14 



ANNUAL EEPGRT OF THE 



Harvard: 





Geology 



20c 



a 



20e 



a 



20f 



Geography- 



1 



Meteorology 



1 



u 



2 



u 



3 



a 



4 



a 



20 



Palaeontology 1 



u 



2 



a 



3 



a 



20 



Radcliffe: 





Geology 



4 



a 



5 



Meteorology 



1 



a 



2 



a 



3 



Palaeontology 1 



Professor Daly . 2 



," • Woodworth 2 



u a -I 



Messrs. Hinds & James 35 



Professor Ward; Mr. French ....... Q2 



" 5 



5 



" " 3 



U U 1 



" Raymond; Mr. Bradley 23 



" « 6 



» « 4 



« « 4 



523 



Professor Woodworth; Mr. Smith 26 



5 



Ward 21 



" . 3 



" " 3 



" Raymond 9 



67 



Students in the Engineering School, registered in the course in 

 geological surveying, take only the field-work in the fall and spring, 

 attending an hourly conference once a week for about twelve 

 weeks. 



Two students were enrolled in field-work in the Summer School 

 of 1921, Mr. Allyn C. Swinnerton working in Vermont, Mr. 

 P. W. K. Sweet in Maine; Mr. E. S. C. Smith, graduate student, 

 also worked in Maine, but without enrollment in the School. 

 Professor Woodworth visited Messrs. Smith and Sweet at East 

 Brownfield, Maine, in August. 



Professor Woodworth continued the registration of earthquakes 

 by the Harvard Seismograph and the decipherment of the records. 



Professor Woodworth gave an unusual amount of time to con- 

 sultations with federal and state officers concerning the geology 

 of the, eastern part of Massachusetts with special reference to 

 soils, the location of concealed minerals or metals which might 

 account for certain anomalies in radio transmission on the coast, 



