Vero with 126 entries and Homo sapiens with 102) an asterisk (*) precedes the reference or references (if any) providing a comprehensive treatment of thelocalityor species. The asteriskserves as a time saving device for the casualresearcher andnot as an indicator of relative merit of the papers involved. No attempt has been made to put a fine point upon the Pleistocene- Recent boundary, since such an attempt would inevitably have led into controversial and in part semantic problems which would onlyhave im- peded the compilation of the bibliography. In fact, the boundary has been freely transgressed whenever it seemed that a record, though assuredly Recent, might contribute to an understanding of the historyof Florida's vertebrate fauna. Such records include the great auk (Blatchley, 1902), the beaver (Allen, G.M., 1942 and Houck, 1951), and the flat- tailed muskrat (Neill, 1955). Unquestionably the "Pleistocene" faunas from springs and stream beds contain a generous admixture of Recent bones. The list of people who have given freely of their time and knowledge is long, and any merit possibly accruing to the present contribution is largely theirs. The author alone is responsible for the errors and omissions which have undoubtedly crept in. The librarians of the Museum of Comparative Zoology and the Peabody Museum of Harvard, and of the Florida Geological Surveyhave been very helpful. Drs. W. Auffenberg, R.S. Bader, P. Brodkorb, C.L. Camp, C.S. Ray, H.B. Sherman, E.E. Williams, and H.E. Wood and Messrs. B. Patterson and S.J. Olsen have all contributed valuable information either in conversation or by correspondence. Various sections of the manuscript have been readand criticized by Professors PattersonandBrodkorb, Dr. Williams, and Mr. Olsen. It is a pleasure to acknowledge the encouragement and cooperation received from Mr. Olsen andDr. Herman Gunter, Director, Florida Geological Survey, throughout the course of the project and in particular during the summer of 1956. The entire manuscript has been typed by my wife, Donna R. Ray. The work was carried out while on the tenure of two National Science Foundation predoctoral fellowships (1955-1956, 1956-1957) and with financial assistance from the Florida Geological Survey during the summer of 1956. The bibliography was closedonSeptember 15, 1957; thus with the exception of a small number of entries in advanced manuscript stage or in press, only the literature of the first half of 1957 is included. PART I LIST OF THE FOSSIL VERTEBRATES SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 I. LIST OF THE FOSSIL VERTEBRATES CHONDRICHTHYES: SHARKS, SKATES, RAYS, AND CHIMAEROIDS MIOCENE AND/OR PLIOCENE Selachii: Modern sharks Carchariidae: Sand sharks Carcharias Rafinesque 1810, sp. indet.: Sand shark Isuridae: Mackerel sharks, man-eater sharks Lamna Cuvier 1817, sp. indet.: Porbeagle or mackerel shark Lamna cuspidataAgassiz 1843: Extinct porbeagle or mackerel shark Isurus Rafinesque 1810, sp. indet.: Sharp-nosed mackerel shark, mako Carcharodon Agassiz 1838, sp. indet.: White shark, man- eater Carcharodon auriculatus (Blainville) 1818: Extinct white shark or man-eater Carcharodon megalodon Agassiz 1837: Extinct white shark, man-eater Orectolobidae: Carpet sharks, nurse sharks Ginglymostoma serra (Leidy) 1877: Extinct nurse shark Carcharhinidae Galeocerdo MUller and Henle 1837, sp. indet.: Tiger shark, leopard shark Galeocerdo aduncus Agassiz 1843: Extinct tiger shark Carcharhinus Blainville 1816, sp. indet. Hemipristis Agassiz 1843, sp. indet. Hemipristis serra Agassiz 1843: Extinct shark Batoidei: Skates, rays Pristidae: Sawfishes Pristis aquitanicus Delfortrie 1871: Extinct sawfish Dasyatidae: Sting or whip rays Gen. et sp. indet. Myliobatidae: Eagle rays Myliobatis Cuvier 1817, sp. indet.: Eagle ray Rhinopteridae: Cow-nosed rays Rhinoptera Cuvier 1829, sp. indet.: Cow-nosed ray PLEISTOCENE Selachii: Modern sharks Carchariidae: Sand sharks Carcharias Rafinesque 1810, sp. indet.: Sand shark Isuridae: Mackerel sharks, man-eater sharks Lamna Cuvier 1817, sp. indet.: Porbeagle or mackerel shark Isurus Rafinesque 1810, sp. indet.: Sharp-nosed mackerel shark, mako FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY CarcharodonAgassiz 1838, sp. indet.: White shark, man-eater Carcharhinidae Galeocerdo MUller and Henle 1837, sp. indet.: Tiger shark, leopard shark Carcharhinus Blainville 1816, sp. indet. Hemipristis Agassiz 1843, sp. indet. Batoidei: Skates, rays Myliobatidae: Eagle rays Myliobatis Cuvier 1817, sp. indet.: Eagle ray Aetobatus Blainville 1816, sp. indet.: Duck-billed ray Aetobatus narirari (Euphrasen) 1790: Spotted duck-billed ray, spotted eagle ray OSTEICHTHYES: BONY FISH EOCENE Acanthopterygii: Spiny teleosts Holocentridae: Squirrel fishes and soldier fishes Holocentrites ovalis Conrad 1941: Extinct squirrel fish OLIGOCENE Acanthopterygii: Spiny teleosts Lutianidae: Snappers Lutianus avus W.K. Gregory 1930: Extinct snapper MIOCENE Acanthopterygii: Spiny teleosts Diodontidae: Porcupine fishes Diodon circumflexus Leriche 1942: Extinct porcupine fish Sphyraenidae: Barracudas Dictyodus Owen 1838 (1839), sp. indet.: Extinct barracuda (see index) Labridae: Wrasse fishes Gen. et sp. indet. PLIOCENE Acanthopterygii: Spiny teleosts Labridae: Wrasse fishes Gen. et sp. indet. PLEISTOCENE Semionotoidea Lepidosteidae: Gar pikes Atractosteus lapidosus Hay 1919: Extinct alligator gar Lepidosteus (Cylindrosteus) platystomus (Rafinesque) 1820: Short-nosed gar Lepidosteus Lacep6d; 1803, sp. indet.: Gar pike Amioidea Amiidae Amia calvus Linnaeus 1766: Bowfin, dogfish SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 Acanthopterygii: Spiny teleosts Labridae: Wrasse fishes Gen. et sp. indet. (see index) Carangidae: Cavallas and pampanos Caranxhippos (Linnaeus) 1766: Crevalle' Caranx Lac6pede 1802, sp. indet. Ephippidae: Spadefishes Chaetodipterus faber Broussonet 1782: Spadefish Diodontidae: Porcupine fishes Diodon Linnaeus 1758, sp. indet. AGE UNCERTAIN Isospondyli: Primitive teleosts Enchodontidae: Extinct family Enchodus Agassiz 1843, sp. indet.: Extinct genus (see index) AMPHIBIA: FROGS, SALAMANDERS, AND ALLIES MIOCENE Anura (Salientia): Frogs and toads Pelobatidae Scaphiopus cf. holbrooki (Harlan) 1835: Eastern spadefoot toad Leptodactylidae ? Familial assignment uncertain (see index) Bufonidae Bufo praevius Tihen 1951: Extinct toad Bufo Laurenti 1768, sp. indet.: Possibly aberrantBufo praevius Hylidae Hyla goini Auffenberg 1956: Extinct tree toad Microhylidae Microhyla Tschudi 1839, sp. indet.: Toad Ranidae Rana Linnaeus 1758, sp. indet.: Frog Urodela (Caudata): Salamanders Sirenidae Siren hesterna Goin and Auffenberg 1955: Extinct siren PLIOCENE Anura (Salientia): Frogs and toads Bufonidae Bufo tiheni Auffenberg 1957: Extinct toad Ranidae Rana cf. pipiens Schreber 1782: Leopard frog Urodela (Caudata): Salamanders Sirenidae Siren simpsoni Goin and Auffenberg 1955: Extinct siren Pseudobranchus vetustus Goin and .Auffenberg 1955: Extinct mud siren PLEISTOCENE Anura (Salientia): Frogs and toads FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY B ufonidae Bufo terrestris (Bonnaterre) 1789: Common American toad Ranidae Rana grylio Stejneger 1901: Pig frog Urodela (Caudata): Salamanders Sirenidae Siren lacertina Linnaeus 1766: Great siren Pseudobranchus robustus Goin and Auffenberg 1955: Extinct mud siren Amphiumidae Amphiuma means Garden 1821: Congo eel, lamper eel, mud eel REPTILIA: TURTLES, SNAKES, LIZARDS, AND CROCODILIANS CRETACEOUS Chelonia (Testudinata): Turtles Bones as yet undescribed, from a depth of 9210 feet in an oil test well, Okeechobee County, Florida (FGS V-5540). MIOCENE Chelonia (Testudinata): Turtles Testudinidae: Pond turtles, land tortoises Pseudemys Gray 1855, sp. indet.: TerrapinalliedtoPseudemys floridana group Geochelone tedwhitei (Williams) 1953: Extinct land tortoise Squamata: Lizards and snakes Anguidae: Slow worms, glass lizards Peltosaurus floridanus Vanzolini 1952: Extinct glass lizard Boidae: Boas Neurodromicus stanolseni Vanzolini 1952: Extinct bold Neurodromicus barbouri Vanzolini 1952: Extinct boid Ogmophis pauperrimus Vanzolini 1952: Extinct boid Crocodilia: Crocodiles, alligators, gavials Crocodylidae Alligator olseni White 1942: Extinct alligator PLIOCENE Chelonia (Testudinata): Turtles Testudinidae: Pond turtles, land tortoises Pseudemys caelata Hay 1908: Extinct terrapin Terrapene putnami Hay 1906: Extinct box turtle (see index) Floridemys nanus (Hay) 1916: Extinct dwarf tortoise Gopherus hayi (Sellards) 1916: Extinct gopher tortoise Geochelone louisekressmanni(Wark) 1928: Extinct giant tortoise Squamata: Lizards and snakes Anguidae: Slow worms, glass lizards Ophisaurus ventralis (Linnaeus) 1766: Common glass lizard Viperidae: Vipers, pit vipers Crotaline, genus and species not specified Crocodilia: Crocodiles, alligators, gavials Crocodylidae Gavialosuchus americanus (Sellards) 1915: Extinct gavial SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 PLEISTOCENE Chelonia (Testudinata): Turtles Chelydridae: Snapping turtles Chelydra Schweigger 1812, sp. indet.: Loggerhead snapper Chelydra laticarinata Hay 1916: Extinct loggerhead snapper Chelydra sculpta Hay 1916: Extinct loggerhead snapper Macroclemys temmincki (Troost) 1835; Alligator snapper Testudinidae: Pond turtles, land tortoises Deirochelys floridana Hay 1908: Extinct chicken turtle Pseudemys Gray 1855, sp. indet.: Terrapin (see index) Pseudemys floridana persimilis Hay 1916: Terrapin Pseudemys scripta Schoepff 1792: Pond terrapin Pseudemys caelata Hay 1908: Extinct terrapin (see index) Terrapene Merrem 1820, sp. indet.: Box turtle Terrapene canaliculata Hay 1907: Extinct box turtle (see index) Gopherus polyphemus (Bartram) 1791: Gopher tortoise Gopherus praecedens Hay 1916: Extinct gopher tortoise Geochelone Fitzinger 1835, sp. indet. : Land tortoise Geochelone crassiscutata (Leidy) 1889: Extinct land tortoise Geochelone sellardsi (Hay) 1916: Extinct land tortoise Cheloniidae: Sea turtles Caretta caretta (Linnaeus) 1758: Loggerhead turtle Chelonia mydas (Linnaeus) 1758: Green turtle Trionychidae: "Soft-shelled" turtles Trionyx Geoffroy 1820, sp. indet. : "Soft-shelled" turtle Trionyx ferox (Schneider) 1783: "Soft-shelled" turtle Squamata: Lizards and snakes Iguanidae Anolis carolinensis (Voigt) 1832: Common anole, "chameleon" Sceloporus undulatus (Latreille) 1802: Fence lizard (see index) Teiidae Cnemidophorus sexlineatus (Linnaeus) 17.66: Eastern or six- lined race runner Scincidae: Skinks Eumeces Wiegmann 1834, sp. indet.: Skink Eumeces cf. fasciatus (Linnaeus) 1758: Five-lined skink Anguidae: Slow worms, glass lizards Ophisaurus compressus (Cope) 1900: Coastal glass lizard Ophisaurus ventralis (Linnaeus) 1766: Common glass lizard Colubridae: Generally nonpoisonous, "higher" snakes Carphophis amoena (Say) 1825: Worm snake Coluber constrictor Linnaeus 1758: Racer, black snake Drymarchon corais (Daudin) 1803: Indigo snake Elape obsoleta (Say) 1823: Chicken snake, rat snake, pilot black snake Farancia abacura (Holbrook) 1836: Horn snake Lampropeltis doliata (Linnaeus) 1766: Milk snake, scarlet king snake Lampropeltis getulus (Linnaeus) 1766: King snake Natrix Laurenti 1768, sp. indet. : Water snake Pituophis melanoleucus (Daudin) 1803: Pine snake Thamnophis Fitzinger 1843, sp. indet.: Garter snake FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Viperidae: Vipers, pit vipers A gkistrodon piscivorus (Lacepede) 1789: Cottonmouth moccasin Crotalus Linnaeus 1758, sp. indet.: Rattlesnake Crotalus adamanteus Beauvois 1799: Eastern diamondback rattlesnake Crotalus adamanteus pleistofloridensis Brattstrom 1954: Extinct diamondback rattlesnake Crotalus giganteus Brattstrom 1954: Extinct giant rattlesnake Crocodilia: Crocodiles, alligators, gavials Crocodylidae Alligator Cuvier 1807, sp. indet.: Alligator Alligator mississippiensis (Daudin) 1803: American alligator AVES: BIRDS MIOCENE Pelecaniformes: Tropic birds, pelicans, frigate birds, and allies Phalacrocoracidae: Cormorants Phalacrocorax subvolans Brodkorb 1956: Extinct cormorant Falconiformes: Vultures, hawks, and falcons Accipitridae: Hawks, old world vultures, and harriers Proictinia floridana Brodkorb 1956: Extinct kite Galliformes: Megapodes, curassows, pheasants, and hoatzins Cracidae: Curassows, guans, and chachalacas Boreortalis laesslei Brodkorb 1954: Extinct chachalaca Charadriiformes: Shore birds, gulls, and auks Rhegminornithidae: Rhegminornis Rhegminornis calobates Wetmore 1943: Extinct shore bird Columbiformes: Sand-grouse, pigeons, and doves Columbidae: Pigeons and doves Gen. et sp. indet.: A small dove slightlylarger than Columbi- gallina passerina, the modern ground dove Passeriformes: Perching birds Compsothlypidae: Wood warblers Gen. et sp. indet.: A wood warbler closely allied to Icteria virens, the modern yellowbreasted chat PLIOCENE Gavii'formes: Loons Gaviidae: Loons Gavia concinna Wetmore 1940: Extinct loon Gavia palaeodytes Wetmore 1943: Extinct loon Colymbiformes: Grebes Colymbidae: Grebes Pliodytes lanquisti Brodkorb 1953: Extinct grebe Procellariiformes: Albatrosses, shearwaters, petrels, and allies Diomedeidae: Albatrosses Diomedea anglica Lydekker 1891: Extinct albatross Pelecaniformes: Tropic birds, pelicans, frigate birds, and allies Sulidae: Boobies and gannets SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 Sula guano Brodkorb 1955: Extinct booby Sula phosphata Brodkorb 1955: Extinct booby Morus peninsularis Brodkorb 1955: Extinct gannet Phalacrocoracidae: Cormorants Phalacrocorax wetmorei Brodkorb 1955: Extinct cormorant Phalacrocorax idahensis (Marsh) 1870: Extinct cormorant Ciconiiformes: Herons, storks, and allies Ardeidae: Herons and bitterns Ardea polkensis Brodkorb 1955: Extinct heron Phoenicopteridae: Flamingos Phoenicopterus floridanus Brodkorb 1953: Extinct flamingo Anseriformes: Screamers, ducks, geese, and swans Anatidae: Ducks, geese, and swans Bucephala ossivallis Brodkorb 1955: Extinct bufflehead Charadriiformes: Shore birds, gulls, and auks Haematopodidae: Oystercatchers Palostralegus sulcatus Brodkorb 1955: Extinct oystercatcher Scolopacidae: Woodcock, snipes, and sandpipers Calidris pacis Brodkorb 1955: Extinct knot or snipe Erolia penepusilla Brodkorb 1955: Extinct snipe Limosa Brisson 1760, sp. indet.: Extinct godwit Laridae: Gulls and terns Larus elmorei Brodkorb 1953: Extinct gull Alcidae: Auks, murres, and puffins SAustralca grandis Brodkorb 1955: Extinct auk PLEISTOCENE Colymbiformes: Grebes Colymbidae: Grebes Colymbus auritus Linnaeus 1758: Horned grebe Podilymbus podiceps (Linnaeus) 1758: Pied-billed grebe Procellariiformes: Albatrosses, shearwaters, petrels, and allies Procellariidae: Shearwaters and fulmars Puffinus puffinus (BrUnnich) 1764: Common shearwater Pelecaniformes: Tropic birds, pelicans, frigate birds, and allies Phalacrocoracidae: Cormorants Phalacrocorax auritus (Lesson) 1831: Double-crested cormo- rant Anhingidae: Snake birds Anhinga anhinga (Linnaeus) 1766: Anhinga Ciconiiformes: Herons, storks, and allies Ardeidae: Herons and bitterns Botaurus lentiginosus (Rackett) 1813: American bittern Nycticorax nycticorax (Linnaeus) 1758: Black-crowned night heron Nycticorax violaceus (Linnaeus) 1758: Yellow-crowned night heron Butorides virescens (Linnaeus) 1758: Little green heron Hydranassa caerulea (Linnaeus) 1758: Little blue heron Hydranassa tricolor (Mtller) 1776: Louisiana heron Egretta thula (Molina) 1782: Snowy egret Egretta alba (Linnaeus) 1758: Greater egret Ardea herodias Linnaeus 1758: Great blue heron FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Ciconiidae: Storks and jabirus Ciconia maltha L. H. Miller 1910: Extinct stork Ciconia malthaweillsi (Sellards) 1916: Extinct stork(see index) Mycteria ?americana Linnaeus 1758: Wood ibis (see index) Threskiornithidae: Ibises and spoonbills Plegadis Kaup 1829, sp. indet.: Glossy ibis Eudocimus albus (Linnaeus) 1758: White ibis Anseriformes: Screamers, ducks, geese, and swans Anatidae: Ducks, geese, and swans Olor columbianus (Ord) 1815: Whistling swan Olor buccinator (Richardson) 1831: Trumpeter swan Branta canadensis (Linnaeus) 1758: Canada goose Branta canadensis hutchinsii (Richardson) 1831: Richardson's goose ?Dendrocygna autumnalis (Linnaeus) 1758:Tree duck (see index) Anas platyrhynchos Linnaeus 1758: Mallard Anas rubripes (Brewster) 1902: Black duck Anas fulvigula (Ridgway) 1874: Mottled duck Anas acuta Linnaeus 1758: Pintail Anas carolinensis Gmelin 1789: Green-winged teal Anas discors Linnaeus 1766: Blue-winged teal Spatula clypeata (Linnaeus) 1758: Shoveler Aythya collaris (Donovan) 1809: Ring-necked duck Aythya valisineria (Wilson) 1814: Canvasback Aythya affinis (Eyton) 1838: Lesser scaup Bucephala albeola (Linnaeus) 1758: Bufflehead Oxyura jamaicensis (Gmelin) 1789: Ruddy duck Lophodytes cucullatus (Linnaeus) 1758: Hooded merganser Falconiformes: Vultures, hawks, and falcons Cathartidae: New world vultures Cathartes aura (Linnaeus) 1758: Turkey vulture Cathartes aura aura (Linnaeus) 1758: Mexican turkey vulture Cathartes aura septentrionalis (Wied) 1839: Turkey vulture Coragyps atratus (Bechstein) 1793: Black vulture Coragyps occidentalis (L.H. Miller) 1909: Extinct vulture Gymnogyps amplus L.H. Miller 1911: Extinct condor Teratornithidae: Teratornithes Teratornis merriami L.H. Miller 1909: Extinct teratornis Accipitridae: Hawks, old world vultures, and harriers Accipiter striatus Vieillot 1807: Sharp-shinned hawk Accipiter cooperii (Bonaparte) 1828: Cooper's hawk Buteo Lacepede 1799, sp. indet.: Eagles formerly assigned to Geranoautus Buteo jamaicensis (Gmelin) 1788: Red-tailed hawk Buteo lineatus (Gmelin) 1788: Red-shouldered hawk Buteo platypterus (Vieillot) 1823: Broad-winged hawk Haliaeetus leucocephalus (Linnaeus) 1766: Bald eagle Pandionidae: Ospreys Pandion haliaetus (Linnaeus) 1758: Osprey Falconidae: Caracaras and falcons SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 Caracara prelutosus (Howard) 1938: Extinct caracara Caracara prelutosus prelutosus (Howard) 1938:Extinct caracara Falco peregrinus Tunstall 1771: Peregrine falcon Falco sparverius Linnaeus 1758: Sparrow hawk Galliformes: Megapodes, curassows, pheasants, and hoatzins Phasianidae: Quails, pheasants, and peacocks Colinus virginianus (Linnaeus) 1758: Bobwhite Meleagrididae: Turkeys Meleagris gallopavo Linnaeus 1758: Turkey Meleagris tridens Wetmore 1931: Extinct turkey Gruiformes: Cranes, rails, and allies Gruidae: Cranes Grus americana (Linnaeus) 1758: Whooping crane Grus canadensis (Linnaeus) 1758: Sandhill crane Aramidae: Limpkins Aramus guarauna (Linnaeus) 1766: Limpkin Rallidae: Rails, gallinules, and coots Rallus elegans Audubon 1834: King rail Rallus longirostris Boddaert 1783: Clapper rail Rallus limicola Vieillot 1819: Virginia rail Porzana carolina (Linnaeus) 1758: Sora Porzana auffenbergi Brodkorb 1954: Extinct sora Laterallus guti Brodkorb 1952: Extinct rail Coturnicops noveboracensis (Gmelin) 1789: Yellow rail Aramides cajanea (MUller) 1776: Wood rail Porphyrula martinica (Linnaeus) 1766: Purple gallinule Gallinula chloropus (Linnaeus) 1758: Common gallinule Fulica americana Gmelin 1789: American coot Fulica minor Shufeldt 1891: Extinct coot Charadriiformes: Shore birds, gulls, and auks Charadriidae: Plovers, turnstones, and surf birds Charadrius vociferus Linnaeus 1758: Killdeer Scolopacidae: Woodcock, snipes, and sandpipers Philohela minor (Gmelin) 1789: American woodcock Capella delicate (Ord) 1825: Snipe Tringa flavipes (Gmelin) 1789: Lesser yellowlegs Laridae: Gulls and terns Larus argentatus Pontoppidan 1763: Herring gull (see index) Alcidae: Auks, murres, and puffins Pinguinus impennis (Linnaeus) 1758: Great auk (see index) Columbiformes: Sand-grouse, pigeons, and doves Columbidae: Pigeons and doves Zenaidura macroura (Linnaeus) 1758: Mourning dove Ectopistes migratorius (Linnaeus) 1766: Passenger pigeon Strigiformes: Owls Tytonidae: Barn owls Tyto alba (Scopoli) 1769: Barn owl Strigidae: Typical owls Otus asio (Linnaeus) 1758: Screech owl Speotyto cunicularia (Molina) 1782: Burrowing owl Strix varia Barton 1799: Barred owl FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Piciformes: Jacamars, barbets, toucans, and woodpeckers Picidae; Woodpeckers, wrynecks, and piculets Colaptes auratus (Linnaeus) 1758: Yellow-shafted flicker Melanerpes erythrocephalus (Linnaeus) 1758: Redheaded wood- pecker Passeriformes: Perching birds Tyrannidae: Tyrant flycatchers Tyrannus tyrannus (Linnaeus) 1758: Kingbird Hirundinidae: Swallows Progne subis (Linnaeus) 1758: Purple martin Tachycineta speleodytes Brodkorb 1957: Extinct swallow Corvidae: Jays, magpies, and crows Protocitta dixi Brodkorb 1957: Extinct jay Cyanocitta cristata (Linnaeus) 1758: Blue jay Corvus brachyrhynchos Brehm 1822: Crow Corvus ossifragus Wilson 1812: Fish crow Troglodytidae: Wrens Troglodytes aedon Vieillot 1807: House wren Cistothorus brevis Brodkorb 1957: Extinct sedge wren Mniotiltidae: Wood warblers Geothlypis trichas (Linnaeus) 1766: Maryland yellowthroat Icteridae: Meadowlarks, blackbirds, and troupials Sturnella magna (Linnaeus) 1758: Eastern meadowlark Agelaius phoeniceus (Linnaeus) 1766: Red-winged blackbird Cassidix mexicanus (Gmelin) 1788: Boat-tailed grackle Quiscalus quiscula (Linnaeus) 1758: Grackle Pandanaris floridana Brodkorb 1957: Extinct cowbird Fringillidae: Grosbeaks, finches, sparrows, and buntings Pipilo erythrophthalmus (Linnaeus) 1758: Chewink or towhee Ammodramus savannarum (Gmelin) 1789: Grasshopper sparrow Passerherbulus henslowii (Audubon) 1831: Henslow's sparrow MAMMALIA: MAMMALS EOCENE Cetacea: Whales and porpoises Basilosauridae: Archaic whales Basilosaurus Harlan 1834, sp. indet. Basilosaurus cetoides (Owen) 1845 Basilosauridae incertae sedis Pontogeneus brachyspondylus (M'uller) 1849 MIOCENE Chiroptera: Bats Vespertilionidae: Little brown bats, big brown bats, etc. Suaptenos white Lawrence 1943 Miomyotis floridanus Lawrence 1943 Gen. et sp. indet. : Eptesicus-like vespertilionid Rodentia: Rodents Mylagaulidae: Extinct family SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 Mesogaulus Riggs 1899, sp.-nov. Heteromyidae: Pocket mice, kangaroo rats Proheteromys magnus A.E. Wood 1932 Proheteromys floridanus A.E. Wood 1932 Gen. et sp. indet. Cricetidae: Native rats and mice (rice rats, cotton rats, white- footed mice, etc.) Gen. et sp. indet. Cetacea: Whales and porpoises Physeteridae: Sperm whales Kogiopsis floridana Kellogg 1929 Acrodelphidae: Long-beaked porpoises Schizodelphis bobengi Case 1934 Schizodelphis depressus G.M. Allen 1921 Pomatodelphis inaequalis G.M. Allen 1921 Delphinidae: Dolphins, killer whales, blackfish, etc. Megalodelphis magnidens Kellogg 1944 Cetotheriidae: Whale-bone whales in part ?Isocetus Van Beneden 1880, sp. indet. ?Mesocetus Van Beneden 1880, sp. indet. Carnivora: Carnivores Canidae: Dogs, wolves, foxes, etc. Cynodesmus iamonensis (Sellards) 1916 Tomarctus canavus (Simpson ) 1932 Temnocyon Cope 1878, sp. indet. ?Enhydrocyon spissidens (White) 1947 Amphicyon intermedius White 1940 Amphicyon pontoni Simpson 1930 "Daphoenus" caroniavorus White 1942, gen. nov. (see index) ?Aelurodon johnhenryi White 1947 Mustelidae: Badgers, skunks, weasels, otters, etc. Oligobunis floridanus White 1947 ?Miomustela Hall 1930, sp. indet. Leptarctus ancipidens (White) 1941 Sirenia: Sea cows, manatees, and dugongs Dugongidae: Dugongs Hesperosiren crataegensis Simpson 1932 Perissodactyla: Odd-toed ungulates Equidae: Horses Anchitherium clarencei Simpson 1932 Parahippus blackbergi (Hay) 1924 Parahippus leonensis Sellards 1916 Merychippus westoni Simpson 1930 Rhinocerotidae: Rhinoceroses Caenopus, cf. platycephalus (Osborn and Wortman) 1894 Gen. et sp. nov., H.E. Wood (ms.): Large rhinoceros Diceratherium (Menoceras) Marsh 1875, sp. nov., H.E. Wood (ms.): Small rhinoceros Diceratherium Marsh 1875 or Caenopus Cope 1880, sp. indet. Aphelops Cope 1873, sp. indet. Artiodactyla: Even-toed ungulates (see index) Entelodontidae: Extinct pig-like ungulates FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Daeodon (Dinohyus) (Cope) 1879, sp. indet. Tayassuidae: Peccaries Desmathyus olseni (White) 1941 ?Oreodontidae: Extinct family (see index) ?Camelidae: Camels, guanacos, and vicunas Floridatragulus dolichanthereus White 1940 Nothokemas floridanus (Simpson) 1932 Camelid, cf. Miolabis tenuis Matthew 1924 Protaceratidae: Extinct family Synthetoceras (Prosynthetoceras) australis White 1941 Cervidae: Deer Blastomeryx (Parablastomeryx) floridanus (White) 1940 Blastomeryx cf. marshi Lull 1920 Machaeromeryx gilchristensis White 1941 ?Dromomeryx cf. americanus Douglass 1903 PLIOCENE Cetacea: Whales and porpoises Platanistidae: River dolphins Goniodelphis hudsoni G. M. Allen 1941 Physeteridae: Sperm whales ?Hoplocetus Gervais 1848-1852 Balaenopteridae: Whale-bone whales in part Balaenoptera floridana Kellogg 1944: Extinct rorqual Carnivora: Carnivores Canidae: Dogs, wolves, foxes, etc. Osteoborus crassapineatus Olsen 1956 Pliogulo dudleyi White 1941 Ursidae: Bears Agriotherium schneideri Sellards 1916 Mustelidae: Badgers, skunks, weasels, otters, etc. Leptarctus progressus Simpson 1930 Proboscidea: Elephants, mastodonts, etc. Gomphotheriidae: Serrate-toothed mastodonts Serridentinus (Ocalientinus) floridanus (Leidy) 1887 Serridentinus (Ocalientinus) floridanus leidii (Frick) 1926 Serridentinus (Ocalientinus) bifoliatus (Osborn) 1929 Serridentinus (Serbelodon) brewsterensis Osborn 1926 Gomphotherium simplicidens (Osborn) 1923 Gomphotherium Burmeister 1837, sp. indet. Rhynchotherium Falconer 1868 Mammutidae: Mastodonts Mammut sellardsi (Simpson) 1930 Sirenia: Sea cows, manatees, and dugongs Dugongidae: Dugongs Felsinotherium floridanum (Hay) 1922 Felsinotherium ossivallense Simpson 1932 Perissodactyla: Odd-toed ungulates Equidae: Horses Hipparion plicatile (Leidy) 1888 Neohipparion phosphorum Simpson 1930 SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 Nannipus ingenuum (Leidy) 1886 Nannipus minor (Sellards) 1916 Tapiridae: Tapirs ?Tapiravus Marsh 1877, sp. indet. Rhinocerotidae: Rhinoceroses Aphelops longipes (Leidy) 1891 Teleoceras proterus (Leidy) 1886 Artiodactyla: Even-toed ungulates Tayassuidae: Peccaries Prosthennops elmorei White 1942 Camelidae: Camels, guanacos, and vicunas ?Procamelus minimus (Leidy) 1887 ?Procamelus minor (Leidy) 1887 ?Megatylopus major (Leidy) 1887 Antilocapridae: Pronghorned "antelopes" Hexameryx elmorei White 1942 Hexameryx simpsoni White 1941 PLEISTOCENE Marsupialia: Opossums only in North America Didelphidae: Opossums Didelphis marsupialis Linnaeus 1758: Virginia opossum Insectivora: Moles, shrews, hedgehogs, etc. Talpidae: Moles Scalopus aquaticus (Linnaeus) 1758: Eastern mole Soricidae: Shrews Blarina brevicauda (Say) 1823: Short-tailed shrew Cryptotis floridana (Merriam) 1895: Florida short-tailed shrew Chiroptera: Bats Vespertilionidae: Little brown bats, big brown bats, etc. Myotis Kaup 1829, sp. indet. Myotis cf. austroriparius (Rhoads) 1897 Molossidae: Free-tailed bats Molossides floridanus G. M. Allen 1932: Extinct free-tailed bat Primates: Lemurs, monkeys, apes, man, etc. Hominidae: Man Homo sapiens Linnaeus 1758: Man Edentata: Armadillos, anteaters, and sloths Megalonychidae: Megalonychid ground sloths Megalonyx jeffersonii (Desmarest) 1822: Jeffersonian ground sloth Megalonyx cf. wheatleyi Cope 1871: cf. Wheatley's ground sloth Megatheriidae: Megatheriid ground sloths Megatherium hudsoni White 1941 (see index) Megatherium mirabile Leidy 1854 Mylodontidae: Mylodont ground sloths Paramylodon harlani (Owen) 1840: Harlan's ground sloth Thinobadistes segnis Hay 1919 (see index) Dasypodidae: Armadillos Chlamytherium septentrionalis (Leidy) 1890: Extinct giant "armadillo" Dasypus bellus (Simpson) 1929: Extinct armadillo FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Glyptodontidae: Glyptodonts Boreostracon floridanus Simpson 1929 (see index) Lagomorpha: Rabbits, hares, and pikas Leporidae: Hares and rabbits Sylvilagus floridanus (J.A. Allen) 1890: Florida cottontail Sylvilagus palustrellus Gazin 1950: Pigmy marsh rabbit Sylvilagus palustris (Bachman) 1837: Marsh rabbit Rodentia: Rodents Sciuridae: Squirrels Sciurus carolinensis Gmelin 1788: Gray squirrel Geomyidae: Pocket gophers Plesiothomomys orientalis (Simpson) 1928: Extinct pocket gopher Geomys pinetis Rafinesque 1817: Pocket gopher Castoridae: Beavers Castor canadensis Kuhl 1820: Beaver Castoroides ohioensis Foster 1838: Extinct giant beaver Cricetidae: Native rats and mice (rice rats, cotton rats, white- footed mice, etc.) Oryzomys palustris (Harlan) 1837: Rice rat Reithrodontomys humulis (Audubon and Bachman) 1841: Harvest mouse Peromyscus floridanus (Chapman) 1889: Florida white-footed mouse Peromyscus gossypinus (LeConte) 1853: Cotton mouse Sigmodon hispidus Say and Ord 1825: Cotton rat Neotoma floridana (Ord) 1818: Wood rat Synaptomys (Synaptomys) australis Simpson 1928: Extinct bog lemming Ondatra zibethicus (Linnaeus) 1766: Muskrat Ondatra zibethicus floridanus Lawrence 1942: Extinct sub- species of muskrat Neofiber alleni True 1884: Florida water rat or round-tailed muskrat Pitymys pinetorum (LeConte) 1830: Pine mouse Erethizontidae: New world porcupines Erethizon dorsatum (Linnaeus) 1758: NorthAmericanporcupine Hydrochoeridae: Capybaras Neochoerus pinckneyi (Hay) 1923: Extinct giant capybara Hydrochoerus holmesi Simpson 1928: Extinct capybara Cetacea: Whales and porpoises Cetacea indet. (see index) Delphinidae: Dolphins, killer whales, blackfish, etc. Globicephala ?baereckeii Sellards 1916: Extinct blackfish ?Balaenopteridae: Whale-bone whales in part ?Balaenoptera Lacepede 1804, sp. indet. : ?Rorqual Carnivora: Carnivores Canidae: Dogs, wolves, foxes, etc. Aenocyon ayersi (Sellards) 1916 Canis latrans Say 1823: Coyote Canis cf. lupus Linnaeus 1758: Wolf Vulpes ?palmaria Hay 1917: Extinct(?) red fox SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 Urocyon cinereoargenteus (Schreber) 1775: Gray fox Urocyon seminolensis Simpson 1929: Extinct gray fox Ursidae: Bears ?Tremarctos floridanus (Gidley) 1928: Extinct spectacled(?) bear Ursus americanus Pallas 1780: Black bear Ursus Linnaeus 1758, sp. nov. ?: "True" Ursus (notblackbear) Procyonidae: Raccoons Procyon lotor (Linnaeus) 1758: Raccoon Procyon nanus Simpson 1929: Extinct raccoon Mustelidae: Badgers, skunks, weasels, otters, etc. Mustela frenata Lichtenstein 1831: Bridled weasel Mephitis mephitis (Schreber) 1776: Striped skunk Spilogale ambarvalis Bangs 1898: Little spotted skunk Lutra canadensis (Schreber) 1776: River otter Felidae: Cats Felis (Lynx) rufus Schreber 1777: Bobcat Felis (Noctifelis or Herpailurus) Severtzov 1858, sp. indet.: Margay or jaguarundi-type cat Felis (Puma) inexpectataa (Cope) 1896: Extinct(?) puma Panthera (Jaguarius) ? augusta (Leidy) 1872: Extinct(?) species of jaguar Smilodon floridanus (Leidy) 1889: Florida saber-toothed cat Phocidae: True or earlesss" seals Monachus tropicalis (Gray) 1850: West Indian monk seal Proboscidea: Elephants, mastodonts, etc. Mammutidae: Mastodonts Mammut americanum (Kerr) 1792: American mastodon Elephantidae: Elephants Mammuthus (Parelephas) columbi (Falconer) 1857: Columbian mammoth Mammuthus (Parelephas) floridanus (Osborn) 1929: Florida mammoth Mammuthus (Archidiskodon) imperator (Leidy) 1859: Imperial mammoth Sirenia: Seacows, manatees, and dugongs Trichechidae: Manatees Trichechus Linnaeus 1758, sp. indet.: Manatee Perissodactyla: Odd-toed ungulates Equidae: Horses Equus Linnaeus 1758, sp. indet.: Horses (see index) Tapiridae: Tapirs Tapirus veroensis Sellards 1918: Florida tapir Tapirus Brisson 1762, sp. indet.: Large tapir Artiodactyla: Even-toed ungulates Tayassuidae: Peccaries (see index) Mylohyus gidleyi Simpson 1929: Extinct peccary Platygonus LeConte 1848, sp. indet.: Extinct peccary ?Tayassu Fischer 1814, sp. indet. Camelidae: Camels, guanacos, and vicunas Camelidae indet., cf. Camelops Leidy 1854 Camelidae indet., cf. Tanupolama americana (Wortman) 1898 22 FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Tanupolama mirifica Simpson 1929: Extinct camel Cervidae: Deer ?Cervus Linnaeus 1758, sp. indet.: Medium-sized cervid (see index) Odocoileus virginianus (Boddaert) 1784: Virginia deer Bovidae: Bison, cattle, sheep, goats, etc. Bison latifrons (Harlan) 1825: Extinct bison Bison H. Smith 1827, sp. indet. PART II BIBLIOGRAPHY II. BIBLIOGRAPHY4 Adams, G.I. 1896 The extinct Felidae of North America: Am. Jour. Sci., 4th ser., vol. 1, no. 6, art. 49, p. 419-444. Agassiz, L. 1853 The lecture of Agassiz: Mobile Daily Tribune, April 14, 1853. (Reprinted on p. 352, 353, by W. Usher, p. 327-372, in J.C. Nott and G.R. Gliddon, 1854, Types of mankind, 738 p., Lippincott, Grambo, and Co., Philadelphia.) Allen, G. M. 1921 Fossil cetaceans from the Florida phosphate beds: Jour. Mammalogy, vol. 2, no. 3, p. 144-160. 1923 Additional remains of the fossil dugong of Florida: Jour. Mammalogy, vol. 4, no. 4, p. 231-239. 1926 Fossil mammals from South Carolina: Harvard Coll. Mus. Comp. Zoology Bull., vol. 67, no. 14, p. 445-468. 1932 A Pleistocene bat from Florida: Jour. Mammalogy, vol. 13, no. 3, p. 256-259. 1941 A fossil river dolphin from Florida: Harvard Coll. Mus. Comp. Zoology Bull., vol. 89, no. 1, p. 1-8. 1942 Extinct and vanishing mammals of the western hemisphere with the marine species of all the oceans: Am. Comm. for Wildlife Protection, Spec. Pub. 11, 620 p. Allen, J. H. 1846 Some facts respecting the geology of Tampa Bay, Florida: Am. Jour. Sci., 2nd ser., vol. 1, no. 1, art. 4, p. 38-42. Anonymous 1932 A Florida marvel: Masterkey, vol. 6, no. 3, p. 94, 95. Auffenberg, W. (see also Goin, C.J., 1955, 1957) 1954 Additional specimens of Gavialosuchus americanus (Sellards) from a new locality in Florida: Florida Acad. Sci. Quart. Jour., vol. 17, no, 4, p. 185-209. 1955a The status of the fossil snake Coluber acuminatus: Copeia, 1955, no. 1, p. 65-67. 4Contributions with multiple authors are entered here and in the in- dices in the style of the United States Geological Survey bibliographies of North American geology. This format was adopted by the Florida Geological Survey. FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY 1955b Glass lizards (Ophisaurus) from the Pleistocene and Pliocene of Florida: Herpetologica, vol. 11, no. 2, p. 133-136. 1956a Remarks on some Miocene anurans from Florida, with a description of a new species of Hyla: Harvard Coll. Mus. Comp. Zoology Breviora, no. 52, p. 1-11. 1956b Additional records of Pleistocene lizards from Florida: FloridaAcad. Sci. Quart. Jour., vol. 19, nos. 2, 3, p. 157- 167. 1956c A studyof the fossil snakes of Florida: Dissertation, Univ. Florida, p. 1-164. (Non vid.) 1957a Anew species of Bufo from the Pliocene of Florida: Florida Acad. Sci. Quart. Jour., vol. 20, no. 1, p. 14-20. 1957b The status of the turtle Macroclemys floridana Hay: Herpeto- logica, vol. 13, pt. 2, p. 123-126. (July 10, 1957) 1957c Notes on fossil crocodilians from southeastern UnitedStates: Florida Acad. Sci. Quart. Jour. vol. 20, no. 2, p. 107- 113. (Non vid.) Bader, R.S. 1956 A quantitative study of the Equidae of the Thomas Farm Miocene: Harvard Coll. Mus. Comp. Zoology Bull., vol. 115, no. 2, p. 49-78. 1957 .Two Pleistocene mammalian faunas from Alachua County, Florida: Florida State Mus. Bull. vol. 2, no. 5, p. 53-75. Balch, E.S. 1917 Early man in America: Am. Philos. Soc. Proc., vol. 56, no. 6, p. 473-483. Barbour, T. 1931 (and Stetson, H. C.) A revision of the Pleistocene species of Terrapene of Florida: Harvard Coll. Mus. Comp. Zoology Bull., vol. 72, no. 8, p. 295-299. 1944a That vanishing eden: A naturalist's Florida: Little, Brown and Co., Boston, 250 p. 1944b Naturalist at large: Little, Brown and Co., Boston, 314 p. Bergendahl, M.H. 1956 Stratigraphyof parts of De Soto andHardee counties, Florida: U.S. Geol. Survey Bull. 1030-B, p. 65-98. Berry, E.W. 1917 The fossil plants from Vero, Florida: Jour. Geology, vol. 25, no. 7, p. 661-666. SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 Bigelow, H.B. 1948 (andSchroeder, W. C. ) Fishes of thewesternNorthAtlantic. Pt. 1, Lancelets, cyclostomes, sharks: Sears Foundation for Marine Research, Mem. 1, p. 1-576. (Lancelets by Bigelow, H.B., and Farfante, I. Perez.) 1953 (and Schroeder, W. C.) Fishes of thewestern NorthAtlantic. Pt. 2, Sawfishes, guitarfishes, skates and rays. Chimaer- oids: Sears Foundation for Marine Research, Mem. 1, p. 1-588. Blatchley, W.S. 1902 A nature wooing at Ormond by the Sea: Indianapolis, The Nature Publishing Co., 245 p. Bock, W.J. 1956 A generic review of the family Ardeidae (Aves): Am. Mus. Novitates, no. 1779, p. 1-49. Boule M. 1946 Les Hommes Fossiles; elements de paleontologie Humaine: 3rd ed. (with Vallois, H.V.), Masson et Cie, Paris, 587p. Bovard, J. F. 1907 Notes on Quaternary Felidae from California: California Univ., Dept. Geol. Sci. Bull., vol. 5, no. 10, p. 155-170. Bowman, R.I. (see Miller, A.H., 1956) Brattstrom, B.H. 1953 Records of Pleistocene reptiles and amphibians from Flor- ida: Florida Acad. Sci. Quart. Jour., vol. 16, no. 4, p. 243-248. 1954 The fossil pit-vipers (Reptilia: Crotalidae) of North Amer- ica: San Diego Soc. Nat. History Trans., vol. 12, no. 3, p. 31-46. Brodkorb, P. (see also Neill, W. T., 1956) 1952 A new rail from the Pleistocene of Florida: Wilson Bull., vol. 64, no. 2, p. 80-82. 1953a A pliocene flamingo from Florida: Nat. History Misc., no. 124, p. 1-4. 1953b Pleistocene birds from Haile, Florida: Wilson Bull., vol. 65, no. 1, p. 49, 50. 1953c APliocene gull fromFlorida: Wilson Bull., vol. 65, no. 2, p. 94-98. 