MUSEUM OF COMPARATIVE ZOOLOGY. 17 







Harvard 



Radcliffe 









Harvs 



Geology 1 (hf) 





93 



12 



Geology 2 (hf) 





11 



4 (hf) 





143 



31 



a 



9 (hf) 





5 



5 (hf) 





39 



9 



a 



10 





10 



6 (hf) 





28 



9 



u 



12. 





4 



8 (hf) 





5 



3 



a 



15 (hf) 





12 



■ 20a 





— 



1 



u 



16 (hf) 





5 



" 20c 





4 



2 



u 



18 





3 



Meteorology 1 



(hf) 



53 



11 



a 



20b 





6 



2 



(hf) 



2 





Palaeon 



tology 1 



(hf) 



4 



3 



(hf) 



2 





« 



2 



(hf) 



4 



5 



(hf) 



4 





H 



20 





1 



20 





1 





Geology 



' S5 





7 



20a 





1 





Geolog} 



' S6 





14 



Total, Harvard 461. Total, Radcliffe 78. 



Within the year four men received the degree of Doctor of Phil- 

 osophy in the field of Geology. This is the largest number secur- 

 ing the degree as administered by the Division of Geology, in 

 any one year. 



Immediately after graduating as Doctors of Philosophy, Messrs. 

 W. G. Foye and Sidney Powers were given grants from the Sheldon 

 Fund to enlarge their experience abroad. Dr. Powers was away 

 from Cambridge about eight months, during which time he made 

 extensive researches among the volcanoes of Hawaii, Japan, 

 and the Philippines. Dr. Foye is in. Fiji, investigating particu- 

 larly the field facts bearing on the origin of coral reefs. Each 

 worker has already secured much new material worthy of publi- 

 cation. 



As last year, profitable cooperation in the training of graduate 

 students has been carried on with the Geological Department of 

 the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. 



The members of the Visiting Committee, through the energetic 

 chairman, Mr. George B. Leighton, have again given welcome and 

 important aid to the Department. They have appreciated and 

 encouraged the work by personal visits and by generous subscrip- 

 tions of money where specially needed. One subscription, supple- 

 mented by a grant from the Corporation, has paid for the services 

 of a watchman in the Geological and Mineralogical Museums, 

 so that these rooms have been kept open to the public several 

 extra days in the week; thus, by a comparatively small payment, 

 a large amount of University capital has been kept more continu- 

 ously at the work it was designed to do. 



The Visiting Committee also subscribed the sum of $700 to pay 

 the expenses of the new summer field course in Colorado under 



