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 218 PROFESSOR THOMAS CONDON. ' ' Condon was one of those rare men that study science from an inherent love of nature, not merely for self -advancement, or for the praise of men." BIBLIOGRAPHY. "The Willamette Sound." Overland Monthly, Vol. VII, No. 5, pp. 468-73. (San Francisco, 1871.) "Preliminary Report of the State Geologist" [of Oregon.] 22 pages. (Salem, Ore., 1874.) Abstract in American Journal of Science, Third Series, Vol. IX (1875), p. 401. "Washington Territory" [and Oregon] (geological forma- tions.) Macfarlane's American Geological Railway Guide, 1879, pp. 172, 173. "On Some Points Connected with the Igneous Eruptions along the Cascade Mountains of Oregon. ' ' American Journal of Science, Third Series, Vol. XVIII (1879), pp. 406-8. "Oregon." Macfarlane's Geological Railway Guide, sec- ond edition (1890), pp. 316, 317. "The Two Islands, and What Came of Them." (Portland, Ore.: The J. K. Gill Co., 1902.) "The Ice Caves of Mount Adams." Mazama, Vol. I, pp. 102, 103. "A New Fossil Pinniped from the Miocene of the Oregon Coast." Bulletin of the University of Oregon, May, 1906; supplement to Vol. Ill, No. 3. Review by J. Wortman, Sci- ence, N. S., Vol. XXIV (July 20, 1906), pp. 89-92.