1953d A review of the Pliocene loons: Condor, vol. 55, no. 4, p. 211-214. FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY 1953e A Pliocene grebe from Florida: Annals and Mag. Nat. His- tory, ser. 12, vol. 6, p. 953, 954. 1954a Another new rail from the Pleistocene of Florida: Condor, vol. 56, no. 2, p. 103, 104. 1954b A chachalaca from the Miocene 6f Florida: Wilson Bull., vol. 66, no. 3, p. 180-183. 1955 The avifauna of the Bone Valley formation: Florida Geol. Survey Rept. Inv. no. 14, 57 p. 1956a Pleistocene birds from Eichelberger Cave, Florida: Auk, vol. 73, no. 1, p. 136, 137. 1956b Pleistocene birds from Crystal Springs, Florida: Wilson Bull., vol. 68, no. 2, p. 158. 1956c Two new birds from the Miocene of Florida: Condor, vol. 58, no. 5, p. 367-370. 1957a New Passerine birds from the Pleistocene of Reddick, Flor- ida: Jour. Paleontology, vol. 31, no. 1, p. 129-138. 1957b The Pleistocene avifauna of Arredondo, Florida: Jour. Paleontology (in press, non vid.). Broecker, W.S. 1956 (and Kulp, J. L. and Tucek, C. S.) Lamont natural radio- carbon measurements III: Science, vol. 124, no. 3213, p. 154-165. Brown, B. 1903 Anew genus of ground sloth from the Pleistocene of Nebraska: Am. Mus. Nat. History Bull., vol. 19, art. 22, p. 569-583. 1908 The Conard fissure, a Pleistocene bone deposit in northern Arkansas; with descriptions of two new genera arid twenty new species of mammals: Am. Mus. Nat. History Mem., vol. 9, pt. 4, p. 155-208. Bryan, K. 1941 Geologic antiquity of man in America: Science, vol. 93, no. 2422, p. 505-514. Bullen, R.P. (see Neill, W. T., 1955) Cahn, A.R. 1922 Chlamytherium septentrionalis, a fossil edentate new to the fauna of Texas: Jour. Mammalogy, vol. 3, no. 1, p. 22-24. SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 1932 Records and distribution of the fossil beaver, Castoroides ohioensis: Jour. Mammalogy, vol. 13, no. 3, p. 229-241. Camp, C.L. 1940 (and Vanderhoof, V. L.) Bibliographyof fossil vertebrates, 1928-1933: Geol. Soc. America Special Paper 27, 503 p. 1942 (andTaylor, D.N., andWelles, S.P.) Bibliographyof fossil vertebrates, 1934-1938: Geol. Soc. America Special Paper 42, 663 p. 1949 (and Welles, S. P., and Green, M.) Bibliography of fossil vertebrates, 1939-1943: Geol. Soc. America Mem. 37, 371 p. 1953 (and Welles, S. P., and Green, M.) Bibliography of fossil vertebrates, 1944-1948: Geol. Soc. America Mem. 57, 465 p. Carr, A. F. Jr. 1940 A contribution to herpetology of Florida: Univ. Florida Pub. Biol. Sci. Ser., vol. 3, no. 1, 118 p. Case, E.C. 1934 A specimen of the long-nosed dolphin from the Bone Valley gravels of Polk County, Florida: Michigan Univ., Mus. Paleontology Contr., vol. 4, no. 6, p. 105-113. Castellanos, A. 1947a Sobrealguns generous demamiferos fosseis norteamericanos e argentinos descobertos ultimamente nobrasil: Div. Geol. e mineralogia Brasil, notas preliminares e estudos, Nu- mero 39, 10 p. 1947b La presencia del genero Boreostracon Simpson en Uruguay y Brasil: Pub. Inst. Fis. Geol. Univ. Nacion. Litoral., vol. 30, p. 5-14. Chamberlin, R.T. 1917a Interpretation of the formations containing human bones at Vero, Florida: Jour. Geology, vol. 25, no. 1, p. 25-39. 1917b Further studies at Vero, Florida: Jour. Geology, vol. 25, no. 7, p. 667-683. Chamberlin, T. C. 1919 Investigationversuspropagandism: Jour. Geology, vol. 27, no. 5, p. 305-338. Clapp, F.G. (see Matson, G.C., 1909) Clark, H.W. (see Jordan, D.S.) FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Colbert, E.H. 1932 Aphelops from the Hawthorn formation of Florida: Florida Geol. Survey Bull. 10, p. 55-58. (Reprinted, 1956) 1942a The association of manwith extinct mammalsin thewestern hemisphere: 8thAm. Sci. Cong., Washington, 1940, Proc., vol. 2, Anthropological Sci. p. 17-29. 1942b The geologic succession of the Proboscidea, Chap. 22, p. 1421-1521, in Osborn, H. F., 1942, Proboscidea, a mono- graph of the discovery, evolution, migration, and extinction of the mastodonts and elephants of the world, vol. 2: Stego- dontoidea, Elephantoidea: Am. Mus. Nat. History Press, New York, p. 803-1675. Collins, R.L., (see also Gazin, C. L., 1950b) 1936 (and Lynn, W.G.) Fossil turtles from Maryland: Am. Philos. Soc. Proc., vol. 76, no. 2, p. 151-173. Connery, H.H. S1932 Recent find of mammoth remains in the Quaternary of Flor- ida, together with arrowhead: Science, n. s. vol. 75, no. 1950, p. 516. Conrad, G. M. :1941 A fossil squirrel-fish from the Upper Eocene of Florida: Florida Geol. Survey Bull. 22, p. 6-25. Conrad, T.A. 1846 Observations on the geology of a part of east Florida.with a catalogue of Recent shells of the coast: Am. Jour. Sci., 2nd ser., vol. 2, no. 4, art. 5, p. 36-48. 1865 Observations on American fossils, with descriptions of two new species: Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia Proc. for 1865, p. 184. Cook, S. F. (see Heizer, R. F.) Cooke, C.W. (see also Vaughan, T.W., 1914) 1915 The age of the Ocala limestone: U. S. Geol. Survey Prof. Paper 95-1, p. 107-117. 1926 Fossil man and Pleistocene vertebrates in Florida: Am. Jour. Sci., 5th ser., vol. 12, no. 71, p. 441-452. 1928 The stratigraphy and age of the Pleistocene deposits in Florida fromwhich humanboneshave been reported: Wash- ington Acad. Sci. Jour., vol. 18, no. 15, p. 414-421. 1929 (and Mossom, S.) Geology of Florida: Florida Geol. Sur- vey 20th Ann. Rept., 1927-1928, p. 29-227. SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 1941 Pleistocene maninFlorida: Geol. Soc. America Bull., vol. 52, no. 12, pt. 2, p. 1998 (abstract). 1943 (and Gardner, J.A., and Woodring, W.P.) Correlation of the Cenozoic formations of the Atlantic and Gulf Coastal Plain and the Caribbean region: Geol. Soc. America Bull., vol. 54, no. 11, p. 1713-1723. (No. 12 of series of corre- lation charts of Nat. Research Council.) 1945 Geology of Florida: Florida Geol. Survey Bull. 29, 339 p. Cope, E.D. (see also Leidy, J., 1892) 1873 Preliminary report on the Vertebrata discovered in the Port Kennedy bone cave: Am. Philos. Soc. Proc. for 1871, vol. 12, p. 73-102. 1878 Descriptions of new Vertebrata from the Upper Tertiary formations of the West: Am. Philos. Soc. Proc. for 1877, vol. 17, no. 100, p. 219-231. 1889a TheProboscidea: Am. Naturalist, vol. 23, no. 268, p. 191- 211. 1889b An intermediate Pliocene fauna: Am. Naturalist, vol. 23, no. 268, p. 253, 254. 1889c The Edentata of North America: Am. Naturalist, vol. 23, no. 272, p. 657-664. 1889d A review of the North American species of Hippotherium: Am. Philos. Soc. Proc. for 1889, vol. 26, no. 130, p. 429- 458. 1892a A contribution to the vertebrate paleontology of Texas: Am. Philos. Soc. Proc. for 1892, vol. 30, no. 137, p. 123-131. 1892b [Alachua clay vertebrates compared to those of the Loup Fork and Equus beds], p. 130 in Dall, W.H., andHarris, G.D., 1892, Correlation papers: Neocene of North Amer- ica: U.S. Geol. Survey Bull. 84, 349 p. 1895 On some Pl[e]istocene Mammalia from Petite Anse, La.: Am. Philos. Soc. Proc. for 1895, vol. 34, no. 149, p. 458- 468. (p. 465-467, Supplementary note on Equus fraternus Leidy). 1896 The fossil Vertebrata from the fissure at Port Kennedy, Pa.: Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia Proc. for 1895, p. 446- 450. FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY 1897 New and little known Mammalia from the Port Kennedy bone deposit: Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia Proc. for 1896, p. 378-394. 1899 Vertebrate remains from the Port Kennedy bone deposit: Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia Jour., 2nd ser., vol. 11, pt. 2, art. 8, p. 193-267. Dall, W. H. 1887 Notes on the geologyof Florida: Am. Jour. Sci., 3rd ser., vol. 34, p. 161-170. 1892a On the age of the Peace Creek beds, Florida: Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia Proc. for 1891, p. 120. 1892b (and Harris, G. D.) Correlation papers: Neocene of North America: U.S. Geol. Survey Bull. 84, 349 p. 1896 [Geologic occurrence of the vertebrate fossils from the Alachua clays], p. xi-xiv in Introduction to Leidy, J., 1896 (Lucas, F.A., ed.), Fossil vertebrates from the Alachua clays of Florida: Wagner Free Inst. Sci. Trans., vol. 4, 61 p. De May, I. (see Miller, L.) Doering, J. A. 1956 Review of Quaternary surface formations of Gulf Coast Re- gion: Am. Assoc. Petroleum Geologists Bull., vol. 40, no. 8, p. 1816-1862. Dougherty, J. F. 1940 A new Miocene mammalian fauna from Caliente Mountain, California: Carnegie Inst. Washington Pub. 514, Contr. Paleontology, no. 8, p. 109-143. Downs, T. 1956 The Mascall fauna from the Miocene of Oregon: California Univ., Dept. Geol. Sci., Pub., vol. 31, no. 5, p. 199-354. Early, R. N. 1951a Florida through the ages. Pt. I: Florida Naturalist, vol. 24, no. 2, p. 44-46. (Non vid.) 1951b Florida through the ages. Pt. II: Oligocene through Mio- cene: Florida Naturalist, vol. 24, no. 4, p. 105-108. 1952 Florida through the ages. Pt. III: Pliocene: Florida Natu- ralist, vol. 25, no. 1, p. 17-21. (Pt. IV not published) SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 Erdbrink, D.P. 1953 A review of fossil and Recent bears of the old world with re- marks on their phylogenybased ontheir dentition: Deventer, Drukkerij Jan de Lange, 2 vols., p. 1-320, 321-597. Evermann, B.W. (see Jordan, D.S.) Ferguson, G.E. 1947 (and Lingham, C.W., Love, S.K., and Vernon, R.O.) Springs of Florida: Florida Geol. Survey Bull. 31, 196 p. Ferguson, V. M. (see also Houck, M.V.W.) 1951 Chronology at South Indian Field, Florida: Yale Univ. Pub. Anthropology, no. 45, p. 1-62. Fisher, H.I. 1947 The skeletons of Recent and fossilGymnogyps: Pacific Sci., vol. 1, no. 4, p. 227-236. Fisk, H.N. 1945 Pleistocene age of the "Citronelle"; Geol. Soc. America Bull., vol. 56, no. 12, pt. 2, p. 1158, 1159. Frick, C. 1926a The Hemicyoninae and an American Tertiary bear: Am. Mus. Nat. History Bull., vol. 56, art. 1, p. 1-119. 1926b Tooth sequence in certain trilophodont tetrabelodont masto- dons: Am. Mus. Nat. History Bull., vol. 56, art. 2, p. 122-176. 1937 Horned ruminants of North America: Am. Mus. Nat. His- tory Bull., vol. 69, p. 1-669. Gardner, J.A. (see Cooke, C.W., 1943) Gazin, C.L. (see also Gidley, J.W., 1933, 1938) 1950a Annotated list of fossil Mammalia associated with human remains at Melbourne, Fla.: Washington Acad. Sci. Jour., vol. 40, no. 12, p. 397-404. 1950b (and Collins, R. L.) Remains of land mammals from the Mio- cene of the Chesapeake Bay region: Smithsonian Misc. Coll., vol. 116, no. 2, p. 1-21, pub. 4019. Gealey, W.K. (see Stirton, R.A., 1949) Gidley, J.W. 1901 Tooth characters and revision of the North American species of the genus Equus: Am. Mus. Nat. History Bull., vol. 14, art. 9, p. 91-141. FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY 1907 Revision of the Miocene and Pliocene Equidae of North America: Am. Mus. Nat. History Bull., vol. 23, art. 35, p. 865-934. 1913 Notes onthe relative ages of thebeds at Archer, at Mixon's, and at Ocala, Fla., and their correlation with deposits of the western-plains region, p. 142, 143, in Matson, G. C., andSanford, S., 1913, Geology and ground waters of Florida: U.S. Geol. Survey Water-Supply Paper 319, 445 p. (Re- printed with minor changes on p. 20 of Matson, G.C., 1915) 1915 [Preliminary examination of vertebrate remains from the phosphate mines of Florida]: p. 21, in Matson, G. C., 1915, The phosphate deposits of Florida: U.S. Geol. Survey Bull. 604, 101 p. 1920 Pleistocene peccaries from the Cumberland Cave deposits: U.S. Nat. Mus. Proc., vol. 57, p. 651-678. 1925a Prehistoric remains in Florida: Science, n. s., vol. 62, no. 1600, Suppl., p. x. 1925b Men and elephants in Florida: Lit. Digest, vol. 87, no. 5, p. 22. 1926a Fossil man in Florida: 17th Ani. Meeting Paleont. Soc. Proc., New Haven (1925), Geol. Soc. America-Bull., vol. 37, p. 239, 240 (abstract). 1926b Investigation of evidences of early man at Melbourne and Vero, Florida: Explorations and field-work of the Smith- sonian Inst. in 1925, p. 23-26, in Smithsonian Misc. Coll., vol. 78, no. 1, pub. 2865. 1926c (and Loomis, F.B.) Fossil man in Florida: Am. Jour. Sci., 5th ser., vol. 12, no. 69, p. 254-264. 1926d Fossil man associated with the mammoth in Florida: New evidence of the antiquity of man in America: Washington Acad. Sci. Jour., vol. 16, no. 11, p. 310. 1927 Investigating evidence of early man in Florida: Smithsonian Misc. Coll., vol. 78, no. 7, p. 168-174. 1928a Anew species ofbear from the Pleistocene of Florida: Wash- ington Acad. Sci. Jour., vol. 18, no. 15, p. 430-433. 1928b Continuing the elephant hunt: Explorations and field-work of the Smithsonian Inst. in 1927, p. 11-16, pub. 2957. SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 1929a Further study of the problem of early man in Florida: Ex- plorations and field-work of the Smithsonian Inst. in 1928, p. 13-20, pub. 3011. 1929b Ancient man in Florida: further investigations: Geol. Soc. America Bull. vol. 40, no. 2, p. 491-502. 1929c (and Singleton, C.P.) [Discoveryof arrow-point under bones of mastodon at Melbourne, Florida]: Science, n. s., vol. 69, no. 1797, p. xiv. 1930 Investigations of early man in Florida: Explorations and field-work of the Smithsonian Inst. in 1929, p. 37, 38, pub. 3060. 1931 Further investigations on evidence of early man in Florida: Explorations and field-work of the Smithsonian Inst. in 1930, p. 41-44, pub. 3111. 1933 (and Gazin, C. L.) New Mammalia in the Pleistocene fauna from Cumberland Cave: Jour. Mammalogy, vol. 14, no. 4, p. 343-357. 1938 (and Gazin, C. L.) The Pleistocene vertebrate fauna from Cumberland Cave, Maryland: U.S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 171, 99 p. Gilmore, C.W. 1927 On fossil turtles from the Pleistocene of Florida: U.S. Nat. Mus. Proc. vol. 71, art. 15, p. 1-10, pub. 2687. 1930 A nearly complete shell of the extinct turtle Trachemys sculpta: U.S. Nat. Mus. Proc., vol. 77, art. 10, p. 1-8, pub. 2833. 1938 Fossil snakes ofNorthAmerica: Geol. Soc. America Spec. Paper 9, p. 1-96. Gliddon, G.R. (see Nott, J.C.) Goggin, J.M. (also see Rouse, I., 1947) 1948 Florida archeology and recent ecological changes: Washing- ton Acad. Sci. Jour., vol. 38, no. 7, p. 225-233. 1950 An early lithic complex from central Florida: Am. Antiquity, vol. 16, no. 1, p. 46-49. 1952 Space andtime perspectiveinnorthern St. Johns archeology, Florida: Yale Univ. Pub. Anthropology, no. 47, 147 p. FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Goin, C.J. 1955 (and Auffenberg, W.) The fossil salamanders of the family Sirenidae: Harvard Coll. Mus. Comp. Zoology Bull., vol. 113, no. 7, p. 497-514. 1957 (and Auffenberg, W.) .A new fossil salamander of the genus Siren from the Eocene of Wyoming: Copeia, 1957, no. 2, p. 83-85. Green, M. (see Camp, C. L., 1949, 1953) Gregory, J. T. 1941 The rostrum of Felsinotherium ossivalense: Florida Geol. Survey Bull. 22, p. 27-47. Gregory, WK. 1930 A fossil teleost fish of the snapper family(Lutianidae) from the Lower Oligocene of Florida: Florida Geol. SurveyBull. 5, p. 7-17. Griffin, J.W. 1952 Prehistoric Florida: a review, p. 322-3-34 in Griffin, J.B. (ed.), 1952, Archeology of eastern United States: Univ. Chicago .Press, .392 p. Gross, H. 1951 Mastodons, mammoths, andman inAmerica: Texas Archeol. and Paleont. Soc. Bull., vol. 22, p. 101-131.. Gunter, I. 1931 The mastodon from Wakulla Spring, Wakulla County, Flor- ida:. Florida.Woods and Waters, :Spring, 1931, Dept. Game and Fresh Water Fish, Tallahassee, Florida, p. 14-16. 1941 Once roamed land of sunshine: Florida Highways, August, .1941, p. 13, 35, .36.. Gut, H.J. (see also Neill, W.T., 1956) 1939a Hitherto unrecorded vertebrate fossil localities in south- centralFlorida: Florida Acad. Sci. Proc. for 1938, vol. 3, p. 50-53. 1939b Additions to the recorded Pleistocene mammals from Ocala, Florida: Florida Acad. Sci. Proc. for 1938, vol. 3, p. 54, 55. 1957 Tentative list of Pleistocene mammals from Reddick, Marion County, Florida: Unpublished ms. (non vid.). SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 Hall, E.R. 1936 Mustelid mammals from the Pleistocene of North America with systematic notes on some recentmembers of the genera Mustela, Taxidea and Mephitis: Carnegie Inst. Washington Pub. 473, p. 41-119. Handley, C.O. Jr. 1956 Bones of mammals fromWest Virginia caves: Am. Midland Naturalist, vol. 56, no. 1, p. 250-256. Harrell, B.E. (see Martin, P.S.) Harris, G.D. (see Dall, W.H., 1892b) Hay, O. P. 1902a Bibliography and catalogue of the fossilVertebrata of North America: U.S. Geol. Survey Bull. 179, 868 p. 1902b On the finding of the bones of the great auk (Plautus impennis) in Florida: Auk, vol. 19, no. 3, p. 255-258. 1906 Descriptions of two new genera (Echmatemys and Xenochelys) and two new species (Xenochelys formosa and Terrapene putnami) of fossil turtles: Am. Mus. Nat. History Bull., vol. 22, art. 3, p. 27-32. 1907 Descriptions of seven new species of turtles from the Tertiary of the United States: Am. Mus. Nat. History Bull., vol. 23, art. 34, p. 847-863. 1908 Fossil turtles of NorthAmerica: CarnegieInst. Washington Pub. 75, 568 p. 1913 Notes on some fossil horses, with descriptions of four new species: U.S. Nat. Mus. Proc., vol. 44, p. 569-594, pub. 1969. 1914 The Pleistocene mammals of Iowa: Iowa Geol. Survey, vol. 23, Ann. Rept., 1912, 662 p. 1916 Descriptions of some Floridian fossil vertebrates, belonging mostly to the Pleistocene: Florida Geol. Survey 8th Ann. Rept., p. 39-76. 1917a [A cervical vertebra of a deer from a deposit in Florida]: Science, n.s., vol. 45, no. 1151, p. 72. 1917b The Quaternary deposits at Vero, Florida, and the verte- brate remains contained therein: Jour. Geology, vol. 25, no. 1, p. 52-55. FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY 1917c On the finding of supposed Pleistocene human remains at Vero, Florida: WashingtonAcad. Sci. Jour., vol. 7, no. 11, p. 358-360. 1917d Vertebrata mostly from Stratum No. 3 at Vero, Florida, together with descriptions of new species: Florida Geol. Survey 9th Ann. Rept., p. 43-68. 1918a A review of some papers on fossil man at Vero, Florida: Science, n. s. vol. 47, no. 1215, p. 370,371. 1918b Doctor Ales Hrdlicka and the Vero man: Science, n. s., vol. 48, no. 1245, p. 459-462. 1918c Further considerations of the occurrence of human remains in the Pleistocene deposits at Vero, Florida: Am. Anthro- pologist, n. s. vol. 20, no. 1, p. 1-36. 1919a Descriptions of some mammalian and fish remains from Florida of probablyPleistocene age: U.S. Nat. Mus. Proc., vol. 56, p. 103-112, pub. 2291. 1919b On the relative ages of certain Pleistocene deposits: Am. Jour. Sci., 4th ser., vol. 47, no. 281, art. 24, p. 361-375. 1920 Descriptions of some Pleistocene vertebrates found in the United States: U.S. Nat. Mus. Proc., vol. 58, p. 83-146, pub. 2328. 