21 
Invertebrate Fossils — Concluded 
By Staff — Concluded 
C. H. Kindle 
Trilobites, etc., Murphys creek, 2 miles east of comer of beach (near Perc6), 
Que. Cambrian. 
B. R. MacKay 
3 trays fossils; Blairmore area, Alberta. Palaeozoic and Mesozoic. 
2 lots of fossils; Byron creek and Bellevue, Alberta. Carboniferous. 
L. S. Russell 
Land, freshwater, brackish- water, and marine molluscs; vertebrates; southern 
Alberta and Saskatchewan. Mesozoic and Cenozoic. 
W. J. Wintemberg 
1 box marine invertebrates; 1 slab rock with Petricola pholadiformis and 
borings; Magdalen islands. Recent. 
L. S. Russell 
Series of samples of Bearpaw shale from southern Alberta, containing 
foraminifera. 
R. T. D. Wickenden 
Series of 20 samples from the Bearpaw in southern Saskatchewan, contain- 
ing foraminifera. 
R. T. D. Wickenden 
8 species of foraminifera from well samples in the Alberta shales in southern 
Alberta. 
R. T. D. Wickenden 
Foraminifera from well samples: Pembina valley, Manitoba; Boyne beds to 
Palaeozoic, Moose Jaw, Sask.; Bearpaw to Palajozoic, Simpson, Sask.; 
Bearpaw to Palaeozoic, Outlook, Sask.; Bearpaw to top of Alberta 
shale; Boundary well, L.S. 4, sec. 9, tp. 1, range 27, W. 3rd mer., Lower 
Bearpaw to Lower Jurassic; Rush lake, L.S. 2, sec. 30, tp. 19, range 11, 
W. 3rd mer., Lower Bearpaw to Lower Cretaceous; Eagle Butte, Alberta, 
well No. 1, Bearpaw to Lower Cretaceous. 
By Purchase: 
G. F. Sternberg, Esq., Hays, Kansas, U.S.A. 
1 slab radiolites, south of Castle Rock, Cove co., Kansas, U.S.A. 
Ward’s Nat. Sci. Estab., Rochester, N.Y., U.S.A. 
1 slab Fusulina secalica from the Pennsylvanian Coal Measures near Tecum- 
seh, Nebraska, U.S.A. 
Lithologic Specimens 
E. M. Kindle, Geol. Surv., Canada, Ottawa 
A collection of marl balls, Canandaigua lake, N.Y. Recent. 
L. J. McCullagh, Roche-Perc6e, Sask. 
A small collection of concretions from sec. 24, tp. 1, range 7, W. 2nd mer. 
J. F. Morkill, M.E.I.C. 
Blue clay concretions; banks of St. Francis river, Que. 
DIVISION OF MINERALOGY (Geological Survey) 
Eugene Poitevin, Chief of the Division, reports: 
Owing to lack of space it is impossible to put the systematic collection 
of minerals on display and it has been considered advisable to limit activities 
in the museum halls to improving the present exhibits and changing them 
from time to time as public interest demands. The systematic collection, 
however, is not suffering from neglect; it is added to as opportunity arises 
and has been considerably increased during the year. 
There were 667 educational collections prepared during the fiscal 
year; almost half of these were prospector’s collections and 200 were 
educational collections prepared for the Bureau of Mines, Quebec. 
