﻿52 
  new 
  york 
  state 
  museum 
  

  

  Iowa. 
  

  

  Davenport 
  Academy 
  of 
  Natural 
  Sciences, 
  Davenport 
  

   W. 
  H. 
  Barris, 
  curator 
  

  

  State 
  university 
  of 
  Iowa, 
  Iowa 
  City 
  

  

  Samuel 
  Calvin, 
  professor 
  of 
  geology, 
  also 
  State 
  Geologist. 
  Col- 
  

   lections 
  include 
  30,000 
  specimens, 
  chiefly 
  from 
  state 
  survey. 
  Cal- 
  

   vin 
  collection 
  of 
  Amierican 
  and 
  European 
  fossils, 
  6000 
  speci- 
  

   mens; 
  and 
  Hornaday 
  collection 
  of 
  vertebrate 
  fossils 
  

  

  Cornell 
  college. 
  Mount 
  Vernon 
  

  

  Wm. 
  H. 
  Norton, 
  professor 
  of 
  geology. 
  Collection 
  contains 
  

   11,000 
  specimens 
  

  

  Amity 
  college, 
  College 
  Springs 
  

  

  H. 
  K. 
  Holcomb, 
  professor 
  of 
  biology 
  and 
  chemistry. 
  Collection 
  

   of 
  4500 
  specimens 
  

  

  Upper 
  Iowa 
  university, 
  Fayette 
  

  

  Bruce 
  Fink, 
  professor 
  of 
  botany 
  and 
  zoology. 
  Collection 
  of 
  

   2000 
  specimens 
  

  

  Iowa 
  college, 
  Grinnell 
  

  

  H. 
  W. 
  Norris, 
  professor 
  of 
  biology. 
  Collection 
  of 
  2000 
  speci- 
  

   mens 
  

  

  Wartburg 
  teachers' 
  seminary 
  and 
  academy, 
  Waverly 
  

  

  Frederick 
  Lutz, 
  president. 
  Collection 
  of 
  1181 
  specimens 
  

  

  Western 
  college, 
  Toledoi 
  

  

  A. 
  G. 
  Leonard, 
  professor 
  of 
  biology 
  and 
  chemistry. 
  Collection 
  

   of 
  600 
  specimens 
  

  

  Muscatine 
  academy 
  of 
  science, 
  Muscatine 
  

  

  Samuel 
  McNutt, 
  president. 
  A 
  valuable 
  collection 
  was 
  destroyed 
  

  

  by 
  fire 
  in 
  1896. 
  New 
  collections 
  started 
  which 
  now 
  contain 
  

  

  about 
  250 
  specimens 
  

  

  Kansas. 
  

  

  University 
  of 
  Kansas, 
  Lawrence 
  

  

  Samuel 
  W. 
  Willi 
  ston 
  and 
  Erasmus 
  Haworth, 
  professors 
  of 
  geol- 
  

   op:y. 
  Geok>gical 
  and 
  mineralogical 
  collections 
  contain 
  abc;>t 
  

   100,000 
  specimens 
  

  

  