Report of Curator and Librarian. 11 



Bulletin of the United States Geological Survey. Vols, i, 2, 3. 



Sixteen maps accompanying Report of Forest Trees of North 

 America. Prof. C. S. Sargent. 



Dinamica — Quimica. C. F. de Landero and Raoul Prieto. Gua- 

 dalajara, 1SS6. 



Bulletin of Brookville (Ind.) Society of Natural History. No. 2. 



Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History, New 

 York. No. 7. 



ADDITIONS TO CABINET. 



Fossil Plants, one specimen. 



Geodes, three specimens. 



Dendrites, four specimens (one very large). 



Calcareous Tufa, two specimens. 



Graphite, two specimens. 



Epidote, two specimens. 



Barytes (Coxcomb), three specimens. 



Mica (Muscovite), one specimen. 



Mica (Biotite), one specimen. 



Moonstone, one specimen. 



Petrified Wood, one specimen. 



Buhrstone, two specimens. 



Native Copper, four specimens. 



Pyrites, two specimens. 



Limonite, three specimens. 



Franklinite, two specimens. 



Black Jack, two specimens. 



Gold-bearing Quartz, two specimens. 



Specimens of Iron, Copper, Manganese, Zinc, Pyrolusite, Psilo- 

 melane. 



Hematite, large and very fine specimens. 



The above minerals are from Northern Michigan. 



Petrified Wood from Apache County, Arizona. 



Feldspar and Rose Quartz from Portland, Conn. 



Metamorphosed Sandstone and Conglomerate, from contact line 

 between Trap and Sandstone, East Rock, New Haven, Conn. 



Cedar Wood perforated by borers, two specimens. 



The following collection of minerals are from the Black Hills, 

 Dakota, in the vicinity of Deadwood, and were presented to the 

 Association by Wm. H. Pratt, Esq. 



Copper Ore from Eagle mine, one specimen. 



Copper Ore from St. Joseph mine, one specimen. 



