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Lb thet ote oven bias rr Necae m bree baie aye reine 4 ee: rraxwicienetea bepamate i These phere net " eet chase belhesegane, i bee shheneaee scihthe etn ‘ sbi Beeeeetettsee te . Heit y he! sesveisertehentenh rsaapatsegueintstats poems mr aqon st de teibotteibrttgd ot te tte wy: ns ahalhes ies ie Sen: se eiviegensee Aaah oho * op On eed 60524 Be wee he wae | ot soteacuemteeueites : ante a mabetye ite be cece earned b mu spencers snatch oetek eo eibemartem nA (P osonnit tntat ce sdetetehe bate Ay fh vibe ob: Lis Leted rea tat rs soriatells aboot rhantensne Aaa * seavanes thanks Pru cmetemedeney ree canienasetenate eu cMohadeiteRa va Leura fh Me saataarlelle toa epe dns hans rate 2 tom tthe thelr dels selene HeAeethe hetrepey “a Aretp ote ites Sean daarntcia bon Aeon ow rnriteqeasiei ‘Atte beteen 14 olerehe er: ya eWndbed siamese rae he herbed: Hid she Atha acter Re 4 Hedsisneten cies migthace ite are enacts Len eovan ry terse: Jott chore Abn eben esd tft Metre th act trace aeene narirrfrwegtdey?s eee jew Bh ch te stn ag ars et 5 ro Loe een nile a tatamer Scere “We tei UENO Orta Spperineeeta acre Sen) oi: asa hehe peeps seu aaa D woensbrachideareeisare irivteavesoeare saa 4" eaaebrachenn ~ rae Se Rethe Reddy Came dewereG wee Dede ve@oy tntndain Os 004: *. 8 O88 nthe: bs Cpe wear aront a aeananat Howaenernbaeraadah rks bnawhaeeis ae tiey WENO Wom eden mem ee OAL UNA ThA te c a ae as ibetie Meme iaaemanear the Ciihowitwerprir er) Kad tor Stavieiearbrortsbeash ocaraeorord ee be bike anes BOM WAN Anew PMMA othaly ws ame Cegeanertti ve ahi aeivesbe ora is wei iat tod thy are ey Whee eres ihe aye We aicatina waa teat POMBO M oem e Hem othe ayes hancihse on ibot smonob emeAsiiey Peto ante ne oi REF TO Ot Be Dome de: ase rate npeavenn aves bes pesaiertees . oa Le eerar peor hoa hee rae trea " wrerteteun ry “a denebaares 8s nto 9 . ” Memecbene a x dean tae asa! alban aataea We ibebaliadeiieirers: saspeaeaes eavnenvorbsnne x . ty 4 Adena tena we a oe OW tert) Hat Sata opty Heine ante Weritaneibe ven dye 9 he Pe 4 | a Cruncreropist se ote aerate feeeieetnerean phi rar bd ey we wegen Sep Sarina aan arash baacaeschacere wma uege ne tenseaebegesvarbese® whe oarbsoanseunenty maweenehwesb ering Hebe weit nenies 7 1099980 Sobaten te 4-NahtesoRnba awed ool O>heee Re ien tow RTA AY Be oy he ees errrcvrrrenn none Writer Dotto Ante vebe WW mow rtsle Heiy vote ban babe met othe senatsiyewraeasatveneina stoi sennentodnartadtbe mate ng vaenet= DP Mabwrete mur been ode haihnthodbe > Ded be hren tn nya thotathotent are ib ti cee renres ATA eee on fete tevars eA Redon w: NOTICE: Return or renew all Library Materials! The Minimum Fee for each Lost Book is $50.00. The person charging this material is responsible for its return to the library from which it was withdrawn on or before the Latest Date stamped below. Theft, mutilation, and underlining of books are reasons for discipli- nary action and may result in dismissal from the University. To renew call Telephone Center, 333-8400 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS LIBRARY AT URBANA-CHAMPAIGN NOV 06 1990 DE 1 3 1990 L161—O-1096 | LIBRARY UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS URBANA FIELD Museum oF NaTurRAL History. PUBLICATION 165. REPORT SERIES. VOR TV NO: is: PN INUAT RIE POR Dc Qk Es DIRECTOR TO THE BOARD COP: TRUSTERS FOR THE YEAR 1912. THE LIBRARY OF [HE } ) - 402) AX “4 fi Lf i UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS Curcaco; U.S.A January, 1913. Nature! History kr Vitek LIBRARY UNIVERSITY oF ILLINOIS URBANA FIELD MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY. REPORTS, PLATE XXX. WATSON F. BLAIR. Second Vice-President and Chairman of the Finance Committee. FieLD Museum oF NATURAL HiIsrorvy. PUBLICATION 165. REporT SERIES. Vousslv=. Nos: meNUAL REPORT OF THE lo) Tso ei BAG) ee TOM REE: POs Or TRUSTEES FORTHE YEAR. 1912: Gricaco, U.S.A January, 1913. THE LIBRARY OF iH: DEC 22 1949 UNIVERSITY OF ILLiNoIs > CONTENTS PAGE Board of Trustees MAL Ot Nil Ga ah) cat Ae eed) Sen ee Re eT OOMIUMICCCES yc. TAN as cy os Pee le nue ele ee eae Ieee eS BPMMGIMEQEMVITIGC UII eo eth ck, at re caged bt cass ce ete ao PoE EEEPUIEE ECT CLOT ic. terete Aral, at) eee teas RE TSG rnibnolocicale Goaac, ike) Sse Tepe ATR ft 60 INGpOnt eared Recoren Me anc fotos wie in bsahl «61 ete. b 602 EOC COME ee ten ee a er Re ES Ne er CL dee OOS THE Liprary.— The additions received during the year exclusive of duplicates were 2,263, increasing the number of books and pamphlets in the library to 58,133. Of this number 1,900 were received by gift or exchange and 363 by purchase, distributed as follows: General Library ESA AE eam et 39,611 Department of Anthropology . 2,807 Department of Botany 6,167 Department of Geology TA: Department of Zoology. 2,434 Total . 58,133 The regular routine work of recording the books requisitioned, ordered, received, catalogued, bound and shelved has been continued, always with an aim to have the system as satisfactory as possible to give efficient results. The accessions of the year have been of unusual value and importance. Publications were received from 727 indi- viduals and institutions, and 27 new exchanges were effected. The fund available for the purchase of books was carefully expended upon works selected by the staff. Among the more important pur- chases were the New (11th) Edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica, the last edition of the Century Dictionary, a beautifully illustrated 194 FIELD Museum or Natura. History — Reports, Vot. IV. copy of the “Catalogue of the Ancient Imperial Treasury called Shéséin,”’ Fenollosa’s Epochs of Chinese and Japanese Art, Smith’s History of Fine Arts in India and Ceylon, Havell’s Indian Sculpture and Painting, Lindt’s Picturesque New Guinea, Bentham’s Botany of the Voyage of H. M. S. Sulphur, 1836-1842, Bentham and Mueller’s Flora of Australia, Bradley’s Bibliography, Hallier’s Flora von Deutsch- land, Richards’ Ore Dressing, Osborne’s Engraved Gems, Alpheraky’s Geese of Europe and Asia, and Scammon’s Mammals of the West Coast of Africa. Through the courtesy of Mr. George Manierre the Museum received a set of Paxton’s Magazine of Botany, 16 volumes. This set is becoming increasingly rare and the library was fortunate in receiving so valuable a gift. As in former years the library is again indebted to Mr. Edward E. Ayer for gifts of books, also to Mr. Henry H. Getty of Paris, France; Mr. Ezra Brainerd, Middlebury, Vermont; Mr. William Barnes, Decatur, Illinois; Professor Walter Barrows, Lansing, Michigan; Mrs. M. W. Lyman, Chicago; and Dr. Berthold Laufer; and to the following institutions: Bureau of Aboriginal Affairs, and Bureau of Production and Industry, Government of Formosa; Indian Museum, Calcutta; Indiana State Board of Forestry; Maryland State Board of Forestry; Museo Nacional de Arqueologia, Historia y Etnologia, Mexico; North Carolina Geological and Economic Survey, Raleigh; Passau Naturhistorischer Verein, Germany; Penn- sylvania Topographic and Geologic Survey Commission; and Tokyo Botanical Society. The current periodical list is being gradually in- creased with a view to eventually including the standard scientific periodicals pertaining to the work of the Museum. The number of books, serials, periodicals and pamphlets bound during the year was 1,or2. A number of pamphlets by various authors were bound in cloth to more properly protect them. The return of the books from the bindery again overtaxed the limited shelf space in the stack room and some of the least used books were shelved in temporary cases. A desired improvement was made in the library of the Department of Anthropol- ogy, the shelving having been enclosed by glass doors that will assist greatly in keeping the books free from dust. There have been written and added to the catalogues 18,146 cards. Two sections of the recently adopted metal card cabinet were purchased. Monthly installments of the John Crerar Catalogue cards were received and filed. DEPARTMENTAL CATALOGUING, INVENTORYING AND LaBeLinc. — Nearly 6,000 catalogue cards have been entered in the inventory books of the Department of Anthropology during the year, the large majority of these pertaining to the Blackstone Chinese and Japanese collections. About 800 cards have been written from the Philippine collections, FIELD MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY. REPORTS, PLATE XXxXIl. CHINESE STONE SCULPTURE OF T‘ANG PERIOD (742 A. D.) OF TORTOISE CARRYING INSCRIBED TABLET JAN., 1913. ANNUAL REPORT OF THE DIRECTOR. 195 covering the Ayer, Darrah, Jenks and Porter collections and nearly a thousand labels prepared for the Tlingit collections now installed in the East Alcoves of the South Court. The iron agricultural im- plements from Boscoreale installed in the North Court have been labeled and about 800 specimen labels have been prepared for the Philippine material, besides many large descriptive labels especially prepared for groups and for special industries. Many revised labels have been placed in the McCormick Hopi collections and the old buff labels in the Egyptian Hall have been replaced by black and white labels. Rubbings of the inscriptions on the great stone sarcophagus from Egypt have been made and submitted to Dr. Breasted of the University of Chicago, to be used in preparing a comprehensive label. There have been prepared for the Chinese collections 1,100labels. In these Dr. Laufer has aimed, so far as possible, to avoid technical phraseology and erudition, to make the labels plain and intelligible to the layman. Thus, in explaining Chinese paintings emphasis has been laid on the appreciation of the spirit and inward qualities of Chinese art, in order to lead the public to a correct understands. and a sound judgment rather than to actual knowledge of a subject * op foreign to the majority of people. All the current accessions in the. Department of Botany for the past year, amounting to 13,517 specimens, have been catalogued and 11,078 specimens entered from the large collections undergoing organization. These two items make a total of 24,595 entries made in the catalogue volumes during the year. A new and additional steel card index case has been added to the laboratory equipment, comprising gt drawers. This will give a capacity for expansion of the “Special Index” for about three years. All specimens added to the exhibition cases in the Department have been labeled. The material received by the Department of Geology during the year was fully inventoried and catalogued with the exception of the Ward-Coonley meteorites, cataloguing of which is still in progress. The cataloguing accomplished was chiefly of collections of fossils and minerals and the fossils collected in Iowa by the Assistant Curator of Invertebrate Paleontology. Care- ful identification of species was carried on in connection with this work. While this requires the expenditure of much time, the greater complete- ness of the catalogue thus obtained is believed desirable. The series of petroleums received during the year numbering 228 specimens was also fully catalogued. To the card catalogue of vertebrate fossils 32 cards giving full description of specimens were added. The Depart- ment library was increased by the addition of 646 books, pamphlets and maps, and 123 cards were added to the catalogue of the library, making a total of 2,614 cards. A considerable amount of labeling of 196 FieLtp Museum or Natura. History — Reports, Vou. IV. a permanent character has been accomplished, the total number of labels prepared and in part printed and distributed being about 3,000. A number of single series were fully labeled and the labeling accord- ing to standard practice of all specimens at present exhibited in the Department is rapidly approaching completion. For the most part new labels replace those of mixed character heretofore used. Many of these were hand written, and the rest were of the old buff card- board type, which were among the first products of the Museum printing shop. Many of these were made for a type of specimen mount now abandoned and in shape and size were unadapted to the present installa- tion. In reprinting these labels in aluminum ink on black cards, it was often found desirable to increase the size of the type. This called for a revision of the matter on the labels so that what was relatively unimportant as well as any matter appearing on the accompanying group labels was omitted. The greater part of the new labeling accom- plished related to the ore collections occupying Hall 34. Except for the marbles and building stones, which were done previously, the labels for the whole of Hall 34 were revised during the year, and those for the gold, silver, lead and platinum collections installed. The total number of labels thus prepared was about 2,000. Besides the prepa- ration of labels for the individual specimens attention was paid to group labels in this series and enough of them were provided to break up the too uniform appearance of lines of specimens. Besides the group labels of the type formerly employed, a number of mining district labels were prepared. These state briefly where the district is located and give a few of the more salient features of its ore de- posits. In preparing these labels every effort was made to keep the labels as brief as possible, to use as large type in the body of the label as possible, and to employ language as non-technical as the subject would allow. An extensive series of labels was prepared for the petroleum collection and the labeling of this collection was prac- tically completed. Nearly 500 labels were prepared for this col- lection, about 30 of them being descriptive and the remainder giving full details. The Chalmers collection of crystals, occupying Alcove 105, was provided with a full series of new labels, about 200 labels being prepared for the purpose. About 300 labels were prepared and distributed among the larger rock specimens to replace those of a miscellaneous character which had hitherto been used. Complete individual labels to the number of 45 and one large descriptive label were provided for the case of fossil Eocene mammals, Hall 59. A series of individual and descriptive labels numbering about 30 was provided for the blast furnace models. A number of defective or writ- AN; 1O13. ANNUAL REPORT OF THE DIRECTOR. 