FOSSIL VERTEBRATES 



Oligocene (White River), South Dakota, 1892, 1894, 1902. 



Oligocene (White River), Colorado, 1898, 1901. 



Oligocene (White River), Montana, 1902; Wyoming, 1909. 



Miocene, Montana, 1902. 



Miocene (Santa Cruz), Patagonia, 1899. 



Lower Miocene, S. Dakota, 1905-7; Nebraska, 1907-8. 



Middle Miocene, Colorado, 1898, 1901-2; Nebraska, 1908. 



Upper Miocene, S. Dakota, 1894, 1902-3; Kansas, 1898. 



Upper Miocene, Texas, 1899-1901. 



Lower Pliocene, Nebraska, 1908. 



Middle Pliocene, Texas, 1899-1900. 



Lower Pleistocene, Nebraska, 1893, 1897; Texas, 1899-1901. 



Later Pleistocene, Arkansas, 1903-4; Alaska, 1907-8. 



Second, but first in point of time, is the collection of vertebrate Hail 

 fossils obtained by Messrs. White and Meek for Professor Hall and 

 purchased with the rest of the Hall Collection for the Museum by the 

 Trustees in 1878. 



Third, the collection of North American Fossil Mammals brought 

 together by Professor E. D. Cope between 1872 and 1890, and pur- 

 chased for $32,000 by subscription of Mr. Morris K. Jesup, Mrs. William Cope 

 H. Osborn, Messrs. Henry Fairfield Osborn, W. E. Dodge, J. Pierpont of ° p^J n 

 Morgan, James M. Constable, Theodore A. Havemeyer, D. Willis James, Mammals. 

 John D. Crimmins, Cornelius Vanderbilt, Adrian Iselin, Charles Lanier, 

 Frederic E. Church, and an unnamed friend of the Museum. In 

 this collection of about 7,000 specimens, is included a great num- 

 ber of skeletons and skulls of extinct mammals of the American 

 Tertiary formations, some of them unique, and all of great value 

 in illustrating the history and evolution of the mammalia in North 

 America. 



Fourth, the Cope Pampean Collection, obtained in the Pampean cope 

 Formation of the Argentine Republic by Messrs. Ameghino, Larroque, C q™^° 

 and Brachet, exhibited at the Paris Expedition of 1878, and pur- 

 chased by Professor Cope. It was purchased from his estate for the 



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