NATURAL HISTORY MUSEUMS 141 



Zoology. 299 specimens: 12 mammals; 7 skeletons of mam- 

 mals; 120 birds; 40 fishes; 10 reptiles; 10 amphibians; 100 in- 

 vertebrates. 30 duplicate specimens of birds for exchange. 



Bofaruj. 4G40 specimens: herbariums of 1200 species of 

 phanerogams; 100 species of fungi; .340 species of algae. 



1000 duplicate phanerogams for exchange. 



Etlinology. G50 specimens: 200 of weapons and wearing ap- 

 parel of the American Indians; 15 of Mexican and oriental wear- 

 ing apparel and ornaments; and 300 foreign and domestic coins. 

 Few duplicates for exchange. 



OHIO 



Antioch college, Yellow Springs. W. E. Wells, professor of M- 

 ologij, in charge. 



Paleontology. 10,000 specimens: 300 graptolites, from Eng- 

 land, United States and Germany; 5000 specimens, United 

 States Silurian; 1000 Devonian; 500 Carboniferous; 1000 of later 

 formations. 



Mineralogy. 500 specimens; educational collection of United 

 States geological survey and some others; no one locality well 

 represented. 



Eistoric and economic geology and lithology. Silurian, Devonian 

 and Carboniferous fauna; metalliferous and nonmetalliferous 

 ores and their products; common rock-forming elements and 

 compounds; fairly good series of rocks of earth crust. 



Zoology. 4000 specimens: two mounted mammals: a few poorly 

 mounted skeletons; eggs; common invertebrates for cla^s demon- 

 stration; 500 insects, unarranged; 3000 shells, unnamed. 



Botany. 600 specimens: several hundred sheets of pressed 

 plants from this locality, gathered by students; small collection 

 of mosses. 



EtJmology and anthropology. 20 specimens: pottery of the 

 Mound Builders and several human skeletons and remains with- 

 out date, obtained from small caves along the cliffs of the Little 

 Miami river. 



Baldwin university museum, Berea. A. G. Riiab, professor of 

 natural science, in charge. 



Paleontology. 300 specimens, mostly Devonian and Carbon- 

 iferous. 



