LIST OF ACCESSIONS. 



161 



Smithsonian Institution: 



About 7,000 speriniens of Cam- 

 brian fossils (63702, deposit). 



Bureau of American Ethnology: 

 2 skeletons and 2 skulls found on 

 the property of the Roxana Petro- 

 leum Co. of Oklahoma. South Wood 

 River, III., and presented to the 

 Bureau (62630) ; 12 prehistoric pot- 

 tery heads found in Huaxtec 

 mounds, and presented to Dr. J. Wal- 

 ter Fewkes by .John M. Muir, of 

 Tampico, Mexico (62931) ; archeo- 

 logical specimens obtained by Mr. F. 

 W. Hodge at Hawikuh, N. Mex., in 

 1917, as part of the cooperative work 

 of the Bureau of American Ethnol- 

 ogy and the Museum of the Ameri- 

 can Indian, Heye Foundation 

 (63154) ; archeological specimens 

 and an Indian skull from different 

 localities in Arizona, collected by 

 Dr. Walter Hough in 1918 (63156) ; 

 archeological specimens and skeletal 

 remains from Gourd Creek, Mo., col- 

 lected by Mr. Gerard Fowke in 1918 

 (63157) ; a specimen of slag vrith 

 embedded charred corn collected by 

 Dr. J. AYalter Fewkes from a ruin 

 in Jlancos Valley 3 miles west of 

 the bridge on the Cortez Ship-rock 

 Road, Colo. (63174) ; sandstone 

 pipe found on Black Warrior River, 

 Tuscaloosa County, Ala., and pre- 

 sented to the Bureau by Mr. F. H. 

 Davis, U. S. Engineer Office, Little 

 Rock, Ark. (63509). 



National Museum, collected by 

 members of the staff: Bartsch, 

 Paul: Logser-head sponge from 

 Florida (63283) ; specimen of 

 cactus, Opuntia, collected in Florida 

 (63684) ; a collection of birds, 

 reptiles, fishes, insects, mollusks, 

 and other marine invertebrates 

 from Florida (63725). Bassler, R. 

 S. : 32 large exhibition specimens 

 illustrating ^geological phenomena, 

 300 pounds of glauconlte, 250 speci- 

 mens of chert, several thousand 

 specimens of Upper Cretaceous in- 

 vertebrates from New Jersey, and 

 143943°— 20 11 



Smithsonian Institution — Contd. 

 1..500 IMiddle Ordovician fossils from 

 Kentucky (62762) ; an exhibition 

 slab of fossiliferous sandstone from 

 the Eocene at Aquia Creek, Va. 

 (63694). Boss, Norman H. and Wil- 

 liam Palmer: Skull, lower jaws, 

 vertebrae, and ribs of a fossil por- 

 poise from the cliffs along Chesa- 

 peake Bay (62S10). Hrdlicka, A.: 

 Conch shells, pick-like implement 

 without the haft, from Hamilton's 

 Hammock, Lostman's River, Fla., 

 November, 1918 (62984). Martin, 

 Dr. J. C. : Collection of rocks, min- 

 erals, and ores for school duplicates, 

 from New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and 

 New York (62667). Martin, J. C. 

 and H. Warner : A collection of gran- 

 ite gneiss and decomposition prod- 

 ucts showing the process of weather- 

 ing from Rock Creek Park, for 

 school series (62879). Resser, 

 Charles E. : A collection of approxi- 

 mately 200 specimens of minerals 

 and ores and 500 .specimens of Lower 

 Cambrian fossils (62637). Rose, J. 

 N. : 2,000 specimens of Ecuadorean 

 plants, also shells, 2 birds, skull of 

 a mammal, and a specimen of fossil 

 leaf collected in Ecuador in 1918 

 (63041). Schmitt, Waldo L. : 26 

 specimens of fishes collected in the 

 tidepools at La Jolla, Calif. (63448). 

 Standley, Paul C. : 5 specimens of 

 plants from the vicinity of Wash- 

 ington, D. C. (63730). Walcott, 

 Charles D. : Skin, skull, and leg 

 bones of a deer, Odocoileus; skin, 

 skull, and ankle bones of a goat, 

 Oreamnos; skins of 2 sheep. Oris, and 

 skin and skull of a wolverine, Gnlo 

 luscus (62901) ; skin and skull of a 

 black bear, Ursus; skulls and leg 

 bones of 2 sheep. Oris; and skull 

 of a moose, Aloes (63170). 



National Museum, obtained by pur- 

 chase: 2 copies in bronze of the 

 medal issued by the American 

 Numismatic Society in commemora- 

 tion of the visit to New York of 

 the French and British War Com- 

 missioners in 1917 (62708) ; insignia 



