b NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 



and galena from Colorado; sphalerite, smithsonite, pjrite, mala- 

 chite and stibnite from Arkansas; antimony and calcite from 

 England, Bohemia and Mexico; smithsonite from Greece; stib- 

 nite from Utah. 



Historic and economic geology and lithology, 72 specimens: 

 representative of the Carboniferous, Subcarboniferous, Niagara 

 and Trenton. 



Zoology. 100 specimens: serpents, insects and mollusks. 



University of Arkansas museum, Fayetteville. A. H. Purdue^ 

 professor of geology. 



Paleontology. 1800 specimens: 300 vertebrates; 1000 inverte- 

 brates and 500 plants. 



Mineralogy. 2000 specimens: 200 mineral species, mostly oxids, 

 sulfids and silicates. 



Economic geology. 50 specimens of building stones; 200 speci- 

 mens representing the carbonates, sulfids, oxids and silicates. 



Petrography. 300 specimens. 



Historic geology. 13 relief maps. 



Zoology. 2900 specimens: 80 species of mammals and birds 

 (200 specimens) ; 40 species of reptiles and amphibians (200 speci- 

 mens) and 18 skeletons; 350 species of fish (1500 specimens); 200 

 species of insects and other invertebrates (1000 specimens). 



Botany. 3500 specimens, illustrating 1500 species. 



CALIFORNIA 



California Academy of sciences, San Francisco. See Addenda, 

 p. 221. 



Golden Gate Park museum, San Francisco. C. P. Wilcomb, 

 curator. 



Collections are small as this museum is only six years old. It 

 consists of 25 distinct departments and is in a well equipped 

 building. 



Paleontology. 2000 specimens and 250 species of fossils. 



Mineralogy. 2322 specimens. 



Zoology. 24,000 specimens: mammals, birds, fishes and miscel- 

 laneous objects of natural history. 



Botany. 404 specimens in forestry. 



Ethnology. 3416 specimens. 