1921 Descriptions of species of Pleistocene Vertebrata, types or specimens of most of which are preserved in the United States National Museum: U.S. Nat. Mus. Proc., vol. 59, p. 599-642, pub. 2391. 1922 Description of a new fossil sea cow from Florida, Metaxy- therium floridanum: U.S. Nat. Mus. Proc., vol. 61, art. 17, p. 1-4, pub. 2438. 1923a Characteristics of sundryfossil vertebrates: Pan-Am. Geol- ogist, vol. 39, p. 101-120. 1923b The Pleistocene of North America and its vertebrated animals from the states east of the Mississippi River and from the Canadian Provinces east of longitude 950: Carnegie Inst. Washington Pub. 322, p. i-viii, 1-499. 1924 Description of some fossil vertebrates from the Upper Mio- cene of Texas: Biol. Soc. Washington Proc., vol. 37, p. 1- SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 1926a A collection of Pleistocene vertebrates from southwestern Texas: U.S. Nat. Mus. Proc., vol. 68, art. 24, p. 1-18, pub. 2625. 1926b On the geological age of Pleistocene vertebrates found at Vero and Melbourne, Florida: Washington Acad. Sci. Jour., vol. 16, no. 4, p. 387-392. 1927a A review of recent reports on investigations made in Florida on Pleistocene geology and paleontology: Washington Acad. Sci. Jour., vol. 17, no. 11, p. 277-283. 1927b The Pleistocene of the western region of NorthAmerica and its vertebrated animals: Carnegie Inst. Washington Pub. 322B, 346 p. 1928a Ageof maninAmerica: El Palacio, vol. 24, no. 19, p. 418, 419. 1928b Again on Pleistocene man at Vero, Florida: Washington Acad. Sci. Jour., vol. 18, no. 9, p. 233-241. 1928c Characteristic mammals of the early Pleistocene: Washing- ton Acad. Sci. Jour., vol. 18, no. 15, p. 421-430. 1929 Second bibliographyand catalogue of the fossil Vertebrata of NorthAmerica: Carnegie Inst. Washington Pub. 390, vol. 1, 916 p. 1930a Remarks on Dr. George G. Simpson's work on the Pleisto- cene paleontology of Florida: WashingtonAcad. Sci. Jour., vol. 20, no. 14, p. 331-340. 1930b On the fossil Mammalia of the first interglacial stage of the Pleistocene of the United States: Washington Acad. Sci. Jour., vol. 20, no. 21, p. 501-509. 1930c Second bibliographyand catalogue of the fossilVertebrata of North America: Carnegie Inst. Washington Pub. 390, vol. 2, 1074 p. Hayden, F.V. (see Leidy, J., 1873) Heilprin, A. 1887 Explorations on the west coast of Florida and in the Okee- chobee wilderness, with special reference to the geology and zoology of the Floridian Peninsula: Wagner Free Inst. Sci. Trans., vol. 1, 134 p. (Reviewed in Am. Jour. Sci., 1887, 3rd ser., vol. 34, p. 230-232; and in Popular Sci. Monthly, 1887, vol. 32, p. 418). FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Heizer, R. F. 1952 (and Cook, S.F.) Fluorine andotherchemicaltests of some North American human and fossil bones: Am. Jour. Physical Anthropology, n. s., vol. 10, no. 3, p. 289-304. Hibbard, C.W. (see also Stovall, J.W.; Taylor, D.W.) 1940 Anew Synaptomys from the Pleistocene: Kansas Univ. Bull. , vol. 41, no. 22; Sci. Bull., vol. 26, no. 8, p. 367-371. 1943 The Rezabek fauna, a new Pleistocene fauna from Lincoln County, Kansas: Kansas Univ. Sci. Bull., vol. 29, pt. 2, no. 2, p. 235-247. 1944 Two new mammals from the middle Pliocene of Seward County, Kansas: Kansas Univ. Sci. Bull., vol. 30, pt. 1, no. 10, p. 107-114. 1951 A new mastodon, Serridentinus meadensis, from the middle Pliocene of Kansas: Michigan Univ., Mus. Paleontology, Contr., vol. 9, no. 6, p. 217-225. 1954 A new Synaptomys, an addition to the Borchers interglacial (Yarmouth?) fauna: Jour. Mammalogy, vol. 35, no. 2, p. 249-252. 1955a Pleistocene vertebrates from the upper Becerra (Becerra Superior) formation, Valley of Tequixquiac, Mexico, with notes on other Pleistocene forms: Michigan'Univ., Mus. Paleontology, Contr., vol. 12, no. 5, p. 47-96. 1955b Notes on the microtine rodents from the Port KennedyCave deposit: Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia Proc., vol. 107, p. 87-97. 1955c The Jinglebob interglacial (Sangamon?) fauna from Kansas and its climatic significance: Michigan Univ., Mus. Pale- ontology, Contr., vol. 12, no. 10, p. 179-228. Hitchcock, C.H. 1902 The Hernandes shell-heap, Ormond, Florida: Science, n. s. , vol. 16, no. 397, p. 203. Hoffstetter, R. 1949 Les Felins duPleistocenede 1'Equateur, I. --Faune actuelle et Methodes de comparison: Travaux de 1'Institut Francais d'etudes andines, Tome 1, p. 3-52. 1952 Les Mammiferes Pleistocenes de la Republique de l'Equateur: Paris, Soc. Geol. France, 391 p. SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 1953a Sur la presence d'un Tatou geant du genre Holmesina dans le Pleistocene de l'Equateur (Amnrrique du sud): Soc. Geol. France Compte rendu, no. 6, p. 101, 102. 1953b A propos de Neurodromicus, un pretendu crotalide de 1'Oli- gocene nord-armrican: Soc. Geol. France Compte rendu, no. 8, p. 122-124. Holmes, F. S. (see also Leidy, J., 1860) 1860 Post-Pleiocene fossils of South-Carolina: Russell and Jones, Charleston, South Carolina, xii+122+v p. Holmes, W.H. 1917 [Examinationof pottery], p. 51 in Hrdlicka, A., 1917a, Pre- liminary report on finds of supposedly ancient human remains at Vero, Florida: Jour. Geology, vol. 25, no. 1, p. 43-51. 1918a On the antiquityof man inAmerica: Science, n. s., vol. 47, no. 1223, p. 561, 562. 1918b Report on the pottery, p. 64, in Hrdlicka, A., The "fossil" man of Vero, Florida, p. 23-67 in Hrdlicka, A., 1918, Recent discoveries attributed to early man in America: Smithsonian Inst. Bur. Am. Ethnology, Bull. 66, p. 1-67. 1928 The antiquity phantom in American archeology: Science, n.s., vol. 62, no. 1603, p. 256-258. Holmes, W.W. 1931 (and Simpson, G.G.) Pleistocene exploration and fossil edentates in Florida: Am. Mus. Nat. History Bull., vol. 59, art. 7, p. 383-418. Houck, M.V.W. (see also Ferguson, V.M.) 1951 Animal remains from South Indian Field, appendix, p. 51- 57, to Ferguson, V.M., 1951, Chronology at South Indian Field, Florida: Yale Univ. Pub. Anthropology, no. 45, p. 1-62. Howard, E. B. 1935 Evidence of early man in North America, based on geolog- ical and archaeological work in New Mexico: Univ. Penn- sylvania Mus. Jour., vol. 24, nos. 2, 3, p. 55-171. 1940 Studies bearing upon the problem of early man in Florida, p. 309-312 in Merriam, J. C., 1940, Paleontology, early man, and historical geology: Carnegie Inst. Washington Yearbook 39, p. 290-312.. Howard, H. 1932 Eagles and eagle-like vultures of the Pleistocene of Rancho la Brea: Carnegie Inst. Washington Pub. 429,Contr. Palae- ontology, 82 p. FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY 1938 The Rancho la Brea caracara: a new species: Carnegie Inst. Washington Pub. 487, Contr. Palaeontology, Paper 5, p. 217-240. 1940 A new race of caracara from the Pleistocene of Mexico: Condor, vol. 42, no. 1, p. 41-44. 1942 A review of the American fossil storks: Carnegie Inst. Washington Pub. 530, Paper 7, p. 187-203. 1946 A review of the Pleistocene birds of Fossil Lake, Oregon: Carnegie Inst. Washington Pub. 551, Paper 8, p. 141-195. Hrdlicka, A. (see also Vaughan, T.W., 1907; Wherry, E. T., 1918) 1907 Skeletal remains suggesting or attributed to early manin North America: Smithsonian Inst., Bur. Am. Ethnology, Bull. 33, 113 p. 1917a Preliminary report on finds of supposedly ancient human remains at Vero, Florida: Jour. Geology, vol. 25, no. 1, p. 43-51. 1917b Examination into the subject of supposedly ancient human remains at Vero, Florida: Smithsonian Misc. Coll., vol. 66, no. 17, p. 24-28, pub. 2438. 1917c Trip to Fort Myers region, west coast of Florida: Smith- sonian Misc. Coll., vol. 66, no. 17, p. 28, 29, pub. 2438. 1918 The "fossil" man of Vero, Florida, p. 23-67in Hrdlicka, A. , Recent discoveries attributed to early man in America: Smithsonian Inst., Bur. Am. Ethnology, Bull. 66, p. 1-67. 1919 Examination of ancient human remains in Florida: Smith- sonian Inst. Ann. Rept. 1917, p. 10-12. 1922 The anthropology of Florida: Florida State Hist. Soc. Pub. 1, 140 p. (Non vid.) 1928 Ancient man in America: El Palacio, vol. 24, no. 17, p. 324-326. 1937 Earlyman inAmerica: What have the bones to say?, p. 93- 104 in MacCurdy, G. G. (ed.), 1937, Early Man: J. B. Lip- pincott Co., Philadelphia and New York, 362 p. Hue, E. 1918 L'homme fossile de Vero, Floride, Etats-Unis.: Soc. pre- historique Franc. Bull., Tome 15, p. 319-336. Hunt, A.P. (see Hunt, C.B.) SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 Hunt, C.B. 1957 (and Hunt, A. P.) Stratigraphyandarcheologyof some Flor- ida soils: Geol. Soc. America Bull. vol. 68, no. 7, p. 797- 806. Jahns, R.H. 1940 Stratigraphy of the easternmost Ventura Basin, California, with a description of a new lower Miocene mammalian fauna from the Tick Canyon formation: Carnegie Inst. Washington Pub. 514, Contr. Paleontology, Paper 9, p. 145-194. James, G. T. 1957 An edentate from the Pleistocene of Texas: Jour. Paleon- tology, vol. 31, no. 4, p. 796-808. Jenkins, J.H. (see Schantz, V.S.) Jenks, A. E. 1941 (and Simpson, Mrs. H.H., Sr.) Beveled artifacts in Flor- ida of the same type as artifacts found near Clovis, New Mexico: Am. Antiquity, vol. 6, no. 4, p. 314-319. Jenness, D. (see also Romer, A.S., 1933) 1933 The American Aborigines; their origin and antiquity (ed.): Toronto Univ. Press, Toronto, 396 p. Joleaud, L. 1919a Relations entire les migrations du genre Hipparion et les connexions continentales de l'Europe, de l'Afrique et de 1'Amerique au Miocene superieur: Acad. Sci. Paris, Comptes rendus des Seances, Tome 168, Jan. -June, p. 177- 179. 1919b Sur les migrations a 1'epoque Neogene des Hipparion, des hippotragines et des tragelaphines: Acad. Sci. Paris, Comptes rendus, Tome 168, Jan.-June, p. 310-312. Jordan, D.S. 1930 (and Evermann, B.W., and Clark, H.W.) Check list of the fishes and fishlike vertebrates of North and Middle America north of the northern boundary of Venezuela and Colombia: U.S. Commissioner of Fisheries Rept. for 1928, Appendix X, 670 p. (reprinted 1955). Kaisen, O. C. (see Skinner, M. F.) Keith, Sir A. 1925 The antiquity of man, rev'd. ed.: J.B. Lippincott Co., Philadelphia, vol. 2, p. 377-753. Kellogg, R. (see also Miller, G.S., Jr.) 1924 Tertiarypelagic mammalsof easternNorth America: Geol. Soc. America Bull., vol. 35, no. 4, p. 755-76b. FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY 1928 The history of whales, their adaptation to life in the water: Quart. Rev. Biol. vol. 3, nos. 2, 3, p. 29-76, 174-208. 1929 A new fossil toothed whale from Florida: Am. Mus. Novi- tates, no. 389, p. 1-10. 1936 A review of the Archaeoceti: Carnegie Inst. Washington Pub. 482, xv+366 p. 1944 Fossil cetaceans from the Florida Tertiary: HarvardColl. Mus. Comp. Zoology Bull., vol. 94, no. 9, p. 432-471. 1957 (and Whitmore, F.C.) Mammals, p. 1021-1024 in Ladd, H. S. (ed.), Treatise on marine ecology and paleoecology, vol. 2, paleoecology: Geol. Soc. America, Mem. 67, 1077 p. Kirby-Smith, H. T. (see McCrady, E.) Kost, J. 1887 First report of the Geological Survey of Florida, 31 p. Kulp, J.L. (see Broecker, W.S.) Lambrecht, K. 1933 Handbuch der Palaeornithologie: Berlin, Gebrtider Born- traeger, p. i-xx, 1-1024. Lawrence, B. 1942 The muskrat in Florida: New England Zool. Club Proc., vol. 19, p. 17-20. 1943 Miocenebat remains from Florida, with notes on the generic characters of the humerus of bats: Jour. Mammalogy, vol. 24, no. 3, p. 356-369. Leidy, J. (see also Cope, E.D.; Lucas, F.A.;Neal, J.C.) 1854a [Reference to a fossil tooth of a tapir]: Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia Proc. for 1852 and 1853, vol. 6, p. 106. 1854b Remarks on Tapirus haysii: Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia Proc. for 1852 and 1853, vol. 6, p. 148. 1859a Remarks on fossils from Nebraska: Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila- delphia Proc. for 1858, p. 10. 1859b Notice of remains of extinct Vertebrata from the valley of the Niobrara River, etc. : Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia Proc. for 1858, p. 11. SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 45 1860 Description of vertebrate fossils, p. 99-122, in Holmes, F.S., 1860, Post-Pleiocene fossils of South-Carolina: Russell and Jones, Charleston, South Carolina, xii+122+v p. 1870 [Narrative of a short visit toBoston and Cambridge]: Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia Proc. for 1870, p. 96-99. 1872 Remarks on some extinct vertebrates: Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia Proc. for 1872, vol. 24, p. 38-40. 1873 Contributions to the extinct vertebrate fauna of the western territories: in Hayden, F. V., U. S. Geol. Survey Terr. Rept. vol. 1, pt. 1, p. 14-358. 1876 Remarks on fossils from the Ashleyphosphate beds: Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia Proc. for 1876, p. 80, 81. 1877 Description of vertebrate remains, chiefly from the phos- phate beds of South Carolina: Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia Jour., 2nd ser., vol. 8, pt. 3, p. 209-261. 1883a On the remains of horses: Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia Proc. for 1882, p. 290, 291. 1883b On an extinct peccary: Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia Proc. for 1882, p. 301, 302. 1884 [Fossilvertebrates fromArcher, Florida]: Science, vol. 3, no. 67, p. 606, 607. (Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, April22, 1884). 1885 Vertebrate fossils from Florida: Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadel- phia Proc. for 1884, p. 118, 119. 1886a Rhinoceros and Hippotherium from Florida: Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia Proc. for 1885, p. 32, 33. 1886b Remarks on Mylodon: Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia Proc. for 1885, p. 49-51. 1887a Mastodon and llama from Florida: Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila- delphia Proc. for 1886, p. 11, 12. 1887b An extinct boar from Florida: Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia Proc. for 1886, p. 37, 38. 1887c Caries in the mastodon: Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia Proc. for 1886, p. 38. 1887d Toxodon and other remains from Nicaragua, C.A. : Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia Proc. for 188o, p. 275-277. FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY 1888 Fossil bones from Florida: Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia Proc. for 1887, p. 309, 310. 1889a Notice of some fossil human bones: Wagner Free Inst. Sci. Trans., vol. 2, p. 9-12. 1889b Description of mammalian remains from a rock crevice in Florida: Wagner Free Inst. Sci. Trans. vol. 2, p. 13-17. 1889c Description of vertebrate remains from Peace Creek, Flor- ida: Wagner Free Inst. Sci. Trans., vol. 2, p. 19-32. 1889d On Platygonus, an extinct genus allied to the peccaries: Wagner Free Inst. Sci. Trans., vol. 2, p. 41-50. 1889e Notice and description of fossils in caves and crevices of the limestone rocks of Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania Geol. Survey Ann. Rept. for 1887, p. 1-20. 1890a The saber-tooth tiger of Florida: Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadel- phia Proc. for 1889, p. 29-31. 1890b Fossil vertebrates from Florida: Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadel- phia Proc. for 1889, p. 96, 97. 1891a Fossil vertebrates from Florida: Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadel- phia Proc. for 1890, p. 64, 65. 1891b Hippotherium and Rhinoceros from Florida: Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia Proc. for 1890, p. 182, 183. 1891c Mastodon and capybara of South Carolina: Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia Proc. for 1890, p. 184, 185. 1892 [Lists and comments on the fossil vertebrates from the Alach- ua clays, Peach Creek and Caloosahatchie Creek], p. 129, 130 in Dall, W.H., and Harris, G.D., 1892, Correlation papers: Neocene of North America: U.S. Geol. Survey Bull. 84, 349 p. 1896 Fossil vertebrates from theAlachua clays of Florida: Wag- ner Free Inst. Sci. Trans., vol. 4, p. 1-61. Leriche, M. 1942 Contribution a l'etude des faunes ichthyologiques marines des terrains tertiaires de la plaine cotiere Atlantique et du Centre des Etats-Unis. Le Synchronisme des formations tertiaires des de;ux cotes de l'Atlantique: Soc. G'ol. France Mem. 45, n. s., Tome 20, Fasc. 2-4, Feuilles 8-21, p. 1- 112. SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 Lingham, C.W. (see Ferguson, G.E.) Loomis, F.B. (see also Gidley, J.W., 1926c) 1924 Artifacts associated with the remains of a columbian ele- phant at Melbourne, Florida: Am. Jour. Sci., 5th ser., vol. 8, no. 48, p. 503-508. 1925 The Florida man: Science, n. s., vol. 62, no. 1611, p. 436. 1926 Early man in Florida: Nat. History, vol. 26, no. 3, p. 260- 262. 1927 A giant tortoise from Florida: Am. Jour. Sci., 5th ser., vol. 13, no. 77, p. 435-439. Love, S.K. (see Ferguson, G.E.) Loveridge, A. 1957 (and Williams, E. E.) Revision of the African tortoises and turtles of the suborder Cryptodira: Harvard Coll. Mus. Comp. Zoology Bull., vol. 115, no. 6, p. 163-557. Lucas, F.A. 1896 In Leidy, J., 1896, Fossil vertebrates from the Alachua clays of Florida: Wagner Free Inst. Sci. Trans., vol. 4, p. 1-61. (Prefatory note, p. vii, viii, 41-54, of text written by Lucas). 1899 The fossil bison of North America: U.S. Nat. Mus. Proc., vol. 21, p. 755-771, pub. 1172. Lull, R.S. 1915 A Pleistocene ground sloth, Mylodon harlani, from Rock Creek, Texas: Am. Jour. Sci., 4th ser., vol. 39, no. 232, p. 327-385. Lyell, C. 1863 The geological evidences of the antiquity of man: Childs, Philadelphia, 3rd ed. 526 p. Lynn, W. G. (see Collins, R. L., .1936) MacCurdy, G. G. 1917a Archaeological evidences of man's antiquity at Vero, Fla.: Jour. Geology, vol. 25, no. 1, p. 56-62. 1917b The problem of man's antiquityatVero, Fla.: Am. Anthro- pologist, n. s., vol. 19, no. 2, p. 252-261. 1937 (see also Sellards, E.H., 1937, and Hrdlicka, A., 1937) Early man (ed.): J.B. Lippincott Co., Philadelphia and New York, 362 p. FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY MacGowan, K. 1950 Early man in the new world: MacMillan, New York, 260 p. MacNeill, F. S. 1949 Pleistocene shorelines in Florida and Georgia: U.S. Geol. Survey Prof. Paper 221-F, p. 95-107. Martin, P. S. 1957 (and Harrell, B. E.) The Pleistocene history of temperate biotas in Mexico and eastern United States: Ecology, vol. 38, no. 3, p. 468-480. Matson, G. C. 1909 (and Clapp, F. G.) A preliminary report on the geology of Florida: Florida Geol. Survey 2nd Ann. Rept., 1908-1909, p. 28-173. 1913 (and Sanford, S.) Geology and ground waters of Florida: U.S. Geol. Survey Water-Supply Paper 319, 445 p. 1915 The phosphate deposits of Florida: U.S. Geol. SurveyBull. 