21 
Vertebrate Fossils — Cone , 
By Exchange 
Professor F. B. Loomis, Amherst College: mounted skeleton of Stenomylm 
hitchcocki and skulls of the following mammals: Hoplophoneus robustus, 
Hyaenodon cruentus, Cynodictis gregarius, Entelodon mortoni , Acera- 
therium copei, Hyracodon nebraskensis, Hyracodon sp., M esoreodon mega- 
lodon, Promerycochoerus thompsoni, Poebrotherium wilsoni, Mesohippus 
bairdi, Ischromys sp., and Stenafiber sp. Also three dinosaur tracks, 
batrachian-track, and two fish from the Triassic of Massachusetts. 
Invertebrate Fossils 
Presented 
G. A. Cooper, U.S. National Museum, Washington, D.C., U.S.A.: two valves 
of Yoldia, Ottawa, Ont. — corner of Cooper and O’Connor streets. 
Pleistocene. 
B. F. Howell, Princeton University, Princeton, N.J.: types of new species 
described by Dr. B. F. Howell from Franklin county, Vermont. Cambrian. 
I. W. Jones, Quebec Bureau of Mines, Quebec, Que.: a small collection of 
fossils from the basins of St. Johns and York rivers, Gaspe co., Que.: 
(field Nos. F-l, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 17, and 18 were 
examined and part of some of them kept). Silurian and Devonian. 
A. Keith, U.S. Geological Survey, Washington: 3 lots of fossil corals from 
Rimouski district, Que. Helderbergian. 
Professor J. W. Russell, Western Ontario University, London, Ont.: 1 speci- 
men of Favosites turbinatus, Arkona, Ont. Devonian. 
U. S. National Museum, Washington, D.C.: a collection of plaster casts 
of types of Edrioasteroids and three (3) specimens, topotypes of the same. 
From Members oj Staff 
M. F. Bancroft: A collection of vertebrates (vertebra of a whale), inverte- 
brates, and plants from Escalante point, Vancouver island, B.C. Tertiary. 
A small collection of fossil invertebrates from Moycha river, Vancouver 
island. Triassic. 
H. S. Bostock: A few fossil fragments from small hill (3,150 feet) on 
south side of the main fork of Klondike river, Yukon Territory. 
Palaeozoic. 
C. E. Cairnes: *A small collection of pel ecy pods, gasteropods, and plants — 
(algse), Bridge River mining district, B.C. “Post-Palaeozoic.’' 
S. C. Ells: A few fragmentary fossils from township 91, range 16, Clearwater 
river, N.W.T. Silurian? 
Roy Graham (through R. T. D. Wickenden) : a collection of fossil inverte- 
brates, north side Saskatchewan river, Sask. Cretaceous or Tertiary. 
George Hanson: 6 lots of fossils, Cassiar district, B.C., field Nos. and forma- 
tions as follows: 1, Silurian, probably Niagaran. Lots 2, 96, 97, and 
98, horizon indeterminate. 
M. S. Hedley: a collection of invertebrate fossils from north of Tahtsa river, 
B.C. Jurassic (Hazelton series). 
J. F. Henderson: large slab with Cephalopods, near Ville-Marie, Quebec. 
Ordovician? 
G. S. Hume and C. O. Hage: a collection of fossil invertebrates from eastern 
Alberta and western Saskatchewan. Upper Cretaceous. 
E. M. Kindle: invertebrate fossils from Dartmouth River basin, Que., 
Forillon peninsula, Que., Campbellton, N.B., and Doctors brook, N.S. 
Devonian to Cambrian. 
E. M. Kindle and C. H. Kindle: graptolit.es from near cape Rosier and 
Griffin cove, Gaspe peninsula, 1935. Ordovician. 
D. Leechman: 3 lots of fossil mollusca from Southampton, Pangnirtung (50 
feet above sea-level), and Wolstenholme (100 feet above sea-level). 
Pleistocene or Recent. 
E. J. Lees: a small collection of fossils from Teslin-Quiet Lake area, Yukon. 
Triassic? 
F. H. McLearn : a collection of invertebrate fossils from Etomani and Red 
Deer rivers, Hudson Bay junction, Sask. Upper Cretaceous. 
D. A. Nichols: a collection of fossil invertebrates from various points in the 
eastern Arctic. Pleistocene. 
