Geology and Invertebrate Fossils 



211 



i Specimen of Calcite, Franklinite, 

 etc., from Franklin Furnace, N. J. 

 Carl E. Malmquist, Astoria, L. I. 

 Fragments of decomposed Conglom- 

 erate, Pegmatite, and Chlorite schist 

 (7 specimens), from Astoria, L. I. 

 Department of Mineralogy (Trans- 

 fer). 



1 Large Stalagmite and 1 curtain stal- 

 actite, from an old cave in Copper 

 Queen Mine, Bisbee, Ariz. 



25 Specimens of Azurite and Mala- 

 chite. 



2 Boxes of miscellaneous fossils (R. 

 C. Kemp Collection). 



J. P. Morgan, New York City. 

 9 Fossils (found 13,500 feet above sea 



level), Tibet. Collected by Rev. 



H. B. Marx. 

 W. H. Murdock, Brooklyn, N. Y. 



3 Iron-sand concretions, from Para, 

 Brazil. 



Hermann Papke, Weehawken Heights, 

 N. J. 

 Specimen of fossilized Wood, from 



Clay Bank, Kreischerville, S. I. 

 9 Fragments of highly quartzitic Sand- 

 stone showing natural cast of an 

 originally underlying drainage (?) 

 system, from Richmond, S. I. 

 H. D. Perrine, New York City. 



Oil painting, "Bridge of Candi." 

 F. E. Reese, St. Paul, Minn. 

 5 Boxes of Ordovician fossils, from 

 near St. Paul. 

 Oscar Santoro, Paterson, N. J. 



Tooth of a Shark (Cretaceous). 

 O. P. Snider, Manitou Springs, Col. 

 Fragments of Limestone, from near 

 Cave of the Winds, Colorado. 

 William Sulzer, New York City. 

 Native Copper from Mt. Natazak, 

 near Mt. McKinley, Alaska; Graph- 

 ite from near Seward Peninsula, 

 near York, Alaska; copper ores 

 from southern end of Prince of 

 Wales Island, Alaska; and Asbestos 

 from Grand Canyon, Col. 

 Warren Travell, New York City. 

 22 Fossil specimens of Hamilton age, 

 from Kashong Glen, near Geneva, 

 Wis. 

 Van Dyke School, Bayside, L. I. 

 (through Mrs. Falconer). 

 Clay-iron-stone concretion shaped like 

 a bison's horn, from Bayside. 



Department of Vertebrate Palaeontol- 

 ogy (through Dr. W. D. Matthew). 

 5 Drawings and 3 enlarged photos 

 from illustration prepared for Pro- 

 fessor Henry Fairfield Osborn's pa- 

 per entitled "Mutations of Waagen," 

 1916. 

 Victory Mines, Spring Mt. Mining Dis- 

 trict, Lemhi Co., Idaho. 

 Vein Quartz intersected with veinlets 

 of Argentite, etc., partly oxidized. 

 James H. Walling, Brooklyn, N. Y. 

 Pot-hole pebbles, one of which shows 

 coal and shale together, from Car- 

 bondale, Pa.; Corals, etc., from 

 Michigan. 

 Ward's Natural Science Establish- 

 ment, Rochester, N. Y. 

 Fragment of Lower California Mete- 

 orite: 7 grams. 

 Clement L. Webster, Charles City, 

 Iowa. 

 2 Photographs of type specimens of 

 Pachyphyllum irregularis, Webster, 

 N. S. 

 H. P. Whitlock, New York City. 

 Iron-stone concretions, from Kreis- 

 cherville, Staten Island. 



By Exchange 

 R. N. Buckstaff. 

 Aerolite, "Colby," 24.5 grams, from 



Colby, Wis. 

 Milwaukee Public Museum (through 



H. L. Ward). 

 Aerolite, "Colby," 841 grams, from 



Colby, Wis. 

 Ward's Natural Science Establish- 

 ment, Rochester, N. Y. 

 Meteorites: Canyon City, 815 grams; 



Mt. Sterling, 1,465 grams; Murphy, 



560 grams; Nejed, 1,822 grams; 



Youndegin, 3,230 grams; Lancon, 92 



grams. 



By Purchase 

 Fossils, Sharks' teeth, Mastodon tooth. 

 Chinautla Siderite : 96 grams. 

 Modoc Aerolite (20 fragments). 

 22 Fossil Corals and Pentremites. 

 Lava stalagmite, from 1919 Alika flow. 

 Fossils : unsorted Bryozoans and other 

 v fossils from shales and limestones 



near St. Paul, Minn. 

 Upper Silurian fossils from Island of 



Gotland. 

 Model of restoration of Trilobite 



(Neolenus). 



