LIST OF ACCESSIONS TO THE COLLECTIONS DURING 
THE FISCAL YEAR 1920-1921. 
(BXCHPT WHEN OTHERWISE INDICATED, THE SPECIMENS WERE PRESENTED OR WHERE TRANS- 
FERRED BY BURBAUS OF THE GOVERNMENT IN ACCORDANCE WITH LAW.) 
ABBOTT, E. L., Washington, D. C.: 
Fragment of a leaf-shaped blade and 
a chipped arrow point collected at 
Ocean City, Md. (65512); sacred 
paint slab and piece of flint worked 
for drill, from Arizona (66567). 
ABBOTT, Dr. W. L., Philadelphia, 
Pa.: 201 bird skins, 9 skeletons and 
2 nests, 6 alcoholic birds, 1 turtle 
and 2 eggs, 3 reptiles, 2 myriapods, 
and 4 packages of shells from Haiti 
(65280, 65367); 4,000 plants, 10 
specimens of cacti, 31 bird skins, 
several eggs and nests, 5 skeletons 
of birds, 6 lots of mollusks, 6 snakes, 
1 insect, 10° archeological specimens 
and lot of human bones, all from the 
Dominican Republic (66026, 66323, 
66659) ; 571 mammals, 534 birds, 118 
reptiles, 65 fishes, 258 invertebrates, 
4 vials of ants, 17 insects, a collec- 
tion of mollusks, and a bottle of 
parasitic worms (collected by 
Charles M. Hoy in Australia) (65456, 
66572). 
ABBOTT, Dr. W. L., and C. BopEN 
Kuioss, Federated Malay States 
Museums, Kuala Lumpur, F. M. 8.: 
144 mammals, 496 birds, 3 reptiles, 
and 6 ethnological specimens from 
Siam, Anam, and Cochin China 
(65213). 
ABBOTT, Dr. W. L., and Emery C., 
Lronarp, U. 8. National Museum: 
10,000 plants from Haiti, collected 
for the Museum (65600). 
ABRAMS, Prof. Le Roy. (See under 
Leland Stanford Junior University, 
and KE. A. McGregor.) 
71305°—21 10 
ACADEMY OF NATURAL  SCI- 
ENCES, Philadelphia, Pa.: 12 speci- 
mens of minerals (65445, exchange). 
ACKERMAN, Cart, Los’ Angeles, 
Calif.: 3 specimens of cacti (65420) ; 
4 specimens of cacti (65485, ex- 
change). 
ADAMS, Patt J., Knoxville, Tenn.: 
176 specimens of land and fresh- 
water shells, representing 11 species, 
from Tennessee (66241). 
AGNES SCOTT COLLEGE, Decatur, 
Ga: 
Dragonfly, Gomphaeschna 
lata (66740). 
AGRICULTURE, DEPARTMENT OF: 
Set of 15 charts illustrating the 
composition of food materials 
(66205). 
(See also under Copenhagen, Den- 
mark, Zoological Museum.) 
Bureau of Biological Survey: 1,981 
insects representing 196 species 
in the Orders Neuropteroidea, 
Coleoptera, Homoptera, Diptera, 
and Hymenoptera (65183); 185 
miscellaneous reptiles and ba- 
trachians from various localities 
received during 1919-1920; also 
8,726 miscellaneous mammals 
from various localities received 
between July 1, 1917, and June 
30, 1920, inclusive, and not previ- 
jurcil- 
ously aeccessioned (65225); 39 
reptiles and batrachians from 
various localities (65227); 8 
specimens of Anodonta wahla- 
metensis from the mouth of Bear 
River, Utah, 8 mollusks, 9 crus- 
143 
