LIST OF ACCESSIONS. 



145 



COLORADO, UNIVERSITY OF, 

 Boulder, Col. (through Prof. T. D. 

 A. Cockerell) : 12 specimens of fos- 

 sil insects described and figured by 

 Prof. Cockerell, fossil seeds from 

 England, and a part of the tj'pe 

 material of a fossil plant (69456). 

 COLORPLATE ENGRAVING COM- 

 PANY, THE, New York City: Re- 

 production, photo-mechanical relief 

 in four colors, of Salome by Henri 

 Regnault (69843). 

 COMMERCE, DEPARTMENT OF: 

 Bureau of Fisheries: Crustaceans, 

 marine invertebrates and mol- 

 lusks collected by the U. S. 

 Bureau of Fisheries Steamer 

 Fish Hawk during July and 

 August, 1920, in connection 

 with a biological survey of 

 Chesapeake Bay, 191 bottles in 

 all (68558) ; 69 bottles of crus- 

 taceans and 22 bottles of mol- 

 lusks, collected by the steamer 

 Fish HawTc in Chesapeake Bay, 

 during October, 1920, cruise 

 (68885) ; 130 lots of marine in- 

 vertebrates, 17 lots of mollusks, 

 and 5 lots of corals, taken by 

 the Fish Haxok on various 

 cruises during the hydrographic 

 and biological survey of Chesa- 

 peake Bay in 1920 (69024) ; 119 

 lots of marine invertebrates and 

 37 lots of mollusks taken by the 

 Fish Hawk on various cruises 

 during the hydrographic and 

 biological survey of Chesapeake 

 Bay in January, 1921 (69314) ; 

 butterfly ray taken in fish-trap 

 at Woods Hole, Mass. (68624) ; 

 a few small pieces of wood con- 

 taining shipworm borings from 

 Charleston, S, C. (68642) ; 20 

 specimens of barnacles taken 

 from the gills and gill cavities 

 of a female spiny lobster at Key 

 West, Fla., in 1919, by D. R. 

 Crawford (68786) ; 22 bottles 

 of crustaceans taken in Chesa- 

 peake Bay on various cruises 

 during 1921 and 1922 (69410) ; 

 6 specimens of shrimps taken 

 from Duncan Canal and Fred- 



COMMERCE, DEPT. OF— Continued. 

 Bureau of Fisheries — Continued, 

 erick Sound, Alaska (69411) ; 

 30 mollusks from Idaho 

 (69448) ; shrimp from brackish 

 water near Lockport, La., ob- 

 tained by E. A. Tulian, Superin- 

 tendent, Fisheries Division, 

 Louisiana Department of Con- 

 servation, New Orleans (69473) ; 

 17 crustaceans collected at 

 Madison, Conn., by Lester W. 

 Smith (69476) ; 5 plants from 

 Utah (69550) ; 130 fishes col- 

 lected in the Gulf of Mexico 

 and near Wilmington, N. C, by 

 the Grampus, including types of 

 2 species (69584) ; 161 fishes, a 

 frog and a moUusk, collected 

 at Augusta, Ga., during 1922 by 

 Samuel F. Hildebrand, and 6 

 vials of crustaceans taken from 

 stomachs of trout, collected by 

 S. B, Locke, in Fish Lake, Utah 

 (69628) ; 11 minnows collected 

 by E. H. Magoon at Rio de 

 Janeiro, Brazil (69694) ; 

 (through Charles J. Fish) 33 

 crustaceans, comprising 30 am- 

 phipods and 3 larvae from 

 Woods Hole (69932) ; a compre- 

 hensive collection of marine in- 

 vertebrates, 115 lots in all, com- 

 prising 58 lots of crustaceans, 

 4 lots of sea anemones, 21 lots 

 of nematodes, and 32 lots of 

 mollusks, taken by the Fish 

 Hawk on various cruises during 

 the hydrographic and biological 

 survey of Chesapeake Bay in 

 March and April, 1921 (69936) ; 

 a collection of Philippine 

 sponges, including types of new 

 species described by Prof. H. 

 V. Wilson in his report taken 

 by the Albatross on the Philip- 

 pine Expedition of 1907-10 

 (70062) ; (through Dr. George 

 S. Lesher) 2 nudibranchs (sea- 

 slugs) and a hermit crab 

 (70206). 

 Bureau of Lighthouses: 10 speci- 

 mens of living cacti from Na- 

 vassa Island (69332). 



