NATURAL HISTOUY MUSEUMS 1-49 



Portland university, Portland. Xo report. 



University of Oregon, Condon museum, iMigene. Thomas Condon, 

 pi'ofessor of geology; Chester Washburn, assistant. 



Paleoiitologij. 0000 specimens: tlie eollection is j^riiicipally 

 Oregon material, it contains 500 specimens from the marine 

 Tertiary of Oregon and the largest collection which has been 

 made of Tertiary vertebrates from the John Day beds and other 

 deposits of Eastern Oregon and type specimens including U n i o 

 c n d n i White, S c a 1 a r i a c o n d o n i T)all, P 1 a t y - 

 g o n u s c n d o n i Marsh, A n c h i t h e r i u m c o n d o n i 

 Leidy, Oreodon superbus Leidj', Hippa eocensis 

 Washburn, Hippa m i o c e n s i s Washburn. 



Mineralogy. 800 specimens^ general collection. 



Economic geologj/ and lltliologi/. 900 specimens: collection of 

 Oregon building and ornamental stones; ores of the Pacific 

 Coast; metamorphic and igneous rocks of Oregon. Some 

 material for exchange. 



Zoology. 1000 specimens, collection of flowering plants and a 

 private collection of fungi. A collection of Oregon woods for 

 furniture, cabinet-making, etc. 



Ethnology. 325 specimens, implements, etc., of Oregon Indian 

 tribes. 



Williamette university, Salem. Xo report. 



PEXXSYLVAXIA 



Academy of natural sciences of Philadelphia, including collections 

 of the second geological survey of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia. 

 Samuel G. Dixon president; Samuel G. Dixon, Henry O. 

 Chapman, Henry A. Pilsbry, and Arthur Erwin Brown, 

 hoard of curators; Witmer Stone, assistant curator; David 

 McCadden, taridermist; F. W. Wamsley, preparator of marine 

 animals; Stewardson Brown, conseiTator of botanic section; Henry 

 Skinner, conservator of entomologic section; H. A. Pilsbry, 

 special curator of concJiology; Witmer Stone, ornithologic section; 

 Theodore D. Rand, curator of the Taux collection of minerals; Rev. 

 L. T. Chamberlain, curator of the Lea collection of Eocene fossils. 



Paleontology. 45,000 specimens: the Lea collection of Eocene 

 fossils, containing many type specimens described by Lea; the 



