REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1907. 



I ntebior, I )epakt m e nt of — Continued. 

 Montana (46937) : 54 duplicate 

 specimens of typical olivine basalt 

 from Pilot Knob, Routt County. 

 Colo., collected by Messrs. II. S. 

 Gale and R. I >. Crawford (46962); 

 vertebrate fossils from the Carbo- 

 naceous, near Seymour, and the Cre- 

 taceous (Austin chalk), at Enloe, 

 Tex., collected by C. II. Gordon 

 (47014) : 4'.i specimens from the 

 Leadville district, Colorado (47(>Nd) ; 

 20 specimens of quartz latite from 

 the Ouray quadrangle, Colorado, and 

 of 72 specimens of the same mate- 

 rial from the Silverton quadrangle 

 (470S7) ; 85 specimens collected in 

 the Penobscot Bay (Maine) quad- 

 rangle by Messrs. George < >. Smith. 

 Edson S. P.astin. and Charles W. 

 Brown (47101); 17 hand specimens 

 and a number of chips of prowersose 

 from Appleton, Knox County, Me. 

 (471<»- ) ; 2 fragments of fossil bones 

 from near Moab, Utah, collected by 

 Whitman Cross (4714:'0 ; 5 geolog- 

 ical specimens from Silverton quad- 

 rangle and .". from Needle Mountain 

 quadrangle, Colorado (47185); 6 

 fractured bowlders from Deer Creek 

 coal held. Arizona (471S6) ; rocks 

 from Rico quadrangle, Colorado 

 (471'.i ( .o ; amphibole asbestos from 

 Rocky Mount. Franklin County. Va. 

 (47265); about 45,000 specimens of 

 studied and unstudied material from 

 the pre-Cambrian, Cambrian, and 

 ordovician rocks of the United 

 States (4727(0 : .". fossil fishes from 

 lice Heights, Hand County, S. Dak. : 

 specimen of Inoceramus dcformis 

 from the Niobrara formation, near 

 La Junta, < 'olo. ; alga? from lime- 

 stone in the lower portion of Morri- 

 son formation near Iron Mountain 

 Station. Wyoming; collection from 

 Lafayette formation near Ileaths- 

 ville. Va. ; oysters from the Quater- 

 nary deposit, Maryland Point. Poto- 

 mac River; fossil bone from Colum- 

 bia formation; coprolite from the 

 base <>f Chesapeake formation, Tar 

 Bay, James River, Virginia (47340) ; 

 rocks from Big Horn Mountains and 



I ntebior, I >epartm km' ok — Continued. 

 other parts of Wyoming; Black 

 Hills of South Dakota, Newark 

 Group of New Jersey, and Kansas 

 (47341); 7 specimens of limestone 

 and other rocks from Independence 

 quadrangle, Kansas, and adjacent 

 localities (47365); rocks collected 

 by Willis T, Lee in the Rio Grande 

 region Of New Mexico, southwestern 

 Utah, and western Arizona (47370) ; 

 specimen of eerussile from the Her- 

 cules mine, Coeur d'Alene district. 

 Idaho, collected by F. L. Itansome 

 (47379); volcanic material, with 

 thin sections of the same, from the 

 West Indies, collected by R. T. Hill 

 and I. C. Russell (47.~>11): minerals 

 from various localities ( -\ 7- _ »24 ) ; im- 

 perfect fossil Ash, Lepisosteus sim- 

 plex, collected by Jeremiah Ahern, 

 U. S. Reclamation Service, near 

 Cody, Wyo. (47534). 



Jack, John P.. I'unta Gorda, Fla. : 

 Photograph of the nest of an Ever- 

 glade kite (4<;o7r>). 



James, Mrs. Julian, Washington, 1 >. < '. : 

 Stick pin, comb, camisa, and kerchief 

 (47347). 



Jarvis, < '. I >.. Storr's, ( "onn. : Two para- 

 sitic Hymenoptera (46412). 



JENNEY, C. E., Fresno. Cal. : Shells 

 (46930). 



Jensen, M. C, Washington, D. C. : 359 

 plants from Virginia (47471 : col- 

 lected for the Museum ). 



Jkwktt. Stanley G., Portland, Oreg. : 

 .". juncos and 2 gophers from Oregon 

 ( 16944). 



John, Andrew, Washington, D. C. : 4 

 ears of " squaw-corn " (47139); 2 

 pottery pipes made by the Catawba 

 Indians of South Carolina (47244). 



Johnson, C. W., Boston Society of 

 Natural History. Boston. Mass.: Pu- 

 pae of mosquitoes (47248); 11 mos- 

 quitoes from Labrador and New- 

 foundland (47264 ). *""**- 



Johnson, Mrs. F. P., St. bonis, Mo.: 

 Larva of a cassid-moth (46297). 



