1892.] NATURAL SCIENCES OF PHILADELPHIA. 515 



W. J. Fox. Fossil corals from Jamaica. 



H. A. Pilsbry. Twelve trays of Cretaceous fossils, from Farmingdale, N. J. 



Joseph Willcox. Sixteen trays of invertebrate fossils. 



Sanil. G. Dixon, M. D. Fossil corals from Bolton Mines, South Carolina. 



Purchased from F. L. Sarmiento. Eighty-nine trays of fossil crinoids and four 



of other invertebrate fossils, principally from Burlington Co., Iowa; seven 



trays of cretaceous fossils from Brazil. 



Plants. 



W. G. Warden and Chas. E. Smith. Four hundred and twenty-eight species of 

 phanerogamic plants, sixteen lichens and twenty-six fungi, collected by 

 J. Bornmiiller in Pontus and Galatia, Asia Minor, in 1890. 



Charles Schaeffer, M. D. Hough's American Woods, Part II., embracing twenty- 

 five species in twenty six sets of sections, with descriptions, keys, index and 

 title page. 



In exchange for duplicate set of Sullivant's Musci Alleghenienses : — Two hundred 

 and seventy-five species of plants collected by Dr. Thomas Morong in Central 

 Paraguay in 1888-90. 



U. S. Department of Agriculture, Botanical Division. Twenty-four species of 

 Hepaticse, collected in Georgia and Florida by Prof. L. M. Underwood ; thir- 

 teen species of Hepaticae, collected in California by the same ; two species of 

 Peronospora, from District of Columbia and Illinois. 



Prof. N. L. Britton, Columbia College Herbarium. Seventy-one species of plants 

 collected in British Guiana, by Jenman in 1888. 



Prof. Jose N. Rovirosa. Fifty-one species of plants collected by him in Tabasco 

 and Chiapas, Mexico. 



Edwin Faxon, Jamaica Plains, Mass. Series of specimens illustrative of the 

 Sphagna of New England, consisting of seventeen species in twenty-seven 

 forms and varieties, supplementing series received in 1891. 



Thomas Meehan. Twenty-one species of plants collected by Mrs. Meehan at 

 Lake Worth, Florida ; one hundred and thirty-five species of Australian plants, 

 and two marine Algas, received from Baron Ferdinand von Miiller; seventy- 

 nine species of plants, mostly cultivated and exotic. 



J. Bernard Brinton, M. D. Twenty-five species of plants collected on Merritt's 

 Island, E. Florida, by A. A. Baldwin in 1892 ; eight species mostly from 

 Pennsylvania and New Jersey. 



W. W. Jefferis. Ten species of phanerogams and ferns, and thirty-six mosses 

 from the Swiss Alps ; twenty species of plants from the Swiss Alps. 



Roberts Le Boutillier. Catase/um viridi-flavutn H, a cultivated orchid, native 

 of Mexico : Cypripedium beUatulum, a cultivated orchid, na.tive of Asia. 



John H. Redfield. One hundred and sixty-four species of plants collected by Dr. 

 Thomas Morong on the Pilcomayo River, Paraguay, in 1888-90; ten species 

 of North American plants ; thirteenth and fourteenth Decades of Under- 

 wood's Hepaticje Americans; polished section of the wood of Cercocarpus 

 Udifoliiis (Mountain Mahogany so-called), collected in Utah by the late Dr. 

 C. C. Parry ; two hundred and sixty -six species of plants collected by C. G. 



