APPENDIX B. — DONATIONS TO THE MUSEUM. 
XX111. 
Committee on Invertebrates. — A part of the fine col- 
lection of Invertebrate marine animals from Passamaquoddy 
Bay, presented to the Society by Prof. W. F. Ganong, have 
been mounted and placed on exhibition in one of the rooms 
of the museum. They are specially valuable for reference, as 
they have been compared with collections in Harvard Museum 
and the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Cambridge, Mass., 
and the names accurately determined. Many of these objects 
are the skeletons or shells of animals of economical importance, 
of which two groups — the Echinodermate and the Mollusca — 
were described in Nos. VII. and VIII. of the Sociey’s Bulletin. 
They are therefore to the Canadian student of the Inverte- 
brata and of the food products of the country, a valuable 
typical series of specimens. A suitable case for the preser- 
vation of this collection is greatly require.d. 
DONATIONS TO THE MUSEUM. 
Date. 
Donor's Name and Description of Article. 
1891 
Mar. s W. D. Matthew. — Piece of trap dyke with secondary growth 
of calcite. Laurentian. 
June 24 j S ir J. W. Dawson. — Series of photographs showing remains 
of reptiles from Joggins. Carboniferous. 
J. Baxter, M. D., Chatham, N. B. — Egg of Night Heron. 
Paper pulp made at Chatham. Flexible sandstone 
( Itacolurribite ). Assam, China. 
Sept, 2 ( j!Rev. J. M. Davenport. — Sponges, Coral, Chiton, Echini from 
Bermuda. 
Oct. 
17 
George Hamilton. — Small stone tomahawk from Virginia. 
Mr. Marshall Reed, Campbellton. — Clialimilla oculatahom. 
Frith of Forth. 
31 
H. 
F. Perkins, — Wasp’s nest. 
Lancaster, N. B. 
Eggs of lizard and snake. 
Nov. 3 R. Bryce Gemmel. — Centipedes, green lizard, shell of crab, 
from Demarara, B. G. Edible frogs from Dominique, 
West Indies. Plumbago from mines at Marble Cove, 
N. B. Felted ball of hair from stomach of a cow. 
iChas. F. Baker. — Water Beetle. 
