44 MUSEUM OF COMPARATIVE ZOOLOGY. [Feb. 
The Museum is indebted to the following persons for dona- 
tions of fossils :— | 
Grerenoucnu, Horatio, Mrs. 1 lot of fossil, from Vaches Noires 
Calvados. | 
Wuitney, Prof. J.D. Teeth of fossil elephant, 
Ciark, President, of Mass, Agricultural College. 2 specimens 
of fossils, from South Carolina. ao 
McPuerson, Wo., Jackson County, Florida. 1 mastodon tooth. 
Exuis, C. Stuart, of Muscatine, Iowa. 1 fossil plant. 
Rapin, Dr., of Grandson, Switzerland. 1 lot of neocomian 
fossils. 
Gispon, Gen., U. 8S. A. Fossils, from Laramie Plain. 
Agassiz, Prof. L., Curator of the Museum. Boxes of fossils, 
from the Smoky Hill route, Rocky Mountains. 
Agassiz, Prof. L., Curator of the Museum. Boxes of fossils, 
from Ithaca, New York. . 
Acassiz, ALEx., Assistant in the Museum. A lot of fossils from 
the drift beds of the Lake Superior region. 
- Barnarp, James M. Fragments of vertebrate skeleton, from 
a citation Territory. 
BouTeE..E, Capt. Fossil tooth, from Ashley River, South Caro- 
lina. 
Wrman, Prof. J. 1 lot of fossils, from Florida. 
Rice, Prof. J. M. 1 box of fossils, from Annapolis, Md. 
Sater, N. S., Assistant in the Dep’t of Paleontology. 1,200 
species, about 30,000 specimens of European fossils, representing 
about 100 localities, and most of the European horizons. 
Suater, N.S. 50 species, 300 specimens Silurian and Tertiary 
fossils, from Ohio and Kentucky. 
Prrry, Rev. J. B., Assistant in the Museum. 915 specimens 
Pleistocene shells; 200 specimens Tertiary seeds and fruits, from 
Vermont and Canada, and 850 specimens of Paleozoic fossils, from 
Vermont and New York. 
SEeRRES, M. Hector, a Dax, France. 1 lot of Tertiary fossils. 
Ravey, Sam. One large Orthoceratite, from Nashville, Tenn. 
The following lots have been received in exchange since the 
last report of the assistant :— Hop 
\Davis, H., McGregor, Iowa. 1 box of fossils. 
a Dr., Delaware, Ohio. 1 box of fossils. 
oa 
