LIST OF ACCESSIONS. 
SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION: 
Commemorative medal issued in 
honor of the tercentennial of the dis- 
covery of Lake Champlain (50361); 
bronze medal struck to commemorate 
the centennial festival of the Univer- 
sity of Oviedo, Spain, and presented 
by the Rector of the University through 
the Spanish Minister at Washington 
(50546); replica, in silver, of gold medal 
awarded during the IV Latin-American 
Medical Congress, Rio de Janeiro, 1909, 
to Dr. Oswaldo Cruz, in recognition of 
his distinguished medical services on 
behalf of his country and humanity 
(50832); plant from Guatemala, received 
from Capt. John Donnell Smith (51300); 
a bronze medal presented by the 
National Battlefields Commission in 
commemoration of the tercentenary 
of the founding of Quebec by Cham- 
plain, 1908 (51533); a medal commemo- 
rating the third centenary of the canon- 
ization of St. Charles Borromeo, 1910, 
presented by Signor Stefano Carlo 
Johnson, Milan, Italy (51555); 20 unit 
drawers of Cambrian fossils collected 
near Vermilion Pass, near Ptarmi- 
gan Pass, and at various other points 
in and near the Bow River Valley, 
Alberta, Canada, by Dr. Charles D. 
Walcott during the field season of 1909 
(51566); casts of 2 specimens of Olenel- 
lus-like forms obtained from Mr. Frank 
Raw, Birmingham, England, and fig- 
ured and described by him (51567); 5 
drawers of Cambrian fossils and 9 
drawers of Ordovician and Silurian 
fossils from the region east of Ogden, 
Utah, collected during the field season 
of 1909 by Mr. J. M. Jessup (51568); 
collection of Lower Cambrian fossils 
made by Dr. Charles D. Walcott in 
Lancaster County, Pa., during the 
winter of 1909 (51569); 20 drawers of 
Cambrian fossils from Manchuria, ob- 
tained during the winter of 1909 by Mr. 
J. P. Iddings (51570); about 100 casts 
of type and figured specimens of Cam- 
brian fossils used by Dr. Charles D. 
Walcott during the preparation of a 
paper describing the various forms of 
Mesonacide (51571). 
107 
SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION—Continued. 
Smithsonian African Expedition, un- 
der the direction of Col. Theodore Roose- 
velt: Collections made in British East 
Africa and received during the year, 
comprising approximately the follow- 
ing specimens: 550 large and 3,450 
small mammals, 2,750 birds, 1,800 rep- 
tiles, 100 fishes, 5,000 invertebrates, 
including insects, mollusks, crusta- 
ceans, etc.; 5,000 plants and a small 
amount of anthropological material 
(50755; 50756; 50757; 50827; 51209; 
51304; 51495). 
Bureau of American Ethnology: About 
1,000 archeological objects collected 
by Dr. J. Walter Fewkes in 1909, in 
connection with the excavation and 
repair of ‘‘Cliff Palace,’’? in the Mesa 
Verde National Park, Colo., under joint 
agreement between the Interior De- 
partment and the Smithsonian Insti- 
tution (50765); stone arrow points made 
by George Kurtley, Tuxedo Park, Md., 
and presented by him to the Bureau 
(50813); Shalako mask horns forwarded 
by Stewart Culin, from collections 
left by Frank H. Cushing in care of 
the Free Museum of Science and Art, 
Philadelphia (50814); buckskin shirt 
with porcupine quill ornamentation, 
made by the Arapaho-Grosventre (alias 
Atsina) tribe of the northern part of 
Montana, purchased for the Bureau 
from Arnold Woolworth by James 
Mooney (50815); pottery fragments 
from a village site near Sutherland, 
Iowa, presented by W. A. Brady, 
Sutherland, Iowa (50816); old Shaker 
pipe obtained from the North family, 
Union village, Warren County, Ohio, 
and presented by J. P. MacLean, 
Franklin, Ohio (50817); flaked stones 
from Piney Branch quarries, District 
of Columbia (50971); archeological 
objects collected by Dr. J. Walter 
Fewkes in 1909 in the Marsh Pass 
region, Arizona (50972); wooden mortar 
and pestle obtained from the Pamun- 
key Indians of Virginia by James 
Mooney (50973); articles, presumably 
of Eskimo origin and consisting of a seal- 
skin packing case, a burial case of 
