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DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC

EDUCATION

BY GIFT

AMERICAN OPTICAL Co., Southbridge, Mass.

1000 Feet positive motion picture film, entitled "Through Life's Windows."

MRS. J. STEWART BARNEY, New York City.

2 Dutch dolls.

FREDERICK BLASCHKE, New York City. Rose-breasted Grosbeak in the flesh. BRAY STUDIOS, New York City.

Strip of motion picture film representing Mr. Copulos making the Magnolia, etc., 400 feet; and a strip showing Mr. Müller making glass flowers, radiolarians, etc., and Mr. Shimotori coloring them, 400 feet. MISS LAURA B. BROOMALL, Far Rockaway, L. I.

I

Tennessee Warbler, 1 Magnolia Warbler, I Parula Warbler, I Flicker, 1 Junco, 1 Winter Wren, 2 White-throated Sparrows, 1 Herring Gull; all in the flesh. From Long Island.

COMMISSION OF FINE ARTS, Washington, D. C.

Book of photographs of Memorials to

Presidents of the United States. RAYMOND L. DITMARS, New York City. 200 Feet positive motion picture film: Crocodile and Lizard.

PAUL ENGEL, New York City.

I Black Snake, mounted; and 7 hawks (1 Red-tailed, I Red-shouldered, 2 Cooper's, 2 Sharp-shinned, I Broad-winged).

EBERHARD FABER, New York City. A chart with samples of material attached to illustrate, showing how a lead-pencil is made and the evolution of the rubber eraser. MESSRS. GORDON and FERGUSON, St. Paul, Minn.

13

Photographs of fur garments, 8 x 10.

WALTER GRANGER, New York City. 2 Negatives, 5 x 7; Sheep and sheepherder's wagon, Wyoming. WALTER C. HARRIS, New York City. 4 Photographs of Skate and Sea Anemone, 8 x 10; and 3 photographs of Japanese Fringetail Goldfish. MISS MARY J. HOCHDERFFER, Harbor Haven, L. I.

Barn-swallow in the flesh.

MRS. CHARLES F. HOLDER, Pasadena, Cal.

Photograph of Professor Bickmore. MISS E. M. KITTREDGE, Woodstock, Vt. 804 Negatives of local wild flowers, identified, 4 x 5; 63 Negatives of botanical subjects, 4 x 5.

DR. F. A. LUCAS, New York City. 148 Lantern slide negatives of sealing industry on Pribilof Islands, some whales, and a few on Palæontology. E. MALMQUIST, Astoria, L. I.

I Hermit-thrush in the flesh. NEW YORK TELEPHONE Co., New York City.

16 Photographs illustrating the use of
the telephone (8 x 10).

L. J. OSWALD, Brooklyn, N. Y.
I Basket tray.

PACH BROTHERS, New York City.
Photograph of Theodore Roosevelt.
MR. ROGERS, New York Tribune, New
York City.

3 Photographs of Prince of Wales planting trees.

MISS MARIANA TOWNSEND, Middletown, Conn.

66 Plain lantern slides of Indian subjects.

UNIVERSAL FILM MANUFACTURING CO., New York City.

200 Feet positive motion picture film: Cartoon of Dinosaurs.

WILLARD G. VAN NAME, New York City. 4 Photographs of whales.

BY PURCHASE

109 Original negatives of western

scenes.

9 Negatives: Niagara Falls, Casco Bay and Panama Canal.

2000 Feet of positive motion picture film from Second Asiatic Zoological Expedition negative, Chinese Mongolia.

THROUGH MUSEUM EXPEDITIONS SECOND ASIATIC ZOOLOGICAL EXPEDITION. 2400 Feet negative motion picture film, from Chinese Mongolia. Taken by Roy C. Andrews.

BY DEPOSIT

CARL E. AKELEY, New York City. 55 Negatives of African subjects.

DEPARTMENT OF GEOLOGY AND INVERTEBRATE PALEONTOLOGY

BY GIFT

MEYER ABRONSON, New York City. Water-worn pebble with concretion, Long Island.

WILLIAM MAXSON ALBERTI, New York City.

Specimen of iridescent coal, from

near Elkhorn City, Ky.

FREDERIC I. ALLEN, New York City.
Block of Schoharie Grit from glacial
drift, above trap-rock quarry, West
Paterson, N. J.

JOSEPH ANDERSON, New York City.
Fossil leaf, Mazon Creek, Ill.
BARRETT Co., New York City.

Series of 187 specimens illustrating coal and its derived products, genetically arranged.

