Fishes — Through Museum Expeditions 



25 



Lee S. Crandall, New York City. 



Collection of 24 fishes, Central America. 

 Department of Invertebrate Zoology, 

 Transfer. 

 4 Small Gobies, Porto Rico. 

 Department of Mineralogy, Transfer. 



Fish teeth. 

 Department of Vertebrate Paleontol- 

 ogy, Transfer. 

 200 Fossil sharks' teeth, vertebrae, etc., 

 and jaw and vertebrae of a Mackerel 

 Shark, Bowman, S. C; fossil fish re- 

 mains, Alberta, Can. 

 Cleveland H. Dodge Fund. 



265 Sharks and other fishes, Japan; 3 

 mounted fishes, Nassau, Bahama Isl- 

 ands; 65 fresh-water fishes, Ecuador; 

 3 fossil fishes, Orkney Islands; 2 Dog- 

 fish and 2 Hound Sharks, Woods Hole, 

 Mass. ; 6 fossil fishes from Germany. 



Richard Dorn, Upper Montclair, N. J. 



54 Aquarium fishes. 

 Mrs. Wm. H. Granbery, New York City. 



Saw of Sawfish. 

 F. Chapman Grant, Eagle Pass, Texas. 



8 Fishes, Eagle Pass. 

 W. Alexander Griffith, Quebec, Canada. 



2 Marston's Trout, Lake Cassette, Can. 

 Miss M. F. Hazell, Bailey Island, Me. 



7 Mackerel and 1 Butterfish, Bailey Island. 

 William Helmuth, East Hampton, L. I. 



2 Flatfish, East Hampton. 

 George G. Heye, New York City. 



3 Gobies, Cuba and Haiti. 

 Fred Kessler, New York City. 



1 Alewife and 12 Anchovies, Hudson River. 

 William Mack, New York City. 



8 Glorious Minnows and 6 Goldfish. 

 Merchants' Club, through Wm. Mahoney, 



New York City. 



1 Snook, 1 Houndfish and 1 Halfbeak. 

 Louis L. Mowbray, New York City. 



2 Angelfish, Key West, Fla. 



New York Zoological Society, New 

 York City. 

 1 Alligator gar, 1 Angelfish, 1 Crab-eater, 

 1 Dogfish, 1 Monkfish, 10 Skates, 1 

 Margatefish. Total, 16 specimens re- 

 ceived from the New York Aquarium. 



John Treadwell Nichols, Englewood, 

 N.J. 

 1 Shark and teeth and skin of Dusky 

 Shark, also 2 fish skeletons and 1 skele- 

 ton jaw, Oyster Bay, N. Y. 



J. W. T. Nichols, New York City. 



1 Starry Flounder. 

 William B. Nichols, Oyster Bay, N. Y. 



1 Mackerel, Cold Spring Harbor, L. I. 

 P. S. Parker, Otis, Mass. 



Large Eel skin, Tarrington River, Mass. 

 E. E. Petersen, New York City. 



Skeletons of jaws of three fishes, Chile, 

 S. A. 

 Henry Ruof, New York City. 



1 Burrfish, 1 Cowfish. 

 Frederick Schneider, Brooklyn, N. Y. 



25 Aquarium fishes. 

 H. A. Silvernail, New York City. 



1 Dried Tarpon skin, Tampico, Mex. 

 Warren B. Travell, New York City. 



Dried head of Paddlefish, Greeneville, 

 Tenn. 

 Henry Trull, New York City. 



1 Sword-tail. 



Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Vanderlip, New 

 York City. 



Mounted Tarpon. 

 Bernard Zettl, Brooklyn, N. Y. 



Pharyngeal teeth of Ladyfish. 

 Carl Zeumer, New York City. 



Tail and embryo of Sting Ray, Costa Rica. 



By Exchange. 



Princeton University, Princeton, N. J. 



8 Fishes, Greenland. 

 Scottish Oceanographical Laboratory, 

 Edinburgh, Scotland. 



7 Dried fishes from the Antarctic. 

 Senckenbergische Naturforschende 



Gesellschaft, Frankfort, Germany. 



2 Acanthodians, Lebach, bei Saarbriicken, 

 Germany. 



Western Australian Art Gallery, Perth, 

 Australia. 



8 Fishes, Australia. 



Through Museum Expeditions. 



30 Specimens of fossil sharks and Arthro- 

 dires from the Cleveland shale of Ohio. 

 Collected by Louis Hussakof. 



Plaster molds of 2 Devilfish (Mania biros- 

 tris) ; sections of the two specimens and 

 various sharks and rays taken on the ex- 

 pedition on the west coast of Florida. 

 Collected by Louis Hussakof, Russell J. 

 Coles and J. C. Bell. 



