DEPARTMENT OF VERTEBRATE PALAEONTOLOGY. 



By Donation. 



Dr. ALES HRDLICKA. Tooth of a mammoth from Mexico. 

 Prof. H. F. OSBORN. Collection of Primitive Reptiles and Amphibia 

 from the Permian of Texas. Made by C. H. Sternberg, 1902. 



The Cope Collection of Fossil Reptiles, Amphibia and Fishes, and the 

 Cope Pampean Collection, presented by Mr. Jesup and by a number of the 

 Trustees of the Museum, have been referred to in previous reports. 



By Exchange. 



Museum of Paleontology, Munich, Bavaria. Cast of foot bones of 

 Amp hi cyan and teeth of fossil apes from the Miocene of Europe. 



Muse'um de Pale'ontologie, Paris, France. Cast of jaw of a fossil 

 rhinoceros. 



Muse'um de V Universite de Moscou, Rtissia. Skull and lower jaws of 

 the extinct "Woolly" Rhinoceros. 



Museum of Paleontology, Bucharest, Roumania. Casts of a gigantic 

 Dinotherium jaw and of a fossil camel jaw. 



Muse'um de V University de Moscou, Russia. Casts of skull of Elasmo- 

 therium and of jaws and teeth of Russian Mastodons. 



British Museum, London. Skeleton of a Plesiosaur, bones of an 

 Ichthyosaur, and skull and vertebrae of a primitive crocodile, all from the 

 Jurassic of England. 



Museo Nacional, Buenos Aires, Argentina. Casts of skull, jaws, fore 

 and hind limbs of the Hippidium. 



Mtiseum of Tubingen University, Gerjnany. Series of 75 casts of bones 

 of Triassic Dinosaurs. 



Museum of Paleontology, Munich, Bavaria. Series of specimens of 

 fossil horses, rhinoceroses and ruminants from the Miocene of Europe and of 

 China. 



Museum- of Lyons University, France. Series of jaws and teeth of 

 Lophiodon from the Eocene of France. 



Through Museum Expeditions. 



TERTIARY OF SOUTH DAKOTA (Whitney Fund). Complete 

 skeleton of a Three-toed Horse from the Upper Miocene, and about fifty 

 other specimens from Oligocene and Miocene. 



TERTIARY OF MONTANA (Whitney Fund in part). About one 

 hundred and fifty specimens, including skeletons of a rare Oreodont from the 

 Upper Miocene, and jaws and fore and hind feet, illustrating a new stage in 

 the evolution of the Horse. 



CRETACEOUS OF MONTANA. Fine skull of the gigantic three- 

 horned Dinosaur Triceratops, skeletons of a rare primitive lizard, and other 

 specimens. 



JURASSIC OF WYOMING. About 120 specimens of Carnivorous and 

 Herbivorous Dinosaurs. 



