LIST OF ACCESSIONS. 



169 



INDIA, ZOOLOGICAL SURVEY OF, 



Indian INIuseum, Calcutta, India 

 (tlirougli Dr. B. Prastiad) : 8 speci- 

 mens, 5 species, of fresliwater mol- 

 lusks from India, Ceylon, and the 

 Solomon Islands (66494, exchange). 



INDIANA UNIVERSITY MUSEUM, 

 Bloomington, Ind. (through Dr. C. 

 H. Eigenmann) : 250 fishes collected 

 by the Irwin expedition to Chile and 

 Peru, 1919 (66451, exchange). 

 INSTITUTE OF SCIENCE, Taihoku, 

 Formosa, Japan (through Dr. M. 

 Oshima) : 56 specimens, 16 species, 

 of crustaceans from Formosa 

 (66023). 

 INSTITUTO DE LA SALLE, Bogota, 

 Colombia : Collections of anthropo- 

 logical material and fossils from Co- 

 lombia (65245) (through Brother 

 Apollinaire-Marie) ; skins and skulls 

 of 5 small mammals (65803, ex- 

 change) ; (through Brother Ariste- 

 Joseph and J. B. Reeside, jr.) : 4 

 specimens of invertebrate fossils, 5 

 fossil leaves, and fragmentary re- 

 mains of vertebrate fossils (66394). 

 INSTITUTO DE LA SALLE, Correo 

 Nunoa, Chile (through Brother 

 Claude- Joseph) : 72 grasses (65372) ; 

 342 plants from Chile (65780, 

 66601) ; 97 plants (66507). 

 INSTITUTO DE LA SALLE, Havana, 

 Cuba (through Brother Leon) : 10 

 specimens oi Passiflora (65899). 

 INTERIOR DEPARTMENT : 



U. S. Geological Survey: A small 

 collection of carnotite minerals 

 and associated ores made by 

 Hoyt S. Gale, from Routt 

 County, Colo. (65389) : A small 

 collection of Eocene fossil plants 

 comprising the types, figured 

 specimens, and other material 

 described by Prof. Edward W. 

 Berry in Professional Paper 

 125-A, U. S. Geological Survey 

 (65539) ; a collection of 353 

 species of Eocene fossil plants 

 comprising the types, figured 

 specimens, and other material 

 described in U. S. Geological 

 Survey Professional Paper 91, 



INTERIOR DEPARTMENT— Con. 



U. (8. Geological Survey — Contd. 

 by Professor Berry (65542) ; 

 rocks from the western New 

 England and eastern New York 

 lime belt, collected by Dr. T. 

 Nelson Dale; also 27 boxes of 

 thin sections (65544) ; 25 crates 

 (250 drawers) of Silurian and 

 Devonian invertebrate fossils, 

 chiefly from Maine, with note 

 books, lists, and other data con- 

 cerning them by the late Prof. 

 H. S. Williams (65591) ; portions 

 of skull and jaws of a Plesio- 

 saurian reptile, collected by Mr. 

 John B. Reeside, jr., in south- 

 western Colorado (65763) ; 4 

 small lots of vertebrate fossils 

 collected by Mr. W. T. Thorn, jr., 

 in northeastern Montana 

 (65779) ; foot bones of a fossil 

 camel from near Dayville, Oreg. 

 (65808) ; miscellaneous rock 

 specimens from Montana, Colo- 

 rado, and Washington, collected 

 by Messi's. Hancock, Pishel, and 

 Beekley (65966) ; specimen of 

 creedite from a type locality, 

 Wagon Wheel Gap, Colo., col- 

 lected and described by Mr. E. 

 S. Larsen (65967) ; 5 minerals 

 (65980) ; a large piece of chal- 

 cocite from Butte, Mont., col- 

 lected by Mr. B. S. Butler 

 (66050) ; 6 miscellaneous min- 

 eral specimens (66134) ; fos- 

 sils from the Coastal Plain re- 

 gion of Texas, Louisiana, and 

 Florida, collected by Mr. C. B. 

 Hopkins (66209) ; 128 boxes of 

 miscellaneous geological mate- 

 rial, and seven trays of miscel- 

 laneous collections (66301, 

 66443, 66439) ; 20 specimens and 

 15 thin sections from the molyb- 

 denum mine near Questa, N. 

 Mex., described by Messrs. E. S. 

 Larsen and C. S. Ross in Eco- 

 nomic Geology, November, 1920 

 (66521) ; 5 specimens of plati- 

 num-bearing covellite from 

 Rambler mine, Wyoming 

 (66594) ; collection of 31 rock 



