18 MUSEUMS. 
(d) PRESENTS. 
Among the donations with which the Museum collections have 
been enriched, the following deserve special mention :— 
A large collection of Natural History specimens, containing 
numerous Birds’ Eggs, Shells, Insects, Fossils, Minerals and 
Botanical specimens, collected by the late Donald Cameron, 
M.A., LL.D., and presented by Mr. John Cameron, 5, Fenwick 
Street, Liverpool. 
Living specimens of West African Walking Fish (Periophthalmus 
koelreuter?) and Mud-fish (Protopterus annectens), and _ other 
specimens, presented by and through Mr. A. Ridyard, s.s. “ Addah.” 
A collection of Fossils, Minerals, Rocks, Shells and Botanical 
specimens, presented by Miss Clare, “ Holmeleigh,’’ Hoylake. 
Specimens of rocks containing remains of the Fossil Fish 
(Asterolepis mazima), from the Old Red Sandstone, Nairn; 
presented by Mr. Wm. Taylor, Lhanbryde, Elgin. 
Four specimens of rare Fishes, presented by Messrs. Harley and 
Miller, St. John’s Market. 
Fossiliferous Rocks with remains of Paretosawrus, &c., and 
Minerals, from Cape Colony, presented by Mr. W. T. T. 
MacMuldrow, Cape Town, late of the Electric Department, Liverpool 
Corporation. 
(e) EXCHANGES. 
A number of living specimens of the American King Crab 
(Limulus polyphemus) received from Dr. H. C. Bumpus, Natural 
History Museum, New York, in exchange for two Mud-blocks of — 
the West African Mud-fish (Protopterus annectens). 7 
A small collection of Nudibranchs, principally from East Africa, | 
received from Sir Charles Eliot, Bart., Vice-Chancellor of the — 
University of Sheffield, in exchange for other duplicate specimens — 
of Nudibranchs, 
| 
b | 
4 