197 ten labels in the clay and soil collections were replaced by correct ones. Considerable attention was paid during the year to devising a new form of case label and the results at present attained seem satisfactory. The difficulty has been to find a stock for printing which would correspond with the case in color and not change under the action of light. After numerous experiments the end seems to be attained by employing a mahogany veneer mounted upon a heavy board. The veneer is finished to correspond in color and gloss with the case and the text of the label is then printed upon it. About 40 of these labels have been prepared and installed. Their appearance is much better than that of the card- board hitherto employed and it is believed they will not suffer from ‘fading. In the Department of Zoology the usual routine of cataloguing has been maintained. Altogether go2 entries have been made; 861 in Ornithology and 41 in Mammalogy. The Division of Ichthyology and Herpetology has been without an assistant for more than two years and for this reason cataloguing in this Division has advanced slowly. In addition to his regular duties the Assistant Curator of Entomology has devoted considerable time to relabeling the systematic bird collection during the absence of Assistant Curator Osgood, who was absent in the field. Considerable progress was, however, made in improving the local collection of insects of which 800 specimens were pinned, labeled and distributed with the result that the Illinois Orthop- tera, or grasshoppers, roaches, etc., have now been identified and systematically arranged so that these insects will henceforth be acces- sible for study or other purposes. The collection of Systematic Osteology and Craniology has been relabeled throughout, the common name of the species being placed in bold type at the top of the label. The work in this important direction is shown in detail as follows: No. of Total No. of Entries Total No. Record Entries to During of Cards , Books. Dec. 31, 1912. 1912. Written. Department of Anthropology. 34 123,530 6,000 124,281 Department of Botany . . . 56 354,434 24,595 40,225 Department of Geology . . . 21 124,016 3,294 7,579 Department of Zoology . . . 40 83,930 929 29,962 siiemMinbrarya foc ies) l a Ue ns 14 94,811 7,394 142,122 Section of Photography . . . 8 101,554 BeOS 4h” ue serene Accessions.— As usual, the majority of accessions acquired by the Department of Anthropology have been through gift. Mr. Homer Sargent continued to show his interest in the Museum by presenting additional valuable material illustrating the technology of certain Salish tribes of the Fraser River region. From Mr. Charles A. Baker, as administrator for the Estate of the late R. H. Baker, the Museum 198 Fietp Museum or Naturat History — Reports, Vou. IV. obtained valuable specimens from the South Pacific Islands, with many photographs and 66 Japanese and Ainu specimens. These have all been catalogued, labeled and installed in Hall 56. The Ainu material was especially welcome as it supplements the present collection. The Japanese specimens enables the Museum, with the addition of the material already on hand, to make what may be said to be the beginning of a Japanese section. Even thus, it must be admitted that Japan is very poorly and inadequately represented in this Department, and immediate attention should be given to its development. One of the most significant acquisitions of the year was by gift from the Tuesday Art and Travel Club of Chicago, who presented to the Museum two magnificent ancient rolls painted on silk. One, over 27 feet long, represents one of China’s famous paintings, showing the life, traffic, and culture of a mediaeval town at the end of the Twelfth Century; the other picture, 21 feet long, represents one hundred boys at play and imparts a vivid description of China’s games and customs, painted in a graceful style during the Ming period Both paintings are exhibited in specially prepared cases in Hall 45, being accompanied by detailed explanatory labels. Mr. John Muir, a missionary at Batang on the Tibetan and Chinese frontier, returned to Chicago with a collection of 165 Tibetan specimens, including a number of interesting paint- ings, books, costumes, weapons, ornaments, and a model of a Tibetan house, all of which form valuable additions to the Tibetan collections obtained by Dr. Laufer. A fine Chinese tapestry, nearly 20 feet long, representing The Eighteen Arhat (disciples of Buddha) in the act of crossing the sea, in the style of the famous painter Li Lungmien, has been acquired by purchase. This notable specimen came to this country at least a century ago through a Chinese family settling in California. A collection of 9 pieces of Han pottery has been purchased from Dr. Buckens, a Belgian physician in the service of the Peking-Hankow Railway, who had exceptional facilities for procuring antiquities exca- vated during the construction of railroads. The mortuary stoves and towers in this collection well supplement the manifold types on hand. There is, besides, a fine piece of Tcang pottery in this lot, an amphora- shaped jar with double dragon handles, made in imitation of Persian ware of theSassanian epoch. A curious album, with beautifully lacquer- ed covers painted in gold with miniatures, is another valuable addition; it contains 25 specimens of popular art, depicting the life, customs, and industries of Southern China in the beginning of the Nineteenth Century —an interesting ethnological record of the now vanishing culture of JAN., 1913. ANNUAL REPORT OF THE DIRECTOR. 199 the Manchu period. Through the continued interest of Trustee Ayer the South Italian collections have been enriched by four magnificent earthenware wine jars from Boscoreale, together with a bronze vase from the same villa and a collection of vases, jewelry and a sarcophagus from Etruria. Mr. Ayer, during the year, has also added many impor- tant examples to the extensive collection of North American ethnology previously presented by him. A certain portion of this accession has been set aside for use in the N. W. Harris Public School Extension of Field Museum project. A very interesting and unique crown from the Marquesas Islands has been acquired by purchase. From Melbourne University has been acquired by exchange an exceedingly valuable col- lection of ethnological material from the native tribes of Central Aus- tralia. Because lists have not yet been received, it is impossible to state at this time the number of specimens added during the year to the Melanesian collections, resulting from the Joseph N. Field South Pacific Islands Expedition in charge of Dr. A. B. Lewis. The Depart- ment of Botany has received the usual annual additions of herbarium specimens, among which the following accessions are noteworthy: Britton & Cowell, Cuba, 53; Otto Buchtien, Bolivia, 205; Ralph W. Chaney, Michigan, 300; June A. Clark, Idaho, 211; Jesse M. Greenman, West Virginia, 387; David Griffiths, Arizona, 74; Marcus E. Jones, Utah, 211; A. Kranz, Germany, 359; Otto Kuntze, Argentine 141; Bolivia 225, Brazil 82, Chile 84, Venezuela 60; O. E. Lansing Jr., Illinois 102, Missouri 87, Wisconsin 73; Leland, Chase & Tilden, New Zealand, 167; Francis Macbride, Idaho, 305; B. Mackenson, Texas, 117; C. F. Millspaugh, Ceylon 53, Japan 88, Philippine Islands 57, Wisconsin 176; Nelson & Macbride, Idaho, 323; C. A. Purpus, Mexico, 451; Sandberg & Leiberg, Washington, 387; J. A. Shafer, Cuba, 402; Baron von Tirckheim, Santo Domingo, 236; C. M. Weber, Philippine Islands, 260; F. Zuccarini, Germany, 222. W. E. Broadway, Tobago, 212. The organization (i. e. poisoning, mounting, cataloguing and installing) of the current accessions has been kept up to date and 11,078 sheets have been organized from the larger herbaria, secured by the Museum, in accordance with the following tabulation: Estimated Organized Previously Herbaria. Contents. IQI2. Organized mepeceitelienc 2) alle). fk. 14,603 Bias 5,264 J. T. Rothrock eaeia ie Pree 22,510 302 22,507 aks 1SIGUCC] Oey UO ae eee 8,671 sass 8,428 Jepineeouuettenc. bs sho 15,000 BPE ey ie Paci Lie LESS Sree | Le el Ls ae a 21,528 229 12,943 University of Chicago... 45,000 10,547 23,140 With the above, and various minor accessions, the additions to the 200 Fretp Museum oF Naturat History—ReEports, Vor. IV. organized herbarium, during 1912, are shown in the following, geographically arranged, table which does not include those regions to which no additions have been received this year: Added to Total Herbarium now in IQI2. Herbarium. INORTHPAME RIGA Gas err eral) ieee ne mere 12a 131 Alaska: (Gneceneralytc” 2 sr fee ess enclave ee aes 217i 528 Amakauklslandivs “rie. /itukaee - dens eee 21 21 Atkanlsland, pax ek. eh se Oi tee eee aston Pee : I I Japonskidisland. Sc oeo-a Roper nae 3. Cen eneia Ih: 3 2 StuGeorse Islandu rd ey een sae. ee it 1 St: Paullisiand 2) oa Fees oc eee 3 5 Unalaska Island 31 31 Canada (in general) . 42 2,002 British Columbia 25 980 Labrador 3 167 New Brunswick . 8 752 Nova Scotia . I 148 Ontario 3 575 Quebec 33 121 Vancouver Island I 231 Yukon 2 - 68 Newfoundland 247 712 United States: (Ala batiae-?.. tae.) hmrantcn ate a8 Oye Men RR e cee ae 27 + 1, OASe Amenicaneh tains, 58s: oar. Senecio eek ener I 95 INTIZ OM Dae eee bots eae (cee an eset eee 1,566 9,364 Valigiech else Suey eran, Set en ERE Se aman > dorm 3 le 3 56 275 Calitormiay sete Gon ne OF es ee eee 2,92 21,967 Svyaneey (Cenmlbias INL 2 5 5 ln I 25 Goloradorriesn: Ciiek ear a ery BAR en ee 2,345 10,918 Gornecticut. i aia eek ue Geet ee ee 20 319 ID alcotas Seen tee vt fia ok moe a abel hee, bee 15 35 NortheDakotay ais; coe Sse ee ec eee ee Pilg 401 SouthoDakotayt ae ety.) a ie et ee 23 107 Delaware a scp wep ins CG fy ee a 276 1,463 Districtrot Columisiay 60) erp eae eee 48 1,968 LG ridaykess?)) ine etd teh A Ey eee ear ee a nee 1,283 19,916 Blondaikieys sty iene ee Ash ore eae er 18 564 Geonciars 4 WS wypsi eed t ha ane eed Ae eon ered ec 87 4,449 Leah rete ee OAL Pe) Oi Se eee RR og alg a en 1,403 2,882 TT OSPNE Wine eta ath oe nas Soe eet ee bad ee aa 949 18,809 (ita AT ny Se ANS PR kG: END lg Corre coe eee go06 5,214 Indian derritonyae RAR. Vai be thie oe 105 254 LO weal 9 jotlen try She ath Ske Stn Scr ee a I51 1,460 IGANISAS SS. Skt meee oS eine ae ae er een mS Slee III 272 Kierituchoyicnn ace) ate Sgt ak gee ene ee ee es 265 935 OWISIanak tte yea he Eee nei Birt ts 188 1,239 Maing, osc. 0c5 ten ihigenc ume ara pene fener ae 332 1,552 Maryland: 'e: [2° bio ae MUR es neo ee eens 54 953 JAN., 1913. ANNUAL REPORT OF THE DIRECTOR. 201 NortH AMERICA (in general) Added to Total United States (in general) Sees Hecbacian BSS C TAGS) Ale Pe een aS eee ecs” oak sya 223 2,906 Michigan - Fay ES SE Et Scr! FA 846 3,430 Nvietaneso tammeeene ey Reiser a OAC, Sc atta, ease ieee 209 goo “LSE SS g/g Sy ee a ast 88 1,963 MEGSOUNEe: SE steeds es et) ea as ee eRe 60 394 2,491 RMA AWE Sy Met we teeter a yi, an es 363 3,507 [Ni GloueaVStISD, GAR C Ceee ae a ae 79 240 Nigwaala, (tee, SR ee yey ee oh 27 751 New Hampshire Settee s wae Ks Wp eal orem en 195 1,358 | ST 1] ERSTE ae AR at ra 317 2,423 Reale COM er aietyn) |) "s.ir rte eee PNB LEE Pere 9 7/7] 2,672 Nea VObicae apres ce cos.

