REFERENCES CITED

[1]Kent, Melvin, and Stahnke, H. L., “Effect and Treatment of Arizona Scorpion Stings,” Southwestern Medicine, April, 1939, pp. 12-121, 124.

[2]Bogen, Emil, “Poisonous Spider Bites,” Journal of the American Medical Association, Vol. 99, No. 24, December 10, 1932.

[3]Thorp, Raymond W., and Woodson, Weldon D., Black Widow, America’s Most Poisonous Spider, University of North Carolina Press, 1945.

[4]Baerg, W. J., “The Effects of the Bite of Latrodectus mactans,” Journal of Parasitology, Vol. IX, No. 3, March, 1933, pp. 161-169.

[5]Wehrle, L. P., “Observations on Three Species of Triatoma,” Bulletin of the Brooklyn Entomological Society, Vol. XXIV, No. 3, June, 1939, pp. 145-154.

[6]Matheson, Robert, Medical Entomology, Charles C. Thomas, Baltimore, Md., 1932.

[7]Jones, W. Ray, King County Medical Association, Seattle, Washington.

[8]Githens, T. H., “Snake Bite in the United States,” Scientific Monthly, August, 1935, pp. 163-167.

[9]Pope, Clifford H., Snakes Alive and How They Live, Viking Press, New York, 1942.

[10]Klauber, L. M., Rattlesnakes, Their Habits, Life Histories, and Influence on Mankind, 2 vol., University of California Press, Berkeley, 1956.

[11]Cowles, R. B., and Bogert, C. M., “Observation on the California Lyre Snake, Trimorphoden vandenburghi, Klauber. With notes on the Effectiveness of Its Venom,” Copeia, July 16, 1935.

[12]Stahnke, Herbert L., Scorpions, Arizona State University Bookstore, Tempe, Arizona, 1949.

[13]Loeb, Leo, and collaborators, The Venom of Heloderma, Carnegie Institution of Washington, 1913.