W. E. BURGESS, New York City. 3 Specimens of free gold in quartz gangue, 360 ft. level, Bodie Mine, Mono Co., Cal.

MRS. CHARLES FINNEY Cox, Yonkers, N. Y.

Septaria, concretion, and geode show

ing freak resemblance to human remains.

E. J. FOYLES, New York City. Collection of fossils and rocks (70 specimens) from Department of Doubs, France.

FRANK KNOWLES, West Englewood, N. J.

2 Water-worn pebbles. JOSEPH F. MACGRAIL, New York City. Fragment of carved marble (17′′ x 7′′) from Cathedral destroyed by eruption of Mt. Pelé, 1902. Marble door, carved (94" x 111⁄2"), from child's tomb, St. Pierre, Martinique. EDWARD A. MALMQUIST, Astoria, L. I. 2 Small rock specimens.

DR. GEORGE P. MERRILL, Washington, D. C.

Plaster cast of Australian meteorite. RICHARD A. METCALF, White Plains, N. Y.

Kaolin and pyrophyllite (12 specimens), Habersham County, Ga. DEPARTMENT OF MINERALOGY (transfer). Specimen of Sphalerite in vein quartz. Shows concentric deposition sphalerite and quartz, latter in "graphic granite" arrangement.

W. H. MORGAN, Sawyer, Ky.

of

2 Fragments (6.5 grams) of Cumberland Falls meteorite, from Cumberland Falls, Ky.

CHRIS E. OLSEN, Hornerstown, N. J. I Pelecypod cast, found 29 feet below surface.

H. PAPKE, West Hoboken, N. J. Sphalerite from Jerome Avenue Railway.

OTTO PAPKE, Snake Hill, N. J. Watchung Mountain trap, long, lathlike crystals.

M. H. SMART, New York City Concretionary mold resembling footprint.

CARROLL RICHARD STEGALL, Rossville, Ga. Hand specimen of conglomerate, from Belgian Congo.

DEPARTMENT OF VERTEBRATE PALEON TOLOGY (transfer).

14 casts of Trilobites.

HERBERT P. WHITLOCK, New York City. Hand specimens showing typical fold in hornblende gneiss.

BY EXCHANGE

DR. ARTHUR HOLLICK, New Brighton, S. I.

2 Specimens of Phragmites aquehongensis, from moraine at Clifton, S. I.

NEW YORK BOTANICAL GARDEN.
27 Fossil plants.
UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM,
Washington, D. C.

Fragment of Cumberland Falls, Ky.,
aërolite, 467 grams (16.5 ounces)—
one surface polished.

BY PURCHASE

Cumberland Falls aërolite, from Cumberland Falls, Ky. An entire mass weighing 2,445 grams (5 pounds 6 ounces).

"El Perdido" meteorite, from Bahia Blanca, Argentina: 4 fragments weighing 766 grams (27 ounces). Richardton meteorite, Richardton, N. D. Entire mass weighing 8,320 grams (18 pounds 5.5 ounces). Models of Trilobites, Triarthrus, Isotelus and Trinucleus, in plaster of Paris.

Iron meteorite, from Signal Mt., Mex., near Calexico, Calif. Entire, unique mass weighing 57,833 grams (127.5 pounds).

Cut and polished mass weighing 3,760 grams (8 pounds 5 ounces) of Australian iron meteorite.

85 Stromatoporoids and corals. 35 Cambrian fossil specimens.

THROUGH MUSEUM EXPEDITIONS Type specimen of Pecten decorus Cooke and type and figured specimens of Pecten (Nodipecten)_articulosus Cooke. Collected by Barnum Brown, near Guajay, Cuba. 500 Specimens of cubic lead ore, marcasite, etc., Tar River, Okla. Collected by Dr. E. O. Hovey, through coöperation of the Laclede Lead and Zinc Mining Company.

14 Volcanic specimens from_eruption of June 7, 1919, San Salvador, Nicaragua. Collected by Dr. H. J. Spinden.

DEPARTMENT OF MINERALOGY

BY GIFT

FREDERICK I. ALLEN, New York City. Specimen of Fluorite in Limestone, Hardyston, N. J.

R. M. ALLEN, New York City.

Specimen of Torbanite on Pegmatite, Bedford Hills, N. Y.

DANIEL MOREAU BARRINGER, Philadelphia, Pa.

Vial of Osmiridium, Shasta Co., Cal. CAERANO A. BARROS, New York City. Specimen of Quartz from Whitlock and Westchester Avenues, New York City.

H. S. BRYAN, Denver, Col.

Vial of Metahewittite, Montrose Co., Col.

HARRY E. DAY, New York City. About 200 specimens of miscellaneous minerals.

