41 



Case K". (1-4): Keokuk Division. (5-7): Warsaw Division. 

 (8-9): St. Louis Division. (10-11): Chester Division. (12-13): 

 Fossil Plants of the Coal Measures. 



Case O. (1 and 2): Remaining Plants of the Coal Measures. 

 (3-6) : Invertebrates and Fish of the Coal Measures. (7-10) : Fishes 

 and Tracks of the Triassic Sandstones, including many presented 

 by R. L. Stuaet, Esq. (11-13): Invertebrates of the Atlantic 

 Coast, Cretaceous. 



Case P. (1-3) : Plants and Invertebrates of the Upper Missouri 

 Cretaceous. (4-11) : Invertebrates of the Eocene. (12-13) : Inver- 

 tebrates of the Atlantic Coast Miocene. 



Case Q. (1-2): Cretaceans from the Upper Missouri region, 

 collected by Meek and Hayden. (3-12) : Eocene Tertiary, from 

 various localities. (13) : Miocene. 



Case R. (1-6): Vertebrate remains from the Upper Missouri. 

 (7): Post Pleiocene, from Lake Cham plain. (8-13): Collection of 

 European Fossils, embracing Primordial to Carboniferous. 



CaseS. (1-2): Saurian remains from the Liassic of England. 

 (2-3): Jurassic and Cretaceous Fossils, from Europe. (4): Cre- 

 taceous and Tertiary Collections, from various sources. (5-9): 

 Pleiocene and Post Pleiocene collections of South Carolina 

 (Holmes' collection), containing many types and figured speci- 

 mens forming the basis of the work of Tuomey and Holmes on 

 South Carolina. (10) : Cretaceous and Liassic Fossils, containing 

 some large Ammonites. (12-13): Eocene Fossils, from the Paris 

 Basin Beds of France. (13) : Plants of the Miocene Formation of 

 Switzerland. 



Case T. Fossil Birds from New Zealand, and a collection of 

 Fossils and Minerals, illustrating the geology of Yesso, Japan. 



THE ATTIC STORY. 



The attic story is divided into a number of rooms for Libraries and 

 Laboratories for scientific men who are carrying on original researches. 

 In these rooms are the collections of the National Survey of the 40th 

 Parallel, Mr. Clarence King in charge; the rocks and minerals gathered 

 by Prof. R. Pumpelly during his travels, and work on various State 

 Surveys ; and the choice and large lithological collections of Maj. T. 

 B. Brooks, containing the rocks described in the Michigan and Wis- 

 consin State Reports, and a full series from Austria, Sweden, and 2,000 

 specimens illustrating the lithology of New Hampshire. The following 

 are the libraries of scientific works already gathered in this fire-proof 

 structure : 



