524 Bulletin American Museum of Natural History. [Vol. XIX, 



Level Mountain 5 Moose, including an adult female with 

 twin calves, 9 Caribou, and i Red Fox, and about 100 small 

 mammals were secured. On the return trip Telegraph Creek 

 was reached September 2 7 . From this point a trip was made 

 to Iskoot Summit, distant about forty-five miles, for the pur- 

 pose of making a collection of the Stone Sheep, first discovered 

 by Mr. Stone in the Cheonnee Mountains, in August, 1896. 

 Six sheep were secured, consisting of two old females, a three- 

 year-old ram and several lambs. A second trip was made to 

 the Cheonnee Mountains during the third week of October, in 

 the hope of securing some large rams, but the weather turning 

 cold, with heavy snow-falls, the trip proved dangerous and 

 unsuccessful. 



The final departure from Telegraph Creek for Wrangel was 

 made on the 23d of October, and later, as already stated, 

 nearly two weeks were devoted to collecting on Kupreanof 

 Island. 



From the foregoing it will be seen that quite diverse lo- 

 calities were covered, as regards elevation and other condi- 

 tions, so that a thoroughly representative collection was made 

 in the region of the headwaters of the Stickine River, and from 

 Wrangel and Kupreanof Islands. The species obtained are, 

 arranged by localities, as follows : 



Alaska Peninsula. 



Phoca richardii pribilofensis. 

 Ursus middendorffi. 

 Gulo luscus. 



Wrangel and Kupreanof Islands. 



Odocoileus columbianus sitkensis. 

 Sciurus hudsonicus vancouveren- 



sis. 



Citellus stonei, sp. nov. 

 Peromyscus sitkensis. 

 Evotomys wrangeli. 

 Microtus macrurus. 

 Ursus sitkensis. 

 Sorex personatus streatori. 

 " longicauda. 



Telegraph Creek Region. 



Rangifer osborni. 

 Paralces gigas. 

 Ovis stonei. 

 Oreamnos montanus. 

 Sciurus hudsonicus baileyi. 

 Eutamias caniceps. 

 Citellus erythrogluteius. 

 Marmotta caligata. 

 Mus musculus. 

 Peromyscus arcticus. 



oreas. 



Neotoma cinerea saxamans. 

 Evotomys dawsoni. 

 Microtus. mordax vellerosus. 

 " drummondi. 



