REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1907. 



Tntkkiok. Dkpart.mkxt of — Coiitinin'il. 

 Molilalia (4i;;»;',T) ; ."4 tlupli( ate 

 specimens of typical olivinr basalt 

 from Pilot Kiioh. Routt County. 

 Colo., collected by Messrs. II. S. 

 Gale and K. D. Crawford (4»;9r):2) ; 

 vertebrate fossils from the Carbo- 

 naceous, near Seymour, and the Cre- 

 taceous (Austin chalk), at Knlo(\ 

 Tex., collected by C. 11. (Jordon 

 (47014) ; 4!) specimens from the 

 Leadville district. Colorado (47()St;) ; 

 20 specimens of quartz latite from 

 the Oura.v quadranurle. Colorado, and 

 of 72 specimens of Ibc same mate- 

 rial from the Silvt'rton (luadr.•^Il^'le 

 (470S7) ; Sf) specimens coUecteil in 

 the Penobscot Bay (Maine) <iuad- 

 ranyle by Messrs. George O. Smitli. 

 Edson S. I'.astiii. and Charles W. 

 Brown (471(11): 17 liand specimens 

 and a nuiuhcr of <iiii)s of prowersose 

 from Appleton, Knox County. Me. 

 (47102) : 2 fra.cments of fossil bones 

 from near Moab, I'tah, collected by 

 Whitman Cross (47143) ; 5 geolog- 

 ical specimens from Silverton quad- 

 rangle and .". from Needle Mountain 

 quadrangle, Colorado (471S.j) ; 

 fractured bowlders from Deer Creek 

 coal field, Arizona (47180) ; rocks 

 from Rico (piadrangle. (\)lorado 

 (47100) ; ampliiiiole asbestos from 

 Rocky Mount, Franklin County, Va. 

 (4720.")) ; about 45,000 specimens of 

 studied and unstudied material from 

 the ])re-Camlirian, Cambri.an, and 

 Ordovician rocks of the I'liitcd 

 States (47270) ; 3 fossil fishes from 

 Ree Heights, Hand Ccmnty. S. Dak.: 

 specimen of InoccrnnniK dvfoDnh 

 from the .Niobrara ftrrmatton, near 

 La Junta, Colo.; alga> from lime- 

 stone in the lower jiortion of .Morri- 

 son formation near Iron Mountain 

 Station. Winning: collection from 

 Lafayette formation near Ile.iths- 

 ville. Va. ; oysters from the Quater- 

 nary deiKtsit. Maryland I'oint, Poto- 

 mac River; fossil hone from Colum- 

 bia formation; coprolite from the 

 base of Chesai)eake formation. Tar 

 Bay, James River. Virginia (47340) ; 

 rocks from Big Horn .Mountains and 



IXTF.umR. DF.p.\RT^^E^■T of — Continued, 

 other iiarts of W.voming ; Black 

 Hills of South Dakota, Newark 

 <;i-oup of New Jersey, and Kansas 

 (47.".41); 7 specimens of lim<>stone 

 and ()th(>r rocks from Indeiiemlence 

 (piadrangle. Kansas, and adjacent 

 localities (47oOr>) ; rocks collected 

 by Willis T. Lee in the Rio Grande 

 region of New Mexico. southw»'stern 

 rtali. ;md western Arizona (47.".7ii) : 

 specimen of cerussite from the Her- 

 cules mine, Coeur d'Alene district, 

 Idaho, collected by F. L. Ransome 

 (47379) ; volcanic material, with 

 thin sections of the same, from the 

 West Indies, collected by R. T. Hill 

 and I. C. Russell (47511) ; minerals 

 from various localities (47524) : im- 

 j)erfect fossil fish, T.f'jnsostriis siiii- 

 l)lc.i\ collected by Jeremiah Ahern, 

 U. S. Reclamation Service, near 

 Cody, Wyo. (47534). 



J.UK, John R.. Punta Gorda. Fla. : 

 I*hotograi)h of the nest of an Ever-" 



gl.'ide kite (40575). 



James. Mrs. Julian. Washington. D. C. : 

 Stick ])in, comb, camisa, and kerchief 

 (47347). 



Jarvis, C. D., Storr's, Coim. : Two para- 

 sitic Hymenoptera (46412). 



Jenney, C. E., Fresno, Cal. : Shells 

 (400.30). 



Jknsen, M. C, Washington. D. C. : 359 

 lilants from Virginia (47471 : col- 

 lected for the Museum). 



Jewett, Stanley G., Portland. Oreg. : 

 3, juncos and 2 gophers from ()i"%on 

 (40944). 



John, Andrew, Washington, D. C. : 4 

 ears of "squaw-corn" (47139); 2 

 I)otter.v pipes made by the Catawba 

 Indians of South Carolina (47244). 



.loiiNSoN. ( ". A\'.. I'ostoii Society of 

 Natm-.il History. I'.oslon. Mass.: Pu- 

 pa' of moS(iuitoes (4724S) ; 11 mos- 

 (piitoes from Labrador and New- 

 fomidland (47204). 



JoiiNSO.N, .Mrs. V. P.. St. Louis. .Mo.: 

 L.iix.i of a c-assid-moth (40297). 



