MAMMALS AND BIRDS 
models of the blackfish, harbor porpoises, and common dolphins. 
In the study series there are skulls and skeletons of the narwhal, 
and skulls of the white whale, collected by Commander Peary and 
presented by the Peary Arctic Club. 
Two North Atlantic right whales, captured off Amagansett, Long 
Island, were obtained by Mr. Roy Chapman Andrews and Mr. James 
L. Clark in 1907. One of these whales was the largest specimen of 
which there has been definite scientific record. The sum paid for 
the two skeletons and a complete set of baleen was $3,278, also the 
gift of Mr. Bowdoin. 
Eight specimens of the fur seal for a group illustrating a seal rookery North Pacific 
were presented to the department in 1908 by Mr. D. 0. Mills. The ^^^^ 
specimens were collected at the Pribilof Islands, Alaska. 
Among recent gifts of special interest are the following : 
The skins and skeletons of the rare Solenodon paradoxus, which 
were obtained in Haiti by Mr. A. H. Verrill and presented in 1907 by 
President Jesup; the small but valuable collection of mammals from 
the border of Tibet, received in 1908 through the generosity of the 
Honorable Mason Mitchell (the takin, mounted in 1909, was in this 
collection) ; the group of Paradise birds, numbering 75 specimens and 
containing 46 species, the gift of Mrs. Frank K. Sturgis. 
MAMMAL AND BIRD COLLECTIONS BY PURCHASE 
A number of important accessions to the department have been 
purchased by the Museum. 
In 1882 two contracts were made with Professor H. A. Ward, of 
Rochester— one to supply mounted specimens of such mammals of 
North America north of Mexico as were necessary to complete the ^^^d 
Museum's collections, not to exceed the value of $8,000— the other 
to procure for the Museum specimens of all the monkeys in the world. 
In the first four years following the drawing up of these contracts a 
large number of specimens was sent in, a few were delivered in 1888, 
and the last received in 1892. The funds for the first contract were 
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