LIST OF DONATIONS xlv 



LIST OF DONATIONS 



FOR THE YEAR ENDING JUNE 30TH, 1915. 



Hugh P. Angus. — Nest of young hedge sparrows, living, one normal 

 bird and two white ; from tlie donor's garden at Low Fell. A piece 

 of thick lead water-pipe gnawed through by rats. 



Geo. a. Atkinson. — Some Japanese butterflies, set, including a large 

 Ht'sfia. 



Richard S. Bagnall, F.E.S., F.L.S. — A collection of local Psyllids 

 {" frog-hoppers," etc.), about 35 species. Reprints of four papers by 

 the donor : Euthrips t ami cola, a new species of Thysanoptera ; 

 Stenurothrips succineti-s, a fossil insect in amber ; Brief descriptions of 

 new Thysanoptera, iv. ; The Woodlice of Northumberland and 

 Durham. 



D. M. Barringer. — Copy of paper by the author, " A Meteor Crater in 

 Northern Central Arizona." 



Miss Seymour Bell. — A West Indian globe fish. 



Thos. Bentham, B.Sc— a pair of living Californian quails ( Lophortyx 

 californicics), and a bullfinch, for the aviary. 



Geo. Bolam. — A Daubenton's bat from Alston. 



T. W. Bracken. — Butterflies (in papers) and other natural history objects 

 collected by the donor on the Lagos Government Railway, Northern 

 Nigeria. 



Dr. Geo. Stewardson Brady, F.R.S. — A collection of apterous 

 insects (Collembola and Thysanura) taken by the donor in various 

 parts of the British Isles. 



Abel Chapman. — A malformed trout from the North Tyne. An adult 

 great grey shrike, picked up dead near Houxty, North Tyne, on 

 1st May. 



Hugh V. Charlton. — A fieldfare shot out of a large flock in Cumberland 

 on 3rd May. A trout, about i^-lbs., from the Eden, for casting. 



Mrs. Norman Cookson. — A fine wapiti head from Canada. 



Herbert Coxon. — Five trout from Rothley Lake, for casting. 



Mrs. Dinning. — From the collections of the late Mr. William Dinning : 

 a box of small tools for developing fossils ; a book of newspaper 

 cuttings referring to the work of local naturalists in the 'sixties and 

 'seventies. 



