Geology — By Gift 



129 



38 Microscopic slides of mounted 

 Rotifera, prepared by C. F. Rousse- 

 let. 



Various marine invertebrates. Woods 

 Hole, Mass. 



60 Larvae of local Lepidoptera. 



700 Insects, British Guiana. 



Through Museum Expeditions. 



Numerous insects, 16 crustaceans and 

 molluscs, Langton Bay, Arctic 

 Ocean. Collected by R. M. Ander- 

 son. 



Collection of local Lepidoptera and 

 several parasitic worms from in- 

 testine of Mosquito, Barnegat, N. J. 

 Collected by J. A. Grossbeck. 



10,617 Insects and other invertebrates 

 from Cuba. Collected by F. E. 

 Lutz and C. W. Leng. 



2,000 Invertebrates, Passamaquoddy 

 Bay, New Brunswick. Collected by 

 R. W. Miner and H. Mueller. 



5 Species Crustacea, Cuba. Collected 

 by J. T. Nichols. 



Myriapods and isopods, Ramsey, N. J. 

 Collected by F. E. Lutz. 



Identified collection of echinoderms, 

 Lower California. Collected in 

 191 1 by C. H. Townsend. 



MOLLUSCA. 

 By Gift. 



C. Wm. Beebe, New York City. 

 Land Shells taken from the stomachs 



of Jungle Fowls. 

 1 Large Slug (Anadenus beebei 



Cocker ell). 



Barnum Brown, New York City. 

 21 Pond Snails, Red Deer River, Al- 

 berta. 



Lyman A. Cheney, New York City. 

 15 Bent Amber Snails, Bronx. 



T. D. A. Cockerell, Boulder, Colo. 

 20 Pyramid Snails, Glenwood 

 Springs, Colo. 



Carlos de la Torre, Havana, Cuba. 

 An important collection of Cuban 

 Land Shells, comprising many co- 

 types and consisting of 655 speci- 

 mens, representing 139 species. 



Mrs. Harriet Phillips Eaton, New 

 York City. 

 2 Coiled Mat Shells, Pass-a-Grille, 

 Fla. 



A. D. Gabay, New York City. 



1 Fossil Nautilus, Bad Lands, N. 

 Dak. ; 1 Painted Thorny Oyster, Cal- 

 ifornia. 



Charles P. Goerrig, Brooklyn, N. Y. 

 314 Specimens of Marine Shells, com- 

 prising 30 genera and 80 species. 

 A. Da Costa Gomez, New York City. 

 6 Marine Shells and a group of Scaly 

 Worm-shells. 



Junius Henderson, Boulder, Colo. 

 19 Shells, various localities in Colo- 

 rado. 



Frederick F. Hunt, New York City. 

 160 Specimens of Florida marine, 

 land and fresh-water shells. 

 Paul Kieler, San Francisco, Cal. 

 4 Specimens of Choanopoma, New 

 Guinea. 

 L. Maurer, New York City. 



1 Specimen deformed Voluta, New 

 Zealand. 



R. C. Osburn, New York City. 

 24 Fresrnwater clams, Ohio and North 

 Dakota. 



J. L. Spicer, New York City. 



2 Shells from Indian grave, Union 

 Springs, N. Y. 



By Purchase. 



The A. Da Costa Gomez Collection of 

 deformed and repaired shells, com- 

 prising scalariform, sinistral, dis- 

 torted and repaired forms, in all 

 60 specimens. 



4 Samples of the Tuzo Conch- Artistry. 



DEPARTMENT OF GEOLOGY. 



By Gift. 



D. M. Barringer, Philadelphia, Pa. 

 Iron nucleus of shale ball, Canyon 

 Diablo. 