604, 101 p. Matsumoto, H. 1918 On the fossil human bones found at Vero, Florida: Anthro- pological Soc. Tokyo Jour., vol. 33, no. 374, p. 157-160. (In Japanese) Matthew, W.D. 1909 Faunal lists of the Tertiary Mammalia of the West, p. 91- 120, in Osborn, H. F., 1909, Cenozoic mammal horizons of westernNorthAmerica: U.S. Geol. SurveyBull. 361, 138 p. 1917 Gigantic Megatherium from Florida: Geol. Soc. America Bull., vol. 28, no. 2, p. 212 (abstract). 1924 Third contribution to the Snake Creek fauna: Am. Mus. Nat. History Bull., vol. 50, art. 2, p. 59-210. McCown, T.D. 1941 The antiquity of man in the new world: Am. Antiquity, vol. 6, no. 3, p. 203-213. McCrady, E. 1951 (and Kirby-Smith, H. T., and Templeton, H.) New finds of Pleistocene jaguar skeletons from Tennessee caves: U.S. Nat. Mus. Proc., vol. 101, p. 497-511, pub. 3287. McGrew, P.O. 1939 A new Amphicyon front the Deep River Miocene: Field Mus. Nat. History Pub., Geol. Ser., vol. 6, no. 23, p. 341-350. SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 Meade, G. E. 1952 The water rat in the Pleistocene of Texas: Jour. Mam- malogy, vol. 33, no. 1, p. 87-89. Mercer, H. C. 1899 The bone cave at Port Kennedy, Pennsylvania, and its par- tial excavation in 1894, 1895, and 1896: Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia Jour., 2nd ser., vol. 11, pt. 2, art. 9, p. 269- 288. Merriam, J. C. 1912 The fauna of Rancho la Brea, Part II. Canidae: California Univ. Mem., vol. 1, no. 2, p. 215-272. 1918a Note on the systematic position of the wolves of the Canis dirus group: California Univ., Dept. Geol. Sci.,Bull., vol. 10, no. 27, p. 531-533. 1918b [Comparison of tooth of Merychippus sp. Sellards 1916 from Quincy, Florida, with horses of the western United States in the University of California collection], p. 108, inOsborn, H. F., 1918, Equidae of the Oligocene, Miocene, and Plio- cene of North America, iconographic type revision: Am. Mus. Nat. History Mem., n.s., vol. 2, pt. 1, p. 1-227. 1925 (and Stock, C.) Relationships and structure of the short- faced bear, Arctotherium, from the Pleistocene of Califor- nia: Carnegie Inst. Washington Pub. 347, p. 1-35. 1932 (and Stock, C.) The Felidae of Rancho la Brea: Carnegie Inst. Washington Pub. 422, 231 p. 1935a Areview of evidence relatingto the status of the problem of antiquity of man in Florida: Science, vol. 82, no. 2118, p. 103 (abstract). 1935b Florida scenes re-examined for ancient man: El Palacio, vol. 39, nos. 7-9, p. 46. 1936 (andassociates) Paleontological researches: CarnegieInst. Washington, Yearbook 35, for the year 1935-36, p. 316-326. Miller, A. H. 1931 Review of A. Wetmore, The avifauna of the Pleistocene in Florida: Condor, vol. 33, no. 4, p. 173, 174. 1956 (and Bowman, R.I.) Fossil birds of the late Pliocene of Cita Canyon, Texas: Wilson Bull., vol. 68, no. 1, p. 38- 46. Miller, G.S., Jr. 1955 (and Kellogg, R.) List of North American Recent mammals: U.S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 205, 954 p. FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Miller, L. 1942 (and DeMay, I.) The fossil birds of California; an avifauna and bibliography with annotations: California Univ. Pub. Zoology, vol. 47, no. 4, p. 47-142. Milstead, W.W. 1956 Fossil turtles of FriesenhahnCave, Texas, withthe descrip- tion of anew species of Testudo: Copeia, 1956, no. 3, p. 162- 171. Mook, C.C. 1921 Skull characters and affinities of the extinct Florida gavial, Gavialosuchus americanus (Sellards): Am. Mus. Nat. His- tory Bull., vol. 44, art. 5, p. 33-42. 1924 Further notes on the skull characters of Gavialosuchus americanus (Sellards): Am. Mus. Novitates, no. 155, 2 p. 1946 A new Pliocene alligator from Nebraska: Am. Mus. Novi- tates, no. 1311, 12 p. Mossom, S. (see Cooke, C.W., 1929) Neal, J. C. 1885 [Discovery of another bed of fossil bones in the Alachua clays], communicated to Joseph Leidy: Am. Naturalist, vol. 19, no. 8, p. '834.' Neill, W. T. 1953 Notes on the supposed association of artifacts and extinct vertebrates in Flagler County, Florida: Am. Antiquity, vol. 19, no. 2, p. 170, 171. 1955 (and Bullen, R.P.) Muskrat remains from a prehistoric Indian site in Jackson County, Florida: Jour. Mammalogy, vol. 36, no. 1, p. 138. 1956 (and Gut, H. J., and Brodkorb, P.) Animal remains from four preceramic sites in Florida: Am. Antiquity, vol. 21, no. 4, p. 383-395. 1957 The rapid mineralization of organic remains in Florida, and its bearing on supposed Pleistocene records: FloridaAcad. Sci. Quart. Jour., vol. 20, no. 1, p. 1-13. Nelson, N. C. 1918a Chronology in Florida: Am. Mus. Nat. History Anthropo- logical Papers, vol. 22, pt. 2, p. 75-103. 1918b Additional studies in the Pleistocene at Vero, Florida: Science, n. s. vol. 47, no. 1216, p. 394, 395. SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 Nicholas, G. 1953 Recent paleontological discoveries from Cumberland Bone Cave: Sci. Monthly, vol. 76, no. 5, p. 301-305. Nott, J.C. (see also Agassiz, L., 1853; Usher, W., 1854) 1854 (and Gliddon, G. R.) Types of mankind: Lippincott, Grambo, and Co., Philadelphia, 738 p. Oelrich, T. M. 1952 A new Testudo from the Upper Pliocene of Kansas with addi- tionalnotes on associated Rexroad mammals: Kansas Acad. Sci. Trans., vol. 55, no. 3, p. 300-311. 1953 A new boxturtle from the Pleistocene of southwestern Kansas: Copeia, 1953, no. 1, p. 33-38. 1957 The status of the Upper Pliocene turtle, Testudo turgida Cope: Jour. Paleontology, vol. 31, no. 1, p. 228-241. Oglesby, W.R. (see Puri, H.S.) Olsen, S.J. 1956a A small mustelid from the Thomas Farm Miocene: Harvard Coll. Mus. Comp. Zoology Breviora, no. 51, 5 p. 1956b A new species of Osteoborus from the Bone Valley formation of Florida: Florida Geol. Survey Special Pub. 2, Contr. to Florida Vertebrate Paleontology, Paper 1, p. 1-5. 1956c The Caninae of the Thomas Farm Miocene: Harvard Coll. Mus. Comp. Zoology Breviora, no. 66, 12 p. 1957a The lower dentition of Mephititaxus ancipidens: Jour. Mam- malogy, vol. 38, no. 4, p. 452-454. 1957b Leptarctines from the Florida Miocene: Am. Mus. Novi- tates, no. 1861, p. 1-7. 1958a A new beak-jawed mastodont from Florida: Paleont. Soc. India Jour., vol. 2, no. 1. (In press, non vid.) 1958b The fossil carnivore Amphicyon intermedius from the Thom- as Farm Miocene of Florida. Pt. I: Skull and dentition: HarvardColl. Mus. Comp. ZoologyBull. (Inpress) 1958c The bog lemming, Synaptomys, from the Pleistocene of Florida: Jour. Mammalogy, vol. 39, no. 3. (In press, non vid.) Olson, E. C. 1940 A late Pleistocene fauna from Herculaneum, Missouri: Jour. Geology, vol. 48, no. 1, p. 32-56. FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Osborn, H. F. (see also Colbert, E. H., 1942b; Merriam, J. C., 1918b) 1904 New Miocene rhinoceroses with revision of known species: Am. Mus. Nat. History Bull., vol. 20, art. 27, p. 307-326. 1909 Cenozoic mammal horizons of western NorthAmerica, with faunal lists of the Tertiary Mammalia of the West byWilliam Diller Matthew: U.S. Geol. Survey Bull. 361, 138 p. 1910 The age of mammals in Europe, Asia and North America: MacMillan Co. New York, 635 p. 1918 Equidae of the Oligocene, Miocene and Pliocene of North America, iconographic type revision: Am. Mus. Nat. His- tory Mem., n. s., vol. 2, pt. 1, p. 1-227. 1923 New subfamily, generic, and specific stages in the evolu- tion of the Proboscidea: Am. Mus. Novitates, no. 99, 4 p. 1926 Additionalnew genera and species of the mastodontoid Pro- boscidea: Am. Mus. Novitates, no. 238, 16 p. 1929 New Eurasiatic and American proboscideans: Am. Mus. Novitates, no. 393, 21 p. 1930 Parelephas floridanus from the Upper Pleistocene of Flor- ida compared with P. jeffersonii: Am. Mus. Novitates, no. 443, 17 p. 1934 Evolution and geographic distribution of the Proboscidea; Moeritheres, Deinotheres and Mastodonts: Jour. Mam- malogy, vol. 15, no. 3, p. 177-184. 1936 Proboscidea, a monograph of the discovery, evolution, mi- gration, and extinction of the mastodonts, and elephants of the world, vol. 1: Moeritherioidea, Deinotherioidea, Mas- todontoidea: Am. Mus. Nat. History Press, New York, p. 1-802. 1942 Proboscidea, a monograph of the discovery, evolution, mi- gration, and extinction of the mastodonts and elephants of theworld, vol. 2: Stegodontoidea, Elephantoidea: Am. Mus. Nat. History Press, New York, p. 803-1675. Patterson, B. 1949 [Comments on Megatherium from El Salvador and Florida], p. 1749, 1750, in Stirton, R.A., and Gealey, W.K., 1949, Reconnaissance geology and vertebrate paleontology of El Salvador, CentralAmerica: Geol. Soc. America Bull., vol. 60, no. 11, p. 1731-1754. SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 Paula Couto, C. de 1948 Sobre os vertebrados fosseis de colecao sellow, do Uruguai: Serv. Geol. Min. Brasil, Bol. 125, 14 p. Peterson, O.A. 1926 The fossils of the Frankstown Cave, Blair County, Pennsyl- vania: Carnegie Mus. Annals, vol. 16, no. 2, p. 249-297. Pirkle, E. C. 1956 The Hawthorne and Alachua formations of Alachua County, Florida: Florida Acad. Sci. Quart. Jour., vol. 19, no. 4, p. 197-240. Puri, H.S. 1958 (and Oglesby, W.R., and Yon, J.W., Jr.) Geology of Gil- christ and Dixie counties, Florida (to be published as Florida Geol. Survey Bull.). Quinn, J.H. 1952 Recognition of hipparions and other horses in the middle Miocene mammalian faunas of the Texas Gulf Region: Univ. Texas Bur. Economic Geology Rept. Investigations 14, p. 5, 6. 1955 Miocene Equidae of the Texas Gulf Coastal Plain: Texas Univ. Pub. 5516, 102 p. Rains, G.W. 1850 Geologyof Florida: Sci. Am. vol. 5, no. 21, p. 165 (Feb. 9). Ray, C.E. 1958 Additions to the Pleistocene mammalian fauna of Melbourne, Florida: Harvard Coll. Mus. Comp. Zoology Bull. Richards, H. G. 1936 Studies on the Pleistocene of Florida: p. 323-325, in Mer- riam, J.C., and associates, Paleontological researches: Carnegie Inst. Washington Yearbook, no. 35, for the year 1935-36, p. 316-326. 1938 Marine Pleistocene of Florida: Geol. Soc. America Bull., vol. 49, no. 8, p. 1267-1296. Romer, A. S. 1933 Pleistocene vertebrates and their bearing on the problem of human antiquity in North America, chap. 2, p. 49-83, in Jenness, D. (ed.), 1933, The American Aborigines; their origin and antiquity: Toronto Univ. Press, Toronto, 396 p. 1945 Vertebrate paleontology: Chicago Univ. Press, Chicago, 687 p. FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY 1948 The fossil mammals of Thomas Farm, Gilchrist County, Florida: Florida Acad. Sci. Jour., vol. 10, no. 1, p. 1-11. 1956 Osteology of the reptiles: Chicago Univ. Press, Chicago, 772 p. Rouse, I. 1947 (and Goggin, J. M.) An anthropological bibliography of the eastern seaboard: Eastern States Archeological Federation, Research Pub. 1, New Haven, 174 p. 1950 Vero and Melbourne man: A cultural and chronological interpretation: New YorkAcad. Sci. Trans., 2nd ser., vol. 12, no. 7, p. 220-224. 1951 A survey of Indian River archeology, Florida: Yale Univ. Pub. Anthropology, no. 44, 296 p. 1952 The age of the Melbourne interval: Texas Archeological and Paleontological Soc. Bull., vol. 23, p. 293-299. Sanford, S. (see Matson, G. C., 1913) Savage, D. F. 1951 Late Cenozoic vertebrates of the San Francisco Bayregion: California Univ. Pub. Geol., vol. 28, no. 10, p. 215-314. Schantz, V.S. 1950 (and Jenkins, J.H. ) Extension of range of the round-tailed muskrat, Neofiber alleni: Jour. Mammalogy, vol. 31, no. 4, p. 460, 461. Schlaikjer, E. M. 1937 A studyof Parahippus wyomingensis and a discussion of the phylogeny of the genus: Harvard Coll. Mus. Comp. Zoology Bull., vol. 80, no. 5, p. 255-280. Schmidt, K. P. 1953 Achecklist of North American amphibians and reptiles: Am. Soc. Ichthyologists and Herpetologists, Chicago Univ. Press, Chicago, 6th ed., 280 p. Schroeder, W. C. (see Bigelow, H.B.) Schwartz, A. 1953 A systematic study of the water rat (Neofiber alleni): Michi- gan Univ., Mus. Zoology, Occ. Papers, no. 547, p. 1-28. Scott, W.B. 1913 Ahistoryof landmammals in thewestern hemisphere: Mac- Millan and Co., New York, 693 p. SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 55 1937 A history of land mammals in the western hemisphere: MacMillan and Co., New York, (revised ed.), 786 p. Sellards, E.H. 1908a Fossils contained in the Florida formations: Florida Geol. Survey 1st Ann. Rept., 1907-08, p. 23-25. 1908b Fossil human remains in Florida: Florida Geol. Survey 1st Ann. Rept., 1907-08, p. 25. 1908c Bibliography of Florida geology: Florida Geol. Survey 1st Ann. Rept., 1907-08, p. 73-108. 1912 The soils and other surface residual materials of Florida: Florida Geol. Survey 4th Ann. Rept., p. 7-79. 1913a Bibliography of publications on the phosphates of Florida, p. 67-80, in Origin of the hard rock phosphates of Florida: Florida Geol. Survey 5th Ann. Rept., p. 23-80. 1913b Origin of the hard rock phosphate deposits of Florida: Flor- ida Geol. Survey 5th Ann. Rept., p. 23-80. 1914 The relation between the Dunnellon formation and theAlachua clays of Florida: Florida Geol. Survey 6th Ann. Rept., p. 161, 162. 1915a Anew gavial from the Late Tertiary of Florida: Am. Jour. Sci., 4th ser., vol. 40, no. 236, art. 11, p. 135-138. 1915b Chlamytherium septentrionalis, an edentate from thePleis- tocene of Florida: Am. Jour. Sci., 4th ser., vol. 40, no. 236, art. 12, p. 139-145. 1915c The value to science of the fossil animal remains found im- bedded in the earth: Florida Geol. Survey Press Bull. 6, 2p. (Reprinted, Florida Geol. Survey 7thAnn. Rept., 1915, p. 7-9. 1915d The pebble phosphates of Florida: Florida Geol. Survey 7th Ann. Rept., p. 25-116. 1916a On the discoveryof fossilhuman remains in Florida in asso- ciation with extinct vertebrates: Am. Jour. Sci., 4th ser., vol. 42, no. 247, art. 1, p. 1-18. 1916b A new tortoise and a supplementary note on the gavial, Tomistoma americana: Am. Jour. Sci., 4th ser., vol. 42, no. 249, art. 25, p. 235-240. 1916c Human remains from the Pleistocene of Florida: Science, n.s., vol. 44, no. 1139, p. 615-617. FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY 1916d Bibliography and review of papers relating to the fossil vertebrates of Florida, p. 109-119, in Fossil vertebrates from Florida: a new Miocene fauna; new Pliocene species; the Pleistocene fauna: Florida Geol. Survey 8th Ann. Rept., p. 77-119. 1916e Fossilvertebrates fromFlorida: a new Miocene fauna; new Pliocene species;the Pleistocene fauna: Florida Geol. Sur- vey 8th Ann. Rept., p. 77-119. 1916f Human remains and associated fossils from the Pleistocene of Florida: Florida Geol. Survey 8th Ann. Rept., p. 122- 160. 1917a Fossil vertebrates from Florida: Geol. Soc. AmericaBull., vol. 28, no. 2, p. 214 (abstract). 1917b On the association of human remains andextinct vertebrates at Vero, Florida: Jour. Geology, vol. 25, no. 1, p. 4-24. 1917c Note on the deposits containing human remains and artifacts at Vero, Florida: Jour. Geology, vol. 25, no. 7, p. 659, 660. 1917d Further notes on human remains from Vero, Florida: Am. Anthropologist, n. s. vol. 19, no. 2, p. 239-251. 1917e Review of the evidence on whichthe human remains found at Vero are referred to the Pleistocene: Florida Geol. Survey 9th Ann. Rept., p. 69-82. 1917f Supplement to studies in the Pleistocene at Vero, Florida: Florida Geol. Survey 9th Ann. Rept., p. 141-143. 1918 The skull of a Pleistocene tapir including description of a new species and a note on the associated fauna and flora: Florida Geol. Survey 10th Ann. Rept., p. 57-70. 1919 Literature relating tohuman remains andartifacts at Vero, Florida: Florida Geol. Survey 12th Ann. Rept., p. 1-4; and Am. Jour. Sci., 4th ser., vol. 47, no. 281, art. 23, p. 358-360. 1937 The Vero finds in the light of present knowledge, p. 193-210, in MacCurdy, G.G. (ed.), Early man: J.B. Lippincott Co., Philadelphia and New York, 362 p. 1940 Early man in America, index to localities, and selected bibliography: Geol. Soc. America Bull., vol. 51, no. 3, p. 373-432. SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 1947 Early man in America: Index to localities and selected bibliography, 1940-1945: Geol. Soc. America Bull., vol. 58, no. 10, p. 955-978. 1952 Early man in America: Texas Univ. Press, Austin, 211 p. Sherman, H.B. (see also White, T. E., 1952) 1952 A list and bibliography of the mammals of Florida, living and extinct: Florida Acad. Sci. Quart. Jour. vol. 15, no. 2, p. 86-126. 1954 The occurrence of bison in Florida: Florida Acad. Sci. Quart. Jour., vol. 17, no. 4, p. 228-232. Shufeldt, R.W. 1917a Report on fossil birds from Vero, Florida, p. 18, 19, in Sellards, E.H., On the association of human remains and extinct vertebrates at Vero, Florida: Jour. Geology, vol. 25, no. 1, p. 4-24. (Reviewed by Stone, W., 1917) 1917b Fossil birds found at Vero, Florida: Florida Geol. Survey 9th Ann. Rept., p. 35-42. (Reviewed by Stone, W., 1918) 1918 Notes on some bird fossils from Florida: Auk, vol. 35, no. 3, p. 357, 358. Simpson, G. G. (see also Holmes, W.W.) 1928 Pleistocene mammals from a cave in Citrus County, Florida: Am. Mus. Novitates, no. 328, 16 p. 1929a The extinct landmammals of Florida: Florida Geol. Survey 20th Ann. Rept., 1927-1928, p. 229-279. (In process of revision by Olsen, S. J., 1957) 1929b Hunting extinct animals in Florida: Nat. History, vol. 29, no. 5, p. 506-518. 1929c Pleistocene mammalian fauna of the Seminole Field, Pinellas County, Florida: Am. Mus. Nat. History Bull., vol. 56, art. 8, p. 561-599. 1930a Rodent giants: Nat. History, vol. 30, no. 3, p. 305-313. 1930b Additions to the Pleistocene of Florida: Am. Mus. Novitates, no. 406, 14 p. 1930c Holmesina septentrionalis, extinct giant armadillo of Flor- ida: Am. Mus. Novitates, no. 442, 19 p. 1930d Tertiary land mammals of Florida: Am. Mus. Nat. His- tory Bull., vol. 59, art. 3, p. 149-211. FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY 1931 Origin of mammalian faunas as illustrated by that of Flor- ida: Am. Naturalist, vol. 65, no. 698, p. 258-276. 1932a Miocene land mammals from Florida: Florida Geol. Survey Bull. 10, p. 7-41. (Reprinted 1956) 1932b Mounted skeletons of Eohippus, Merychippus, and Hesper - osiren: Am. Mus. Nbvitates, no. 587, 7 p. 1932c Fossil Sirenia of Florida and the evolution of the Sirenia: Am. Mus. Nat. History Bull., vol. 59, art. 8, p. 419-503. 1936 Data on the relationships of local and continental mammalian faunas: Jour. Paleontology, vol. 10, no. 5, p. 410-414. 1941a Discovery of jaguar bones and footprints in a cave in Ten- nessee: Am. Mus. Novitates, no. 1131, 12 p. 1941b Large Pleistocene felines of North America: Am. Mus. Novitates, no. 1136, 27 p. 1945a The principles of classificationand a classification of mam- mals: Am. Mus. Nat. History Bull., vol. 85, 350 p. 1945b Notes on Pleistocene and Recent tapirs: Am. Mus. Nat. History Bull., vol. 86, art. 2, p. 33-82. 