REPORT. 
To THE PRESIDENT AND FrLLows OF HARVARD COLLEGE: — 
Throughout the Academic year, 1904-1905, eleven courses in 
Zodlogy were given, by Professors Mark, Jackson, Parker, Castle, 
and Dr. Rand, to students in Harvard University, and four courses 
to students of Radcliffe College. The assistantsin the University 
courses were Messrs. M. W. Blackman, L. J. Cole, Manton Cope- 
land, N. C. Davis, I. A. Field, A. D. Howard, and H. E. Walter ; 
in those given for Radcliffe College, Mr. A. S. Pearse and Miss 
Edith N. Buckingham. During the summer, seven students 
carried on work at the Laboratory of the U. S. Fisheries 
Bureau at Woods Hole, and twelve persons, six connected with 
Harvard University, availed themselves of the facilities offered- 
by the Bermuda Biological Station for Research. The incomes of 
the Humboldt Fund and the Virginia Barret Gibbs Fund have 
been applied, as in late years, for the benefit of students con- 
nected with the Zoédlogical Laboratory. 
In the Department of Geology and Geography, Professor Davis, 
as Sturgis-Hooper Professor of Geology, conducted two courses, 
one of research elected by two students, and a second, open 
to graduates and undergraduates, given to fifteen students. Mr. 
Isaiah Bowman was assistant in the second course. The geologi- 
cal courses, other than those of Professor Davis, were given by 
Professors Shaler, Jackson, Ward, Woodworth, Jaggar, and Dr. 
Smith, assisted by Messrs. A. H. Gale, Augustus Locke, G. R. 
Mansfield, H. E. Simpson, and S, A. Starratt. These courses, 
nineteen in number, were attended by 460 students of Harvard 
University ; the four courses in Radcliffe College were taken by 
40 students. In the Summer School, Professor Shaler and Dr. 
Smith of the Geological Department, and Prof. J. E. Woodman 
of Dalhousie College, Halifax, gave two courses to eighteen stu- 
dents. Prof. J. B. Woodworth’s course in advanced field work in 
the Rocky Mountains of Montana was taken by three students. 
