REGISTER OF THE MEETING 



145 



tion of various phyla was well illustrated in the stages from the successive 

 faunal zones. 



GROUP OF TWENTY-SIX ASSOCIATED SKELETONS OF LEPTOMERYX FROM 

 THE WHITE RIVER OLIGOCENE 



BY E. S. RIG6S 



Read by title, with abstract by the chairman. 



"This paper will describe the occurrence of this remarkable number of asso- 

 ciated skeletons, the probable conditions of deposition, as evidenced by the 

 position of the specimens, and the character of the including matrix. Note 

 some undetermined points of anatomy and draw some conclusions as to the 

 probable habits of the animal. 



The meeting then adjourned. 



Register of the Princeton Meeting, 1913 



Henry M. Ami 

 R. S. Bassler 

 E. W. Berry 

 Barnum Brown 

 L. D. Burling 

 Fritz Berckheimer 

 Thomas C. Brown 

 E. C. Case 

 William B. Clark 

 John M. Clarke 

 Marjorie OTonnell 

 John T. Doneghy 

 Marcus S. Farr 

 a. f. foerste 



J. W. GiDLEY 

 C. W. GiLMORE 



A. W. Grabau 

 Walter Granger 

 W. K. Gregory 

 Chris. A. Hartnagel 

 Robert T. Jackson 

 Frank H. Knowlton 

 Frederick B. Loomis 

 Richard S. Lull 



Claude 



X — Bull. Geol. Soc. Am., Vol. 25, 



W. D. Matthew 

 Henry F. Osborn 

 Percy E. Raymond 

 Chester A. Reeds 

 Rudolph Ruedemann 

 Frederick W. Sardeson 

 Thomas D. Savage 

 Charles Schuchert 

 William B. Scott 

 William J. Sinclair 

 T. W, Stanton 

 MiGNON Talbot 

 Edward L. Troxell 

 M. W. Twitchell 

 Gilbert Van Ingen 

 T. W. Vaughan 

 Charles D. Walcott 

 Stuart Weller 

 David White 

 G. R. Wieland 

 Henry S. Williams 

 Elvira Wood 

 W. C. Mansfield 

 E. 0. TJlrich 

 W. Unger 



1913 