1949 Afossildeposit in a cave in St. Louis: Am. Mus. Novitates, no. 1408, 46 p. Simpson, Mrs. H.H., Sr. (see Jenks, A.E.) Simpson, J.C. 1948 Folsom-like points from Florida: Florida Anthropologist, vol. 1, p. 11-15. Singleton, C.P. (see Gidley, J.W., 1929c) Skinner, M. F. 1947 (and Kaisen, O. C.) The fossil bison of Alaska and prelimi- nary revision of the genus: Am. Mus. Nat. HistoryBull., vol. 89, art. 3, p. 127-256. Spencer, J.W. 1895 Reconstruction of the Antillean continent: Geol. Soc. Amer- ica Bull. vol. 6, p. 103-140. (Not Jour. Geology as listed by Hay, O. P., 1929, p. 437). Stephenson, L.W. (see Veatch, O.) Sterns, F.H. 1918 The Pleistocene man of Vero, Florida: A summary of the evidence of man's antiquity in the new world: Sci. Am. Suppl., vol. 85, no. 2214, p. 354, 355. SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 1919 The Pleistocene man of Vero, Florida. A review of the latest evidence and theories: Sci. Am. Suppl., vol. 87, no. 2251, p. 118, 119. Stetson, H.C. (see Barbour, T., 1931) Stewart, T. D. 1946 A re-examination of the fossil human skeletal remains from Melbourne, Florida, with further data on the Vero skull: Smithsonian Misc. Coll., vol. 106, no. 10, p. 1-28, pub. 3854. Stirling, M.W. 1935 Smithsonian archeological projects conducted under the Fed- eral Emergency Relief Administration, 1933-34: Smithson- ian Inst. Ann. Rept. for 1934, p. 371-400. Stirton, R. A. (see also Patterson, B.) 1936 Succession of North American continental Pliocene mam- malian faunas: Am. Jour. Sci., 5th ser., vol. 32, no. 189, p. 161-206. 1940 Phylogeny of North American Equidae: California Univ., Dept. Geol. Sci., Bull., vol. 25, no. 4, p. 165-198. 1949 (and Gealey, W.K.) Reconnaissance geology and vertebrate paleontology of El Salvador, Central America: Geol. Soc. America Bull., vol. 60, no. 11, p. 1731-1753. Stock, C. (see also Merriam, J. C., 1925, 1932) 1925 Cenozoic gravigrade edentates of western North America with special reference to the Pleistocene Megalonychinae and Mylodontidae of Rancho la Brea: Carnegie Inst. Wash- ington Pub. 331. 206 p. 1928 Tanupolama, a new genus of llama from the Pleistocene of California: Carnegie Inst. Washington Pub. 393, Contr. Palaeontology,paper 4, p. 29-37. 1950 Bears from the Pleistocene cave of San Josecito, Nuevo Leon, Mexico: Washington Acad. Sci. Jour., vol. 40, no. 10, p. 317-321. Stone, W. 1917 Shufeldt on fossil birds from Florida: Auk, vol. 34, no. 3, p. 357, 358. (Review of Shufeldt, R.W., 1917a) 1918 Shufeldt on fossil'birds from Vero, Florida: Auk, vol. 35, no. 2, p. 249. (Review of Shufeldt, R.W., 1917b) Stovall, J.W. 1948 (and Hibbard, C.W.) The giant armadillo, Holmesina septentrionalis (Leidy), new to the Pleistocene of Oklahoma: Jour. Mammalogy, vol. 29, no. 4, p. 420. FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Symposium (see Chamberlin, R. T., 1917a; Hay, O. P. 1917b; Hrdlicka, A., 1917a; MacCurdy, G.G., 1917a; Sellards, E.H., 1917b; Vaughan, T.W., 1917) 1917 Symposium on the age and relations of the fossil human re- mains found at Vero, Florida: Jour. Geology, vol. 25, no. 1, p. 1-62. Taylor, D.N. (see Camp, C.L., 1942) Taylor, D..W. 1955 (and Hibbard, C.W.) A new Pleistocene fauna from Harper County, Oklahoma: Oklahoma Geol. Survey, Circ. 37, p. 1- 23. Templeton, H. (see McCrady, E.) Thorpe, M.R. 1937 The Merycoidodontidae, an extinct group of ruminant mam- mals: Peabody Mus. Nat. History Mem., vol. 3, pt. 4, 428 p. Tihen, J. A. 1951 Anuran remains from the Miocene of Florida with the descrip- tion of a new species of Bufo: Copeia, 1951, no. 3, p. 230- 235. 1952 Rana grylio from the Pleistocene of Florida: Herpetologica, vol. 8, no. 3, p. 107. Toulmin, L.D. 1952 Volume of Cenozoic sediments in Florida and Georgia: Geol. Soc. America Bull., vol. 63, no. 12, pt. 2, p. 1165-1176. (Pt. 2 of Sedimentary volumes in the Gulf Coastal Plain of the United States and Mexico). Tucek, C.S. (see Broecker, W.S.) Usher, W. (see Agassiz, L., 1853) 1854 Geology and palaeontology, in connection with huinan origins, chap. 9, p. 327-372, in Nott, J.C., and Gliddon, G.R., 1854, Types of mankind: Lippincott, Grambo, and Co., Philadelphia, 738 p. Vallois, H. V. (see Boule, M.) Vanderhoof, V.L. (see Camp, C.L., 1940) Vanzolini, P.E. 1952 Fossil snakes and lizards from the Lower Miocene of Flor- ida: Jour. Paleontology, vol. 26, no. 3, p. 452-457. Vaughan, T.W. 1907 Report [on the stratigraphy of the Osprey, Manatee County localityfor human fossils], p. 64-66, in Hrdlicka, A., 1907, Skeletal remains suggesting or attributed to early man in North America: Smithsonian Inst., Bur. Am. Ethnology, Bull. 33, p. 1-113. SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 1914 (and Cooke, C.W.) Correlation of the Hawthorn formation: Washington Acad. Sci. Jour., vol. 4, no. 10, p. 250-253. 1917 On reported Pleistocene human remains at Vero, Florida: Jour. Geology, vol. 25, no. 1, p. 40-42. Veatch, O. 1911 (and Stephenson, L.W.) Preliminary report on the geology of the coastal plain of Georgia: Georgia Geol. Survey Bull. 26, 466 p. Vernon, R. O. (see also Ferguson, G. E.) 1942 Geologyof Holmes and Washington counties, Florida: Flor- ida Geol. Survey Bull. 21, 161 p. 1943 Florida mineral industry: Florida Geol. Survey Bull. 24, 207 p. 1951 Geology of Citrus and Levy counties, Florida: Florida Geol. Survey Bull. 33, 256 p. Viret, J. 1939 Monographie paleontologique de la Faune de Vertebres des Sables de Montpellier. III. Carnivora Fissipedia: Travaux Laboratoire Geologie Faculte Sciences Lyon, Fasciculo 37, Memoire 2, Lyon, 26 p. (Non vid.) Walker, S. T. 1884 Onthe origin of the fossil bones discovered in the vicinity of Tise's Ford, Florida: U.S. Nat. Mus. Proc. for 1883, vol. 6, p. 427-429. Wark, A.F. 1928a Paleontologic sketches. Pt. 1. Prehistoric fauna of Flor- ida; Pt. 2. The evolution of teeth: Florida Naturalist, vol. 2, no. 1, p. 1-8. 1928b Description of a giant fossil tortoise from the Pliocene of Florida: Florida Naturalist, vol. 2, no. 1, p. 9,10. 1929a Anew giant tortoise from the Pliocene of Florida: Am. Jour. Sci., 5th ser., vol. 17, no. 101, p. 400-402. 1929b Paleontologic sketches. Pt. 3. The elephants: Florida Nat- uralist, n. s., vol. 2, no. 2, old ser., vol. 8, p. 52-55. (Pt. 4 was apparently not published) Welles, S.P. (see Camp, C. L., 1942, 1949, 1953) FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Wetmore, A. 1928a Bones of birds fromthe Ciego Monterodeposit of Cuba: Am. Mus. Novitates, no. 301, 5 p. 1928b Prehistoric ornithology in North America: WashingtonAcad. Sci. Jour., vol. 18, no. 6, p. 145-158. 1929 Birds of the past in North America: SmithsonianInst. Ann. Rept. for 1928, p. 377-389, pub. 2994. 1931a The Pleistocene avifauna of Florida: 7th Internat. Ornith. Cong. at Amsterdam, 1930, Proc., p. 479-483. (Reviewed in Auk, 1932; see Wetmore, A., 1932) 1931b The avifauna of the Pleistocene in Florida: Smithsonian Misc. Coll. vol. 85, no. 2, p. 1-41. (Reviewed in Condor by Miller, A.H., and in Auk; see Miller, A.H., 1931, Wet- more, A., 1931c, 1931d) 1931c The avifauna of the Pleistocene in Florida (review of Wet- more, A., 1931b): Auk, n. s., vol. 48, no. 3, p. 462. 1931d The avifauna of the Pleistocene in Florida (review of Wet- more, A., 1931b, by Miller, A.H.): Condor, vol. 33, no. 4, p. 173, 174. 1932 The Pleistocene avifauna of Florida (review of Wetmore, A., 1931a): Auk, n. s. vol. 49, no. 3, p. 384. 1933 Status of the genus Geranoabtus: Auk, n. s., vol. 50, no. 2, p. 212. 1940 A check-list of the fossil birds of North America: Smith- sonian Misc. Coll., vol. 99, p. 1-81. 1943 Fossil birds from the Tertiary deposits of Florida: New England Zool. Club Proc., vol. 22, p. 59-68. 1944 Remains of birds from the Rexroad fauna of the Upper Plio- cene of Kansas: Kansas Univ. Sci. Bull., vol. 30, pt. 1, no. 9, p. 89-105. 1945 Afurther record for the double-crested cormorant from the Pleistocene of Florida: Auk, n. s., vol. 62, no. 3, p. 459. 1951 Recent additions to our knowledge of prehistoric birds, 1933- 1949: 10th Internat. Ornith. Cong., Uppsala, 1950, Proc., p. 51-74. 1955 The genus Lophodytes in the Pleistocene of Florida: Condor, vol. 57, no. 3, p. 189. SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 1956 A check-list of the fossil and prehistoric birds of North America and theWestIndies: Smithsonian Misc. Coll. vol. 131, no. 5, 105 p., pub. 42Z8. Wetzel, R. M. 1955 Speciation and dispersal of the southern bog lemming, Synaptomys cooper (Baird): Jour. Mammalogy, vol. 36, no. 1, p. 1-20. Wherry, E. T. 1918 Report on the analysis of the bones, p. 61-63, in Hrdlicka, A., 1918, The "fossil" man of Vero, Florida, p. 23-67, in Hrdlicka, A. Recent discoveries attributed to early man in America: Smithsonian Inst., Bur. Am. Ethnology Bull. 66, p. 1-67. White, T.E. 1940 New Miocene vertebrates from Florida: New England Zool. Club Proc. vol. 18, p. 31-38. 1941a Additions to the fauna of the Florida Pliocene: New England Zool. Club Proc., vol. 18, p. 67-70. 1941b Additions to the Miocene fauna of Florida: New England Zool. Club Proc., vol. 18, p. 91-98. 1941c An additional record of Megatherium from the Pliocene of Florida: New England Zool. Club. Proc., vol. 19, p. 3-6. 1941d Collecting in the Florida Miocene: Harvard Alumni Bull., vol. 44, no. 5, p. 178, 179. 1942a Anew alligator from the Miocene of Florida: Copeia, 1942, no. 1, p. 3-7. 1942b The Lower Miocene mammal fauna of Florida: Harvard Coll. Mus. Comp. Zoology Bull., vol. 92, no. 1, p. 1-49. 1942c Additions to the fauna of the Florida phosphates: New Eng- land Zool. Club Proc., vol. 21, p. 87-91. 1947 Additions to the Miocene fauna of north Florida: Harvard Coll. Mus. Comp. Zoology Bull., vol. 99, no. 4, p. 497- 515. 1952 [On the status of Hexameryx and the age of Megatherium hudsoni], p. 86, in Sherman, H.B., 1952, A list and bibli- ography of the mammals of Florida, living and extinct: Florida Acad, Sci. Quart. Jour., vol. 15, no. 2, p. 86-126. Whitmore, F. C. (see Kellogg, R. 1957) FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Wickham, H. F. 1919 Fossil beetles from Vero, Florida: Florida Geol. Survey 12th Ann. Rept., p. 5-7; also Am. Jour. Sci., 4th ser., vol. 47, no. 281, p. 355-357. Wieland, G.R. 1918 The Vero man and the Sabre tooth: Science, n. s., vol. 48, no. 1230, p. 93, 94. Williams, E. E. (see also Loveridge, A.) 1950 Testudo cubensis and'the evolution of Western Hemisphere tortoises: Am. Mus. Nat. History Bull., vol. 95, art. 1, p. 7-36. 1952 A new fossil tortoise from Mona Island, West Indies, and a tentative arrangement of the tortoises of the world: Am. Mus. Nat. History Bull., vol. 99, art. 9, p. 541-560. 1953 A new fossil tortoise from the Thomas Farm Miocene of Florida: Harvard Coll. Mus. Comp. Zoology Bull., vol. 107, no. 11, p. 537-554. Williams, S. 1957 The Island 35 mastodon: Its bearing on the age of archaic cultures in the east: -Am. Antiquitf, vol. 22) no. 4, p. 359- 372. Wood, A.E. (see also Wood, H.E., 1937) 1932 New heteromyid rodents from the Miocene of Florida: Flor- ida Geol. Survey Bull. 10, p. 45-51. (Reprinted 1956) 1935 Evolution and relationship of heteromyid rodents, with new forms from the Tertiary of westernNorthAmerica: Carnegie Mus. Annals, vol. 24, p. 73-262. 1947 Miocene rodents from Florida: Harvard Coll. Mus. Comp. Zoology Bull., vol. 99, no. 3, p. 487-494. Wood, H.E. 1937 (andWood, A.E.) Mid-Tertiaryvertebrates from the Texas coastalplain: Fact and fable: Am. MidlandNaturalist, vol. 18, no. 1, p. 129-146. 1957 [Study of the rhinoceroses of the Thomas Farm Miocene]: (Ms., non vid.). Woodring, W.P. (see Cooke, C.W., 1943) Wormington, H. M. 1949 Ancient man in North America: Denver Mus. Nat. History, Popular Ser., no. 4, 198 p.,. 3rd ed. SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 65 Wyman, J. 1875 Fresh-water shell mounds of the St. Johns' River, Florida: Peabody Acad. Sci. Salem, Mem. 4, 94 p. Yon, J.W., Jr. (see Puri, H.S.) PART III INDEX OF LOCALITIES III. INDEX OF LOCALITIES CRETACEOUS Okeechobee County Unpublished (turtle fragments from oil test well) EOCENE Cummer Lumber Co. Pit no. 12, near Newberry, Alachua County (see also Miocene and Kendrick under Pleistocene) Cooke, 1945, p. 63 Sellards, 1916e, p. 81 Marianna Caverns, Jackson County Conrad, G.M., 1941, p. 9 Ocala, Marion County (see also Pleistocene) Cooke, 1915, p. 113 Cooke, 1945, p. 62, 71 Kellogg, 1936, p. 9, 19, 273 Leidy, 1889b, p. 13 Leidy, 1890b, p. 96 Sellards, 1916e, p. 81 OLIGOCENE Marianna, Jackson County (see also Pleistocene) Cooke, 1945, p. 80, 83 Gregory, W.K., 1930, p. 7 MIOCENE Ashley River, South Carolina (see Pleistocene) Brewster, Polk County (see Pliocene) Chesapeake Bay Region, Maryland (principally Calvert Formation) Collins, 1936, p. 151 *Gazin, 1950b, p. 1-5 Kellogg, 1957, p. 1022 Cummer Lumber Co. Alachua County; Sec. 25, T9S, R16E (see also SEocene and Kendrick under Pleistocene) Simpson, G.G., 1929b, p. 512 (photograph) Simpson, G.G., 1930d, p. 155, 156, 159 Dunnellon, Marion County (see also Pliocene and Pleistocene) Hay, 1923b, p. 196, 376; map 17, 18 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 261 Franklin Phosphate Co., Pit no. 2, Alachua County Bader, 1956, p. 50 Cooke, 1945, p. 118 Olsen, 1956c, p. 8, 9 Pirkle, 1956, p. 226 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 255 *Simpson, G.G., 1930d, p. 155, 159; fig. 2 Simpson, G. G., 1932a, p. 11-16 Vernon, 1951, p. 185 Garvin Gully, Texas Bader, 1956, p. 50 FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Hay, 1924, p. 1-18 *Quinn, 1955, p. 73 (bibliography, p. 81, 82) Wood, H.E., 1937, p. 137 Griscom Plantation, Leon County Bader, 1956, p. 50 Cooke, 1945, p. 118, 119 Olsen, 1956c, p. 1, 8 Osborn, 1918, p. 95 Sellards, 1916e, p. 82, 83, 87-89 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 255 *Simpson, G.G. 1930d, p. 153, 154, 159 Simpson, G.G., 1932a, p. 11-16 Stirton, 1940, p. 177 Vernon, 1951, p. 184 "Hallowell's Place", near Newberry, Alachua County Hay, 1923b, p. 376 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 255 Hawthorn Formation Cooke, 1929, p. 115-137 Cooke, 1945, p. 144-161 Dougherty, 1940, p. 118; fig. 4 Jahns, 1940, p. 175-181; fig. 7 Kellogg, 1957, p. 1022 Leriche, 1942, p. 56, 74-77, 87-90, 95, 96 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 248, 251-254 Vaughan, 1914, p. 250-253 *Vernon, 1951, p. 178-202 Kingsford, Polk County (see also Pliocene and Pleistocene) Leriche, 1942, p. 95 Midway, Gadsden County (Fuller's earth mine) Bader, 1956, p. 50 Cooke, 1945, p. 146, 151 Quinn, 1955, p. 13, 74 Sellards, 1916e, p. 82, 83, 87-90 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 255 Simpson, G.G. 1929b, p. 514 (photograph) *Simpson, G.G. 1930d, p. 156, 157, 159; fig. 3 Simpson, G. G., 1932a, p. 11-16 Simpson, G.G., 1932c, p. 425 Vernon, 1951, p. 185 Wood, A.E., 1932, p. 45 Wood, A.E., 1947, p. 491 Newberry, Alachua County (see also Cummer Lumber Co., Franklin Phosphate Co. and "Hallowell's Place") Bader, 1956, p. 50 Cooke, 1945, p. 62, 63, 119, 202 Hay, 1916, p. 42 Hay, 1923b, p. 195, 375, 376; map 17, 18 Sellards, 1913b, p. 58 Sellards, 1916e, p. 81, 94 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 255, 259, 260, 270 Simpson, G. G., 1930d, p. 176 SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 Pierce, Polk County (see Pliocene) Preston, Alachua County Cooke, 1945, p. 183 Leriche, 1942, p. 56 Quincy, Gadsden County (Floridin Co., Fuller's earth Cooke, 1929a, p. 120, 121 Cooke, 1945, p. 143, 146, 151 Osborn, 1918, p. 108 Quinn, 1955, p. 74 Sellards, 1916e, p. 82, 87, 91 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 255 Simpson, G.G., 1929b, p. 518 (photograph) *Simpson, G.G., 1930d, p. 157-159; fig. 4 Simpson, G.G., 1932a, p. 11-16 Simpson, G.G., 1932b, p. 5 Simpson, G.G., 1932c, p. 425, 427 Stirton, 1940, p. 181 Rock Springs, Orange County (see also Pleistocene) Gut, 1939a, p. 53 Sanford, Seminole County (see also Pleistocene) Gut, 1939a, p. 50 Seminole Springs, Lake County (see also Pleistocene) Gut, 1939a, p. 52 Tallahassee Water Works, Leon County Colbert, 1932, p.. 55, 57 Cooke, 1945, p. 154, 155 Vernon, 1951, p. 185 Thomas Farm, Gilchrist County (see also Pleistocene Auffenberg, 1956a, p. 1 Auffenberg, 1957a, p. 14 *Bader, 1956, p. 49, 71-74 Barbour, 1944a, p. 8-15; fig. facing p. 10 Barbour, 1944b, p. 228-232 Brodkorb, 1954b, p. 180 Brodkorb, 1956c, p. 367 Cooke, 1945, p. 119, 120, 152 Downs, 1956, p. 326 Goin, 1955, p. 504 Lawrence, 1943, p. 356 Olsen, 1956a, p. 1 *Olsen, 1956c, p. 1 Olsen, 1957a, p. 452-454 Olsen, 1957b, p. 1-7 Olsen, 1958b (in press) Pirkle, 1956, p. 226 Purl, 1958, ms. Quinn, 1952, p. 5, 6 Quirin, 1955, p. 12, 70, 73, 74 *Romer, 1948, p. 1-11 Simpson, G.G., 1932a, p. 11-16 Stirton, 1940, p. 176 mine) ) FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Tihen, 1951, p. 230, 234, 235 Vanzolini, 1952, p. 452 Vernon, 1951, p. 185 Wetmore, 1943, p. 59 Wetmore, 1951, p. 71 Wetmore, 1956, p. 69, footnote 95 White, 1940, p. 31, 32 White, 1941b, p. 91 White, 1941d, p. 178, 179; text-fig. p. 179 White, 1942a, p. 3 White-, 1942b, p. 3, 4, 29-47; text-fig. 4-10; pi. 14 *White, 1947, p. 497 Williams, E. E. 1953, p. 537 Wood, A.E., 1947, p. 489 Wood, H.E., 1957, ms. PLIOCENE5 "Alachua Clays" Colbert, 1942b, p. 1495, 1496 Cooke, 1929, p. 173-179 Cooke, 1945, p. 201 Cope, 1892b, p. 130 Dall, 1892b, p. 129 Dall, 1896, p. xi-xiv Dall, 1897, p. 164 Early, 1952, p. 20 Hay, 1919a, p. 109 Hay, 1919b, p. 373 Leidy, 1892, p. 129 *Leidy, 1896, p. ix-xiv Lucas, 1896, p. vii, viii Matson, 1909, p. 133-138 Matson, 1913, p. 141-144 Matson, 1915, p. 20, 21 Matthew, 1909, p. 115-118 Neal, 1885, p. 834 Osborn, 1909, p. 80, 115-118; fig. 10 ("Archer formation") Osborn, 1910, p. 346-348; fig. 160, 171 Osborn, 1918, p. 28, 29; fig. 15 *Pirkle, 1956, p. 221-232 Quinn, 1955, p. 70, 75 Scott, 1913, p. 127 Scott, 1937, p. 97, 110-112 Sellards, 1914, p. 161, 162 Sellards, 1916e, p. 93, 94, 100 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 248, 251-254 Simpson, G. G., 1929c, p. 594 Simpson, G.G., 1930d, p. 170-177 Spencer, 1895, p. 136, 137 5See footnote 3, p. 2. SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 Stirton, 1936, p. 170, 171, 174-176 Stirton, 1940, p. 183, 186 Stock, 1925, p. 15 *Vernon, 1951, p. 178-202 Amalgamated Phosphate Co. (American Cyanamid Co.) (see Brewster) Arcadia, DeSoto County (see Peace Creek and Pleistocene) Archer, Alachua County (see also Pleistocene) Barbour, 1944a, p. 10, 11 Cooke, 1945, p. 62 Cope, 1889d, p. 432, 444 Gidley, 1907, p. 902 Gidley, 1913, p. 142, 143 Hay, 1923b, p. 37, 121, 195, 207, 211, 224, 232, 233, 375; map 3-5, 10, 17-19, 21, 22 Holmes, W.W., 1931, p. 394 Leidy, 1884, p. 606 Leidy, 1885, p. 118 Leidy, 1886a, p. 32 Leidy, 1887a, p. 11 Leidy, 1887b, p. 37 Leidy, 1888, p. 309 Leidy, 1889b, p. 17 Leidy, 1889c, p. 20, 21 Leidy, 1890b, p. 96 Leidy, 1891a, p. 64 Leidy, 1891b, p. 183 Leidy, 1892, p. 129 Leidy, 1896, p. ix, xi Lucas, 1896, p. vii Osborn, 1904, p. 313 Osborn, 1918, p. 191 