160 



REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1920. 



INTERIOR DEPARTMENT— Contd. 



(64212) ; 42 boxes of borings 

 from near Fallon, Nevada, in 

 the Black Rock Desert, the 

 Smoke Creek Desert, and else- 

 where (64275) ; reference collec- 

 tion illustrating report by Mr. 

 F. L. Ransonre on the Ray and 

 Miami copper districts, Arizona 

 (Professional Paper 115), and 2 

 boxes of miscellaneous material 

 (64279) ; samples from well 

 1 wired at Searles Lake, Califor- 

 nia (642S0) ; thin sections of 

 rocks and ores from collections 

 made by Mr. James M. Hill 

 (64284) ; US plants collected in 

 Alaska by Mr, G. L. Harrington 

 (6436S) ; S6 specimens illustrat- 

 ing the ore deposits of Tonopah, 

 Nevada, as described in Profes- 

 sional Paper 104, by Messrs. 

 Edson S. Bastin and Francis P>. 

 Laney (64393) ; 3 small lots of 

 Pleistocene vertebrate fossils 

 collected by Mr. William C. 

 Alden in western Iowa and east- 

 ern Nebraska (64403) ; 4 Eocene 

 mammalian teeth collected by 

 Mr. D. F. Hewett on McCulloch 

 Peak, Bighorn Basin, Wyoming 

 (64419) ; lot of mineral speci- 

 mens (64437) ; 27 boxes of Alas- 

 kan material (64526) ; 37 fossil 

 land and fresh water mollusks. 

 6 species from Red River bot- 

 tom lands, Burkburnett. Texas 

 (64527) ; a collection of igneous 

 rocks illustrating the Hot 

 Springs, Arkansas, folio 



(64534) ; 2 teeth and frag- 

 ment of a foot bone of Pleisto- 

 cene horse, collected by Mr. 

 W. C, Alden in Iowa (6453S) ; 

 21 additional specimens bearing 

 on the geology of the Tintic Dis- 

 trict, Utah (64563) ; the type 

 specimen of the mineral haus- 

 manite (6460S) ; box of potash 

 well borings (6464S) ; a box of 

 phosphate (64649) ; 9 boxes of 

 minerals collected by Mr. W. T. 

 Sehaller {64650) ; 30 specimens 

 of teeth, plates, bones, etc. of 



INTERIOR DEPARTMENT— Contd. 



fishes from the Pennsylvania 

 rocks of Missouri (61671) ; 

 about 1,000 specimens of inver- 

 tebrate fossils and 15 shark's 

 teeth from the Cannonball ma- 

 rine member of the Lance 

 formation of North and South 

 Dakota, including types and fig- 

 ured specimens described in Pro- 

 fessional Paper 12S-A (64700) ; 

 21 photographs showing mining 

 of inorganic substances used in 

 medicine (6471S) ; 100 drawers 

 of Silurian and Devonian inver- 

 tebrates collected by Mr. E. M. 

 Kindle (64776) ; Hayes' Nica- 

 ragua collection ; Hayes and 

 others' Southern Appalachian 

 collections; Hague's Yellowstone 

 Park collection ; and other 

 minor collections n;4790): py- 

 rite rilled cavity of a flattened 

 stem of the fossil plant, CaJn- 

 mites suckowii (64939) ; rocks 

 from the Idaho and Montana 

 cinnabar deposits, collected and 

 described by Mr. E. S. Larsen 

 (64949) ; rock specimens col- 

 lected in Alaska by Messrs. 

 E. M. Eakin and A. G. Maddren 

 (64985) ; brass projector and a 

 Burt solar compass (65070). 

 (See also under Dominican Bo- 

 public, Charles P. Farnquist and 

 Charles W. Fletcher. 

 INTERIOR DEPARTMENT ( See also 



under Smithsonian Institution). 

 IOWA MUSEUM OF NATURAL HIS- 

 TORY, State University of, Iowa 

 City, Iowa ; 11 isopod crustaceans, 

 representing 5 species, collected by 

 the Barbados-Antigua Expedition of 

 the State University of Iowa, 191S 

 (64S40). 

 ITURBE, Dr. Juan, Clinico Labora- 

 torio. Caracas, Venezuela: 2 speci- 

 mens of Pseuilolhclpliusa. the crab 

 which serves as the secondary inter- 

 mediate host of the lung distome 

 (64572) ; 5 mollusks, representing 2 

 species, which serve as intermediate 

 host of Schistosoma mcnisoni 

 (64629). 



