28 Twenty-fourth Report on the State Museum. 



four linndred and ten. Among them are some beautiful stalactitic 

 and stalagmitic formations from Ball's Cave in Schoharie county. 



V. By Deposit. 



By the Dikectoe. 



Seventy -five specimens, representing the Waverley sandstone series 

 of Ohio, the supposed equivalents of the same at Burlington, Iowa, 

 and the Burlington beds of the Lower Carboniferous Limestone of 

 Burlington, iowa. (The specimens are marked with carmine tickets 

 bearing the name "Hall," and are numbered from 1 to 75 inclusive, 

 as follows) : 



From 1 to 11, Specimens from the Waverley Sandstone Series of 

 Ohio. 

 12 to 23, Specimens from Burlington, Iowa — sandstones, etc. 

 24 to 42, Actinocrinus, of Burlington Limestone. 

 43 to 48, Pentremite, etc., " " 



49 to 56, Other forms from " " 



57 to 72, Other fossils from " ." 



73 to 75, Geological specimens, " " 



lY. TO THE DEPAETMEl^T OF ARCHEOLOGY AND 



ETHNOLOGY. 



I. By Donation. 



From F. E. Aspinwall, Loudonville, Albany Co. 

 A collection of forty Indian Arrow-heads, and other Indian antiquities. 



From J. H. Kasten, Fort Hunter, N. Y. 

 Eelics collected at Fort Hunter, IsT. Y. 



From Isaac De Forest, Fort Hunter, N. Y. 

 Bullets, buttons and other relics from Fort Hunter. 



From James Sinclair, Meredith, N. Y. 

 A Horn Spoon made in Scotland over a century ago. 



II. By Purchase. 



Articles from the " Antiquarian Department " of the " Simms 

 Collection," catalogued under two hundred and thirty-six printed 



