96 ACCOUNTS, ETC., OF THE BRITISH MUSEUM. 



II. — Duplicates and Exchanges. 



Duplicate fossils and plaster casts of fossils have been presented 

 to the National Museum of Wales and the Cheltenham Museum ; 

 also (in return for services rendered to the Department of Geology) 

 to the Sedgwick Museum (Cambridge), Maidstone Museum, Peabody 

 Museum (Yale University), Prof. A. G. Nathorst, Dr. Marie C. 

 Stopes, and Dr. E. Curwen. 



Exchanges of duplicate fossils have been made with the Royal 

 Agricultural College, Cirencester, and with Mr. W. E. Crane. 



III. — Dej^artmental Library. 



The additions to the Library which have been registered, stamped, 

 catalogued, and press-marked, comprise 131 new works and 

 pamphlets, of which 16 were purchased and 115 presented ; 296 

 parts of serials in progress, of which 103 were purchased and 

 193 presented. 35 sheets of maps were acquired, 9 by purchase 

 and 26 presented. 4 photographs were presented. 19 volumes 

 and pamphlets were obtained by transfer from other Departments. 

 169 volumes have been bound, press-marked, and returned to the 

 shelves. 1,168 visits were made to the Library by students and 

 others. 



IV. — Publications. 



The second part of the Catalogue of Cretaceous Plants has been 

 published. 



A Guide Book to the Fossil Remains of Man has been published. 



V. — A cquisitions. 

 A. — By Donation. 

 Among numerous donations the following may be enumerated : — 



Mariimalia. — A cervical vertebra of Zeuglodon from the Barton 

 Clay, Barton, Hampshire, described and figured in Quart. Journ. 

 Geol. Soc, vol. Ixiii (1907), p. 124. H. Eliot Walton, Esq. 



Remains of a Zeuglodont from an Eocene formation in a cutting 

 on the Port Harcourt Railway, Omobialla district. Southern Nigeria. 

 Sir Frederick Lugard, G.C.M.G. 



A nearly complete skeleton of a Beaver from Wicken Fen, 

 Cambridge. E. B. Williams, Esq. 



Specimens, chiefly limb-bones, of Anaglocliis and other Ruminants 

 from the Pleistocene cave-deposits of Crete. Miss D. M. A. Bate. 



A collection of remains of Vertebrata from rock-fissures in 

 the Balearic Isles, obtained by Miss D. M. A. Bate, namely about 

 40 limb-bones of Mijotragus balearicus from Majorca, and 1 skull, 

 10 portions of skulls, 9 mandibular rami, 12 vertebrge and various 

 other bones of Myotragus from Minorca. The Percy^ Sladen 

 Memorial Trustees. 



A collection of remains from Pleistocene Gravel at Piltdown, 

 Sussex, including the nasal bones, part of a turbinal, and the right 