PSR Me eo es: 537 2,494 (0) OMENS Fees NE we Meck Aa er tes 61 1,536 Wiclahioimicitany cis) hy ect ee) eeu evoke gee ce 6 182 Cregorah 2 Ba aa eae rns, 2) ee en me enn Pred ie 1,596 7,524 BACITCKCOASt sy ) wally Waloee Sent, sot os cee ay Ce 338 706 esibalciylicritel es ters tn tea oR aN ai) | ay) Hamme bees wa 219 9,259 eactemicland wey Yeas ete. S Deer ee, oe eee 63 544 IReciay IMlorrior Whats | oi ae) ee a ee) Benoa 85 1,378 SOMpnm Carolina ew k pace ea Pg hese aes 42 747 BIREMIMESSCCIM ian) etn Mid yeas aR re eles oe Per 174 1,226 Texas SO MR ee Ns Medes ct fect Winn ae erat Sven 1,850 8,733 UREN a 2, WE ae a a lee ead en Aine tee 637 2,698 WGIRCDOITTE™ ge ing Tey Yay eee rai eRe Dee haber comers Are 699 2,546 Virginia a oh Tree RSC: pHae eee : 695 2,318 Nijaslimotore (State) ieee | mp ee geen eee mnina? mi. 1,702 6,250 ESI MVA CIMA tome teh Vout | hom ewer |. 520 1,801 RUA SCOR GSI SEES eS oct eet pi Rye eos a ASI, ea eo Can 321 1,180 RIVAy CT apap Pca MO cette e ger ietc, Seth ty tl NSN tel 67 854 Nellowstone Nationalelatkm ma: semen elie snnle 117 400 CENTRAL AMERICA Memicanimgenendl), case. lov ced kee Ee ie oe ee 4,192 32,434 Wowem Caliiorniauer. teow eons) oS cue uae lames pony 3 153 1,726 CarmenglislanGies se a1. ten gees eh met th 18 22 Gedrostislande sn tia mrs cttas Meta Use ts eee 61 164 Grackiloine lisikhel 5 ~ so. 5 o po a os 34 74 Sane benicorlslandegesse msn eae eee cae I 10 (Caayorstoletss ae a Bak sem ese Oh aig ley Ag ee I 28 PRA ASCO mee mre a ertet Boul rg Oh AUeTE en car hah + I 5 WETICE OL EASA Perot Soe into ee ee men, cane Pf 4,671 Woslaw Ri CAtmergs: Silly. Bee miner, Cte ee eh ie eda 247 535 (OGY HE ADI odes Soy ok tae lg, SPA ere, eas or ee ol ae en 601 2,856 OU GUiraS amr eet nea | se eet oS oes 75 340 Ranaman(excl@analeZone)i = )s 9) 5 le uso ee 12 58 Sin Sallyeycloreseer ak ak = a Red re nel LR lk ete I 2m 202 Fir~tp MusEum oF Naturat History — Reports, Vot. IV. Added to Total Herbarium now in 1912. Herbarium. WEST. INDIES) (nscenerall)ic2: ose actrees 8 22 Bahamas . Aree Eleuthera. 2 686 Great Bahama sft oko Maa A ee oe ee I 625 New Providence? Sica > Soo gee ee 9 2,407 Barbados I 328 Bermuda . RP TSE ET Mrs Signe gs: I 644 Cuba Rt lin Be CMS ORI | dh y Pianeta eee 1,193 9,424 Gudadaloupey) aoe aoe ae eo ue ee ee ee I 1,509 Jamaica es: 9 a2. Pin ae Seat ie enn as oe a 57 6,558 Martinique MPa aren) Ad ame cc 5 13 615 PortowRacorns eas. Fe so. oer ae ee 18 3,992 Seetayng Blilo)oot: eee ere Mane eee es Pere eRO EEL een ho. 7 445 SantoDomingo es ('+, 0.8 wal yeh Pes ace ee 236 712 MODACO r Ria Pek Cokes moa er ee ER ee MOR Fen eee 212 575 aE rind ad, Lay SP oe Paros tk Pee gets ee eco) cea as 77 465 SOUDHSAMERTCAN( ny general) jeanne ata en em 5 5 Argentine. > pice coil” bP ohh pau ea elie eae 150 974 BOlMVia aoe th oro chides Lee eee eer ee a ene ee 430 3,534 )Bhec VAC Sine ae le re Men Moet oR GO ch ry Ad aa Uice! IOI 397 hilt os whet as HE eS ae ae See tenes ee 88 249 Solombiare = MASE 2G Sato cata ace? sey Mc ues eee I 2,420 Raliclandelclandcr 745 oes hearin ates tea ee eee pee I 3 Galapasosmsland 25 2 (Reena peal nee peer Cewek 5 10 IPATACI AY reer shee hast los W) D Museum or NaturaL History — Reports, Vor. IV. Collected by C. B. Cory: 5 Striped Ground Squirrels — Burnside, Illinois. Collected by W. J. Gerhard: 283 dragonflies. roaches, grasshoppers, katydids, bugs, butterflies, moths, beetles, flies, bees, wasps and parasites — Northern Indiana and Northern Illinois. 103 dragonflies, grasshoppers, bugs, moths, beetles, flies, bees, wasps and parasites — Southern Michigan, Northern Indiana and Northern Tlinois. Collected by S. E. Meek: 7 bugs and beetles — Costa Rica. Collected by S. E. Meek and S. F. Hildebrand: 567 decapods and isopods — Canal Zone and vicinity, Panama. Collected by W. H. Osgood and M. P. Anderson: 83 millipeds, spiders, mites, bird lice, bugs, grasshoppers, butterflies, moths, flies, fleas, beetles, etc.— Peru, South America. 3 skeletons of small rodents — Pacasmayo, Peru. 214 fishes — Peru. 44 lizards, snakes, toads and frogs — Peru. 525 mammal and bird skins — Peru. 6 Raccoon skins and skulls — Balboa, Canal Zone. 127 mammal skins, skulls and skeletons and bird skins and eggs — Northern Peru. 280 mammal skins and skulis, bird skins, bats, opossum-like forms and bugs — Peru, South America. 344 mammal skins, skulls and skeletons, bird skins and eggs, spiders, - grasshoppers, land shells, lizards, fishes and bats — Peru, South America. Collected by A. B. Wolcott: 139 grasshoppers, bugs, butterflies, moths, beetles, flies, bees, wasps and parasites — Northern Indiana and Northern Illinois. 164 spiders, stoneflies, grasshoppers, katydids, crickets, bugs, moths, beetles, flies, bees, wasps and parasites — Northern Indiana, Northern Illinois and Missouri. Mounted by E. N. Gueret: 1 skeleton of Toucan — Paramo de Tama, Venezuela. 1 skeleton of Australian Anteater — Australia. 2 skeletons of chameleon and 1 skeleton of snake — Africa. 1 skull of chimpanzee. Mounted by W. Heim: 130 fish — California. 27 fish — Key West, Florida. 1 Saw-fish — Tampico, Mexico. 3 fish and some sea-weeds — Long Beach, California. Purchases: 1 Great Blue Heron — Florida. 33 specimens mammals — Jay County, Indiana. 1 banded Australian Anteater — Australia. 8 bird skins — Tobago, West Indies. 1 Brewer’s Field-mouse — Muskeget Island, Massachusetts. JAN., 1913. ANNUAL REPORT OF THE DIRECTOR. 230 100 bird skins — British Guiana. 8 mounted swans cranes, etc. 2 skeletons of porpoise — Lake Maracaibo, Venezuela. 78 birds’ eggs and nests. 24 birds, Albino or partly Albino—Europe (purchased by Mr. E. E. Ayer). 19 bird skins — Antioquia, Colombia, South America. 14 butterflies and moths — California, Maryland, New York and Ohio. 1 Cackling Goose — Washington County, Wisconsin. FRIESSER, J., Chicago. 1 Golden Eagle — Kansas (exchange). 1 skin Hermit Thrush — Chicago. 2 skulls buffalo — Fort Pierre, South Dakota. GAGE, S. H., Ithaca, New York. 62 lampreys, larve and eggs — Ithaca, New York. GILLETT, CLARENCE R., Chicago. 3 fish. GERHARD, W. J., Chicago. 1 skin Fox Sparrow — Chicago. GUERET, E. N., Chicago. 1 skeleton of Wilson Snipe — Lake Calumet, Cook County, Illinois. HARPHAM, E. L., Evanston, Illinois. 1 Whistling Swan. IOWA STATE UNIVERSITY, Iowa City, Iowa. 24 species of birds— Laysan Island. KWIAT, ALEX., Chicago. 5 mosquito, beetle, fly, parasite — Northern Indiana and Northern Illinois. LILJEBLAD, E., Chicago. I spider — Bowmanville, Illinois. LINCOLN PARK COMMISSIONERS, Lincoln Park, Chicago. I chimpanzee. LOEB, J. A., Chicago. 35 bird skins — Central or South America. McDONALD, MRS. H. F., Chicago. I mounted Sail-fish. MAIN, W. W., Sinamox, Oregon. 2 walking-sticks — Sinamox, Oregon. MITCHELL, FRANCISCO, Yurimaguas, Peru. 2 snakes — Yurimaguas, Peru. IRA ews le. Chicago: 1 Deer Mouse — Iowa City, Iowa. SCHUBERT, A., Chicago. I parasite — Chicago. SNETHLAGE, E., Para, Brazil. 43 mammal skins — Brazil. STEPHENSON, FRED M. 7 White-eared Kob Antelopes and Wild Dogs — Africa. THOMPSON, STUART L., Toronto, Canada. 1 Otter skull. THOMPSON, S. L., Canton, Ohio. 3 wasp, beetle, bug — Canton, Ohio. 240 Fie~tp Museum oF NaturaAL History — Reports, Vot. IV. UNITED STATES BUREAU OF FISHERIES, Washington, D. C. 252 freshwater shells — United States. WILLIAMSON, E. B., Bluffton, Indiana. 1 American Coot — Bluffton, Indiana. WILLIAMSON, E. B., and DEAM, C. C., Bluffton, Indiana. 1 Whistling Swan — Vera Cruz, Wells County, Indiana. SECTION” OF PHOTOGRAPEY: (ACCESSIONS ARE BY GIFT UNLESS OTHERWISE DESIGNATED). FIELD MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY. Made by C. H. Carpenter: 596 negatives Museum specimens, etc., 6728 prints, 418 lantern slides, 25 enlargements, 208 negatives developed for field expeditions, 5 photo- macrographs, 4 Lumiere autochrome color plates. ‘ Made by Edward L. Baker, Lake Forest, Illinois. i —— negatives of general views, landscapes, etc. (The negatives were : loaned to the Museum and one set of prints donated by Mr. Baker; total number of prints including the set presented, 1088.) Made by S. E. Meek: 108 negatives, general views, landscapes, etc.— Panama and Costa Rica. Made by C. F. Millspaugh: 378 negatives, general views, landscapes, etc. John R. Muir, Kingston, Canada. — negatives of landscapes, general views, portraits, etc.— Philippines. (The negatives were loaned to the Museum and one set of prints ‘ donated by Mr. Muir; total number of prints including the set . presented, 554.) Pee Made by W. H. Osgood: ail 217 negatives, general views, landscapes, etc. Made by H. H. Smith: 934 negatives, landscapes general views, portraits of trees, ete.— Cali- fornia. Ng x y 7 ? a THE LIBRARY. BOOKS, PAMPHLETS, AND SERIALS. (ACCESSIONS ARE BY EXCHANGE UNLESS OTHERWISE DESIGNATED. ) Books and Pamphlets ACIREALE ACCADEMIA DI SCIENZE; Acireale, Italy 2... - {agi eee ALABAMA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY, University, Alabama . eS I ALBANY MUSEUM, Grahamstown, South Africa . . PGES ys I ALLEN, GLOVER M., Cambridge, Massachusetts I ALTENBURG. NATURFORSCHENDE GESELLSCHAFT DES OSTERLANDES, Altenburg, Germany . . S eaieates | ee AMERICAN ACADEMY IN ROME, Rome, Ttaly. (gift) n,n a AMERICAN ACADEMY OF ARTS AND SCIENCES, Cambridge, Massachusettgieee.. 2 BB. LE oo OS ee ES ee oe | ‘puny AsopoyyuUIG onseidg-pyoly ‘(sojavstayo DjiNby) AIDVA NAGIOH “dNOYS LVLIGVH JAN., 1913. ANNUAL REPORT OF THE DIRECTOR. AMERICAN ANTIQUARIAN SOCIETY, Boston, Massachusetts AMERICAN ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE, Washington, D. C. : AMERICAN CHEMICAL JOURNAL PUBLISHING COMPANY, Baltimore, Maryland ‘ AMERICAN FOLK-LORE SOCIETY, @ambudert NMAssaonnicett: AMERICAN GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY, New York City .. AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF MINING ENGINEERS, New York City AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHARMACY, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY, New York City AMERICAN ORIENTAL SOCIETY, New Haven, Connecticut AMERICAN PHILOSOPHICAL SOCIETY, Philadelphia . AMSTERDAM. K. AKADEMIE VAN WETENSCHAPPEN, Anigtordem, Netherlands . . AMSTERDAM. UNIVERSITEITS- BIBLIOTHEEK, Aeietecdsin’ Netherlands .. ANNALES DES MINES, Paes ‘France ANTHROPOLOGICAL INSTITUTE OF GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND, London, England . . : ARCHAOLOGICAL HE ON OF AMERICA, Santa He: ‘New Mexico . . ARCHIV FUR ben oncn eka: eis stamens ARIZONA AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION, Tucson, Arizona . ARKANSAS AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION, Teceveatils Arkansas. . ARMOUR INSTITUTE OF ‘TECHNOLOGY, icaro. ARTHUR, J. C., Fayette, Indiana ASHMOLEAN NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY OF OXFORDSHIRE, Oxford, England ASIATIC SOCIETY OF BENGAL, Galeuties aetian ASSOCIATION OF ENGINEERING SOCIETIES, Peiacieletnien AUGSBURG. NATURWISSENSCHAFTLICHER VEREIN FUR SCHWABEN UND NEUBERG, Augsburg, Germany . AUSTRALASIA ROYAL SOCIETY, Sydney, Australia. : AUSTRALASIAN ORNITHOLOGISTS’ UNION, Melbourne, Aeianka AUSTRALIA. GOVERNMENT OF THE COMMONWEALTH, Melbourne, Australia . : : AUSTRALIAN MUSEUM, Srdaey New South viele ‘ Aik. 1. ., Chicago (gift)-.- . rays BAILEY, F. MANSON, Brisbane, @ueenciandl BAILEY, H. B., Newport News, Virginia BAMBERG. NATURFORSCHENDE GESELLSCHAFT, Beye: Germany @ BARCELONA. L’ INSTITUT DE CIENCIES, rnedioad), Sanh : BARNES, WILLIAM, Decatur, Illinois (gift) . 5 é BARROWS, WALTER, Lansing, Michigan BASCOM, F., Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania BASEL. NATURFORSCHENDE GESELLSCHAFT, Beek Saitama BATAVIAASCH GENOOTSCHAP WETENSCHAPPEN, Batavia, Java 241 eH Ne eH NH eH WN fon) bo bh NO oe QO ee er OW 242 Fretp Museum or NaturAt History — Reports, Vot. IV. BATH. NATURAL HISTORY AND pee ake FIELD CLUB, Bath, England . ; 3 : : BAY, J. CHRISTIAN, Cheese (gift) BP BAYERISCHE BOTANISCHE GESELLSCHAFT, Weemich! Gee BAYREUTH. NATURWISSENSCHAFTLICHE GESELLSCHAFT, Bayreuth : BEAN, ROBERT BENNETT, EGE Pinan Tsteee (gift) BEAN, TARLETON H., Albany, New York . . BELFAST NATURAL HISTORY AND PHILOSOPHICAL SOCIETY, Belfast, Ireland ; BELFAST NATURALISTS’ FIELD CLUB, Belase Ireland . BELOIT COLLEGE, Beloit, Wisconsin. BERGEN MUSEUM, Bergen, Norway. BERLIN. DEUTSCHE ENTOMOLOGISCHE NATIONAL- | BIBLIOTHEK, Berlin, Germany BERLIN. DEUTSCHE GEOLOGISCHE GESELLSCHAFT, Benin Germany . BERLIN. DEUTSCHE GESELLSCHAFT FUR ‘ANTHROPOLOGIE, ETHNOL., UND URGS., Berlin, Germany F BERLIN. DEUTSCHE GESELLSCHAFT FUR VOLKSTUMLICHE, Berlin, Germany : : BERLIN. DEUTSCHER SEEFISCHEREL VEREIN, Berliae Gennaene - BERLIN. DEUTSCHER UNIVERSITAT, Berlin, Germany Pdi: BERLIN. GESELLSCHAFT FUR ERDKUNDE, Berlin, Germany . BERLIN. K. BIBLIOTHEK, Berlin, Germany : BERLIN. K. BOTANISCHER GARTEN UND MUSEUM, Benin Germany ; BERLIN. K. MUSEUM FUR VOLKERKUNDE, Beni Gounane mie. BERLIN. K. PREUSSISCHE AKADEMIE DER WISSENSCHAFTEN, Berlin, Germany BERLIN. VEREIN FUR “VOLKSKUNDE, Bere Gomene BERLIN. ZOOLOGICAL MUSEUM, Berlin, Germany . : BERN. NATURFORSCHENDE GESELLSCHAFT, Bern, Switzerland : BERN UNIVERSITAT, Bern, Switzerland : : BERNICE PAUAHI BISHOP MUSEUM, Honelite Hawa Tslanele ; BIOLOGISCH-LANDWIRTSCHAFTLICHES INSTITUT, Amani, D. Ostafrika ; BIRMINGHAM. NATURAL HISTORY AND PHILOSOPHICAL SOCIETY, Birmingham, England BLATCHLEY, W. S., Indianapolis, Indiana BOHMEN. NATUR. LANDESDURCHFORSCHUNG, rae Bonemel BOLTON, H., London, England. . rae BOMBAY. ANTHROPOLOGICAL SOCIETY, Bombers Tdi) BONN. NATURHISTORISCHER VEREIN, Bonn, Germany . BONN-POPPELSDORF. DEUTSCHE DENDROLOGISCHE GESELLSCHAFT, Bonn-Poppelsdorf, Germany. BORDEAUX. SOCIETE LINNEENE, Bordeaux, France BOSTON MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS, Boston, Massachusetts BOSTON PUBLIC LIBRARY, Boston, Massachusetts . BOSTON SOCIETY OF NATURAL HISTORY, Boston, Meeacneeuss N Ne N N @® NN NH AN.» O13. ANNUAL REPORT OF THE DIRECTOR. BOSTON UNIVERSITY, Boston, Massachusetts. BOWDOIN COLLEGE, Brunswick, Maine BRAINERD, EZRA, Middlebury, Vermont (gift) BRANDEGEE, T. S., Berkeley, California . BRANDENBERG. BOTANISCHER VEREIN, Epaindoanene Gaiman BRAUNSCHWEIG. VEREIN FUR NATURWISSENSCHAFT, Braunschweig, Germany . BREMEN. NATURWISSENSCHAFTLICHER VEREIN, Beenien Germany : BRISTOL MUSEUM AND ART GALLERY, Breve: Baetadd BRITISH ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE, London, England BRITISH GUIANA ROYAL AGRICULTURAL AND COMMERCIAL SOCIETY, Georgetown, British Guiana BRITISH MUSEUM (NATURAL HISTORY), encoun Baeleac BROOKLYN INSTITUTE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES, Brooklyn, INews Mork * = BROOKLYN PUBLIC LIBRARY, Brooke Ne Werle BRUNN. LANDWIRTH. LANDESVERSUCHSSTATION FUR PFLANZENKULTUR, Brinn, Austria BRUNN. NATURFORSCHENDER VEREIN, yaa eee BRUSSELS. ACADEMIE ROYALE DES SCIENCES, DES LETT RES ET DES BEAUX ARTS, Brussels, Belgium . : BRUSSELS. INSTITUTS SOLVAY, Brussels, Belgium . BRUSSELS. JARDIN BOTANIQUE DE L’ETAT, Brussels, Belen BRUSSELS. MUSEE ROYAL D’HISTOIRE NATURELLE DE BELGIQUE, Brussels, Belgium . BRUSSELS. SOCIETE D’ARCHEOLOGIE, Benceely Belen BRYN MAWR COLLEGE, Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania . BUCKING, H., Strassburg, Germany ; BUDAPEST. K. MAGYAR-TERMES- ZETTUDOMANYI ‘TARSULAT, Budapest, Hungary : BUDAPEST. MAGYAR ORNITHOLOGIAI KOZPONT, ade, Hungary BUDAPEST. UNGAR. AKADEMIE WISSENSCHAFTEN, Budeneee Hungary : BUENOS AIRES. FACULT TAD DE FILOSOFIA Y LETRAS, Buenas Aires, Argentina BUENOS AIRES. INSTITUTO GEOGRAFICO ARGENTINO, Beenge Aires, Argentina. BUENOS AIRES. MUSEO NACIONAL, Buenos) tues, Beatin BUFFALO PUBLIC LIBRARY, Buffalo, New York BUITENZORG: DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, Ereoncare, eve é CALCUTTA. ROYAL BOTANIC GARDEN, Calcutta, India . Pease CALIFORNIA ACADEMY OF SCIENCES, San Francisco, California . CALIFORNIA AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION, Berkeley, California CALIFORNIA STATE FORESTER, aie inente: California CALIFORNIA UNIVERSITY, Berkeley, California . CAMBRIDGE ANTIQUARIAN SOCIETY, Cambridge, Byetancl - NNN _ 244 Fretp Museum or NATuRAL History — Reports, Vot. IV. CAMBRIDGE MUSEUMS AND LECTURE ROOMS SYNDICATE, Cambridge, England . . 