172 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 



University of Tennessee, Knoxville. Samuel M. Bain, professor 

 of hotcmy. 



Paleontology. Small collection of casts and fossils. 



^Mineralogy. A small working collection. 



Zoology. Several thousand insects and a small collection of 

 alcoholic specimens of other animals. 



Botamj. 30,000 specimens including many types of Chapman, 

 Gattinger, Scribner and others. 



Duplicates for exchange. 



Ethnology and anthropology. Small collection of Indian relics 

 and casts of same. 



Vanderbilt university, Nashville. L. C. Glenn, professor of 

 geology, in charge; George W. Martin, professor of hiology. 



Paleontology. 15,000 specimens: Sturtz and Krantz collec- 

 tions; the Safford collection of Tennessee Paleozoic fossils and 

 Mesozoic and Cenozoic fossils from Tennessee and Alabama; the 

 Glenn collection of Atlantic coast Cenozoic invertebrates. 

 Material for exchange. 



Mineralogy. 4000 specimens: Sturtz and Krantz general col- 

 lections. 



Historic and economic geology and Uthology. 2500 specimens: 

 classic European and American rocks, both igneous and sedi- 

 mentarv; Tennessee Paleozoic rocks. 



Some Tennessee rocks for exchange. 



Zoology. 2000 specimens: the commoner forms of Tennessee 

 and the south; both vertebrates and invertebrates; shells; some 

 forms from the Woods Hole station. Material for exchange. 



Botany. 5000 specimens: collections of lichens and algae. 

 Material for exchange. 



Ethnology and anthropology. 800 specimens: stone and bone 

 articles and pottery from the Tennessee and Florida mounds. 



Walden university, Nashville. Harold Steele, professor of 

 natural science, in charge. 



Paleontology. 100 specimens: material illustrating the fauna 

 of the Lower Silurian formations in Tennessee, and of the Car- 

 boniferous formations of northern Illinois. A few brachiopod^ 

 and corals for exchange. 



