26 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 



Zoology. 2,661,148 specimens: mammals 27,016, birds 115,059, 

 Mi'ds eggs and nests 64,661, insects 994,236, reptiles and batrach- 

 ians 38,977, fishes 151,301, marine invertebrates 509,331, mollusks 

 740,017, helmintliologic collection (catalogue entries) 4945, com- 

 parative anatomy 15,585. 



Many duplicates for exchange. 



Botany. 391,241 specimens from all parts of the world. 

 Many duplicates available for exchange. 



Anthropology. 818,234 specimens. 



The national museum makes exchanges in all departments, 

 and also makes up extensive collections from the duplicate 

 material, specially conchological and geologic, which are pre- 

 sented to educational institutions throughout the country. 



FLORIDA 



John B. Stetson university, De Land. John F. Forbes, preHdent. 

 Collections small, consisting of about 2500 specimens of geologic, 

 mineralogic and zoologic material. 



GEORGIA 



Bowdon college, Bowdon. No report. 



Emory college, Oxford. H. H. Stone, curator. 



Paleontology. 200 specimens from the Silurian, Carboniferous, 

 Cretaceous and Tertiary. 



Mineralogy. 5000 specimens including Smithsonian collections 

 and miscellaneous specimens from Georgia, Maryland, New 

 York, Italv, Sicilv and Africa. 



Historic and economic geology and lithology. A few specimens. 



Zoology. A very limited collection. 



The museum is made up largely of Japanese, Chinese and 

 Indian curios together with relics of Civil and Spanish Ameri- 

 can Wars. 



Geological survey of Georgia (state museum), state capitol, At- 

 lanta. W.. S. Yeates, state geologist and curator of the mnseiim; 

 S. W. McCallie and Thomas L. Watson, assistant geologists. 

 ]\Ir McCallie is also assistant curator of the museum in charge 

 of the biologic departments. 



