Some rare and unusual occurrences of fishes off California and Baja California. California Fish and Game, 64(2), 74–92
A list of common and scientific names of fishes from the United States and Canada (Third Ed.). American Fisheries Society Special Publication, 6, 149 pp
Fish remains, mostly otoliths and teeth, from the Palos Verdes Sand (Late Pleistocene) of California. Contributions in Science, Los Angeles County Museum, 199, 1–41
Otoliths and other fish remains from the Timms Point Silt (Early Pleistocene) at San Pedro, California. Contributions in Science, Los Angeles County Museum, 146, 1–29
The marine fish fauna, based primarily on otoliths, of a Lower Pleistocene deposit at San Pedro, California (LACMIP 332, San Pedro Sand). Contributions in Science, Los Angeles County Museum, 128, 1–23
Otoliths and other fish remains from a Long Beach, California, Pliocene deposit. Bulletin of the Southern California Academy of Sciences, 66(2), 77–91, 22 fig.
Additional fish remains, mostly otoliths, from a Pleistocene deposit at Playa del rey, California. Contributions in Science, Los Angeles County Museum, 119, 1–16
The fish fauna of the Playa del Rey locality, a southern California Marine Pleistocene deposit. Contributions in Science, Los Angeles County Museum, 82, 1–35
First records of the bigeye thresher (Alopias superciliosus) and slender tuna (Allothunnus fallai) from California, with notes on eastern Pacific scombrid otoliths. California Fish and Game, 50(3), 195–206
A new species of eagle ray, Myliobatis longirostris, from Baja California, Mexico. California Fish and Game, 50(3), 189–194
The great white shark, Carcharodon carcharias (Linnaeus) in California waters during 1948. California Fish and Game, 35(2), 135–138