ILLUSTRATIONS.
(Page numbers, when given, indicate an earlier issue of Volume 3.)
Plate 1—South America (map) (page 1)
2—Sketch Map of Alaska (page 57)
3—Map of the St. Elias Region, after La Pérouse (page 59)
4—Map of the eastern Shore of Yakutat Bay, after Dixon (page 61)
5—Map of the St. Elias Region, after Malaspina (page 64)
6—Map of Bay de Monti, after Malaspina (page 64)
7—Map of Disenchantment Bay, after Malaspina (page 67)
8—Sketch Map of St. Elias Region, by MARK B. KERR (page 74)
9—The Hubbard Glacier (page 99)
10—Wall of Ice on eastern Side of Atrevida Glacier (page 105)
11—View on Atrevida Glacier (page 105)
12—Entrance of an Ice Tunnel (page 106)
13—Deltas in an abandoned Lake Bed (page 106)
14—A River on the Lucia Glacier (page 106)
15—Entrance to a glacial Tunnel (page 107)
16—View of Malaspina Glacier from Blossom Island (page 120)
17—Moraines on Marvine Glacier (page 123)
18—View of the Hitchcock Range from near Dome Pass (page 144)
19—View of Mount St. Elias from Dome Pass (page 146)
20—View of Mount St. Elias from Seward Glacier (page 175)
[21—Carte Générale des Découvertes de l'Amiral de Fonte (1752)]
RUSSELL: Figure 1—Diagram illustrating the Formation of Icebergs (page 101)
2—View of a glacial Lakelet (page 120)
3—Section of a glacial Lakelet (page 120)
4—Diagram illustrating the Formation of marginal Crevasses (page 128)
5—Crevasses near Pinnacle Pass (page 130)
6—Snow Crests on Ridges and Peaks (page 143)
7—Faulted Pebble from Pinnacle Pass (page 171)
8—Faulted Pebble from Pinnacle Pass (page 171)
PUBLICATIONS OF THE NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC SOCIETY.
REGULAR PUBLICATIONS.
In addition to announcements of meetings and various circulars sent to members from time to time, the Society issues a single serial publication entitled THE NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC MAGAZINE. During the first two years of the existence of the Society this serial was issued in quarterly numbers. With the beginning of the third year of the Society and the third volume of the Magazine the form of publication was changed, and the serial now appears at irregular intervals in parts or brochures (designated by pages and designed either for separate preservation or for gathering into volumes) which consist either of single memoirs or of magazine brochures made up of articles, notes, abstracts, and other geographic matter, together with the Proceedings and other administrative records of the Society.