the late Professor Jameson. 43 
Brought forward, : d 47,600 
FOSSIL ORGANIC REMAINS. 
Tertiary Fossils. 
Tertiary fossils from Scotland, England, France, 
Sweden, Italy, Bessarabia, Persia, Egypt, India, 
—all named and arranged, d 2939 
Secondary Fossils. 
Seahidiry fossils from Scotland, England, Ger- 
many, France, Belgium, dadhanitdy ‘ 5034 
Silurian Fossils. 
Silurian fossils from Scotland, England, Ger- 
many, Bohemia, : ; 680 
Fossils not yet arranged, . : 500 
9,153 
Insects, . é ; ; F ; 16,000 
Birds’ Eggs, : : : 1,000 
Drawings, maps and Ries, upwards of : t 700 
74,453 
A high mark of honour was conferred upon Jameson by 
the members of the Wernerian Society, some of his col- 
leagues, and many of our most distinguished citizens, in get- 
ting a bust of him executed in marble by our far-famed and 
celebrated artist Mr Steel. This noble piece of masterly 
art of Mr Steel is the most truthful likeness of the veteran 
Jameson that now remains. It is true that we have lost 
his spiritual vitality, but still we have the true image with 
the spiritual features, or the inanimate matter spiritualized 
by the hand of man in Steel’s bust. The bust stands on a 
white marble pedestal in the centre of the Upper Hall of 
the University Museum, a position where his fellow citizens 
will, I am sure, be proud to see it. 
In addition to what we have said of Jameson we now add 
four letters, one received from his old pupil, Earl of Cath- 
cart, one from L. Elie de Beaumont, who writes in the name 
of the Institute of Paris, a third letter from A. Baum- 
gartner, who writes in the name of the Imperial Academy of 
Science of Vienna ; and a fourth from the University of Bonn. 