4 CAMBRIDGE PHILOSOPHICAL SOCIETY, Camibidect ‘Englaed . CAMBRIDGE PUBLIC LIBRARY, Cambridge, Massachusetts CAMPINAS CENTRO DE CIENCIAS, Sao Paulo, Brazil . . CANADA. DEPARTMENT OF INTERIOR, GEOLOGICAL SURVEY, Ottawa, Canada . . CANADA. ROYAL SOCIETY OF CANADA, Toronto; ‘Cac CANADIAN INSTITUTE, Toronto, Canada . ‘ CAPE OF GOOD HOPE. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, Cape Town, South Africa. . CAPE OF GOOD HOPE. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY, ea Tow Soh Africa Regie is: - CARACAS. MUSEOS NACIONALES, Caracas Wewericla : ; CARDIFF. NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WALES, Cardiff, Wales . CARDIFF NATURALISTS’ SOCIETY, Cardiff, Wales CARNEGIE FOUNDATION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF TEACHING, New York City 5 CARNEGIE INSTITUTE, Pittsburgh, Benes Wari CARNEGIE INSTITUTION OF WASHINGTON, Washiaztor D. C. CARNEGIE LIBRARY OF PITTSBURGH, Pittsburgh, ie ; CARNEGIE MUSEUM, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania aes CARPENTER, G. N., Dublin, Ireland . a; CASEY, THOMAS L., Washington, D. C. (gift) CASSEL. VEREIN FUR NATURKUNDE, Cassel, Gaines: - CATANIA. ACCADEMIA GIOENIA DE SCIENZE NATUR., Calas Iediiy ge CEMENT WORLD PUBLISHING COMPANY, Chicaze (gitt) CEYLON AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY, Colombo, India . : CEYLON ROYAL BOTANIC GARDENS, Peradeniya, Ceylon. . CHARLESTON MUSEUM, Charleston, South Carolina. 4 3 CHEMNITZ NATURWISSENSCHAFTLICHE GESELLSCHAFT, Chemnitz, Germany 3 CHICAGO ACADEMY OF SCIENCES, Ghiaes CHICAGO ART INSTITUTE, Chicago CHICAGO HISTORICAL SOCIETY, Chicago CHICAGO PUBLIC LIBRARY, Chicago CHICAGO. SOUTH PARK COMMISSION, Giveacs CHICAGO. SPECIAL PARK COMMISSION, Chicago. CHICAGO UNIVERSITY, Chicago : CINCINNATI MUSEUM ASSOCIATION, @ncncse Oni : CINCINNATI NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY, Cincinnati, Ohio . CINCINNATI PUBLIC LIBRARY, Cincinnati, Ohio CINCINNATI UNIVERSITY, Cincinnati, Ohio CLARK UNIVERSITY, Worcester, Massachusetts CLAUSTHAL K. BERGAKAD, Clausthal, Prussia CLEVELAND PUBLIC LIBRARY,.Cleveland, Ohio COCKERELL, T. D. A., Boulder, Colorado COLLEGIO DE S. FIEL, Lisbon, Portugal 3 COLLIERY ENGINEER COMPANY, Scranton, Beansylysnie NN Se Se a ee |) eS N = BW BB OO = = Qe =! ° w Ny HN OW ND HB QOAARH HN 4 HN PAN. ; 1013. ANNUAL REPORT OF THE DIRECTOR. COLOMBO MUSEUM, Colombo, India COLORADO COLLEGE, Colorado Springs, Colorado : : COLORADO MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY, Denver, (Coleride COLORADO SCHOOL OF MINES, Golden, Colorado . Ny eam COLORADO SCIENTIFIC SOCIETY, Denver, Colorado . COLORADO STATE AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STA TION, Fort Collins, Colorado. Se PSS bite Demi wht Ale COLORADO UNIVERSITY, Boutdee Oulgeels ; COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY, New York City. . . f CONCARNEAU LABORATOIRE DE ZOOLOGIE ET DE PHYSIOLOGIE, Mauritius. . CONNECTICUT AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION, New Haven, Connecticut CONNECTICUT STATE FORESTER, New Haven, Goanesceut, ; CONNECTICUT STATE GEOLOGICAL AND NATURAL HISTORY SURVEY, Hartford, Connecticut COOK, MELVILLE T., Delaware, New eee : COOPER ORNITHOLOGICAL CLUB, Hollywood, Galera COOPER UNION, New York City . : COPENHAGEN. BOTANICAL GARDEN, @apennnecn, Deemer COPENHAGEN. NATURHISTORISK FORENING, Copenhagen, iDiesiaaaelic. | Oa ees Ss ee ne ae i a Oe ee ee eri oe COPENHAGEN. ROYAL SOCIETY OF NORTHERN ANTIQUITIES, Copenhagen, Denmark . . COPENHAGEN UNIVERSITY. ZOOLOGICAL MUSEUM, Copenhagen, Denmark . COSTA RICA. CENTRO ‘DE ESTUDIOS SISMOLOGICAS, ican Joss; Costa Rica . CRAFTSMAN, THE, Eastwood: “New York Gaul : CROYDEN. NATURAL HISTORY AND SCIENTIFIC SOCIETY, Croyden, England . CUBA. ESTACION CENTRAL “AGRONOMICA, Santiago de ibs. Vegas, Cuba on . ete CZEKANOWSKI, JAN, St. Petersbune Teta (ato) : DARMSTADT. VEREIN FUR ERDKUNDE, Darmstadt, Conus DAVENPORT ACADEMY OF ARTS AND SCIENCES, Davenport, lowe DAVENPORT PUBLIC LIBRARY, Davenport, Iowa . . DELAWARE COUNTY INSTITUTE OF SCIENCE, Median Bennerivanie DENISON UNIVERSITY, Granville, Ohio : Me irae DETROIT. DEPARTMENT OF PARKS AND BOULEVARDS, Detroit, Michigan . . . DETROIT MUSEUM OF ART, Binet Michizan . DETROIT PUBLIC LIBRARY, Detroit, Michigan. . DEUTSCHER NATURWISS-MEDICINISCHER VEREIN FUR BOHMEN “LOTUS,” Prag, Bohemia DIAL PUBLISHING COMPANY, Chicago DOOLITTLE, ALFRED A., Washington, D. C. "DORETY, HELEN A., Chicago (gift) . DOWNEY, MARY E., Columbus, Ohio (gift) DREIBRODT, OTTO, Leipzig, Germany (gift) to > on ef ies) = N OO a eS) =a se S&S oe 246 Fretp MusEeum oF NaAtTuRAL History — Reports, Vot. IV. DRESDEN. GESELLSCHAFT FUR NATUR- UND HEILKUNDE, Dresden, Germany. . DRESDEN. K. SAMMLUNGEN FUR KUNST ‘UND ‘WISSENSCHAFT, Dresden, Germany. DRESDEN. K. ZOOLOGISCHES UND ANTHROPOLOGISCH- ETHNOGRAPHISCHES MUSEUM, Dresden, Germany . 4 DRESDEN. NATURWISSENSCHAFTLICHE GESELLSCHAFT “ISIS, 2 Dresden, Germany. DROPSIE COLLEGE, Piiadelphia, Benrisyiranic : ; DUBLIN. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, FISHERIES BRANCH, Dublin, Ireland . . : DUBLIN. NATIONAL MUSEUM OF SCIENCE AND ART, Dubliel Ireland . : ; DUBLIN. ROYAL IRISH SOCIETY, TDi. ireland DUBLIN. ROYAL ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF IRELAND, Dublin Ireland. . , DUMFRIESSHIRE AND GALLOWAY NATURAL HISTORY "AND ANTIQUARIAN SOCIETY, Dumfries, Scotland DUNN, SAMUEL O., New York City (gift) Ait ; EALING SCIENTIFIC AND MICROSCOPICAL SOCIETY, Lonelen England. . EAST AFRICA AND UGANDA NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY, Nairobi, East Africa EDINBURGH FIELD NATURALISTS’ AND MICROSCOPICAL SOCIETY, Edinburgh, Scotland 2 EDINBURGH. ROYAL SCOTTISH MUSEUM, ieambaren) Scotland EDINBURGH. ROYAL SOCIETY, Edinburgh, Scotland ae EGYPT. PUBLIC WORKS DEPARTMENT, Giza, Egypt EGYPT. SURVEY DEPARTMENT, Giza, Egypt . . ELBERFELD. NATURWISSENSCHAFTLICHER VEREIN, ‘Elberta Prtissiayemne ELISHA MITCHELL ‘SCIENTIFIC SOCIETY, ‘Chapel Hill, Noun Carolina. Sah ee ead he ec ENGERRAND, JORGE, iceico) Ser yee j ENGINEERS’ SOCIETY OF WESTERN PENNSYLVANIA, Pithshanent Pennsylvania . . : 2 ie ENOCH PRATT FREE LIBRARY, alenores Maryland ESSEX INSTITUTE, Salem, Massachusetts . . EVANSTON PUBLIC LIBRARY, Evanston, nos EWART, ALFRED L., Melbourne, Australia . EXSTEENS, MAURICE, Brussels, Belgium FIELD MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY, Chivass (purchase yal FLORIDA AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION, Tallahassee, Hloridayes. F FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING COMPANY, Ghieaea ; FOREST QUARTERLY, Ithaca, New York . . FORMOSA, GOVERNMENT. BUREAU OF ABORIGINAL AFFAIRS, Taihoku, Formosa, Japan : FORMOSA, GOVERNMENT. BUREAU OF PRODUCT INDUSTRY. Taihoku, Formosa, Japan (gift) . NAN. 1913. ANNUAL REPORT OF THE DIRECTOR. FRANKFURT-A.-M. STADTISCHES VOLKERMUSEUM, Frankfurt-a.-M. FRANKFURTER VEREIN FUR ORIENTALISCHE SPRACHEN, Frankfurt-a.-M., Germany . ! FRANKLIN INSTITUTE, Brarcisnien Dena hee : FREIBURG. K. SACHS. BERGAKADEMIE, Freiburg, Gita FREIBURG. NATURFORSCHENDE GESELLSCHAFT, Bees Germany . 3 - FRIEDLANDER, R. UND SOHN, Bese ‘Gemmnane FROGGATT, WALTER W., Sydney, N.S. W. . . ‘ GENEVA. CONSERVATOIRE ET JARDIN BOTANIQUES, eae Switzerland : ee GENEVA. MUSEO CIVICO STORIA NATURALE, Chon. Switzerland GENEVA. SOCIETE DE. PHYSIQUE ET D’ HISTOIRE NATURELLE, Geneva, Switzerland Bie ha A Selves ES GENEVA. SOCIETE ZOOLOGIQUE, Gencge Serica GEORGIA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY, Atlanta, Ba GERHARD, W. J., Chicago (gift) : GETTY, HENRY H., Paris, France (gift) . GIESSEN. UNIVERSITATS-BIBLIOTHEK, Gieeen Gasman: GILCHRIST, DOUGLAS A., Newcastle-upon-Tyne, England GLASGOW NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY, Glasgow, Scotland GLEERUP, C. W. K., Lund, Sweden j GORLITZ NATURFORSCHENDE GESELLSCHAFT, Gorkitz, Sess , GOTEBORG. K. VETENSKAPS OCH VITTERHETS SAMHALLET, Goteborg ‘ GOTTINGEN. K. GEORG- AUGUST UNIVERSITAT, Gaines. Germany GRAND RAPIDS PUBLIC LIBRARY, Grand Rapids, Michigan GRAZ. NATURWISSENSCHAFTLICHER VEREIN, Graz, Austria GRAZ. ZOOLOGISCHES INSTITUT, Graz, Austria : GREAT BRITAIN GEOLOGICAL SURVEY, London, Bngland GREENMAN, J. M., Chicago (gift) ; é ; GRIFFITHS, DAVID, Washington, D. C. (gift) GRUBE, MRS. LILLY (gift) ‘ GUPPY, H. B., Salcombe, South Devon, Bagland Geo GURNEY, J. jee Norfolk, England . : HAARLEM. STADTS BIBLIOTHEEK, Feeley Netedeads HABANA. BIBLIOTECA NACIONAL, Havana, Cuba . HABANA. UNIVERSIDAD DE LA HABANA, Havana, Cuba . . : HAMBURG. GEOGRAPHISCHE GESELLSCHAFT, Hamburg, Gonman - HAMBURG. NATURAL HISTORY MUSEUM, Hamburg, Germany HAMBURG. WISSENSCHAFTLICHE ANSTALTEN, Hamburg, reiiaeaaa i HAMILTON SCIENTIFIC ASSOCIATION, Hamilton, Canada . HANKINSON, THOMAS L., Charleston, Illinois (gift) . HANNOVER. STADT-BIBLIOTHEK, Hannover, Germany HARDWOOD RECORD, Chicago (gift) : HARTFORD PUBLIC LIBRARY, Hartford, Conascene HARVARD COLLEGE, Cambridge, Massachusetts . HARVARD UNIVERSITY, Cambridge, Massachusetts. . . HAVRE. MUSEE D’HISTOIRE NATURELLE, Havre, eae 247 ah Wm hUW HU Oe N NR NN ee ee Re et ND ON OO OT wu DN 248 FreLtpD Museum oF Natura History — REports, VOL. IV. HAWAII AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION, Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands .. eo HAWAIIAN HISTORICAL SOCIETY, Honsians ee Istana see I HEIDELBERG UNIVERSITATS-BIBLIOTHEK, Heidelberg, ae sO HELLER, A. A., Las Vegas, New Mexico . . MED ¢ I HONGKONG. BOTANICAL AND FORESTRY DEPARTMENT, Hongkong... 620+. 0-600. sn ee oe Se HONOLULU. BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS OF AGRICULTURE AND FORESTRY, Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands . HORNIMAN MUSEUM, London, England HUARD, VICTOR A., Quebec, Canada (gift) . HULL MUNICIPAL MUSEUM, Hull, England . HULL SCIENTIFIC AND FIELD NATURALISTS’ CLUB, Hull, Bncland Saas so 2. a IDAHO. MINING INDUSTRY, Boe Wiehe, ILLINOIS. GENERAL ASSEMBLY, Springfield, lito (gift) : ILLINOIS STATE BOARD OF AGRICULTURE, Springfield, Illinois . ILLINOIS STATE ENTOMOLOGIST, Springfield, Illinois. ILLINOIS STATE FISH COMMISSION, Springfield, Illinois ILLINOIS STATE GEOLOGICAL SURVEY, Urbana, Illinois ILLINOIS STATE HISTORICAL LIBRARY, Springfield, Illinois : ILLINOIS STATE MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY, > Ilinois F ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY, Usha inline INDIA. ARCHASOLOGICAL SURVEY, Calcutta, Teaches INDIA. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, Pusa, India INDIA. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY, Calcutta, India INDIA, GOVERNMENT, Calcutta, India INDIAN FORESTER, Allahabad, India . . >. 2 =A INDIAN MUSEUM, Calcutta, India . . . Dr INDIANA ACADEMY OF SCIENCE, Gadi nase) eres ; ‘ INDIANA STATE BOARD OF FORESTRY, Indianapolis, Indiana. INLAND PRINTER PUBLISHING COMPANY, Chicago L’INSTITUT EGYPTIEN, Alexandria, Egypt : INTERNATIONAL BUREAU OF AMERICAN REPUBLICS, Washington, D.C. _. IOWA ACADEMY OF SCIENCE, Des AGES! Tews IOWA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY, Des Moines, Iowa. : IOWA STATE COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE, Ames, lomes . IOWA STATE HISTORICAL DEPARTMENT, Des Moines, Iowa . IOWA STATE HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY, Des Moines, lowa ISAAC DELGRADO MUSEUM OF ART, New Orleans, Louisiana . ISTHMIAN CANAL COMMISSION, Ancon, Canal Zone ee JAMAICA INSTITUTE, Kingston, ies JANET, CHARLES, Paris, France JASSY UNIVERSITE, Jassy, Roumania JENNINGS, F. C., New York City . JOHN CRERAR LIBRARY, Chicago . JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY, alee! Maryland JOURNAL OF GEOGRAPHY, Madison, Wisconsin Be NH eH WR DR — a me WN _ ON AA BR HYWW NW PS 4 = NO = ee we OR NR ee HU NH HS WN ee a FIELD MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY. REPORTS, PLATE XXXIxX. 