LIST OF ACCESSIONS. 93 
INTERIOR, DEPARTMENT OF: 
Geological material from the Territo- 
ries of Alaska and Hawaii exhibited at 
the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition, 
1909, under the auspices of the Interior 
Department (51108); anthropological, 
biological, and geological material trans- 
ferred from the museum of the Bureau 
of Education (51115; 51116); plaster re- 
lief maps of Hawaii and of the oil fields 
of Ohio, together with a piece of whale- 
bone (51213); collection of framed pho- 
tographs illustrating the various types 
and nationalities in the Hawaiian Is- 
lands, from the Department’s exhibit at 
the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition, 
1909 (51302). 
U. S. Geological Survey: Rocks and 
ores illustrative of Bulletin 397 of the 
Survey (50414); small lot of Tertiary 
fossil vertebrates from the Payette for- 
mation, Snake River, Oreg., collected 
by C. W. Washburne (50689); speci- 
mens of paisanite from the San Fran- 
cisco Mountain volcanic field, Arizona, 
received from H. H. Robinson, Hart- 
ford, Conn. (50775); vertebrate re- 
mains collected by J. H. Gardner in the 
Ignacio Quadrangle, southwestern part 
of Colorado (50792); vertebrate remains 
collected by A. L. Beekly in the Glen- 
wood Springs, Colo., coal field (50793); 
Mesozoic vertebrate remains collected 
by T. W. Stanton in Wyoming and Mon- 
tana (50794); vertebrate fossils col- 
lected by R. W. Stone in the Salt Creek 
Oil Field, Wyo. (50807); portion of a 
rib belonging to a mastodon or a mam- 
moth, probably of Pleistocene age, col- 
lected by P. 8. Smith on the Cyrus 
Noble claim, Third Beach, Nome, 
Alaska (50846); Mesozoic vertebrate 
fossils from the Standing Rock and 
Cheyenne River Indian Reservations, 
S. Dak., collected during the season of 
1909 by parties from the U. 8. Geolog- 
ical Survey, under the direction of W. 
R. Calvert (50865); samples of magne- 
tite and of a nonmagnetic material from 
the beach at Redondo, Cal.; also piece 
of steel made from the extract of this 
sand by an electrical process (50915) ; 
INTERIOR, DEPARTMENT OF—Continued. 
specimen of a carboniferous fossil fish 
representing the species Lissoprion fer- 
riert, collected near Montpelier, Idaho, 
by H. 8. Gale’s party (51056); fossil’ 
plants comprising type and figured 
specimens of Hollick’s ‘‘Cretaceous 
Flora of Southern New York and New 
England, ” and 44 specimens represent- 
ing 27 species of fossil plants from the 
Amboy clay of New Jersey (51101); 26 
specimens of variegated conglomerate 
from Parral, Fayette County, W. Va.; 
6 specimens of variegated conglomerate 
breccia from the Mascot mine, near 
Park City, Utah; and a small slab, 
greenish sandstone with impressions, 
probably of raindrops, from D. & R. G. 
R. R. tunnel 9 miles below Salida, Colo. 
(51111); rock specimens from the peg- 
matite deposits of Maine, and a speci- 
men of coarse porphyritic granite from 
Highland Plantation, Somerset County, 
Me. (51132); mercury minerals from 
Texas, type specimens of an important 
investigation (51154); about 70 speci- 
mens representing various species of fos- 
sil mammals from the Fort Union forma- 
tion near Fish Creek, Sweet Grass 
County, Mont., collected by J. W. Gid- 
ley in 1909 (51182); vertebrate fossils 
from the Cretaceous of Georgia and Ala- 
bama (51358); a suite of specimens of 
geodes from Chamberlain Pass, in the 
Big Badlands of South Dakota (51494); 
Cambrian fossils collected by Eliot 
Blackwelder in the northeastern part of 
Utah during the season of 1909 
(51582); Cambrian fossils collected by 
E. M. Kindle in Alaska during the sea- 
son of 1907 (51583); Indian papoose 
board found in Hayden Gulch, Routt 
County, Colo. in 1905 (51629); rocks, 
etc., collected by N. H. Darton in the 
Black Hills and Wyoming and a suite 
of granites from Richmond, Va. (51653); 
fossil turtle from the White River beds 
in Big Badlands of South Dakota, col- 
lected by N. H. Darton (51654); speci- 
mens of hydrogiobertite from Napa 
County, Cal. (51718). 
