326 DIRECTORY OF AMERICAN MUSEUMS 



LONGUEUIL: 



LONGUEUIL COLLEGE. 



The college maintains a general museum in charge of Brother Vic- 

 torin. The collections comprise a herbarium of 2000 phanerogams and 

 300 cryptogams; 300 minerals; and a zoological collection including 

 200 shells, 800 insects, 20 fishes, 30 reptiles, 200 birds, 50 mammals, 

 and 200 bird eggs. 



MONTREAL: 



McGILL UNIVERSITY. Anatomical Museum. 



The museum of anatomy was completely destroyed by fire in 1907 

 and is now being re-formed as a teaching collection. It is in charge of 

 F. J. Shepherd, director. 



McGILL UNIVERSITY. Museum of Hygiene. 



This museum has been established from the income of an endow- 

 ment provided in 1893, and is in charge of T. A. Starkey, director. It 

 includes exhibits relating to disinfection, lighting and heating, water, 

 buildings, soil, air, drainage and refuse disposal, food stuffs and cloth- 

 ing, vital statistics, and bacteriology and pathology in relation to pub- 

 lic health. There is also a collection of over 1000 lantern slides. A com- 

 plete descriptive catalog has been published. 



McGILL UNIVERSITY. Pathological Museum. 



Since the organization of the medical faculty, this museum has 

 been an object of special attention, and for the past fifty years material 

 has been systematically gathered from the Montreal General Hospital 

 and other sources. Serious damage was done by the fire of 1907, and 

 this is being repaired as rapidly as possible. The museum staff con- 

 sists of J. G. Adami, director; Maude E. Abbott, curator; and E. L. 

 Judah, preparator and osteologist. ^ 



McGILL UNIVERSITY. Peter Redpath Museum. 



Staff. Curator, D. P. Penhallow, and an assistant curator. 



Anthropology. Archeological and ethnological collections from 

 the Queen Charlotte Islands, from Egypt, and from South Equatorial 

 West Africa. 



Botany. A herbarium comprising 50,000 Canadian and exotic 

 plants, and collections illustrating structural and economic botany. 



Geology. General and economic collections of minerals and rocks, 

 supplemented by casts and models. 



Paleontology. Synoptic series of fossils arranged both in the 

 order of the geological system and in systematic order. 



