188L] ADDITIONS TO THE MUSEUM. 501 



Dr. W. D. Hartman. Sixteen species of Partula, new to our collection. 



P. R. Hoy. Amnicola lustrica and A. Cincinnatiensis, from deep water, Lake 



Michigan. 

 Mrs. M. A. Haldeman. A collection of fresli-water shells, part of the cabinet 



of the late Prof. Haldeman. 

 A. A. Hinkley. Ten species of marine shells. Cedar Keys, Fla. 

 Joseph .Jeanes. Sixty-four species and varieties of marine shells, collected 



by Henry Hemphill on the coast of California ; eighty-six species and 



varieties of marine, land and fresh-water shells from the West Coast of 



America. 

 F. R. Latchford. Sixty-two species terrestial and fluviatile moUusks, from 



Ontario, Canada; seven species of fresh-water shells from Canada. 

 Isaac Lea. Twenty-five species of marine and terrestrial shells, new to the 



collection. 

 Dr. E. Palmer. Uhio fuscatus, Lea. U. Jayanus, Lea, U. nigrinus. Lea, U. 



Blandingianiis, U. amygdalum and W. Buckleyi, from near Cassina River, Fla. 

 C. F. Parker. Twenty-eight species of marine shells, new to the collection. 

 John A. Ryder. Area pexata. Say, Wood's Holl, Mass. and Cherry Stone 



Inlet, E. Shore of Virginia; Xylotrya fimbriata, Jeffreys, from St. Jerome's 



Creek, St. Mary Co , Md. 

 John H. Redfield. Thirty-one species of marine bivalve and land shells, new 



to the collection. 

 S. R. Roberts. Four specimens of Cypraea, and three other marine species. 

 R. E. C. Stearns. Helix circumcarinata Sterns, Stanislaus Co., Cal. 

 John Jay Smith. Abalone, the animal of Haliotis, eaten by the Californian 



Chinese. 

 Geo. W. Tryon, Jr. Eighty-two species of shells, new to the collection. 

 Dr. J. W. Velie. Veronicella Floridana, Bulimits muUiradiatus, from Florida. 

 W. S. Vaux. Fifty species of shells, new to the collection; three species of 



land shells from Tunis, and one from Peru. 

 Joseph Willcox. Unio luteolus, Lam., Rideau Lake, Ontario. 

 F. M. Witter. Amnicola Cincinnatiensis, Anth. ; Unio 3Iississippiensis, U. 



Anodontoides, U. lachrymosus, from Muscatine, Iowa. 

 Fossil Invertebrata. — J. W. Vogdes, U. S. A. Sixteen specimens of Miocene 



fossils from Virginia (Yorktown). 

 Angelo Heilprin. Thirty species from the Eocene of Claris e Co., Ala., eleven 



of which are types; nine species from the Eocene of Alabama and Florida, 



two of which are types. 

 Conchological Section of the Academy of Natural Sciences. Eighty-six species 



from the Carboniferous of Illinois, etc.; two hundred and twelve species, 



mainly from the Palaeozoic of Illinf^is and Indiana. 

 F. W. Payne. Annelid tracks in Hudson River Slate. 



A. W. Bailey. Specimen of Fulgur adversarius washed ashore from a sub- 

 marine (?) Miocene bed, Atlantic City, N. J. 

 J. W. Pike. Thirty-five species of Carboniferous fossils from Mazon Creek, 



Grundy Co., 111. 

 Dr. J. W. Hess. Fossil (?) from the Carboniferous of Vermilion, 111. 

 F. R. Latchford. Leda glacialis, Champlain clays, Ottawa River, Eardley, 



Quebec. 

 F. L. Hess. Eurypterus, from the Carboniferous of Streator, 111. 

 Dr. Jos. Wilson. Eighteen species of Crinoids, and two species of MoUusca 



from the Lower Carboniferous of Burlington, Iowa. 

 Ethnological and 3Iiscella7ieous. — Mrs. M. A. Haldeman. The Haldeman collec- 

 tion, consisting of many thousand specimens, ancient and modern, of spears 



and arrow-heads, axes, hammers, pounders, chisels, gauges, scrapers, knives, 



awls, borers, morters and pestles, mullers, net-sinkers, plummets, discoidal 



stones, sharpeners, pierced tablets, ceremonial weapons, pendants, sculpture, 



pipes, pottery, beads and other ornaments, shell-money, basket-work, bows 



and arrows, etc. 



