200 Conclusion 



CHAPTER XIV 



CONCLTJSION 



Last May I resigned my position as collector 

 and preparator for the Geological Survey of 

 Canada. And soon afterwards went into the 

 field for the British Museum of Natural History, 

 London. Though the British government was 

 spending no money in this kind of research. Dr. 

 A. Smith Woodward, Keeper of G«ology there, 

 secured the means for the first two months' work 

 from The Sladin Memorial Fund of Piccadilly, 

 London. My son, Levi, was the only expert col 

 lector I had with me though I employed men 

 and transportation in the field. We settled down 

 in a camp a couple of miles below Steveville and 

 remained there all summer, exploring the bad- 

 lands near the mouth of Berry Creek. 



Our success was as usual, great. We were able 

 to collect three skeletons of duckbilled dinosaurs 

 of the genus Corythosaurus, of Brown or 

 Stephanosa'Urus, of Lambe. They were all three 

 discovered by my son, Levi, who worked with re- 

 markable persistence and enthusiasm. I too, 

 after I had recovered from an injury I received 

 due to being thrown from my wagon onto the 

 ground, put in every moment I could see, in the 

 heavy work of excavating three skeletons, and 