Sellards, 1916e, p. 79, 80, 103 Simpson, G. G. 1929a, p. 259, 260, 270 Simpson, G.G., 1930d, p. 175, 176 Spencer, 1895, p. 136 Vernon, 1951, p. 193 Ashley River, South Carolina (see Pleistocene) Bartow, Polk County (see also Pleistocene) Alien, G. M. 1921, p. 145 Case, 1934, p. 110 Cooke, 1929, p. 166 Cooke, 1945, p. 132, 159, 209 Simpson, G.G., 1932c, p. 446 Bone Valley Formation *Bergendahl, 1956, p. 79-84 *Brodkorb, 1955, p. 2-4, 29-38; table 1, 2, 7, 8 Colbert, 1942b, p. 1495, 1496 Cooke, 1929, p. 162-172 Cooke, 1945, p. 206, 207 Early, 1952, p. 17-20; text-fig., p. 18, 19 FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Gregory, J. T., 1941, p. 29 (introduction by Sellards) Kellogg, 1924, p. 765 Kellogg, 1944, p. 433, 434 MacNeil, 1949, p. 105, 106 Matson, 1909, p. 138-141 Matson, 1913, p. 144-146 Matson, 1915, p. 21, 22, 35-44, 65-67, 69 Olsen, 1958a, in press Osborn, 1918, p. 29 Sellards, 1916e, p. 95 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 248, 251-254 Simpson, G.G., 1932c, p. 445 Vernon, 1943, p. 154-158 Brewster, Polk County Allen, G.M., 1921, p. 148, 156, 157 Auffenberg, 1954, p. 185 Brodkorb, 1953a, p. 1 Brodkorb, 1953c, p. 94 Brodkorb, 1953d, p. 212 Brodkorb, 1953e, p. 953 *Brodkorb, 1955, p. 1-4, 29-33; table 1, 2 Cooke, 1929, p. 166 Erdbrink, 1953, p. 563, 568 Frick, 1926a, p. 75, 84, 85 Hay, 1923b, p. 123, 197, 211, 380; map 5, 10, 17, 18 Kellogg, 1929, p. 1, 2 Mook, 1921, p. 33 Osborn, 1918, p. 29, 192 Osborn, 1926, p. 11 Osborn, 1929, p. 2 Osborn, 1936, p. 160, 415, 430, 431 Sellards, 1915a, p. 135 Sellards, 1915d, p. 95 Sellards, 1916b, p. 235, 237 Sellards, 1916e, p. 95, 96, 98, 100 *Simpson, G.G. 1929a, p. 257 Simpson, G.G. 1930d, p. 180; fig. 18 Simpson, G.G., 1932c, p. 446 Wark, 1928a, p. 3,6 Christina, Polk County Sellards, 1915d, p. 106 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 257 Simpson, G.G., 1930d, p. 180 Coronet, Hillsborough County Cooke, 1929, p. 165, pl. 24a Cooke, 1945, p. 159 Simpson, G.G., 1932c, p. 446 Coronet Phosphate Co. (see Coronet and Pembroke) Cullen River Mine (see Dunnellon) DeLeon Springs, Volusia County Cooke, 1945, p. 227 SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 Ferguson, G.E., 1947, p. 24, 25, 165-168, 187 Gut, 1939a, p. 52 Dominion Phosphate Co. (see Bartow) Dunnellon, Marion County (see also Miocene and Pleistocene) Gidley, 1915, p. 21 Hay, 1916, p. 43 Hay, 1923b, p. 122, 196, 211, 224, 376; map 17, 18, 21 Sellards, 1913b, p. 58 Simpson, G. G., 1929a, p. 261 Simpson, G.G., 1930d, p. 176 Dunnellon Phosphate Co. (see Dunnellon and Hernando) Dutton Phosphate Co. (see Juliette) Haile, Alachua County (see also Pleistocene) Auffenberg, 1954, p. 186-189 Auffenberg, 1955b, p. 135 Auffenberg, 1957a, p. 14 Goin, 1955, p. 500, 509 "Hallowell's Place", near Newberry, Alachua County (see also Mio- cene and Pleistocene) Hay, 1923b, p. 376 Leidy, 1896, p. ix, xi Simpson, G. G., 1929a, p. 260 Hernando, Citrus County Hay, 1923b, p. 196, 225; map 17, 18, 21 Sellards, 1913b, p. 58 Simpson, G. G., 1929a, p. 261 Simpson, G.G., 1930d, p. 176 Vernon, 1951, p. 193 Hickory Hill (see Archer) Indiantown vicinity, 12 miles east of Lake Okeechobee on Saint Lucie Canal, Martin County (see also Pleistocene) Gidley, 1931, p. 44; fig. 35, 36 Juliette, Marion County Hay, 1916, p. 41 Hay, 1923b, p. 121, 122; map 5, 10 Sellards, 1913b, p. 58 Simpson, G. G., 1929a, p. 260 Simpson, G. G., 1930d, p. 176 Kingsford, Polk County (see also Miocene and Pleistocene) Case, 1934, p. 110 Lakeland, Polk County Early, 1952, p. 21 (text-fig.) Osborn, 1923, p. 2 Mixson's Bone Bed, Levy County (see also Archer, Williston and Pleistocene) Gidley, 1907, p. 905 Gidley, 1913, p. 142, 143 Hay, 1908, p. 356 ("Mason's Bone Bed") Hay, 1916, p. 64 Leidy, 1892, p. 129 Leidy, 1896, p. ix, xi Matson, 1909, p. 136 FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Osborn, 1918, p. 192 Osborn, 1936, p. 419 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 259, 260 Simpson, G. G., 1930d, p. 175 Spencer, 1895, p. 136 Mulberry, Polk County Allen, G. M., 1921, p. 144, 147, 156 Allen, G. M., 1923, p. 233 Case, 1934, p. 105 Cooke, 1929, p. 165 (pl. 24b), 168 Cooke, 1945, p. 209 Gidley, 1915, p. 21 Hay, 1922, p. 1 Hay, 1923b, p. 211, 380 Sellards, 1915d, p. 72, 106, 110 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 257 Simpson, G.G., 1929b, p. 509 Simpson, Q.G., 1930d, p. 180 Simpson, G.G., 1932c, p. 446-448 White, 1941a, p. 68 White, 1941c, p. 4 Neals, Alachua County (see also Pleistocene) Hay, 1923b, p. 121, 195; map 17, 18 Sellards, 1913b, p. 58 Sellards, 1916e, p. 94 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 260 Simpson, G.G., 1930d, p. 176 Nichols, Polk County Hay, 1923b, p. 380 Sellards, 1915d, p. 70, 75 Sellards, 1916b, p. 235 Wark, 1928b, p. 9, 10 Wark, 1929a, p. 400 Nocatee, DeSoto County Bergendahl, 1956, p. 88 Oviedo, Seminole County Gut, 1939a, p. 51 Peace Creek, DeSoto County (see Pleistocene) Pembroke, Polk County Cooke, 1929, p. 134 Simpson, G.G., 1932c, p. 446 Phosphate Mining Co. (see Mulberry and Nichols) Pierce, Polk County Allen, G.M., 1941, p. 3, 4 Cooke, 1929, p. 169, 170 Kellogg, 1944, p. 434, 445, 451, 455, 457, 459 Olsen, 1956b, p. 1 Osborn, 1936, p. 285 Simpson, G.G., 1930d, p. 180 Wetmore, 1943, p. 64, 66, 68 Wetmore, 1951, p. 65 White, 1941a, p. 69 SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 White, 1942c, p. 87 Ponce DeLeon Springs (see DeLeon Springs) Prairie Creek, DeSoto County Bergendahl, 1956, p. 88 Thompson (T.A.) Mine (see Neals) Williston, Levy County (see also Pleistocene) Barbour, 1944a, p. 10 Cooke, 1945, p. 203 Hay, 1923b, p. 121, 196, 211, 224, 375; map 5, 10, 17, 18, 21 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 259, 260 Simpson, G.G., 1930d, p. 176 Vernon, 1951, p. 212 PLEISTOCENE Alafia River, Hillsborough County Hay, 1906, p. 30 ("Alifia" River) Hay, 1908, p. 361, 461 Hay, 1913, p. 574, 575 Hay, 1923b, p. 123, 197, 243, 379; map 5, 10, 17, 18, 23 Oelrich, 1953, p. 34 ("Alifi" River) Sellards, 1915d, p. 81, 82 Simpson, G. G., 1929a, p. 273 Allen Cave, near Lecanto, Citrus County (see also Lecanto and Saber- tooth Cave) Brattstrom, 1953, p. 245, 247 Brattstrom, 1954, p. 40 Allen's Farm, Saint Johns County (see Matanzas) Almero Farm, Saint Johns County Hay, 1923b, p. 37, 122, 194, 195, 375; map 3-5, 10, 17, 18 Anderson, Brevard County Rouse, 1951 Sellards, 1952, p. 127 Arcadia, DeSoto County (see also Peace Creek) Cooke, 1945, p. 208 Hay, 1908, p. 361, 459 Hay, 1923b, p. 39, 40, 160, 163, 164, 198, 199, 208, 233, 264, 380, 381; map 3, 4, 12-15, 17-19, 22, 26 Hay, 1928c, p. 429 Hay, 1930b, p. 505 James, 1957, p. 808 Leidy, 1890b, p. 96 Leidy, 1892, p. 129 Sellards, 1916e, p. 101 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 275 Spencer, 1895, p. 137 Archer, Alachua County (see also Pliocene) Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 270 Arredondo, Alachua County Auffenberg, 1956b, p. 157 Bader, 1957, p. 53-55, 57, 61, 71-74 Brodkorb, 1957b, in press FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Pirkle, 1956, p. 227, 228 Ashley River, South Carolina (see also Miocene and Pliocene) *Allen, G. M. 1926, p. 447 Hay, 1908, p. 458, 461 Hay, 1923a, p. 103, 104 *Hay, 1923b, p. 363 *Leidy, 1860, p. 99 Leidy, 1876, p. 80 Leidy, 1877, p. 209 Leidy, 1889c, p. 20, 21, 29 Osborn, 1918, p. 31 *Simpson, G.G., 1932c, p. 443-445 Stirton, 1936, p. 170, 171, 176, 177 Bartow, Polk County (see also Pliocene) Hay, 1923b, p. 180, 380; map 16 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 272 Belle Glade, Palm Beach County (Recent) Stewart, 1946, p. 23, footnote 13 Stirling, 1935, p. 374 Bluffton, Volusia County (Preceramic) Neill, 1956, p. 383 (and throughout) Bon Terra Farm, Flagler County (see also Flagler Beach; localities synonymous) Goggin, 1952, p. 64 Howard, E.B., 1940, p. 309-311 Howard, H., 1942, p. 190 Neill, 1953, p. 170, 171 Neill, 1957, p. 3 Sellards, 1947, p. 961 Bowling Green, Hardee County (see also Peace Creek) Hay, 1923a, p. 104 Bradenton Field, Manatee County Auffenberg, 1956b, p. 158 Cooke, 1945, p. 158, 223 Hay, 1927b, p. 275 ("Braidentown") Holmes, W.W., 1931, p. 390, 391; fig. 3 James, 1957, p. 796, 807, 808 Osborn, 1929, p. 20 Osborn, 1930, p. 1 Osborn, 1942, p. 1105 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 273 Simpson, G.G., 1929b, p. 511 (photograph) Simpson, G.G., 1930a, p. 313 Simpson, G.G., 1930b, p. 5-7, 10 Simpson, G.G., 1930c, p. 5 Skinner, 1947, p. 208; map 1 Wetmore, 1931b, p. 8; fig. 1 Wetmore, 1945, p. 459 Buttgenbach Mines, Santa Fe River, 6 miles north of Wade, Alachua County (see also Santa Fe River and Wade) Simpson, G. G., 1929a, p. 270 SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 Caloosahatchee River, Glades, Hendry, and Lee counties (see also La Belle and Tourner's or Turner's) Cooke, 1929, p. 212 Cooke, 1945, p. 254 Hay, 1908, p. 459 Hay, 1913, p. 571 Hay, 1916, p. 67 Hay, 1923b, p. 384 Leidy, 1889b, p. 17 Leidy, 1889c, p. 23 Leidy, 1892, p. 129 Matson, 1909, p. 137 Sellards, 1916e, p. 79, 102 Simpson, G.G. 1929a, p. 272, 275, 276 Spencer, 1895, p. 137 Calvenia, mouth of Charlie Apopka Creek, Hardee County (see also Peace Creek) Hay, 1923b, p. 198, 380; map 17, 18 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 275 Citra, Marion County Hay, 1923b, p. 121, 158; map 5, 10, 12, 13 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 271 Conard Fissure, Arkansas Brown, 1908, p. 155 Gidley, 1938, p. 8, 9 Crystal Springs, Pasco County Brattstrom, 1954, p. 40 Brodkorb, 1956b, p. 158 Cooke, 1929, p. 85 Cooke, 1945, p. 64, 97 Ferguson, G.E., 1947, p. 24, 25, 34, 35, 134-136, 184 Neill, 1957, p. 10 (Crystal River) Cumberland Cave, Maryland Gidley, 1920, p. 651 Gidley, 1933, p. 343 Gidley, 1938, p. 1 Handley, 1956, p. 250-254 Nicholas, 1953, p. 301-305 Cummer Lumber Co. (see Kendrick) Cypress Springs, Washington County Ferguson, G.E., 1947, p. 24, 25, 177, 178, 187 Simpson, G.G., 1932a, p. 39-41 Daytona, Volusia County Hay, 1923b, p. 20, 122, 158, 159, 378; map 1, 5, 10, 12, 13 Sellards, 1916e, p. 105 Simpson, G. G., 1929a, p. 277 DeBary or Du Barry Creek site, Volusia County (Preceramic) Neill, 1956, p. 391 Deland, Volusia County Cooke, 1945, p. 226 Hay, 1923b, p. 20, 378; map 1 Sellards, 1916e, p. 107 FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Demere or Demorest Key, near Fort Myers, Lee County (Recent) Hrdlicka, 1917c, p. 28, 29 Hrdlicka, 1918, pl. 3-5 Hrdlicka, 1919, p. 11, 12 Dixie Lime Products Corp. (see Reddick) Dunnellon, Marion County (see also Miocene and Pliocene) Cooke, 1945, p. 290 Hay, 1923b, p. 38, 122, 158, 162, 196, 207, 225, 233, 263, 376; map 3-5, 10, 12-15, 17-19, 21, 22, 26 Holmes, W.W., 1931, p. 394 James, 1957, p. 807 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 271, 272 Simpson, G.G., 1929c, p. 586 Eau Gallie, Brevard County Cooke, 1945, p. 267 Hay, 1923b, p. 159, 196, 380; map 12, 13, 17, 18 Rouse, 1951, p. 151 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 277 Eichelberger Cave, 2 miles southwest of Belleview, Marion County Brodkorb, 1956a, p. 136 Ellenton, Manatee County Cooke, 1945, p. 136, 153, 157, 158 Hay, 1916, p. 70 Hay, 1923b, p. 379 "Everglades", Palm Beach or Hendry County Hay, 1923b, p. 163, 384; map 14, 15 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 276 Fellsmere, Indian River County Hay, 1923b, p. 122, 159, 381; map 5, 10, 12, 13 Rouse, 1951, p. 150, 151 Sellards, 1916e, p. 105 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 277 Flagler Beach, Flagler County (see also BonTerra Farm; localities synonymous) Anonymous, 1932, p. 94 Connery, 1932, p. 516 Cooke, 1929, p. 200 Cooke, 1945, p. 268 Sellards, 1940, p. 380, 381 Sellards, 1952, p. 127 Fort White, 3 miles northwest of, Columbia County Hay, 1923b, p. 121, 374; map 5, 10 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 270 Frankstown Cave, Pennsylvania Hay, 1923b, p. 321, 322 Peterson, 1926, p. 249-251 Fruitville Ditch and Philippi Creek, Sarasota County (see also Sara- sota) Hay, 1927b, p. 275 (Philippi Creek) Simpson, G. G., 1929a, p. 274 Simpson, G. G., 1930b, p. 14 SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 Gainesville, Alachua County (see also Wall Co. Pit) Leidy, 1896, p. xi Grove City, Charlotte County (see also Stump Pass; localities synon- ymous) Hay, 1923b, p. 263; map 26 Haile, Alachua County (see also Pliocene) Auffenberg, 1954, p. 186-189 Auffenberg, 1955b, p. 135 Auffenberg, 1956b, p. 157 Brattstrom, 1953, p. 244 Brodkorb, 1953b, p. 49 Brodkorb, 1954a, p. 103 Brodkorb, 1957a, p. 136 Goin, 1955, p. 498, 505 Pirkle, 1956, p. 227, 228 Tihen, 1952, p. 107 Wetmore, 1956, p. 65, 66; footnote 90 "Hallowell's Place", near Newberry, Alachua County. (see also Mio- cene and Pliocene) Hay, 1923b, p. 376 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 270 Hawkinsville, on St. Johns River, south of Lake Dexter, Volusia County (this place apparently no longer exists as such) Wyman, 1875, p. 81 Hillsborough County (see also Peace Creek) Hay, 1907, p. 847 Hay, 1908, p. 351, 356, 461, 548 Hay, 1916, p. 69 Hay, 1923b, p. 123, 379 Matson, 1909, p. 136 Hillsborough River, Hillsborough, Pasco, and Polk counties Cooke, 1945, p. 127 Hay, 1923b, p. 38, 379; map 3, 4 Holmes, W.W., 1931, p. 394 James, 1957, p. 807 Sellards, 1915b, p. 143 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p.-272, 273 Simpson, J. C. 1948, p. 13; fig. 4 Hog Creek, Sarasota County (see also Sarasota) Cooke, 1945, p. 172 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 274 Simpson, G.G., 1930b, p. 13 Wetmore, 1931b, p. 7 Holder, Citrus County (see also Withlacoochee River) Cooke, 1945, p. 64 Hay, 1916, p. 53 Hay, 1923b, p. 158, 196; map 12, 13, 17, 18 Hornsby Springs, Alachua County Bader, 1957, p. 61-63 Ferguson, G.E., 1947, p. 51, 180 Goin, 1955, p. 500 FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Horse Landing, on St. Johns River 12 miles south of Palatka, Putnam County Wyman, 1875, p. 81 Huntoon Island, on St. Johns River, south of Lake Beresford, Volusia County Wyman, 1875, p. 81 Indian River (Indian mound, no details) Allen, G.M., 1942, p. 66 Indian Rock, near Saint Petersburg, Pinellas County (see also Saint Petersburg) Cooke, 1945, p. 131, 132, 308 Hay, 1923b, p. 159, 378; map 12, 13 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 273 Indiantown vicinity, 12 miles east of Lake Okeechobee onSaint Lucie Canal, Martin County (see also Pliocene) Gidley, 1931, p. 44; fig. 35, 36 Inverness, Citrus County Hay, 1927b, p. 275 Itchtucknee Springs and River, Columbia County (Springs also known as Jug Springs and the Blue Hole: Itchtucknee preferred, on basis of priority and congruitywith name of river; fossils in part Recent) Auffenberg, 1956b, p. 158 Auffenberg, 1957b, p. 123 ("Itchtuckanee") Bader, 1957, p. 61 ("Ichatucknee") Ferguson, G.E., 1947, p. 18, 24, 25, 34, 35, 62-65, 181 ("Itchatucknee") Goin, 1955, p. 500 Gunter, 1941, p. 36 Howard, H. 1942, p. 190 Jenks, 1941, p. 314 Lawrence, 1942, p. 17 Neill, 1957, p. 6, 7 Osborn, 1942, p. 1115; fig. 989 Sellards, 1952, p. 127 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 270 Simpson, G.G., 1930b, p. 1-3 Simpson, G.G., 1932a, p. 39, 40 Simpson, J.C., 1948, p. 13, 14; fig. 4 Wetmore, 1931b, .p. 9, 10; fig. 1 Wetmore, 1956, p. 29, footnote 34 Jug Springs, Columbia County (see also Itchtucknee Springs) Auffenberg, 1957b, p. 123, 124; fig. 1 Kanapaha, Alachua County Goin, 1955, p. 498 Kendrick, Marion County (see also Cummer T.rnmehr Co. under Eocene and Miocene) Cooke, 1945, p. 129 Gut, 1939b, p. 54 Kingsford, Polk County (see also Miocene and Pliocene) Hay, 1923b, p. 159, 196, 197, 379, 380; map 12, 13, 17, 18 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 273 SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 La Belle, Hendry County (see also Caloosahatchee River, and Tourner's or Turner's) Cooke, 1945, p. 214, 215, 222, 249 Hay, 1916, p. 66, 69 Hay, 1923b, p. 40, 163, 199, 264, 384; map 3, 4, 14, 15, 17, 18, 26 Holmes, W.W., 1931, p. 394 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 276 Lake Monroe, Seminole and Volusia counties (see also Sanford and Wekiva River; in part Recent) Agassiz, 1853 Boule, 1946, p. 503 Gut, 1939a, p. 50, 51 Hrdlicka, 1907, p. 19 Lyell, 1863, p. 44, 45 Neill, 1957, p. 7 Sellards, 1908b, p. 25 Sellards, 1940, p. 381 Usher, 1854, p. 351-353 Lecanto, Citrus County (see also Allen Cave and Saber-tooth Cave) Hay, 1930b, p. 505 James, 1957, p. 807 Leesburg, Lake County Gut, 1939a, p. 52 Lithia Springs, Hillsborough County Auffenberg, 1956b, p. 158 Cooke, 1945, p. 208 Ferguson, G.E., 1947, p. 24, 25, 46, 79, 182 Little River, Gadsden County Hay, 1923b, p. 121, 374; map 5, 10 Sellards, 1916e, p. 104 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 269 Little Sarasota Bay, Sarasota County (see also Sarasota) Cooke, 1945, p. 160 Hay, 1923b, p. 379 Sellards, 1908b, p. 25 Manatee, Manatee County Bader, 1957, p. 63 (county reference only) Hay, 1923b, p. 379 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 273 Marianna, Jackson County (see also Oligocene) Cooke, 1945, p. 80, 83 Hay, 1923b, p. 121, 374; map 5, 10 Simpson, G.G. 1929a, p. 269 Matanzas (?) vicinity, Inland Waterway Canal,Allen's Farm, 20 miles south of Saint Augustine, Saint Johns County Hay, 1923b, p. 158; map 12, 13 Sellards, 1916e, p. 106 Simpson, G. G., 1929a, p. 276 Melbourne, Brevard County Allen, G. M. 1932, p. 256 Auffenberg, 1955a, p. 65 Bader, 1957, p. 60 (legend to fig. 3), 61, 71, 73 FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Barbour, 1931, p. 295 Barbour, 1944a, p. 18, 19, 21 Boule, 1946, p. 504 Brattstrom, 1953, p. 245, 246 Brattstrom, 1954, p. 40 Bryan, 1941, p. 513 Cooke, 1926, p. 441-447 Cooke, 1928, p. 414-421 Cooke, 1929, p. 218-220 Cooke, 1941, p. 1998 Cooke, 1945, p. 265, 267, 301-303, 309, 311 Gazin, 1950a, p. 397 Gidley, Gidley, Gidley, Gidley, Gidley, Gidley, Gidley, Gidley, Gidley, Gidley, Gidley, 1925a, p. x 1925b, p. 22 1926a, p. 239, 240 1926b, p. 23-26; fig. 27, 28 1926c, p. 254, 257-264 1926d, p. 310 1927, p. 169-174; fig. 170-174 1928a, p. 431, 432 1929a, p. 13-20; fig. 8-12 1929b, p. 491-501; pl. 14, 15 1929c, p. xiv Gidley, 1930, p. 37; fig. 28, 29 Gidley, 1931, p. 41; fig. 33, 34 Gilmore, 1927, p. 1-10 Gilmore, 1930, p. 1 Gilmore, 1938, p. 62, 65, 66, 74, 75 Goin, 1955, p. 500 Griffin, 1952, p. 322, 323 Gross, 1951, p. 116 Hall, 1936, p. 77 Hay, 1926b, p. 387 Hay, 1927a, p. 277 Hay, 1927b, p. 273-275 Hay, 1928b, p. 237, 238 Hay, 1928c, p. 430 Hay, 1930b, p. 504, 505 Heizer, 1952, p. 299, 300 Holmes, W.H., 1925, p. 257, 258 Holmes, W.W., 1931, p. 394 Howard, E.B., 1935, p. 142 Howard, E.B., 1940, p. 310, 311 Howard, H., 1932, p. 45 Howard, H., 1938, p. 237, 238 Howard, H., 1944, p. 189 Hrdlicka, 1928, p. 325, 326 Hrdlicka, 1937, p. 95-98 James, 1957, p. 807 