H. A. ENGLISH, New York City.

1 Pyrargyrite, from Tonopah, Nev. I Rhodochrosite, from Butte, Mont. DR. W. D. FERRIER, Ottawa, Canada. 3 specimens of Ferrierite, Kamloops Lake, B. C.

DEPARTMENT OF GEOLOGY (transfer). 33 Specimens of Galena, 5 Marcasite on Galena, and 3 Sphalerite, from Admiralty Zinc-Lead Company Mine, Century, Okla.

MISS ELIZA R. GREENWOOD, New York City.

3 Specimens of Bloodstone (cut) and I of Silver, from Michigan. E. T. HERRMAN, Grand Junction, Col. I Specimen of Carnotite, Gateway, Col.; I Carnotite and 2 Metahewittite, south of Thompsons, Utah. CHARLES W. HOADLEY, Englewood, N. J. 2 Specimens of Franklinite, Franklin Furnace, N. J.

MOSES JOY, Boston, Mass.

6 Specimens of Chromium ore, from near Anacortes, Wash.; Cody, Wyo., and Alaska.

C. MARSHALL, New York City.

I Specimen of Muscovite, 1 Scheelite, and Wolframite, from Peru. ESTATE OF SARA E. MOWER, New York City.

I Diamond Ring.

H. C. OGDEN, Middletown, N. Y.

I Specimen of Sphalerite in Quartz, and I Vesuvianite, Wurtzboro and Orange Cos., N. Y.

H. PAPKE, West Hoboken, N. J. 3 Specimens of Gmelinite and 2 of Datolite, Snake Hill, N. J.

EDWARD POWERS, Gouverneur, N. Y. I Specimen of Galena and 4 Pyrite, from Cole Farm, Gouverneur, N. Y., and 1 Magnetite, from Benson Mine, St. Lawrence Co., N. Y. JOHN A. ROEBLING, Bernardsville, N. J. 2 Specimens of Antimony, from Kern

Co., Cal., and I of Smaltite with Niccolite, Ontario, Canada. CHARLES RUTLEDGE, New York City. I Alabandite, 1 Azurite, 1 Barite in Psilomelane, 4 Chalcopyrite, Chalcocite, I Chrysocolla, 2 Galena, 3 Malachite, I Magnetite, I lot of Manganese ore, 10 Psilomelane, 17 Pyrolusite, 10 Pyrite in Shale, 2 Pyrite, from Cuba; 2 Serpentine, from Trinidad.

GEORGE S. SCOTT, New York City.

I Specimen of Bisbeeite and Shattuckite, Bisbee, Ariz.

R. SHAD, New York City.

56 Specimens of miscellaneous minerals.

[blocks in formation]
[blocks in formation]

I Calcite, West Paterson, N. J.
I Calcite, Apophyllite and Pectolite,
Great Notch, N. J.

I Calcite and Aurichalcite, Stockton,
Utah.

I Calcite containing Copper, Michigan.

I Carnotite, Naturita, Col. 1 Cerussite, Arizona.

I Chalcophanite, Sterling Hill, N. J. 1 Chalcopyrite, Gilpin Co., Col. 12 Cuprotungstite, Tooele Co., Utah. I Fluorite, Colorado.

35 Galena and associated minerals, Picher, Okla.

1 Garnet, Franklin, N. J.

I Kreittonite, Bavaria.

I Magnetite, Brewster, N. Y.

1 Manganhedenbergite, Stockton, Utah.

I Manganosite, Franklin, N. J.

I Molybdenite, Tooele Co., Utah.

2 Octahedrite, Switzerland.

1 Olivenite, Juab Co., Utah.

3 Opals, Italy.

2 Opals, Nevada.

1 Orthoclase, Italy.

1 Pyromorphite, Germany. 5 Pyrite, Arizona.

1 Pyrite, Gilpin Co., Col.

I Psittacinite, Good Springs, Nev.

I Quartz, Pike's Peak, Col.

2 Rhodochrosite, Colorado.

1 Scheelite, Utah.

I Silver, Chihuahua, Mexico.

I Sphalerite, Joplin, Mo.

2 Tourmaline crystals, California.

2 Tourmaline, Auburn, Me.

I Tourmaline, St. Lawrence Co., N. Y.

I Tungstenite, Utah.

I Willemite, Utah.

I Wulfenite, New Mexico.

I Zincite, Franklin, N. J.

30 Miscellaneous minerals.

BY PURCHASE

(Jesup Fund)

5 Apophyllite, Snake Hill, N. J.

I Azurite, Bisbee, Ariz.

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