NATURAL HISTORY MUSEUMS 221 



Harvard botanical garden, Cambridge Mass. (Collections partly 

 enumerated under Harvard university). George L. Goodale, 

 director. 



Buffalo botanical garden, John R. Cowell, director. 



The Arnold arboretum, Boston Mass. C. S. Sargent, d/irc^'tor. 



The cit}^ of Detroit is noAV building an aquarium and maintains 

 a zoologic garden. 



There is also a collection of animals in Lincoln park, Chicago. 



ADDENDA 



Received too late to be inserted in their proper place in the text. 



CALIFORNIA 



California academy of sciences, San Francisco. Leverett Mills 

 Loomis, director of the museum and curator' of oiivitliolo<j-}j ; H. H. 

 Behr, curator of entomology ; Alice Eastwood, curator of botany; 

 John Van Denburgh, honorary curator of herpetology ; Alfred L. 

 Kroeber, honorary curator of anthropology; F. M. Anderson, 

 honorary curator of paleontology; Charles Fuebis, preparator of 

 entomology. 



Paleontology. Small collection chiefly of invertebrate fossils. 

 It contains a number of type specimens and is constantly 

 growing. 



Mineralogy. Several thousand including many rare sx)ecimens. 



Economic geology. Collection small. 



Zoology. An extensive collection representing all orders. 

 Birds about 20,000 including several types; 4500 reptiles and 

 batrachians with a few tyi>e specimens; 4000 fishes, 36 types; 

 45.000 insects with over 1000 types. 



Much material for exchange. 



Botamj. 110,000 specimens. Every department of botany is 

 well represented. The collection is of general distribution but 

 particularly rich in Pacific coast X. A. plants, and contains the 

 types of many species. 



Specimens for exchange. 



