14 



SMITHSONIAN MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS VOL. ']'] 



their contained faunas in the Canadian Rockies, but there is a great 

 opportunity for the young, vigorous geologist and paleontologist to 

 add to knowledge of them for many years to come, especially between 

 the Canadian Pacific Railway and the Arctic Ocean. 



Fig. 21. — KaineUa hilUngsl (Walcott). This large, fine trilobite loses its 

 former generic name Hiiniiaia^ as a species referred to Himgaia was published 

 in a list of Upper Camlirian fossils in 1914 as Huiiyaia niafjiiificus Billings.^ 

 The genus Kaiiiella is now proposed with the species billiiigsi Walcott as the 

 genotype. Other species occur that will be described in a subsequent paper. The 

 name KaincUa is derived from Mount Kain (9,392 feet, 2,862.7 m.), which was 

 named after Conrad Kain, a noted Swiss guide and Alpine climber. It is located 

 southeast of Billings Butte and Robson Peak, British Columbia, Canada. 



As in previous years, assistance was freely given by Commissioner 

 J. B. Harkin and the members of the Canadian National Parks Serv- 

 ice, and the ofificials and employees of the Canadian Pacific Railway. 

 The expedition was greatly aided by grants from the O. C. Marsh 

 and Joseph Henry endowment funds^ of the National Academy of 

 Sciences. 



^Smithsonian Misc. Coll., Vol. 75, No. i, 1924, p. 37, fig. 7, p. 38. 

 * Loc. cit., Vol. 57, No. 13. 1914, p. 351. 