3 ee TROYES. ( Triticum sativum ). A grain of Troyes Wheat, standard of the Troy Grain, Troy weight. In mediaeval times nearly all towns, or seats of commercial activity, had their own standards of weight and measure. Inthe early part of the four- teenth century the ‘‘Pound of Troy’”’ was accepted in Eng- land, and many other places, for weighing bread, silk, gold, silver and jewelry; it is now used for gold and silver only. One kernel of the wheat of Troyes equals one grain troy. ONE OF THE ELEMENTS. VEGETABLE STANDARDS OF WEIGHT AND MEASURE. am 1O13. ANNUAL REPORT OF THE DIRECTOR. KANSAS AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION, Manhattan, Kansas. . KANSAS STATE BOARD OF AGRICULTURE, dopey Oieneae KANSAS STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY, Topeka, Kansas KANSAS UNIVERSITY, Lawrence, Kansas KARLSRUHE. NATURWISSENSCHAFTLICHER VEREIN, Ke picrune, Germany KAUKASISCHES MUSEUM, Tiflis, Ree De ats Saar een re ae KENTUCKY AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION, Lexington, Kentucky . . KENTUCKY BUREAU OF “AGRICULTURE, LABOR AND STATISTICS, Frankfort, Kentucky KENTUCKY STATE BOARD OF AGRICULTURE, FORESTRY AND IMMIGRATION, Frankfort, Kentucky 4 KEW. ROYAL BOTANIC GARDENS, Kew, Bnetaade, KIEL. NATURWISSENSCHAFTLICHER VEREIN FUR SCHLESWIG- HOLSTEIN, Kiel, Germany KLAGINFURT. NATURHISTORISCHES LANDESMUSEUM VON KARNTEN, Klaginfurt, Austria : KONIGSBERG. BOTANISCHER VEREIN, eamipebere Santa KRAKAU. K. AKADEMIE DER WISSENSCHAFTEN, Krakau, Rseelin LA CAMERA AGRICOLA, Merida, Yucatan. LAKE FOREST COLLEGE, Lake Forest, Illinois . . LAKE MOHONK CONFERENCE OF INTERNATIONAL | ARBITRATION, Lake Mohonk, New York . . LANCASHIRE SEA FISHERIES LABORATORY, Dierpool Beeiands LANDSHUT. NATURWISSENSCHAFTLICHER VEREIN, Landshut, Germany . LAUFER, BERTHOLD, Giicaze (gift). i LEICESTER MUSEUM AND ART GALLERY, Boronenl of Heicester, England. LEIDEN. RIJKS ETHNOGRAPHISCHES MUSEUM, Leiden Necierimse LEIDEN. RIJKS GEOLOGISCH-MINERALOGISCH. MUSEUM, Leiden, Netherlands . . RT atm hd UG LEIDEN. RIJKS HERBARIUM, eden Netherland Me ae LEIPZIG. INSTITUT FUR MINERALOGIE UND PETROGRAPHIE, Leipzig, Germany. . LEIPZIG. K. SACHS. GESELLSCHAFT DER WISSENSCHAFTEN, Leipzig, Germany. . LEIPZIG. GESELLSCHAFT. FUR ERDKUNDE, Dencie’ Bemmany LELAND STANFORD Leen UNIVERSITY, Stanford University, California Ae ek Rete Enh aeh epic Den Tey ENA CE LEON, NICOLAS, Wlerico Ce: sapere LEVALLOIS-PERRET L’ ASSOCIATION DES NATURALISTES, Levallois-Perret, France . LEVY-BRUHE, L., Paris, France Ghee LEWIS INSTITUTE, Chicago . . LIAS, MRS. SOLOMON, Middlebury, Wecant (gift) LIEBISCH, THEODOR, Berlin, Germany. . LIEGE. SOCIETE ROYALE DES SCIENCES, Tere! Belem NeW UI — > =e Ne HN OWN 250 Fretp Museum or Natura. History — Reports, Vor. IV. LIMA. SOCIEDAD GEOGRAFICA, Lima, Peru ; LIVERPOOL BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY, Liverpool, Bawiend LIVERPOOL GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY, Liverpool, England . : LIVERPOOL MARINE BIOLOGICAL STATION, Liverpool, England LLOYD LIBRARY, Cincinnati, Ohio LONDON. ENTOMOLOGICAL AND NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY, | London, England . : LONDON. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF GREAT BRITAIN, Landeota England. LONDON. IMPERIAL COLLEGE ‘OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, London, England . LONDON LIBRARY, Landen England LONDON. LINNEAN SOCIETY, London, Eagiindl : LONDON. ROYAL COLONIAL INSTITUTE, London, Baan LONDON. ROYAL GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY, London, England LONDON. ROYAL SOCIETY, London, England. : ae LONDON. ROYAL SOCIETY OF ARTS, London, Enema LONDON ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY, London, England ; LUND. K. UNIVERSITETS BIBLIOTEKET, Lund, Sweden . LYMAN, MRS. M. W., Chicago (gift) . McCLURE, C. F. W., Princeton, New Jersey . . MACCURDY, GEORGE GRANT, New Haven, Connecticut MACRITCHIE, DAVID, Edinburgh, Scotland . . MADRAS. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WMadiras Tacha MADRAS. GOVERNMENT MUSEUM, Madras, India MADRAS. HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY, Madras, India MADRID. BIBLIOTECA NACIONAL, Madrid, Spain MADRID. R. ACADEMIE DE CIENCIAS, Madrid, Spain MADRID. SOCIEDAD ESPANOLA DE HISTORIA NATURAL, Madrid, Spain . MAIDEN, J. H., Sydney, New San Wales MAINE AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION, Oantel Maine MAINE STATE LIBRARY, Augusta, Maine. , MANCHESTER LITERARY AND PHILOSOPHICAL SOCIETY, Manchester, England . : MANCHESTER MUSEUM, NMiamehester acted MANIERRE, GEORGE, Chicago (gift) . . MARBURG. GESELLSCHAFT ZUR BEFORDERUNG DER GESAMTEN NATURWISSENSCHAFTEN, Marburg, Germany MARINE BIOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION OF THE UNITED KINGDOM, Plymouth, England MARKS, E. L., Cambridge, Massachusetts Spee : MARSEILLES. FACULTE DES SCIENCES, Miarseiltes, France MARTELLI, UGOLINO, Florence, Italy MARYLAND AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION, College Park, Maryland 5 MARYLAND GEOLOGICAL SURVEY, Batimerct ivieaeeiont MARYLAND STATE BOARD OF FORESTRY, Baltimore, Maryland . MARYLAND STATE HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY, College Park, Maryland On Fe & WN Ne NNW M SF NAT Se DH SF NN HON Ian N JAN., 1913. ANNUAL REPORT OF THE DIRECTOR. MASSACHUSETTS AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION, Amherst, Massachusetts . MASSACHUSETTS HORTICULTURAL SOCIE TY, Boston Massachusetts. . : MASSACHUSETTS INSTITU TE OF ‘TECHNOLOGY, Boston: Massachusetts. . . MASSACHUSETTS STATE FORESTER, Boston: Nascachees: MATSCHIE, PAUL, Berlin, Germany (gift) ars MELBOURNE NATIONAL MUSEUM, Melbourne, estraliay MELBOURNE UNIVERSITY, Melbourne, Australia MEXICO. BIBLIOTECA NACIONAL, Mexico . MEXICO. DIRECCION GENERAL DE ESTADISTICA, Mexico MEXICO. INSTITUTO GEOLOGICO DE MEXICO, Mexico : MEXICO. MUSEO NACIONAL DE aa aan A, HISTORIA Y ETNOLOGIA, Mexico ; MEXICO. SOCIEDAD GEOLOGICA, Menies MEXICO. SOCIEDAD MEXICANA DE GEOGRAFIA Y ESTADISTICA, Mexico MICHIGAN ACADEMY OF SCIENCES, Aan Aeon ice hieani MICHIGAN AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION, Ae ceuieaee College, Michigan. . MICHIGAN COLLEGE OF “MINES, Hate avant Miciierinl MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY, Ann Arbor, Michigan . MILLSPAUGH, CHARLES FREDERICK, Chicago (ate MILWAUKEE PUBLIC MUSEUM, Milwaukee, Wisconsin MINING WORLD PUBLISHING COMPANY, Chicago . MINNEAPOLIS PUBLIC LIBRARY, Minneapolis, Minnesota MINNESOTA AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION, St. Anthony Park, Minnesota ‘ MINNESOTA FORESTRY BOARD, St. Bail Minnesota (gift) MINNESOTA HISTORICAL SOCIETY, St. Paul, Minnesota. MISSISSIPPI AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION, Agricultural College, Mississippi. . MISSISSIPPI STATE GEOLOGICAL SURVEY, jackeom MEN MISSOURI AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION, Columbia, Missouri. é : MISSOURI BOTANICAL GARDEN, St. peu: Mascot “ae MISSOURI BUREAU OF GEOLOGY AND MINES, Jefferson Gity, Missouri. . MISSOURI HISTORICAL SOCIETY, (CSheat RRGSREL. MISSOURI UNIVERSITY, Columbia, Missouri . MOORE, CLARENCE B., Philadelphia, Pennsylvania MORSE, ALBERT P., Salem, Massachusetts (gift) . . . MOSCOW. SOCIETE IMPERIALE DES NATURALISTES, Rioccou Russia. MUNCHEN. BOTANISCHE GESELLSCHAFT, Onicha: encase MUNCHEN. DEUTSCHES MUSEUM, Munchen, Germany MUNCHEN. GEOGRAPHISCHE GESELLSCHAFT, Munchen, Cusnea MUNCHEN. K. BAYER. AKADEMIE DER WISSENSCHAFT, Munchen, Germany bo Un taal no = ne Se me eS LN on Se Ne ON &S OD = NN G® ff mH me NN N 252 Firerp Museum or Natura History — Reports, Vot. IV. MUSEO DE LA PLATA, La Plata, Argentina . . NAPOLI. ISTITUTO ZOOLOGICO, Naples, Italy NAPOLI. R. ACCADEMIA DELLE SCIENZE, Naples, eae NAPOLI. SOCIETA DI NATURALISTI, Naples, Italy NAPOLI. UNIVERSITA. R. ORTO BOTANICO, Naples, Italy NATAL BOTANIC GARDENS, Durban, Natal . NATAL SCIENTIFIC SOCIETY, Durban, Natal NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES, Washington, D. oe : NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF AUDUBON SOCIETIES, New Vora (cit) eee NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC SOCIETY, Washineren D. Cc. NATIONAL LIBRARY OF WALES, Aberystwyth, Wales NATURALISTE CANADIEN, Chicoutimi, Canada. . . NEBRASKA AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION, lineoln Nebraska : NEDERLANDSCH- INDIE. K. INSTITUT TAAL- LAND- EN VOLKENKUNDE, Batavia, Java. . NEDERLANDISCHE DIERKUNDIGE VEREENIGING, Lewien Netherlands NEVADA STATE UNIVERSITY, Rend: Ney ae ; NEW BEDFORD FREE PUBLIC LIBRARY, New Bediond: Massachusetts. . Bh AO RE SO BL ieee an ee NEW BRUNSWICK NATURAL HUISMORNS SOCIRARYerSc- a New Brunswick NEW HAMPSHIRE COLLEGE OF AGRICUL TURE, Duta New Hampshire . . NEW JERSEY AGRICULTURAL ‘EXPERIMENT STATION, Trenton New Jersey : : NEW JERSEY GEOLOGICAL SURVEY, enten: New jeer F NEW JERSEY HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY, Trenton, New Jersey NEW MEXICO AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION, Mesilla Park, New Mexico f NEW MEXICO HISTORICAL SOCIETY, Sante Be: New Megs io NEW SOUTH WALES. BOTANIC GARDENS AND GOVERNMENT DOMAINS, Sydney, New South Wales . . NEW SOUTH WALES. DEPARTMENT OF FISHERIES, Sydneiil : New South Wales .- NEW SOUTH WALES. DEPARTMENT OF MINES ANN AGRICULTURE, Sydney, New South Wales. NEW SOUTH WALES. LINNEAN SOCIETY, Sydney, Men South Wales ; NEW SOUTH WALES. TECHNICAL MUSEUM, Sydney, New South WES . « NEW YORK ACADEMY OF SCIENCES, New ork City ae NEW YORK AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION, Geneva, INew Orkin NEW YORK BOTANICAL GARDEN, New York Ce Ave NEW YORK FOREST, FISH AND GAME COMMISSION, Albany New Works NEW YORK. METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART, New Vor City NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY, New York City . NN &# BF ew ® BN = ese we WD i2 JAN., 1913. ANNUAL REPORT OF THE DIRECTOR. NEW YORK SOCIETY OF MECHANICS AND TRADESMEN, New York City. . NEW YORK STATE LIBRARY, inany: New Wiarale NEW YORK ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY, New York City NEW ZEALAND. DEPARTMENT OF SIU Ey Wellineton’ New Zealand id Pee NEW ZEALAND INSTITUTE, iirelineton! Nes Pesdarie NEWARK FREE PUBLIC LIBRARY, Newark, New Jersey . NEWBERRY LIBRARY, Chicago . NORTH CAROLINA AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMEN T STATION, Raleigh, North Carolina . NORTH CAROLINA GEOLOGICAL AND ECONOMIC ‘SURVEY, Raleigh, North Carolina .. NORTH DAKOTA STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY, Sisnance North Dakota. . NORTH DAKOTA UNIVERSITY, Wacrersit North aeeen NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY, Evanston, Illinois . NOTRE DAME UNIVERSITY, Notre Dame, Indiana . NOVA SCOTIAN INSTITUTE OF SCIENCE, Halifax, Now Sis NOVARA. INSTITUTO GEOGRAFICO DE AGOSTINI, Novara, Italy NUMISMATIC AND ANTIQUARIAN SOCIETY, Montreal, Canada . NURNBERG. NATURHISTORISCHE GESELLSCHAFT, ge Germany : OAKLAND FREE LIBRARY, @aldaud: Catigane : OBERLIN COLLEGE LIBRARY, Oberlin, Ohio OBERRHEINISCHER GEOLOGISCHER VEREIN, Stuttgart, Cannan : OHIO AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION, Wooster, Ohio OHIO STATE ARCHZOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL SOCIETY, Columbus, Ohio OHIO STATE COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE, Canis, Ohio OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY, Columbus, Ohio . ; ; OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY ASSOCIATION, Colenpre Ohio OKLAHOMA AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION, Stillwater, Oklahoma : OKLAHOMA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY, Noman, Olanemte ; ONEIDA HISTORICAL SOCIETY, Utica, New York . : ONTARIO DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, Ontario, @snada’ OPEN COURT PUBLISHING COMPANY, Chicago OREGON AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION, @onrallis, Oregon (gift) A OREGON STATE BOARD OF FORESTRY, elem Oren ma OTTAWA DEPARTMENT OF MARINE AND FISHERIES, Orewa: Canada . ; OTTAWA FIELD NATURALISTS’ CLUB, Otianee Ganga. OUTES, FELIX F., La Plata, Argentina OXFORD DELEGATES OF UNIVERSITY MUSEUM, Ore aead ; PALERMO. R. ORTO BOTANICO E GIARDINO COLONIALE, Palermo, Italy . PARIS. ACADEMIE DES SCIENCES, Pane Prance PARIS. ECOLE D’ANTHROPOLOGIE, Paris, France . NF HW = ~ H NN WH WH WF ty NN &eN OO me NN 254 Frert> Museum or Natura. History — Reports, Vot. IV. PARIS. MINISTERE DE L’INSTRUCTION PUBLIQUE ET DES BE AUXECARRS baris-shranccumrame PARIS. MUSEE D’HISTOIRE NATURELLE, Parie. Brancen PARIS. SOCIETE DES AMERICANISTES, Paris, France : PARIS. SOCIETE NATIONALE D’AGRICULTURE, Paris, France! PARKE, DAVIS AND COMPANY, Detroit, Michigan (gift) PASSAU. NATURHISTORISCHER VEREIN, Passau, Germany PEABODY INSTITUTE, Peabody, Massachusetts . . PEABODY MUSEUM OF AMERICAN ARCHOLOGY AND ETHNOLOGY, Cambridge, Massachusetts. : PENNSYLVANIA AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. PENNSYLVANIA MUSEUM AND SCHOOL OF INDUSTRIAL ART, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania PENNSYLVANIA STATE DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. PENNSYLVANIA TOPOGRAPHIC AND GEOLOGIC SURVEY COMMISSION, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania PENNSYLVANIA UNIVERSITY, Philadelphia, Pence PENROSE, R. A. F., JR., Philadelphia, Pennsylvania PEORIA PUBLIC LIBRARY, Peoria, [linois PERKINS, G. H., Burlington, Vermont. PERTHSHIRE NATURAL HISTORY MUSEUM, ieechs ‘Scotlanal PERTHSHIRE SOCIETY OF NATURAL SCIENCE, Perth, Scotland . PHILADELPHIA ACADEMY OF NATURAL SCIENCES, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania . : ee PHILADELPHIA COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS, Bmierdelabie Pennsylvania PHILADELPHIA COMMERCIAL “MUSEUM, Bialacelphey Pennsyieaeia PHILIPPINE ISLANDS. BUREAU OF EDUCATION, Manila, Philippine Islands . . PHILIPPINE ISLANDS. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR. BUREAU OF SCIENCE, Manila, Philippine Islands PHILLIPS ACADEMY, Andover, Massachusetts. . . PILGRIM MEMORIAL COMMITTEE, Southampton, Bdgiaddl PIONEER WESTERN LUMBERMAN, Sacramento, California (gift) PLYMOUTH MUSEUM AND ART GALLERY, Plymouth, England POMONA COLLEGE, Claremont, California > . PORTICI. R. SCUOLA SUPERIORE D’AGRICULTURA, Partin [eae POSEN. DEUTSCHE GESELLSCHAFT FUR KUNST UND WISSENSCHAFT, Posen, Germany . . PRAG. ACADEMIE DES SCIENCES: DE L’ EMPEREUR FRANCOIS JOSEPH I, Prag, Bohemia . : PRAG. K. BOHMISCHE GESELLSCHAFT WISSENSCHAFT, Pas Bohemia : PRATT INSTITUTE FREE LIBRARY, Brooklyn: Nee Vouk PRINTING ART, THE, New York City (gift) : PROVIDENCE PUBLIC LIBRARY, Providence, RnGde isand PURDUE UNIVERSITY, Lafayette, Indiana : QUEENSLAND. DEPARTMENT OF MINES, Baebane: @acendana HO Ss SS SS He NH HO OC + we NN NK C ‘VMSVUGSN JO SNSOOIN YSMO7 ‘(1n0g40q saqyfoauajs) LNAGOY AIYVA 4O NOL3AIaXS “1X 3LV1d ‘SLH¥Od3uy “AYOLSIH TWHNLYN JO WNASNW G1314 JAN., 1913. ANNUAL REPORT OF THE DIRECTOR. QUEENSLAND FIELD NATURALISTS’ CLUB, Brisbane, Queensland QUEENSLAND MUSEUM, Brisbane, Queensland . . QUEENSLAND ROYAL GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY, Aeeoaae Queensland . ae QUEENSLAND ROYAL SOCIETY, Beeeaaes @eeenstad’ RANDALL AND COMPANY, Chicago (gift). RENNES UNIVERSITY, Rennes, France REVUE BRETONNE DE BOTANIQUE, Rennes, Piante: REVUE CRITIQUE DE PALEOZOOLOGIE, Paris, France REVUE SCIENTIFIQUE DU BOURBONNAIS ET DU CENTRE DE LA FRANCE, Moulins, France : LA REVISTA DE AGRICULTURA TROPICAL, Mexico Chis RHOADS, SAMUEL N., Philadelphia, Pennsylvania : RHODE ISLAND AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION, Kingston, Rhode Island : RHODESIA MUSEUM, Bulawayo, Rhodesia . RHODESIA SCIENTIFIC ASSOCIATION, Bulawayo, mhedestis RIES, HEINRICH, Ithaca, New York . : RIO DE JANEIRO MUSEO NAGIQN;: AL, Rio de Janciro, Brazil RIV BE, P:, Paris, France . ROBERTS, THOMAS 6., vPeaeraes icaneeo ROCHESTER ACADEMY OF SCIENCES, Rochester, Nee York ROGER WILLIAMS PARK MUSEUM, Providence, Rhode Island ROME. R. ACCADEMIA DEI LINCEI, Rome, Italy . : ROSE POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTE, Terre Haute, Indiana . ROSEN, NILS, Lund, Sweden : ROTH, WALTER E., Georgetown, Baiel enone ROTTERDAM MUSEUM VOOR LAND-EN- VOLKENKUNDE, Rotterdam, Holland ROYAL ARCHAOLOGICAL INST ITUTE OF GREAT BRITAIN. AND IRELAND, London, England ; ROYAL CORNWALL POLYTECHNIC SOCIETY, RaGnen, Bnetadal ST. GALL. OSTSCH. GEOGRAPH. COMMERC. GESELLSCHAFT, St. Gall, Switzerland .. . ST. LOUIS ACADEMY OF SCIENCES, St. Louis: Mascon : ST. LOUIS. CITY ART MUSEUM, St. Louis, Missouri Se ST. LOUIS MERCANTILE ASSOCIATION, St. Louis, Missouri . ST. LOUIS PUBLIC LIBRARY, St. Louis, Missouri ST. LOUIS UNIVERSITY, St. Louis, Missouri : ST. PETERSBURG. ACADEMIE IMPERIALE DES SCIENCES, St. Petersburg, Russia ; . ST. PETERSBURG. SOCIETE IMPERIALE DES NATURALISTES, St. Petersburg, Russia. SALEM PUBLIC LIBRARY, eater Maserohusetts, SAN DIEGO SOCIETY OF NATURAL HISTORY, San nieces California . SAN JOSE. MUSEO NACIONAL, San roe Costa ies SAO PAULO. DEPARTMENTO ESTADUAL DO TRABAIHO, Sao Paulo, Brazil . SAO PAULO. INSTITUTO AGRONOMICO, ‘Sao Paulos Brvil to Un On Oem aeR NRW ANH N SB DW ~~ Noe ee ee 256 Fretp Museum or Natura History — Reports, Vot. IV. SAO PAULO. SOCIEDADE CIENTIFICA, Sao Paulo, Brazil SAONE ET LOIRE. SOCIETE DES SCIENCES NATURELLES, Chalon-sur-Sa6dne, France : SAPIR, EDWARD, Washington, D. ou) SARAWAK MUSEUM, Borneo, India . SARGENT, CHARLES S., New York City ; SCHLESISCHE GESELLSCHAFT FUR V ATERLANDISCHE CULTUR, Breslau, Prussia SCHMUDA SP We: Modine: Aeecies SCHOBERT, ERICH, Leipzig, Germany . SCHWEIZERISCHE ENTOMOLOGISCHE GESELLSCHAFT, Bea Switzerland SCHWEIZERISCHE NATURFORSCHEN DE GESELLSCHAFT, Aaeaee Switzerland A SCHWEIZERISCHE NATURFORSCHENDE GESELLSCHAFT, Lausanne, Switzerland . SCOTLAND FISHERIES BOARD, Giastow, ‘Scotland SELER, EDUARD, Berlin, Germany : SENCKENBERGISCHE NATURFORSCHEN DE GESELLSCHAFT, InayalatoineloIMl, (Geimaeny 4 oo o 5c 5 5 ov © C SERGI, GIUSEPPE, Rome, Italy . . SHEFFIELD PUBLIC MUSEUMS, Sheffield, Engladh SLOCOM, A. W., Chicago (gift) . Z SLONAKER, JAMES ROLLIN, Palo Alto, Galton SMITH, J. D., Baltimore, Maryland SOCIETA AFRICANA ITALIANA, Rome Thal SOCIETA GEOGRAFICA ITALIANA, Rome, Italy SOCIETA GEOLOGICA ITALIANA, Rome, Italy SOCIETA ITALIANA DI ANTROPOLOGIA, Florence, Teale SOCIETA ROMANA DI ANTROPOLOGIA, Rome, Italy SOCIETA TOSCANA DI SCIENZE NATURAL, Pisa, italy, See SOCIETAS PRO FAUNA ET FLORA FENNICA, Helsingfors, Finland SOCIETE BELGE DE GEOLOGIE, DE PALEONTOLOGIE ET D’HYDROLOGIE, Brussels, Belgium . SOCIETE BOTANIQUE DE COPENHAGEN, Copenhagen! Denceee : SOCIETE BOTANIQUE DE FRANCE, Paris, France . SOCIETE D’ETUDES DES SCIENCES NATURELLES, Rhema! rane SOCIETE D’ETUDES SCIENTIFIQUES, Angers, France. . SOCIETE, DVHORTICULTURE, EDDE BOTANIQUE, Marceitles! Fienee SOCIETE DES AMIS DE L’UNIVERSITE, Clermont, France . ae SOCIETE DES SCIENCES, Nancy, France . SOCIETE FRIBOURGEOISE DES SCIENCES NATURELLES, Fribourg, Switzerland F SOCIETE GEOLOGIQUE DU NORD, ae ‘Biance ; SOCIETE IMPERIALE RUSSE DE GEOGRAPHIE, St. Petenbare RUSSiae ene SOCIETE NATIONALE D ‘AGRICULTURE, eects Heanes) : SOCIETE NATIONALE D’HORTICULTURE DE FRANCE, Paris, Fras SOCIETE NEUCHATELOISE DE GEOGRAPHIE, Neuchatel, Switzerland _ NINN NY Boy Ss See eS et Ne =“ = = = SS SS PAN... LO13. ANNUAL REPORT OF THE DIRECTOR. SOCIETE OURALIENNE D’AMATEURS DES SCIENCES NATURELLES, Ekaterinburg, Russia ee SOCIETE PORTUGAISE DE SCIENCES NAT URELL ES, Teebon, Portugal é : SOCIETE ROYALE DE BOT ANIQUE DE BELGIQUE, anges Belgium : SOCIETE ROYALE ZOOLOGIQUE ET M ALACOL OG IQUE DE BELGIQUE, Brussels, Belgium . SOCIETE ZOOLOGIQUE DE FRANCE, ane rates SOUTH AFRICA. GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY, Johannesburg, South Airiog : SOUTH AFRICA. MINES DEPARTMENT, Pretoria, South Africa SOUTH AFRICAN ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE, Cape Town, South Africa SOUTH AFRICAN DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, C ape eTown South Africa : SOUTH AFRICAN MUSEUM, one own) South Arua : SOUTH AFRICAN ROYAL SOCIETY, Cape Town, South Aries SOUTH AUSTRALIA. Department of Agriculture, Adelaide, South Australia : SOUTH AUSTRALIA. PUBLIC ‘LIBRARY, MUSEUM AND ART GALLERY, Adelaide, South Australia . ‘ SOUTH CAROLINA AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION, Clemson, South Carolina . SOUTH DAKOTA AGRICULT URAL ‘EXPERIMENT STATION, Brookings, South Dakota. . . SOUTH LONDON ENTOMOLOGICAL AND NATURAL HIST ORY SOCIETY, London, England SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA ACADEMY OF SCIENCES, ee Angeles California SOUTHERN PACIFIC RAILROAD, on igrancieces Calitonta DLE GlORGIO} Lorino, Ltaly 2 STATEN ISLAND ASSOCIATION OF ARTS AND SCIENCES, New York City wie STECHERT AND COMPANY, New Work Gis, (gift) STETTIN. GESELLSCHAFT FUR VOLKER- UND ERDKUNDE, Stettin, Germany . . SROCKHOLM. Ke VITT: HIST. ‘OCH ANTIK. AKADEMIEN, Stockholm, Sweden . . : SLOCKHOLM. KUNG. BIBLIOTEKET, vachenin Sweden , STOCKHOLM. UNIVERSITE DE STOCKHOLM. INSTITUT DE BOTANIQUE, Stockholm, Sweden. . STRASSBURG. KAISER WILHELMS UNIVERSITAT, Strassburg, Germany . STRONG, R. M., Gineage OL. : SWEDEN. FORSTLICHE VERSUCHSANSTALT, stociialn, Sweden : SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY, Syracuse, New York . . TASMANIA. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, Hobart, Toenails TASMANIA. ROYAL SOCIETY, Hobart, Tasmania TAUBENHAUS, J. J... -. TEILING, EINAR, Sinckholan Sweden. 257 to ~ = OG GQ we m= OG “NI GO “NI = WN Ne Sw 258 Fietp Museum oF Naturat History — Reports, Vot. IV. TENNESSEE. AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION, Knoxville, Tennessee ae TENNESSEE. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY, NERC. Piennestee oe TEXAS AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION, oe Sieniam Texas NE eh eS. THAXTER, ROLAND, Gumendee Sg eae THROOP INSTITUTE, Pasadena, Galiomnias THURINGISCHER BOTANISCHER VEREIN, Wemoae Genmiaael TIMBERMAN, THE, Portland, Oregon (gift) 5 Di TOKYO. ANTHROPOLOGICAL SOCIETY, Tokyo, Fajpani ho TOKYO. BOTANICAL SOC@IE DY, Dokyo; Japan a= = eo. TOKYO. DEUTSCHE GESELLSCHAFT FUR NATUR- UND | VOLKERKUNDE OSTASIENS, Tokyo, Japan . TOKYO. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY, Tokyo, Japan . . TORINO. MUSEO DI ZOOLOGIA ET ANATOMIA COMPARATA, Turin, Italy , TORINO. R. ACCAD. DELLE SCIENZE, apne eae TORONTO UNIVERSITY, Toronto, Canada : TRANSVAAL. DEPARTMENT OF MINES, retain Transvaal TRANSVAAL MUSEUM, Pretoria, Transvaal TRELEASE, WILLIAM, St. Louis, Missouri . TRING ZOOLOGICAL MUSEUM, Tring, Bagiaadl TRIVANDRUM MUSEUM, Trivandrum, India . TROMSO MUSEUM, Tromso, Norway TRONDHJEM K. NORSKE VIDENSKABERS. SELSKAB, Trondinenm Norway . TUBINGEN. K. UNIVERSITATS- BIBLIOTHEK, Tubingen Germany TUFTS COLLEGE, Tufts College, Massachusetts TUNIS. CARTHAGE INSTITUTE, Tunis, Africa U.S. GOVERNMENT, Washington, D.C. . . U.S. INDIAN SCHOOL, Carlisle, Pennsylvania . UPSALA. UNIVERSITY, Upsala, Sweden ; UTAH. STATE HORTICULTURAL COMMISSION, Salt bate Ce. Utah VAN DENBURGH, JOHN, San Francisco, California : . 2 VASSAR BROTHERS INSTITUTE, Poughkeepsie, New Vere VERMONT BIRD CLUB, Burlington, Vermont . : VERMONT STATE FORESTER, Burlington, Venmone, VERMONT UNIVERSITY, Burlington, Vermont . . 3 VICTORIA. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, Neiboueue! Austen : VICTORIA FIELD NATURALISTS’ CLUB, Melbourne, Australia . VICTORIA. PUBLIC LIBRARY, MUSEUMS AND NATIONAL GALLERY, Victoria, Australia. . ; VICTORIA. ROYAL SOCIETY, WW elyatiens: feaeteaiies ais VICTORIA. ROYAL ZOOLOGICAL AND ACCLIMATIZATION SOCIETY, Melbourne, Australia VICTORIA UNIVERSITY, Toronto, Crm. VIENNA. K. K. NATURHISTORISCHES HOFMUSEUM, Vienne er VIENNA. K. K. UNIVERSITAT, Vienna, Austria VIENNA, K. K. ZOOLOGISCH-BOTANISCHE GESELLSCHAFT, Vienna, Austriay © <5 8 ee i _— on} MoH NH HWN NS Se ee SP — See Be [ony = IS) ss NS Se BF Se HSB DY DN nas WY JAN., 1913. ANNUAL REPORT OF THE DIRECTOR. VIENNA. NATURWISSENSCHAFTLICHER VEREIN, Vienna, Austria VIRGINIA AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION, Blacksburg, Witeimia. ae aly bes VIRGINIA STATE LIBRARY, iachmoncd: arenes VIRGINIA UNIVERSITY, Charlottesville, Virginia WANGANUI PUBLIC MUSEUM, Wanganui, New Zealand . WASHINGTON ACADEMY OF SCIENCES, Washington, D. C. WASHINGTON BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY, Washington, D. C. WASHINGTON STATE ART ASSOCIATION, Seattle, Washington (gift) . WASHINGTON STATE GEOLOGICAL SURVEY, Olympia, Washington . WASHINGTON STATE MUSEUM, Seattle, Washington . WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY, St. Louis, Missouri. WEIGEL, OSWALD, Leipzig, Germany (gift). . . WELLCOME CHEMICAL RESEARCH LABORATORIES, Tendon’ England. WELLINGTON ACCLIMATIZATION SOCIETY, Wellington New Zealand . : WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY, Middletown Connection? : WEST INDIES. IMPERIAL DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, Barbados, West Indies : : WEST VIRGINIA AGRICULTURAL ‘EXPERIMENT STATION, Morgantown, West Virginia . WEST VIRGINIA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY, Misieaniorne, West atiie : WEST VIRGINIA STATE BOARD OF AGRICULTURE, Charleston, West Virginia .. WEST VIRGINIA UNIVERSITY, ieee aston “West East WESTERN AUSTRALIA. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY, Perth, West Australia . . Bae, a.) er ok WESTERN PENNSYLVANIA ENGINEERS’ SOCIETY, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania . Nupca ee has) 2 Se oes WIESBADEN. NASSAUISCHER VEREIN FUR NATURKUNDE, Wiesbaden, Germany . WILLE, N., Christiania, Nomar: WILLIAMS COLLEGE, Williamstown, UViaseaehicete WILSON ORNITHOLOGICAL CLUB, Oberlin, Ohio . WINDSOR-KENFIELD PUBLISHING COMPANY, Chicago WISCONSIN ACADEMY OF SCIENCE, Madison, Wisconsin WISCONSIN ARCHAZZOLOGICAL SOCIETY, Madison, Wisconsin . WISCONSIN GEOLOGICAL AND NATURAL HISTORY SURVEY, Madison, Wisconsin F WISCONSIN HISTORY COMMISSION, viadicon! WWieconcil WISCONSIN STATE BOARD OF AGRICULTURE, Madison, Tigoarnetis : WISCONSIN STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY, Madison, Wisconsin WISCONSIN STATE HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY, Madison, Wisconsin WISCONSIN UNIVERSITY, Madison, Wisconsin 2 WISTAR INSTITUTE OF ANATOMY AND BIOLOGY, Baiteadelphicy, Pennsylvania oe WOLCOTT, A. B., meee (gift) ee WORCESTER COUNTY HORT ICULTURAL SOCIETY, ier cester Massachusetts . pate hd, agra ®O SB HO HH He HS NW QD onl lon) Ny Now Se & Ye WN WH “IN HO 260 Fretp Museum oF NATuRAL History — Reports, Vot. IV. WORCESTER FREE PUBLIC LIBRARY, Worcester, Massachusetts WULFING, E. A., Heidelberg,Germany . WURTEMBERG. VEREIN FUR VATERLANDISCHE NATURKUNDE, Wiurtemberg, Germany . : WYOMING AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION, Lararael Wyoming : : WYOMING HISTORICAL AND GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY, " Witkeshaees Pennsylvania . L WYOMING STATE GEOLOGICAL SURVEY, Chey, enne, Wyoming YALE UNIVERSITY, New Haven, Connecticut . : : YOUNG, R. T., University, North Dakota (gift) ZIMANYI, KARL, Budapest, Hungary. . ZURICH. BOTANISCHES MUSEUM DER UNIVERSITAT, Tait Switzerland ZURICH: GEOGRAPHISCH- “ETHNOGRAPHISCHE GESELLSCHAFT, Zurich, Switzerland : ZURICH. NATURFORSCHENDE GESELLSCHAFT, Teich Switzeniantim “(SIsuapDUDI 40}ISP)) YAAVAG NVOIYAWY “dNOYHD LVLIGVH JAN., 1913. ANNUAL REPORT OF THE DIRECTOR. 261 ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION STATE OF ILEINGOITS: DEPARTMENT OF STATE. WILLIAM H. HINRICHSEN, Secretary of State. To ALL TO WHOM THESE PRESENTS SHALL COME, GREETING: Whereas, a Certificate duly signed and acknowledged having been filed in the office of the Secretary of State, on the 16th day of September, A. D. 1893, for the organization of the COLUMBIAN MUSEUM OF CHICAGO, under and in ac- cordance with the provisions of ‘“‘An Act Concerning Corporations,’ approved April 18, 1872, and in force July 1, 1872, and all acts amendatory thereof, a copy of which certificate is hereto attached. Now, therefore, 1, William H. Hinrichsen, Secretary of State of the State of IJinois, by virtue of the powers and duties vested in me by law, do hereby certify that the said COLUMBIAN MUSEUM OF CHICAGO is a legally organized Corporation under the laws of this State. In Testimony Whereof, | hereto set my hand and cause to be affixed the Great Seal of the State. Done at the City of Springfield, this 16th day of September, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and ninety-three, and of the Independence of the United States the one hundred and eighteenth. W. H. HINRICHSEN, [SEAL. ] Secretary of State. TO HON. WILLIAM H. HINRICHSEN, SECRETARY OF STATE: SIR: We, the undersigned citizens of the United States, propose to form a corpora- tion under an act of the General Assembly of the State of Illinois, entitled ‘‘An Act Concerning Corporations,”’ approved April 18, 1872, and all acts amendatory thereof; and that for the purposes of such organization we hereby state as follows, to wit: 1. The name of such corporation is the ‘‘COLUMBIAN MUSEUM. OF CHICAGO.” 2. The object for which it is formed is for the accumulation and dissemina- tion of knowledge, and the preservation and exhibition of objects illustrating Art, Archeology, Science, and History. 3. The management of the aforesaid Museum shall be vested in a Board of FIFTEEN (15) TRUSTEES, five of whom are to be elected every year. 4. The following named persons are hereby selected as the Trustees for the first year of its corporate existence: 262 Firrtp MusEumM oF NATURAL History — REports, VOL. LV. Ed. E. Ayer, Charles B. Farwell, George E. Adams, George R. Davis, Charles L. Hutchinson, Daniel H. Burnham, John A. Roche, M. C. Bullock, Emil G. Hirsch, James W. Ellsworth, Allison V. Armour, O. F. Aldis, Edwin Walker, John C. Black, and Frank W. Gunsaulus. 5. The location of the Museum is in the City of Chicago, County of Cook, and State of Illinois. (Signed), George E. Adams, C. B. Farwell, Sidney C. Eastman, F. W. Putnam, Robert McMurdy, Andrew Peterson, L. J. Gage, Charles L. Hutchinson, Ebenezer Bucking- ham, Andrew McNally, Edward E. Ayer, John M. Clark, Herman H. Kohlsaat, George Schneider, Henry H. Getty, William R. Harper, Franklin H. Head, E. G. Keith, J. Irving Pearce, Azel F. Hatch, Henry Wade Rogers, Thomas B. Bryan, L. Z. Leiter, A. C. Bartlett, A. A. Sprague, A. C. McClurg, James W. Scott, George F. Bissell, John R. Walsh, Chas. Fitzsimons, John A. Roche, E. B. McCagg, Owen F. Aldis, Ferdinand W. Peck, James H. Dole, Joseph Stockton, Edward B. Butler, John McConnell, R. A. Waller, H. C. Chatfield-Taylor, A. Crawford, Wm. Sooy Smith, P. S. Peterson, John C. Black, Jno. J. Mitchell, C. F. Gunther, George R. Davis, Stephen A. Forbes, Robert W. Patterson, Jr., M. C. Bullock, Edwin Walker, George M. Pullman, William E. Curtis, James W. Ellsworth, William E. Hale, Wm. T. Baker, Martin A. Ryerson, Huntington W. Jackson, N. B. Ream, Norman Will- iams, Melville E. Stone, Bryan Lathrop, Eliphalet W. Blatchford, Philip D. Armour. STATE OF eee Cook CouNTY I, G. R. MITCHELL, a Notary PuBLic in and for said County, do hereby certify that the foregoing petitioners personally appeared before me and acknowledged severally that they signed the foregoing petition as their free and voluntary act for the uses and purposes therein set forth. Given under my hand and notarial seal this 14th day of September, 1893. G. R. MITCHELL, [SEAL.! Notary Pustic, Cook County, ILL. CHANGE OF NAME. Pursuant to a resolution passed at a meeting of the Corporate members held the 25th day of June, 1894, the name of the COLUMBIAN MUSEUM was changed to FIELD COLUMBIAN MUSEUM. A certificate to this effect was filed June 26, 1894, in the office of the Secretary of State for [linois. CHANGE OF NAME. Pursuant to a resolution passed at a meeting of the Corporate members held the 8th day of November, 1905, the name of the FIELD COLUMBIAN MUSEUM was changed to FIELD MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY. A certificate to this effect was filed November 10, 1905, in the office of the Secretary of State for Illinois. JAN., 1913. ANNUAL REPORT OF THE DIRECTOR. 263 AMENDED BY-LAWS. (AUGUST I2, IQI2). ARTICLE I. MEMBERS. SEcTION I. Members shall be of five classes, Annual Members, Corporate Members, Life Members, Patrons and Honorary Members. Sec. 2. Annual Members shall consist of such persons as are selected from time to time by the Board of Trustees at any of its meetings, and who shall pay an annual fee of ten dollars ($10.00), payable within thirty days after notice of election, and within thirty days after each recurring annual date. The failure of any person to make such initiatory payment and such annual payments within said time shall, at the option of the Board of Trustees, be sufficient grounds for the forfeiture of an annual membership. This said annual membership shall entitle the member to: First.— Free admittance for the member and family, to the Museum on any day. Second.— Ten tickets every year, admitting the bearer to the Museum on pay _ days. Third.— A copy of all publications of the Museum when requested. Fourth.— Invitations to all special exhibits, receptions, lectures, or other func- tions which may be given at the Museum. Sec. 3. The Corporate Members shall consist of the persons named in the articles of incorporation, and of such other persons as shall be chosen from time to time by the Board of Trustees at any of its meetings, upon the recommendation of the Executive Committee; provided, that such persons named in the articles of incorpora- tion shall, within ninety days from the adoption of these By-Laws, and persons hereafter chosen as Corporate Members shall, within ninety days of their election, pay into the treasury the sum of twenty dollars ($20.00) or more. The failure of any person to make such payment within said time, shall, at the option of the Board of Trustees, be ground for forfeiture of his corporate membership. Corporate Members becoming Life Members, Patrons or Honorary Members shall be exempt from dues. Annual meetings of said Corporate Members shall be held at the same place and on the same day that the annual meeting of the Board of Trustees is held. Sec. 4. Any person paying into the treasury the sum of five hundred dollars ($500.00), at any one time, shall, upon the unanimous vote of the Board, become a Life Member. Life Members shall be exempt from all dues. Sec. 5. Patrons shall be chosen by the Board upon recommendation of the Executive Committee from among persons who have rendered eminent service to the Museum. They shall be exempt from all dues, and, by virtue of their election as Patrons, shall also be Corporate Members. 264 Frirtp Museum oF Natura History — Reports, Vou. IV. Sec. 6. Honorary Members shall be chosen by the Board from among persons who have rendered eminent service to science, and only upon unanimous nomination of the Executive Committee. They shall be exempt from all dues. ARTICLE II. BOARD OF TRUSTEES. SECTION I. The Board of Trustees shall consist of fifteen members. The respec- tive members of the Board now in office, and those who shall hereafter be elected, shall hold office during life. Vacancies occurring in the Board shall be filled at a regular meeting of the Board, upon the nomination of the Executive Committee made at a preceding regular meeting, by a majority vote of the members of the Board present. Sec. 2. Regular meetings of the Board shall be held on the second Monday of each month. Special meetings may be called at any time by the President, and shall be called by the Secretary upon the written request of three Trustees. Five Trustees shall constitute a quorum, except for the election of officers or the adoption of the Annual Budget, when seven Trustees shall be required, but meetings may be adjourned by any less number from day to day, or to a day fixed, previous to the next regular meeting. Sec. 3. Reasonable written notice, designating the time and place of holding meetings, shall be given by the Secretary. ARTICLE III. HONORARY TRUSTEES. SECTION 1. Asa mark of respect, and in appreciation of services performed for the Institution, those Trustees who by reason of inability, on account of change of residence, or for other cause, or from indisposition to serve longer in such capacity, shall resign their place upon the Board, may be elected, by a majority of those present at any regular meeting of the Board, an Honorary Trustee for life. Such Honorary Trustee will receive notice of all meetings of the Board of Trustees, whether regular or special, and will be expected to be present at all such meetings and participate in the deliberations thereof, but an Honorary Trustee shall not have the right to vote. ARTICLE IV. OFFICERS. SECTION I. The officers shall be a President, a First Vice-President, a Second Vice-President, a Secretary, an Assistant Secretary and a Treasurer. They shall be chosen by ballot by the Board of Trustees, a majority of those present and voting being necessary to elect. The President, the First Vice-President, and the Second Vice-President shall be chosen from among the members of the Board of Trustees. The meeting for the election of officers shall be held on the second Monday of Jan- uary of each year, and shall be called the Annual Meeting. SEc. 2. The officers shall hold office for one year, or until their successors are elected and qualified, but any officer may be removed at any regular meeting of the Board of Trustees by a vote of two-thirds of all the members of the Board. Vacancies in any office may be filled by the Board at any meeting. Sec. 3. The officers shall ‘perform such duties as ordinarily appertain to their respective offices, and such as shall be prescribed by the By-Laws, or designated from time to time by the Board of Trustees. JAN., 1913. ANNUAL REPORT OF THE DIRECTOR. 