L2 



ANNUAL KEl'nRT OF THK 



REPORT ON THE LABORATORIES OF GEOLOGY AND 



GEOGRAPHY. 



Rv Assistant Professor Robert De C. Waiid. 



Tin: instruction given in this Department during the academic 

 year 1900-01 was essentially the same as during the preceding 

 year, with the exception of the usual changes involved in the 

 bracketing and unbracketing of certain courses given in alternate 

 years, and the addition of a new course in Meteorology (Geology 1). 

 Eighteen courses and half-courses were given in the lecture room 

 and laboratories of the Museum of Comparative Zoology by Pro- 

 fessors Shaler and Davis, Assistant Professors R. T. Jackson, Ward 

 and Woodworth, and Drs. T. A. Jaggar, Jr., and R. A. Daly. Mr. 

 J. E. Woodman assisted in Courses 4, 5, and 8 ; Mr. H. C. Boynton, 

 Austin Teaching Fellow in Geology, in Courses 5 and 16 ; Mr. R. W. 

 Stone in 14% and Mr. F. M. Wilder in B. In addition, Messrs. G. C. 



Johnson, L. H. Woolsey, J. W. 

 Goldthwaite, W. L. Estabrook and 

 C. T. Whitney served as student- 

 assistants in the laboratory and 

 field work of Geology 5, under Pro- 

 fessor Wood worth's direction. 



In the spring of 1901 the Gover- 

 nor of Massachusetts, and the Coun- 

 cil, voted to deposit in the gnological 

 exhibition rooms, in the new south 

 wing of the Museum, the large 

 model of the Metropolitan District 

 of Boston which was exhibited at 

 the Paris Exposition. This model 

 was constructed by Mr. G. C. Curtis, 

 a former student in this Depart- 



LtaliCfl indicate students of Radcliffe menu. 



Colle8e ' A number of the advanced stu- 



dents in field geology passed creditably the United States Civil 



Courses. 



Students. 



Geology A 



74 4 



B 



104 8 



1 



12 



:> 



164 10 



6 



27 8 



8 



19 



11 



20 3 



14 



60 



14a 



12 



15 



2 



16 



14 



17 



7 



11) 



6 



20 



4 



22 



9 



23 



2 



24 



1 



25 



2 



Totals 18 



548 36 



