222 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 



Etlmology. 2200 specimens from Alaska, California, South 

 Sea islands and Japan, specially strong in Polynesia. The acad- 

 emy has a library of 11,000 volumes on natural history and pub- 

 lishes a series of proceedings (octavo) memoirs (quarto) and 

 occasional papers (octavo). 



MICHIGAN 



Detroit Museum of Art, Detroit. A. H. Griffith, director. 

 Paleontology. 5000 specimens. 

 Mineralogy. 3000 specimens. 

 Economic geology and lithology. 300 specimens. 

 Zoology. 8000 insects, 60,000 mollusks and 700 specimens of 

 other orders. 

 Botany. A collection of 3000 specimens. 

 Ethnology. 3500 specimens. 



PENNSYLVANIA 



Lehigh university, South Bethlehem. 



Paleontology. 3000 specimens illustrating common genera- 

 Paleozoic Mollusca and P>rachiopoda best represented. 



Mineralogy. 10,000 specimens included in the Roepper coUeo 

 tion, a general collection of 3000 specimens; the Keim collection 

 of 1000 specimens and about 300 other specimens and a prac- 

 tice collection of 2500 specimens. 



Economic geology and Uthology. 4000 specimens : illustrative col- 

 lections from the Rocky mountains; ores of precious metals, 

 copi>er and iron ores and coal; specimens of rocks from all 

 parts of the world but chiefly from Europe and the United 

 States. 400 specimens for exchange. 



Zoology. 2500 specimens. The Werner collection of North and 

 South American birds, nests and eggs, GOO specimens; the 

 Packer collection of recent shells, mostly gastropods, 1000 si)eci- 

 mens, and a s^moptic collection of 2500 specimens. 



Botwmj. A small collection, mainly microscopic sections. 



Etlmology. 1000 specimens North American Indian weapons, 

 clothing and utensils. 



