226 Proceedings of Indiana Academy of Science. 
COLLECTING STATIONS. 
Lake Maxinkuckee is in Marshall County, Indiana, 34 miles south of 
South Bend, 94 miles southeast of Chicago, and 32 miles north of Lo- 
gansport. Its elevation above sea-level is 735 feet. It is about 2.6 miles 
long from north to south, about 1.6 miles wide, and its surface area is 
1,854 acres. Its greatest depth is about 90 feet. 
Observations were made and collections obtained in all sorts of places 
and situations in and about the lake. Certain localities mentioned spe- 
cifically in this series of papers may be more definitely described as 
follows: 
Arlington.—A flag station on the west side of the lake, at the base 
of Long Point. 
Aubeenaubee Creek.—A small stream entering the lake near the 
middle of the east side. 
Birch Swamp.—About two miles west of the lake. 
Bruce Lake.—A small lake a few miles southwest of Lake Max- 
inkuckee. 
Culver Inlet—A small stream entering the lake at the northeast 
corner. 
Drained Lake.—An old lake bed a mile northwest of the lake. 
Farrar’s Creek.—A small creek entering the lake at the south- 
west end. 
Green’s Marsh.—A few acres of wet ground between Long Point and 
the railroad on the west side of the lake. 
Long Point-—A small peninsula projecting into the lake on the 
west side. ; 
Lost Lake.—A small, shallow, muck-bottomed lake lying west a few 
rods from Lake Maxinkuckee. 
Norris Boathouse-—On the southeast shore of the lake. , 
Norris Inlet—The principal inlet of the lake, entering the lake at 
the southeast corner. 
Outlet Bay.—A small bay on the north side of Long Point. 
Outlet.—The small stream through which the water flows from Lake 
Maxinkuckee into Lost Lake. 
Spangler Creek.—A small brook entering the lake from the east. 
Walley’s—A farm on the outlet creek just below Lost Lake. 
Weedpatch.—An east-and-west bar about 1,200 feet long and 500 
feet wide, in Lake Maxinkuckee, in 10-foot water southeast of Arlington. 
Winfield’s.—On west side north of Outlet Bay. 
For convenience of treatment, the Crustaceans of Lake Maxinkuckee 
may be divided into five groups, as follows: (1) the Plankton species; 
