Geological Research 57 



Miss Marks has continued the accessioning and has entered 

 seventy-one lots of material as having been received. About 

 Labeling and one-fiith of her time has been occupied with 

 Catalogue preparing the typewritten labels for the strati- 

 Work graphic exhibition series. Under the Curator's 

 supervision, Mr. Tyson has catalogued some hundreds of 

 department photographs and has put the new numbers on 

 the irons of the meteorite collection. Miss Anna H. Greene, 

 under the direction of the Associate Curator, has carded the 

 revised nomenclature of our Bryozoa according to Dr. J. J. 

 Galloway and incorporated reference data supplied by Dr. 

 Coryell, also that of the fossil plant exhibit prepared by Dr. 

 Arthur Hollick. She has also numbered and catalogued the 

 Florissant type series of specimens and has performed other 

 similar work. 



Dr. Reeds has prepared three articles : "The Pueblo Floods," 



"The Movement of Glaciers in Sweden and 



ndR h Alaska," which appeared in the June number 



of Natural History, and "The Geology of New 



York and Vicinity" for the same journal. From the latter 



part of October on, Dr. Reeds was engaged on his part of the 



preparation of a joint paper with President Osborn, entitled 



"Old and New Standards of Pleistocene Division in Relation 



to the Prehistory of Man in Europe," for presentation before 



the Geological Society of America. He also prepared a 



paper on "Transgressions, Regressions and Change of Sea 



Level during the Pleistocene," which he read before the same 



Society. Mr. Foyles has prepared and published in Novitates 



a paper entitled "The Geology of the Northeast Quarter of 



the Monticello Quadrangle, Wayne Co., Kentucky." 



Dr. Reeds, accompanied by Mr. Hill, spent about a month 

 collecting specimens and making studies of certain Helder- 

 bergian localities in "New York, New Jersey and 

 w . Pennsylvania. Excellent exhibition material re- 



sulted from this work. Mr. Foyles made a recon- 

 naissance of the historic area about Fort Cassin, Vermont, with 

 reference to the task of making an intimate study of it. 



