172 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 



University of Tennessee, Knoxville. Samuel M. Bain, professor 

 of hoiani/. 



Paleontology/. Small collection of casts and fossils. 



Mineralogy. A small working collection. 



Zoology. Several thousand insects and a small collection of 

 alcoholic specimens of other animals. 



Botany. 30,000 specimens including many types of Chapman^ 

 Gattinger, Scribner and others. 



Duplicates for exchange. 



Ethnology and anthropology. Small collection of Indian relics 

 and casts of same. 



Vanderbilt university, Nashville. L. 0. Glenn, professor of 

 geology, in charge; George W. Martin, professor of biology. 



Paleontology. 15,000 specimens: Sturtz and Krantz collec- 

 tions; the Safford collection of Tennessee Paleozoic fossils and 

 Mesozoic and Genozoic fossils from Tennessee and Alabama; the 

 Glenn collection of Atlantic coast Cenozoic invertebrates. 

 Material for exchange. 



Mineralogy. 4000 specimens: Sturtz and Krantz general col- 

 lections. 



Historic and economic geology and Uthology. 2500 ispecimens: 

 classic European and American rocks, both igneous and sedi- 

 mentary; Tennessee Paleozoic rocks. 



Some Tennessee rocks for exchange. 



Zoology. 2000 specimens: the commoner forms of Tennessee 

 and the south; both vertebrates and invertebrates; shells; some 

 forms from the Woods Hole station. Material for exchange. 



Botany. 5000 specimens: collections of lichens and algae. 

 Material for exchange. 



Ethnology and anthropology. 800 specimens: stone and bone 

 articles and pottery from the Tennessee and Florida mounds. 



Walden university, Nashville. Harold Steele, professor of 

 natural science, in charge. 



Paleontology. 100 specimens: material illustrating the fauna 

 of the Lower Silurian formations in Tennessee, and of the Car- 

 boniferous formations of northern Illinois. A few brachiopods 

 and corals for exchange. 



