32 
(e) A bottle containing sulphur, from the Clifton Springs, 
wherein there is a portion of unassociated or disengaged 
sulphuric acid.—Godon. 
(f) A cornuted madrepore, bedded in the fetid lime- 
stone of the region, and overspread with the sulphur-pre- 
cipitated after the escape of the hydrogenous gas in which 
it had been dissolved while under ground. A specimen of 
thousands, overspread in like manner. 
(g) The wooden case of a butternut, overspread with 
sulphur, of Clifton Springs. _ Interesting. 
(h) Various favosites, madreporites, &c., from the same 
spot, though lying rather above the aqueo-sulphureous 
stream; or else the sulphur has been rubbed off daring the 
transportation. 
2. Sulphureo-calcareous sediment of the Canandaigua 
Spring, near the source of the lake so denominated ; very 
_much resembling that of Clifton, near Geneva. The water 
and its product, now inland, is in the town of Richfield, 
and county of Otsego, New-York. 
3. Residue, after evaporating the water of the before- 
mentioned spring by boiling. Probably a carbonate of 
lime, with a sulphate of magnesia ?—Dr. H. Manley. 
4. A bottle of the sulphureous water from Fredonia, 
Chatauque county, New-York. 
5. A bottle of the ferrigino-sulphureous water, from a 
spring on the southern shore of Lake Erie, at the village 
of Dunkirk. 
6. A horn, a solitary one, of the Wapiti deer, or North 
American elk; dug out of the sulphureous bog of Canan- 
derago, by Dr. H: Manley ; showing the probability that 
this noble creature formerly inhabited the region east ‘of 
the Mississippi, as the caribou perhaps, in ancient days, 
ventured southward of the St. Lawrence River. 
7. North American fluates of lime, from f ve set 
places—to wit: Pes 
(2) From Patterson, Huron county, Ohio, in a ridge 
among the prairies, below the level of Sandusky Bay. 
Almost black.—F. Granger. 

PF 
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