20 ANNUAL REPORT OF THE 



cases. By a transfer of large specimens and certain models 

 already in the teaching collections of the department, the cases 

 so far constructed have been temporarily partially filled with 

 the nucleus of a collection, some of which will naturally be re- 

 placed by better and newer material as soon as it can be obtained. 

 The labelling of the exhibits has been begun. A printed card of 

 the size indicated in the accompanying example (4| x lr in.) 

 has been adopted as suitable for recording the leading data con- 

 cerning the numerous specimens which will enter into the 

 exhibition. 



SMALL DINOSAUR FOOT PRINT on red shale. 



Belleville, N. J. 

 Newark series, Upper Triassic. 

 Am. Jour. Sci., Vol. 1, p. 481, 1895. 

 Coll. J. B. W. 



The Committee has received the following gifts : — Glaciated 

 pebbles and tillite from the Carboniferous Dwyka conglomerate 

 of South Africa, collected in 1905 by Professor W. M. Davis; 

 sand-blasted parts of trees from the dunes of Ipswich, Mass., 

 collected by Mr. Albert P. Morse ; ashes from the eruption of Mont 

 PelCe, Martinique, May 20, 1903, gift of Mrs. N. S. Shaler. 



The Committee on the Josiah Dwight Whitney Scholarship 

 (Professors Davis, Jaggar, and Woodworth) recommended that a 

 scholarship of $200 be awarded to Mr. Howard E. Merwin, a 

 student in the Lawrence Scientific School, for defraying the 

 expense of ten weeks' work during the summer of 1906 upon the 

 ancient Pleistocene shore lines of Vermont, which task Mr. Merwin 

 has satisfactorily carried out, and a report is now in preparation. 



Publications. August i, 1905- July SI, 1906. 

 By R. T. Jackson. 



A new species of fossil Limulus from the Jurassic of Sweden. 

 Arkiv for Zoologi, 1906, Vol. 3, No. 11, 7 pp. 

 By R. DeC. Ward. 



The Climatic Zones and their Subdivisions. Bull. Amer. Geogr. 

 Soc, 1906, Vol. 38, p. 385-396. 



