DIVISION OF VERTEBRATE PALEONTOLOGY GILMORE 355 



1902 



Accessions included a collection of teeth of Camelop.H, Symlos, 

 Maw.mut america?mm, Elephas columhi, and E. Imperator from the 

 Pleistocene in a spring near Afton, Okla., made by W. H. Holmes 

 (Hay, O. P., Proc. U. S. Nat. Mns., vol. 58, p. 117, 1921 ; Indiana 

 Geol. Surv., vol. 26; Iowa Geol. Surv., vol. 23). 



Plaster casts of five restorations of the heads of as many genera 

 of Brontotheres were received in exchange with the American Mu- 

 seum of Natural History. 



1903 



Teeth of Mastodon humhoMti an.d M. cordilleinim and plaster casts 

 of mandibular rami were received in exchange with the British Mu- 

 seum of Natural History. 



A slab of sandstone showing Pennsyivanian footprints from Mount 

 Carbon, Pa., was presented by Dr. H. J. Herbein. A tooth of Gladodus 

 foi'mosus from Needle Mountain quadrangle, collected by Dr. Wliit- 

 man Cross, was transferred by the United States Geological Survey. 



190 A 



A complete skeleton of Rhmnphorhynchus geinmingi showing impres- 

 sions of the wing and tail membranes (Gilmore, C. W., Proc. U. S. 

 Nat. Mus., vol. 30, 1906) and fossil fishes of the genera Aspidorhyn- 

 chv.s, Catuinzs, Sqiiatina. Hypsocormus^ Pholidophoynis^ and Gyrodus^ 

 from the Upper Jurassic near Eichstatt, Germany, were purcku-ed 

 from Fritz Ehrensberger. Complete skeletons of Stenosau7^^ hoJlen- 

 sis and Ichfhyosm'rus qiuulriciss-us from the Lias of Wiirttembeig, 

 Germany, were purchased from F. Krantz. 



A skull of Bison aUeni with horn and external sheaths, from the 

 Pleistocene near Rampart, Alaska, was presented by D. McLean (Hay, 

 O. P., Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., vol. 46, p. 182, 1914) . 



1905 



A small collection of mannnalian specimens from the Wasatch, 

 Eocene, of the Big Horn Basin, Wyo., made by Dr. C. A. Fisher was 

 transferred by the United States Geological Survey. A collection 

 of Pleistocene mammals from Alaska, made by A. G. Maddren, was 

 transferred by the Smithsonian Institution (Maddren, A. G., Smith- 

 sonian Misc. Coll., vol. 49, pp. 1-117, 1908). 



1906 



The most important acquisition of this year was a beautifully pre- 

 served skeleton of SiTwpa grangeri (Matthew, W. D., Proc. U. S. Nat. 



