ii8 Field Mus£um of Natural History — Reports, Vol. IV. 



Added to Total 



„ /. IS Herbarium now in 



Europe (m general) ipu. Herbarium. 



Russia 233 1,489 



Nova Zembla 29 29 



Spain 34 231 



Canary Islands 12 17 



Sweden 32 8,996 



Switzerland 298 2,034 



Asia (in general) 79 -82 



Asia Minor 3 3 



Turkey 100 279 



Ceylon i 9 



China 44 212 



India 128 856 



Japan I loi 



Java 29 57 



Kamtschatka 4 6 



Malay Peninsula 3 12 



Siberia 33 439 



Turkestan 32 83 



Africa (in general) 50 3.887 



Abyssinia 3 195 



Algeria 39 105 



Cape Colony I 1.594 



Egypt 7 17 



Mauritius 2 6 



Tibet 13 291 



Oceanica, etc. : 



Australia (in general) 441 1,837 



New South Wales 77 343 



Queensland 15 16 



Western Australia 9 9 



Tasmania 9 191 



Dutch East Indies 5 5 



Sandwich Islands 145 420 



New Zealand 1,294 1,313 



Philippine Islands 1,421 4,163 



Borneo 5 7 



Molucca Islands I i 



Samoa 3 23 



Sumatra 2 3 



Horticultural sources, etc 773 1,986 



The total increase of the organized herbarium during the year 

 amounted to 31,092 specimens. The accessions deserving of especial 

 mention in the Department of Geology were the following : By gift were 

 received from the late Prof. W. P. Blake, two full-sized sections of the 

 Noon meteorite, and from Dr. Walton Haydon of Marshfield, Oregon, 

 141 specimens of fossils of the Oregon Tertiary and 8 specimens of con- 

 cretions. By exchange, specimens of the Vigarano and Cowra meteor- 



