NATURAL HISTOIIY MUSEUMS 7 



Leland Stanford Junior museum, Stanford University. Harry C. 

 Peterson, curator; Edwin A. Austin, assistant curator; Daniel V. 

 Koland, assistaiit grapldc arts; George M. Shindo, assistant 

 Japanese dcpH; T. Sliibata, George Slade, Robert Godwin, Adelin 

 Martin, museum assistants. 



Mineralogy. Principally Pacific coast specimens, also collec- 

 tion of Ural mountain ores. 



Zoology. A representative collection of birds, birds eggs, 

 seals, etc. 



Ethnology. Series of Di Cesnola's material from Cyprus; 

 Indian remains and fabrics, Alaskan material, very complete 

 collection of stone age specimens from Denmark; a comprehen- 

 sive collection of Chinese, Japanese and Korean material, also 

 Egyptian, Assyrian, Sudanese and Bisharin collections. 



Archeology. Large collections of fine arts, nearly all the gift 

 of Mrs Stanford. 



Leland Stanford Junior university, Stanford University. Museum 

 staff: Charles H. Gilbert, professor of zoology, in charge of 

 museum; Edwin C. Starks, curator; Michitaro Lindo, assistant. 



Paleontology. Calif ornian Carboniferous, Calif ornian Triassic, 

 Californian Cretaceous, Californian Tertiary and marine Pleis- 

 tocene, each with large quantity of undescribed material. Not 

 yet listed, but specially full for Triassic, Tertiary and Pleisto- 

 cene. Chiefly invertebrates. Yates collection of invertebrates 

 and the Law collection of Moliusca are deposited with the 

 department of geology and used constantly in instruction. 



Specimens of Carboniferous, Cretaceous, Tertiary and Pleis- 

 toce^ne (all invertebrates) of California for exchange. 



Mineralogy. Collection illustrating the minerals of the crys- 

 talline rocks of New England; local set illustrating the rock- 

 forming minerals of California. 



Historic and economic geology. Zinc and lead ores of Missouri; 

 building stones and clays of Arkansas; U. S. geological survey, 

 Eureka, Nevada set; gold and silver ores, manganese ores of 

 Brazil, Arkansas and Georgia; phosphate rocks of the United 

 States. 



