APPENDIX D XCI 



Eegion I. (Yarmouth and Digby Co.) : Principal A. W. Horner, 

 Yarmouth. 



Eegion II. (Shelburne Co.) : Principal C. Stanley Bruce, Shelburne. 



Region II. (Queens Co.) : Miss ^Minnie C. Hewitt, Science Teacher, 

 Lunenburg Academy. 



Eegion II. (Lunenburg Co.) : Principal Burgess McKittrick, 

 Lunenburg. 



Eegion III. (Annapolis and Kings Co.) : Principal Ernest Eobin- 

 son, Kentville. 



Eegion IV. (Hants Co.) : J. E. Barteaux, Science Master, Truro 

 Academy. 



Eegion V. (Halifax and Guysboro Co.) : Principal G. E. Marshall, 

 Halifax. 



Eegion VI. (Cum. & Col. on Cobequid Bay) : J. E. Barteaux, 

 Truro. 



Eegion VII. (Cum. & Col, Xorth slope) : Principal E. J. Lay, 

 Amherst. 



Eegion VII. (Pictou and Antigonish Co.) : W. P. Eraser, Science 

 Master, Pictou Academy. 



Eegion VIII. (Eiehmond Co.) : Principal Geo. W. McKenzie, 

 Sydney Mines. 



Eegion VIII. (Cap Breton Co.) : Loran A. DeWolfe, Science Mas- 

 ter, North Sydney. 



Eegion IX. (Victoria Co.) : Loran A. DeWolfe, M.Sc, North 

 Sydney. 



Eegion X. (Inverness Co. sloping to Gulf) : Loran A. DeWolfe. 



The compilations of this staff were further reduced into the form 

 published in the second table, " The Phenochrons of Nova Scotia, 1903," 

 by Miss Jean Lindsay, Halifax. The phenochrons of the several divi- 

 sions of the province, as well as the individual schedules are bound into 

 annual volumes for the convenience of preservation and of the study of 

 future phenologists. 



In previous reports attention was called to the phenological work 

 in other countries, especially that of Mr. Edward Hawley, F. E. Met. 

 Soc, F.E.H.S., in England; of Dr. Ihne of Darmstadt, in Europe; and 

 of the public school work of Michelsen and Mathiassen in Denmark, on 

 Nova Scotian lines. Nothing strikingly new has appeared during the 

 year abroad or at home in this department. The Marine Biological 

 Station of Canada under the directorship of Professor Ramsay Wright 

 of Toronto University, was working at Malpeque in Prince Edward 

 Island during the year. Incidentally botanical work was done, more 

 particularly the determination of the microscopic flora on which the 