Lawrence, 1942, p. 19 Loomis, 1924, p. 503-508; fig. 1 Loomis, 1925, p. 436 SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 Loomis, 1926, p. 260-262; text-fig. p. 261 Loomis, 1927, p. 435 MacGowan, 1950, p. 102, 103, 137 McCrady, 1951, p. 501 Merriam, 1935a, p. 103 Merriam, 1935b, p. 46 Neill, 1957, p. 8 Osborn, 1942, p. 1005, 1079 Ray, 1958, in press Richards, 1938, p. 1274 Romer, 1933, p. 68-70, 78, 79 Rouse, 1950, p. 220-224 Rouse, 1951, p. 66, 67, 151-165, 235 Rouse, 1952, p. 293 Sellards, 1940, p. 381, 382 Sellards, 1947, p. 961-964 Sellards, 1952, p. 90, 91, 127, 128 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 268 Simpson, G.G., 1929c, p. 576, 579 Simpson, G. G. 1941b, p. 6, 7, 9, 20 Stewart, 1946, p. 1-10, 12-27; pl. 1 Wark, 1929b, p. 55 (footnote) Wetmore, 1928b, p. 157 Wetmore, 1929, p. 388 Wetmore, 1931a, p. 486 Wetmore, 1931b, p. 1, 11; text-fig. 1; pl. 3 Wetmore, 1955, p. 189 Williams, S. 1957, p. 364 Wormington, 1949, p. 133, 134 Miami River, Dade County Hay, 1923b, p. 384 Sellards, 1916f, p. 106 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 277 Mixson's Bone Bed (see also Pliocene) Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 270, 271 Neals, Alachua County (see also Pliocene) Hay, 1923b, p. 121, 195, 206, 207, 232; map 5, 10, 19, 22 Sellards, 1916e, p. 94 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 270 New Smyrna, Volusia County Cooke, 1928, p. 414-421 Cooke, 1929, p. 218, 226 Cooke, 1945, p. 272 Gidley, 1929a, p. 20 Gidley, 1929b, p. 491 Goggin, 1952, p. 64 Sellards, 1940, p. 382 Sellards, 1952, p. 128 Simpson, .G.., 1929a, p. 277 Ocala, Marion County (see also Eocene) Gidley, 1913, p. 142, 143 Gilmore, 1938, p. 75 FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Hay, 1914, p. 413 Hay, 1916, p. 45, 46, 48, 57 Hay, 1919a, p. 106 Hay, 1919b, p. 374 Hay, 1923b, p. 38, 158, 196, 207, 224, 233, 262, 378; map 3, 4, 12, 13, 17-19, 21, 22, 26 Holmes, W.W., 1931, p. 394 Leidy, 1892, p. 129 Matson, 1909, p. 136 Merriam, 1932, p. 9 Osborn, 1910, p. 348 Osborn, 1942, p. 1077 Shufeldt, 1918, p. 358 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 271 Spencer, 1895, p. 137 Old Town, on St. Johns River, due west of DeLand, Volusia County (this place apparently no longer exists as such) Wyman, 1875, p. 81 Orange County Hay, 1923b, p. 196, 378 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 272 Ormond, Volusia County (shell heap) Blatchley, 1902, p. 175 Cooke, 1945, p. 272 Goggin, 1948, p. 231 Hay, 1902b, p. 255 Hitchcock, 1902, p. 203 Osprey, Sarasota County Boule, 1946, p. 503 Cooke, 1945, p. 160 Hrdlicka, 1907, p. 53-66 Sellards, 1940, p. 382, 383 Vaughan, 1907, p. 64-66 Pablo Beach vicinity, Station 120, Inland Waterway Canal, 20 miles north of Saint Augustine, Duval County (see also San PabloBeach) Hay, 1923b, p. 157, 158, 232, 262, 374, 375; map 12, 13, 22, 26 Sellards, 1916e, p. 106 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 276 Pains Creek, Polk County Hay, 1923b, p. 123, 124; map 5, 10 Palm Beach Canal, Palm Beach County Barbour, 1944a, p. 18 (canal bank, 15 miles west of Palm Beach) Cooke, 1945, p. 270 Hay, 1923b, p. 123, 160, 200, 264, 384; map 5, 10, 12, 13, 17, 18, 26 Sellards, 1916e, p. 105, 106 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 277 Palma Sola, Manatee County Hay, 1922, p. 3 Hay, 1923b, p. 145, 146, 159, 197, 222, 233, 263, 379; map 11- 13, 20, 22 SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 Sellards, 1940, p. 383 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 273 Palmer-Taylor Site, Seminole County (Recent) Neill, 1956, p. 391 Rouse, 1950, p. 222 Rouse, 1951, p. 116-125; fig. 12 Palmetto, Manatee County Cooke, 1945, p. 158 Hay, 1923b, p. 164, 197, 233, 263, 379; map 14, 15, 17, 18, 22, 26 Simpson, G. G., 1929a, p. 273 Parker Farm, 5 miles east of Venice, Sarasota County (see also Sarasota) Simpson, G. G., 1930b, p. 14 Paynes Prairie, Alachua County Bader, 1957, p. 61 Peace Creek, DeSoto County (see also Arcadia, Bowling Green, Calvenia, and Hillsborough County) Allen, G.M., 1921, p. 144 Colbert, 1942b, p. 1495 Cooke, 1929, p. 166, 173 Cooke, 1945, p. 153, 208 Cope, 1889b, p. 254 Dall, 1892a, p. 120 Frick, 1937, p. 579 Gidley, 1907, p. 910 Gidley, 1913, p. 142, 143 Hay, 1906, p. 30 Hay, 1908, p. 222, 346, 350, 351, 459, 461 Hay, 1913, p. 571-576 Hay, 1916, p. 70 Hay, 1919a, p. 103, 109 Hay, 1923b, p. 124, 264, 380, 381; map 5, 10 Hay, 1928b, p. 237, 238 Holmes, W.W., 1931, p. 394 James, 1957, p. 796, 808 Leidy, 1883a, p. 290 *Leidy, 1889c, p. 19-31 Leidy, 1891b, p. 182 Leidy, 1892, p. 129 Lucas, 1899, p. 768, 771 Matson, 1909, p. 136, 137 Matson, 1913, p. 137, 138 Osborn, 1904, p. 313 Osborn, 1910, p. 366-368; fig. 160, 171 Osborn, 1918, p. 31, 201; fig. 15 Rains, 1850, p. 165 Savage, 1951, p. 246 Scott, 1913, p. 127 Sellards, 1915b, p. 142, 143 Sellards, 1915d, p. 78-81 Sellards, 1916b, p. 235 Sellards, 1916e, p. 79, 80., 94, 101, 102 FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Simpson, G.G. 1929a, p. 261, 275 Simpson, G.G., 1929b, p. 515 (photograph) Simpson, G.G., 1930c, p. 1 Simpson, G.G., 1930d, p. 181 Simpson, G.G., 1932c, p. 470 Spencer, 1895, p. 137 Walker, 1884, p. 427-429 (Tise's Ford) Philippi Creek (see Fruitville Ditch) Poe Springs, Alachua County Ferguson, G.E., 1947, p. 18, 24, 25, 49-51, 180 Simpson, G. G., 1932a, p. 39-41 Port Kennedy Cave, Pennsylvania Brown, 1908, p. 167 Cope, 1897, p. 378 Cope, 1899, p. 193 Gidley, 1938, p. 8, 9 Hay, 1923b, p. 311-320; fig. 11, 12 Hibbard, 1955, p. 87 Mercer, 1899, p. 269 Simpson, G.G., 1945b, p. 66 Reddick, Marion County (Dixie Lime Products Corp.) Auffenberg, 1955b, p. 135 Auffenberg, 1956b, p. 157, 166 Bader, 1957, p. 71, 73 Brodkorb, 1952, p. 80 Brodkorb, 1957a(throughout) Goin, 1955, p. 500 Gut, 1939b, p. 54 Gut, 1957, ms. Rock Island (see Lake Monroe) Rock Springs, Orange County (see also Miocene) Auffenberg, 1956b, p. 158 Cooke, 1929, p. 132, 133 Cooke, 1945, p. 181, 192; fig. 26 Ferguson, G.E., 1947, p. 24, 25, 130, 131, 184 Gut, 1939a, p. 53 Rocky Creek, 30 miles north of Sarasota Bay, Hillsborough County Leidy, 1889a, p. 12 Sellards, 1916e, p. 103 (footnote) Saber-tooth Cave, Citrus County (see also Allen Cave and Lecanto) Bader, 1957, p. 71 Cooke, 1929, p. 226 Gidley, 1933, p. 355 Hall, 1936, p. 69 Holmes, W.W., 1931, p. 388-390; fig. 3 Houck, 1951,,p. 52 Howard, H., 1932, p. 45 Simpson, G.G., 1928, p. 1 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 264 Simpson, G.G., 1929b, p. 12 (photograph) Simpson, G.G., 1945b, p. 63 Vernon, 1951, p. 212 SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 Wetmore, 1931a, p. 480 Wetmore, 1931b, p. 3, 8, 9; text-fig. 1; pl. 2 Saint Augustine, Saint Johns County (see also Pablo Beach and Matanzas) Gidley, 1931, p. 44 Hay, 1916, p. 70 (Florida Coast Line Canal, 20 miles north of Saint Augustine) Saint Johns River (see also Hawkinsville, Horse Landing, Huntoon Island, Old Town, and Watson's Landing) Cooke, 1945, p. 301, 310 Neill, 1957, p. 7 Saint Marks River, Leon and Wakulla counties Hay, 1923b, p. 157, 374; map 12, 13 Leidy, 1870, p. 98 Simpson, G. G., 1929a, p. 269 Saint Petersburg, Pinellas County (see also Indian Rock) Cooke, 1945, p. 181, 192, 224, 308 San Pablo Beach, Duval County (see also Pablo Beach) Hay, 1923b, p. 122; map 5, 10 Sanford, Seminole County (see also Miocene, Lake Monroe, and Wekiva River) Cooke, 1945, p. 225, 299 Gut, 1939a, p. 50 Santa Fe River, northern border of Gilchrist County Bader, 1957, p. 62 Cooke, 1945, p. 62 Leidy, 1896, p. xi Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 259, 270 Simpson, G.G., 1932a, p. 39-41 Simpson, J. C. 1948, p. 13, 14; fig. 4 Sarasota, Sarasota County (see also Fruitville Ditch and Philippi Creek, Hog Creek, Little Sarasota Bay, Parker Farm, and White Beach; these localities together are designated the Sarasota Field) Cahn, 1932, p. 235 Cooke, 1929, p. 136 Cooke, 1945, p. 160 Gidley, 1928b, p. 16; fig. 17 Hay, 1923b, p. 38, 159, 198, 379; map 3, 4, 12, 13, 17, 18 (Sarasota Bay) Hay, 1930b, p. 505 Heilprin, 1887, p. 14, 15 ("Mrs. Hanson's", Sarasota Bay) Holmes, W.W., 1931, p. 394 James, 1957, p. 807 Leidy, 1889a, p. 10, 11 Neill, 1957, p. 1 (Sarasota Bay) Sellards, 1916e, p. 79, 103 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 274 Simpson, G.G., 1930b, p. 12-14 Wetmore, 1931b, p. 7; fig. 1 Seminole Field, Pinellas County Bader, 1957, p. 57, 61, 69-71, 73 Brattstrom, 1953, p. 243, 245-247 FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Brattstrom, 1954, p. 40 Broecker, 1956, p. 161 Cooke, 1926, p. 447-449 Cooke, 1929, p. 216-218, 224, 225 Cooke, 1945, p. 224, 300, 308-310, 314 Erdbrink, 1953, p. 312 Gilmore, 1938, p. 75 Hay, 1930a, p. 332 Hay, 1930b, p. 504, 505 Holmes, W.W., 1931, p. 386-388; fig. 3 Howard, H. 1932, p. 45 Howard, H. 1938, p. 237 Howard, H. 1942, p. 189 James, 1957, p. 807 Lawrence, 1942, p. 20 Neill, 1957, p. 8, 10 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 264 Simpson, G. G., 1929c, p. 561 Simpson, G.G. 1930b, p. 4, 5, 11 Simpson, G.G., 1932c, p. 470 Simpson, G.G., 1941b, p. 20 Simpson, G.G., 1945b, p. 56 Wetmore, 1928b, p. 157 Wetmore, 1929, p. 388 ("Holmes Collection") Wetmore, 1931a, p. 480 Wetmore, 1931b, p. 1, 3, 5-7; text-fig. 1, pl. 1 Wetmore, 1944, p. 95 ("Pinellas County") Wetmore, 1955, p. 189 Seminole Springs, Lake County (see also Miocene) Ferguson, G.E., 1947, p. 24, 25, 99, 183 Gut, 1939a, p. 52 Silver Springs vicinity, Marion County (Paleo-Indian site) Goggin, 1952, p. 65, footnote 3 Sneads, 3 miles east of, Jackson County (Indian site) Neill, 1955, p. 138 South Indian Field, Brevard County (Recent) Ferguson, V.M., 1951, p. 1-62 Houck, 1951, p. 51 Neill, 1956, p. 391 Rouse, 1951, p. 83 Station 120, Inland Waterway Canal (see Pablo Beach) Stokes Ferry, Nassau County Cooke, 1945, p. 229 Hay, 1923b, p. 180, 194, 374; map 16-18 Matson, 1909, p. 147 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 276 Veatch, 1911, p. 393, 394 Stump Pass, Sarasota County (see also Grove City) Sellards, 1916e, p. 79, 80, 103 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 275 Sugarloaf Key, Monroe County Gazin, 1950a, p. 399 SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 Sulphur Springs, Hillsborough County Cooke, 1945, p. 127 Ferguson, G.E., 1947, p. 24, 25, 46, 82, 182 Hay, 1923b, p. 123 Sumterville, Sumter County Hay, 1923b, p. 158; map 12, 13 ("Sumpterville" in captionto map 13) Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 272 Suwannee River, at entrance of Santa Fe River, Gilchrist County (Preceramic) Goggin, 1950, p. 46-49 Leidy, 1896, p. xi ("Clay Landing") Sellards, 1952, p. 128 Tallevast, Manatee County Hay, 1927b, p. 275 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 273 Tampa Bay (see also Alafia River and Indian Rock) Allen, J.H., 1846, p. 38-42 Conrad, T.A., 1846, p. 45 Conrad, T.A., 1865, p. 184 Cooke, 1945, p. 223 Hay, 1908, p. 460 Hay, 1923b, p. 123, 159, 197, 208, 263, 378, 379; map 12, 13, 19, 26 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 273 Thomas Farm, Gilchrist County (see also Miocene) Barbour, 1944a, p. 14 Tourner's or Turner's, onCaloosahatchee River, Glades County(see also Caloosahatchee River and La Belle) Hay, 1923b, p. 160, 380; map 12, 13 Hay, 1927b, p. 275 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 275 Venice, Sarasota County Bader, 1957, p. 70 Cooke, 1945, p. 160 Howard, H., 1932, p. 45 Osborn, 1942, p. 1005, 1078 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 275 Wetmore, 1931b, p. 8; fig. 1 Wetmore, 1955, p. 189 Vero, Indian River County Auffenberg, 1956b, p. 158 Auffenberg, 1957a, p. 17 Bader, 1957, p. 68, 71, 73 Balch, 1917, p. 481, 482 Barbour, 1944a, p. 21 Berry, 1917, p. 661-666 Boule, 1946, p. 502, 503 Brattstrom, 1953, p. 243-247 Brattstrom, 1954, p. 40 Brodkorb, 1953c, p. 96 Bryan, 1941, p. 513 Chamberlin, R. T., 1917a, p. 25-39; fig. 1-9 FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Chamberlin, R.T. 1917b, p. 667-683; fig. 1-5 Chamberlin, T.C., 1919, p. 305 Cooke, 1926, p. 441 Cooke, 1928, p. 414-421 Cooke, 1929, p. 202, 218, 220-224 *Cooke, 1945, p. 265, 269, 305-307, 309 Erdbrink, 1953, p. 313 Gidley, 1925a, p. x Gidley, 1925b, p. 22 Gidley, 1926a, p. 239, 240 Gidley, 1926b, p. 23-26 Gidley, 1926c, p. 254-257, 261-264 Gidley, 1926d, p. 310 Gidley, 1929b, p. 491-501 Gilmore, 1927, p. 4, 5 Gilmore, 1938, p. 64-66, 69, 70, 73-75 Goin, 1955, p. 500 Griffin, 1952, p. 322, 323 Gross, 1951, p. 116 Hall, 1936, p. 57, 77 Hay, 1916, p. 49, 52, 55, 58, 61, 68-76 Hay, 1917b, p. 52 Hay, 1917c, p. 358 Hay, 1917d, p. 43 Hay, 1918a, p. 370, 371 Hay, 1918b, p. 459-462 Hay, 1918c, p. 1-7, 36 Hay, 1919a, p. 106-109 Hay, 1919b, p. 366 (and throughout) Hay, 1923b, p. 38, 39, 122, 123, 159, 160, 163, 199, 208. 222, 225, 233, 263, 373, 381-383; map 3-5, 10, 12-15, 17-22, 26 Hay, 1926b, p. 387 Hay, 1927a, p. 277 Hay, 1927b, p. 275 Hay, 1928b, p. 233-241 Hay, 1928c, p. 430 Hay, 1930b, p. 504, 505 Holmes, W.H., 1917, p. 51 Holmes, W.H., 1918a, p. 561, 562 Holmes, W.H., 1918b, p. 64 Holmes, W.H., 1925, p. 258 Holmes, W.W., 1931, p. 394 Howard, E.B., 1935, p. 140-142 Howard, E.B., 1940, p. 310, 311 Howard, H., 1942, p. 190 Hrdlicka, 1917a, p. 43-51 Hrdlicka, 1917b, p. 24-28; fig. 28 Hrdlicka, 1918, p. 23-60, 65; text-fig. 1-7; pl. 1, 2, 6, 7 Hrdlicka, 1919, p. 10, 11 Hrdlicka, 1937, p. 95, 96 Hue, 1918, p. 319-336 James, 1957, p. 796, 808 SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 Keith, 1925, p. 467, 468 Lawrence, 1942, p. 20 Loomis, 1925, p. 436 Loomis, 1926, p. 260 MacCurdy, 1917a, p. 56-62 MacCurdy, 1917b, p. 252-261; fig. 45, 46 MacGowan, 1950, p. 102, 103, 137 Matsumoto, 1918, p. 157-160 McCown, 1941, p. 203, 207 McCrady, 1951, p. 501 Merriam, 1935a, p. 103 Merriam, 1935b, p. 46 Neill, 1957, p. 8-11 Nelson, 1918a, p. 100-102 Nelson, 1918b, p. 394, 395 Osborn, 1942, p. 1079 Richards, 1936, p. 325 Richards, 1938, p. 1275, 1287, 1288 Romer, 1933, p. 68-70, 78, 79 Rouse, 1950, p. 220-224 *Rouse, 1951, p. 65-67, 171-189, 235; fig. 13; table 3, 4 Rouse, 1952, p. 295 Sellards, 1915b, p. 140-143 Sellards, 1916a, p. 1-5; fig. 1, 2, 7, 11 Sellards, 1916c, p. 615-617; fig. 1 Sellards, 1916e, p. 80, 106, 107 Sellards, 1916f, p. 123-160; text-fig. 1-6, 14; pl. 15-17 Sellards, 1917a, p. 214 Sellards, 1917b, p. 4-24; fig. 1-4 Sellards, 1917c, p. 659, 660 Sellards, 1917d, p. 239-251; fig. 40-44 Sellards, 1917e, p. 69; text-fig. 1; pl. 4, fig. 1-3; pl. 5, fig. 1, 2 Sellards, 1917f, p. 141 Sellards, 1918, p. 57, 69, 70 Sellards, 1919, p. 358 (Am. Jour. Sci.); p. 1 (Florida Geol. Survey Ann. Rept.) Sellards, 1937, p. 193-210; text-fig. 27-30; pl. 16 Sellards, 1940, p. 383-385; fig. 1, 2 Sellards, 1947, p. 961-964; fig. 1 Sellards, 1952, p. 90-94, 128 Shufeldt, 1917a, p. 18, 19 Shufeldt, 1917b, p. 35 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 268, 278 Simpson, G.G., 1930b, p. 14 Simpson, G.G., 1930c, p. 1 Simpson, G.G., 1941b, p. 7, 20 Simpson, G.G., 1945b, p. 56 Sterns, 1918, p. 354, 355 Sterns, 1919, p. 118, 119 *Stewart, 1946, p. 10-13, 19-24 Stone, 1917, p. 357 Stone, 1918, p. 249 FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY *Symposium, 1917, p. 1-62 Vaughan, 1917, p. 40-42 Wetmore, 1928b, p. 157 Wetmore, 1929, p. 388 Wetmore, 1931a, p. 479 Wetmore, 1931b, p. 1, 2, 10, 11; fig. 1 Wetmore, 1955, p. 189 Wetmore, 1956, p. 18 (footnote 18), 35 (footnote 43), 57 (footnote 76), 85 (footnote 15) Wherry, 1918, p. 61-63 Wickham, 1919, p. 5-7 (also p. 355-357) Wieland, 1918, p. 93, 94 Williams, S., 1957, p. 364 Wormington, 1949, p. 133, 134 Wade, Alachua County (see also Buttgenbach Mines) Hay, 1923b, p. 195, 262; map 17, 18, 26 Wakulla Springs, Wakulla County Brattstrom, 1953, p. 243, 246 Cooke, 1945, p. 132 Ferguson, G.E., 1947, p. 24, 25, 169-174, 187 Gunter, 1931, p. 14-16 Gunter, 1941, p. 35 Hay, 1923b, p. 179, 180, 374; map 16 Neill, 1957, p. 8, 9 Sellards, 1916e, p. 103, 104 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 269 Simpson, G.G. 1929b, p. 516 (photograph) Wall Co. Pit, 7 miles west of Gainesville (see also Gainesville) Coin, 1955, p. 498 Watson's Landing (Paleo-Indian site; see also Saint Johns River) Goggin, 1952, p. 65 Wekiva River, mutual border of Lake and Seminole counties (see also Sanford and Lake Monroe) Cooke, 1945, p. 70, 192 Gunter, 1941, p. 36 Gut, 1939a, p. 50, 51 White Beach, on Little Sarasota Bay (see also Sarasota) Cooke, 1945, p. 160 Hay, 1923b, p. 379 Sellards, 1915b, p. 143 Williston, Levy County (see also Pliocene, Archer, and Mixson's) Hay, 1919a, p. 104, 110 Hay, 1921, p. 638 Hay, 1923b, p. 37, 38, 195, 375; map 3-5, 10, 17, 18 Holmes, W.W., 1931, p. 394 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 270, 271 Winter Beach, Indian River County Auffenberg, 1956b, p. 158 Rouse, 1951, p. 67, 171 Sellards, 1940, p. 385 Withlacoochee River, northern and eastern borders of Citrus County (see also Holder) SPECIAL PUBLICATION NO. 3 95 Cooke, 1929, p. 176 Frick, 1937, p. 579 Hay, 1919a, p. 109 Holmes, W.W., 1931, p. 394 Lucas, 1899, p. 769 Sellards, 1913b, p. 58 Sellards, 1916e, p. 104 Shufeldt, 1918, p. 357 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 261, 272 Skinner, 1947, p. 208; map 1 Vernon, 1951, p. 212 Zolfo, Hardee County Gidley, 1928b, p. 16; fig. 16 (Zolfo Springs) Hay, 1923b, p. 38, 160, 380; map 3, 4, 12, 13 Holmes, W.W., 1931, p. 394 Matthew, 1917, p. 212 Simpson, G.G., 1929a, p. 275 PART IV TAXONOMIC INDEX |
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| MILLISECOND | CLASS.METHOD | MESSAGE |
|---|---|---|
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor | Application State validated or built |
| 0 | sobekcm_database.verify_item_lookup_object | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor | Navigation Object created from URI query string |
| 0 | sobekcm_database.verify_item_lookup_object | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.display_item | Retrieving item or group information |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.get_entire_collection_hierarchy | Retrieving hierarchy information |
| 0 | sobekcm_assistant.get_entire_collection_hierarchy | |
| 0 | cached_data_manager.retrieve_item_aggregation | |
| 0 | cached_data_manager.retrieve_item_aggregation | Found item aggregation on local cache |
| 0 | item_aggregation_builder.get_item_aggregation | Found 'all' item aggregation in cache |
| 0 | system.web.ui.page.page_load (ufdc.page_load) | |
| 0 | sobekcm_page_globals.constructor.on_page_load | |
| 0 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_style_references | Adding style references to HTML |
| 0 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_text_to_page | Reading the text from the file and echoing back to the output stream |
| 49 | html_echo_mainwriter.add_text_to_page | Finished reading and writing the file |