265 ARTICLE V. THE TREASURER. SECTION I. The Treasurer shall be custodian of the funds of the Corporation, except as hereinafter provided. He shall make disbursements only upon warrants drawn by the Director and countersigned by the President. In the absence or inability of the Director, warrants may be signed by the Chairman of the Finance Committee, and in the absence or inability of the President, may be countersigned’ by one of the Vice-Presidents. But no warrants shall be issued, except in conformity with a regularly prepared voucher, giving the name of the payee and stating the occasion for the expenditure, and verified and approved as hereinafter prescribed. It shall be no part of the duties of the Treasurer to see that the warrants have been issued in conformity with such vouchers. SEc. 2. The securities and muniments of title belonging to the corporation shal! be placed in the custody of some Trust Company of Chicago to be designated by the Board of Trustees, which Trust Company shall collect the income and principal of said securities as the same become due, and pay same to the Treasurer, except as hereinafter provided. Said Trust Company shall allow access to and deliver any or all securities or muniments of title to the joint order of the following officers, namely: The President or one of the Vice-Presidents, jointly with the Chairman, or one of the Vice-Chairmen, of the Finance Committee of the Museum. Src. 3. The Treasurer shall give bond in such amount, and with’ such sureties, as shall be approved by the Board of Trustees. Sec. 4. All vouchers executed for the payment of liabilities incurred in the administration of the Museum, shall be verified by the Auditor, and approved for payment by the Director, and the Chairman of the Administration Committee. All vouchers executed for expenditures for the construction or reconstruction of the Museum building, or buildings, shall be verified by the Auditor and approved for payment by the Chairman of the Building Committee. All vouchers executed in connection with the investments of the Corporation, or in any way having to do with the endowment funds of the Corporation, shall be verified by the Auditor and approved for payment by the Chairman of the Finance Committee. Sec. 5. The Harris Trust and Savings Bank of Chicago shall be Custodian of “The N. W. Harris Public School Extension of Field Museum” fund. The Bank shall make disbursements only upon warrants drawn by the Director and counter- signed by the President. In the absence or inability of the Director, warrants may be signed by the Chairman of the Finance Committee, and in the absence or inability of the President, may be countersigned by one of the Vice-Presidents. But no warrant shall be issued, except in conformity with a regularly prepared voucher, giving the name of the payee and stating the occasion for the expenditure, and veri- fied and approved as hereinafter prescribed. It shall be no part of the duties of the Bank to see that the warrants have been issued in conformity with such vouchers. ARTICLE VI. THE DIRECTOR. SECTION I. The Board of Trustees shall elect a Director of the Museum, who. shall remain in office until his successor shall be elected. He shall have immediate charge and supervision of the Museum, and shall control the operations of the insti- tution, subject to the authority of the Board of Trustees and its Committees. The 266 Fretp MusrEum oF NaturaAL History — Reports, Vou. IV. Director shall be the official medium of communication between the Board, or its Committees, and the scientific staff and maintenance force. Sec. 2. There shall be four scientific departments of the Museum — Anthropol- ogy, Botany, Geology and Zodlogy, each under the charge of a Curator, subject to the authority of the Director. The Curators shail be appointed by the Board upon the recommendation of the Director, and shall serve during the pleasure of the Board. Subordinate staff officers in the scientific departments shall be appointed and removed by the Director upon the recommendation of the Curators of the respective Departments. The Director shall have authority to employ and remove all other employees of the Museum. Sec. 3. The Director shall make report to the Board at each regular meeting, recounting the operations of the Museum for the previous month. At the Annual Meeting, the Director shall make an Annual Report, reviewing the work of the Museum for the previous year, which Annual Report shall be published in pamphlet form for the information of the Trustees and Members, and for free distribution in such number as the Board may direct. ARTICLE VII. AUDITOR. SECTION I. The Board shall appoint an Auditor, who shall hold his office during the pleasure of the Board. He shall keep proper books of account, setting forth the financial condition and transactions of the Corporation, and of the Museum, and report thereon at each regular meeting, and at such other times as may be required by the Board. He shall certify to the correctness of all vouchers for the expenditure of the money of the corporation. ARTICLE VIII. COMMITTEES. SECTION I. There shall be five Committees as follows: Finance, Building, Auditing, Administration and Executive. Sec. 2. The Finance and Auditing Committees shall each consist of three members, and the Building and Administration Committees shall each consist of five members. All members of these four Committees shall be elected by ballot by the Board at the Annual Meeting, and shall hold office for one year, and until their successors are elected and qualified. In electing the members of these Com- mittees, the Board shall designate the Chairman and Vice-Chairman by the order in which the members are named in the respective Committee; the first member named shall be Chairman, the second named the Vice-Chairman, and the third named, Second Vice-Chairman, succession to the Chairmanship being in this order in the event of the absence or disability of the Chairman. Sec. 3. The Executive Committee shall consist of the President of the Board, the Chairman of the Finance Committee, the Chairman of the Building Committee, the Chairman of the Administration Committee, the Chairman of the Auditing Committee, and two other members of the Board to be elected by ballot at the Annual Meeting. Sec. 4. Four members shall constitute a quorum of the Executive Committee; three members shall constitute a quorum of the Administration Committee, and in all other standing Committees, two members shall constitute a quorum. In the ‘puny AsojoyyusgQ onseidg-pporyy ‘\Spiposay DipdAy) NOYYAH ANTG LVAYH “dNOYDS LVLIGVH LIBRARY UNIVERSITY OF URBANA ILLINOIS JAN., 1913. ANNUAL REPORT OF THE DIRECTOR. 267 event that, owing to the absence or inability of members, a quorum of the regularly elected members cannot be present at any meeting of any Committee, then the Chairman thereof, or his successor, as herein provided, may summon any member of the Board of Trustees to act in place of the absentee. SEc. 5. The Finance Committee shall have supervision of investing the en- dowment and other permanent funds of the Corporation, and the care of such real estate as may become its property. It shall have authority to invest, sell, and reinvest, funds, subject to the approval of the Board. Sec. 6. The Building Committee shall have supervision of the construc- tion, reconstruction, and extension of any and all buildings used for Museum purposes. Sec. 7. The Executive Committee shall be called together from time to time as the Chairman may consider necessary, or as he may be requested to do by three members of the Committee, to act upon such matters affecting the administration of the Museum as cannot await consideration at the Regular Monthly Meetings of the Board of Trustees. It shall, before the beginning of each fiscal year, prepare and submit to the Board an itemized Budget, setting forth the probable receipts from all sources for the ensuing year, and make recommendations as to the ex- penditures which should be made for routine maintenance and fixed charges. Upon the adoption of the Budget by the Board, the respective Committees shall be con- sidered as authorized to make the expenditures detailed therein. No increase in the expenditures under any items of the Budget shall be made, except by authority of the Board of Trustees, but the Executive Committee shall have authority, in cases of emergency, to expend a further total sum not exceeding two thousand dollars in any one month. Sec. 8. The Administration Committee shall have general supervision of the affairs of the Museum. The Committee shall hold one meeting each month with the Director at the Museum within a week preceding each Monthly Meeting of the Board of Trustees. Sec. 9. The Auditing Committee shall have supervision over all accounting and bookkeeping, and full control of the financial records. It shall cause the same, once each year, or oftener, to be examined by an expert individual or firm, and shall transmit the report of such expert individual or firm to the Board at the next ensuing tegular meeting after such examination shall have taken place. Sec. 10. The Chairman of each Committee shall report the acts and proceedings thereof at the next ensuing regular meeting of the Board. Sec. 11. The President shall be ex-officio a member of all Committees and ‘Chairman of the Executive Committee. Vacancies occurring in any Committee ‘may be filled by ballot at any regular meeting of the Board. ARTICLE IX. NOMINATING COMMITTEE. SECTION 1. At the November meeting of the Board, each year a Nominating Committee of three shall be chosen by lot. Said Committee shall make nom- inations for membership of the Finance Committee, the Building Committee, the Administration Committee, and the Auditing Committee, and for two members of the Executive Committee, from among the Trustees, to be submitted at the ensuing December meeting and voted upon at the following Annual Meeting in January. 268 Fretp Museum or Natura History — Reports, Vot. IV. ATC CIC, 2X: SECTION I. Whenever the word ‘‘Museum”’ is employed in the By-Laws of the Corporation, it shall be taken to mean the building in which the Museum as an Institution is located and operated, the material exhibited, the material in study collections, or in storage, furniture, fixtures, cases, tools, records, books, and all appurtenances of the Institution, and the workings, researches, installations, ex- penditures, field work, laboratories, library publications, lecture courses, and all scientific and maintenance activities. Src. 2. These By-Laws may be amended at any regular. meeting of the Board of Trustees by a two-thirds vote of all the members present, provided the amend- ment shall have been proposed at a preceding regular meeting. JAN., 1913. ANNUAL REPORT OF THE DIRECTOR. 269 HONORARY MEMBERS. EDWARD E. AYER STANLEY McCORMICK HARLOW N. HIGINBOTHAM ROBERT F. CUMMINGS CHARLES B. CORY MRS. TIMOTHY B. BLACKSTONE NORMAN W. HARRIS DECEASED. GEORGE M. PULLMAN MARY D. STURGES PATRONS. ALLISON V. ARMOUR GEORGE MANIERRE JOSEPH N. FIELD JOHN S. MILLER ERNEST R. GRAHAM JOHN BARTON PAYNE NORMAN W. HARRIS FREDERICK W. PUTNAM VERNON SHAW KENNEDY FREDERICK J. V. SKIFF WILLARD A. SMITH DECEASED. DANIEL H. BURNHAM WILLIAM 1. BUCHANAN EDWIN WALKER 270 Fretp Museum or Natura History — Reports, Vot. IV. CORPORATE MEMBERS. ADAMS, GEORGE E. HIGINBOTHAM, H. N. ALDIS, OWEN F. HUTCHINSON, CHARLES L. ARMOUR, ALLISON V. AYER, EDWARD E. JONES, ARTHUR B. BARTEL A. KENNEDY, VERNON SHAW BLACK, JOHN C. KOHLSAAT, HERMAN H. BLAIR, WATSON F. BLATCHFORD, ELIPHALET W. LATHROP, BRYAN BUTLER, EDWARD B. McCORMICK, CYRUS H. CHALMERS, W. J. MANIERRE, GEORGE CHATFIELD-TAYLOR, H. C. MILLER, JOHN S. CLARK, JOHN M. MITCHELL, JOHN J. CRANE, RICHARD T., Jr. PAYNE, JOHN BARTON EASTMAN, SIDNEY C. PECK, FERD. W. ELLSWORTH, JAMES W. PORTER, GEORGE F. PUTNAM, FREDERICK W. FIELD, JOSEPH N. FIELD, STANLEY REAM, NORMAN B. RYERSON, MARTIN A GAGE, LYMAN J. GETTY, HENRY H. SKIFF, FREDERICK J. V. GRAHAM, ERNEST R. SMITH, BYRON L. GUNSAULUS, FRANK W. - SMITH, WILLARD A. GUNTHER, C. F. SPRAGUE, A. A. SPRAGUE, A: A-; 2D: HARRIS, NORMAN W. STONE, MELVILLE E. HEAD, FRANKLIN H. DECEASED: ARMOUR, PHILIP D. McCAGG, E. B. BAKER, WILLIAM T. McCLURG, A. C. BISSEL, GEORGE F. McNALLY, ANDREW BUCHANAN, W. I. PATTERSON, ROBERT W. BUCKINGHAM, EBENEZER PEARCE, J. IRVING BURNHAM, DANIEL H. PETERSON, ANDREW CRAWFORD, ANDREW PULLMAN, GEORGE M. CURTIS, WILLIAM E. SCHNEIDER, GEORGE DAVIS, GEORGE R. SCOTT, JAMES W. FITZSIMONS, CHARLES STOCKTON, JOSEPH HALE, WILLIAM E. WALKER, EDWIN HARPER, WILLIAM R. WALLER, R. A. HATCH, AZEL F. WALSH, JOHN R. JACKSON, HUNTINGTON W. WILLIAMS, NORMAN LEITER, L. Z. JAN., 1913. ANNUAL REPORT OF THE DIRECTOR. 271 LIFE MEMBERS. ADAMS, GEORGE E. ALDIS, OWEN F. BARRETT, MRS. A. D. BARRETT, ROBERT L. BARTLETT, A. C. BLACKSTONE, MRS. TIMOTHY B. BLAINE, MRS. EMMONS BLAIR, CHAUNCEY J. BLAIR, HENRY A. BLAIR, WATSON F. BOOTH, W. VERNON BUTLER, EDWARD B. BYLLESBY,..H.M. CARTER, JAMES 5. CARTON, L. A. CHALMERS, WILLIAM J. CRANE, RICHARD T., Jr. CUMMINGS, D. MARK DEERING, CHARLES DELANO, FREDERIC A. DRAKE, TRACY C. FARWELL, WALTER man... N. FIELD, STANLEY FULLER, WILLIAM A. GARTZ, A. F. GRISCOM, CLEMENT A. GROMMES, JOHN B. HAMILL, ERNEST A. HILL, LOUIS W. HOROWITZ, L. J. HOXIE, MRS. JOHN A. HUGHITT, MARVIN HUTCHINSON, C. L. INGALLS, M. E. ISHAM, MRS. KATHERINE PORTER. JOHNSON, FRANK 65. JOHNSON,MRS. ELIZABETH AYER JONES, ARTHUR B. KEEP, CHAUNCEY KING, FRANCIS KING, JAMES C. KIRK, WALTER RADCLIFFE LAWSON, VICTOR F. McCORMICK, MRS. McCORMICK, CYRUS H. McCORMICK, HAROLD F. MacVEAGH, FRANKLIN MITCHEDE, Jc NEWELL, A. B. ORR, ROBERT M. PAM, MAX PIKE, EUGENE S. PORTER, GEORGE F. PORTER, H. H., Jr. REAM, MRS. CAROLINE P. REAM, NORMAN B. REVELL, ALEX. H. ROSENWALD, JULIUS RUSSELL, EDMUND A. RYERSON, MRS. CARRIE H. RYERSON, MARTIN A. SCHLESINGER, LEOPOLD SINGER, C. G. SMITH, BYRON L. SMITH, ORSON SPRAGUE, A. A. SPRAGUE, A. A., 2D. STURGES, GEORGE THORNE, GEORGE R. WILLARD, ALONZO J. 272 FirELD Museum oF NaturaL History — Reports, Vot. IV. ANNUAL MEMBERS. ADAMS, CYRUS H. ADAMS, MILWARD ALLERTON, ROBERT H. ARMOUR, GEORGE A. BAILEY, EDWARD P. BANGA, DR. HENRY BARRELL, JAMES BECKER, A. G. BILLINGS, C. K. G. BILLINGS, DR. FRANK BIRKHOFF, GEORGE, Jr. BOAL, CHARLES T. BOUTON, C. B. BROWN, WILLIAM L. BURLEY, CLARENCE A. COMSTOCK, WILLIAM C. CONOVER, CHARLES H. COONLEY-WARD, MRS. L. A. CORWITH, CHARLES R. COWAN, W. P. CRANE, CHARLES R. CUDAHY, JOHN CUMMINGS, E. A. CURTIS, D. H. DAY car vie DEERING, JAMES DEERING, WILLIAM DILLMAN, L. M. EISENDRATH, W. N. FAIR, R. M. FARNSWORTH, GEORGE FORGAN, JAMES B. FORSYTH, ROBERT FRANK, HENRY L. FULLER, O. F. FURST, CONRAD GAYLORD, FREDERIC GLESSNER, J. J. GOODRICH, A. W. GORDON, EDWARD K. GREY, CHARLES F. GREY, WILLIAM L. GURLEY, W. W. HARDING, AMOS J. HARRIS, GEORGE B. HARRIS, JOHN F. HASKELL, FREDERICK T. HERTLE, LOUIS HIBBARD, WILLIAM G., Jr. HITCHCOCK, R. M. HOLT, GEORGE H. HOPKINS, JOHN P. HORNER, ISAAC INSULL, SAMUEL JENKINS, GEORGE H. JONES, J. S. KEEFER, LOUIS KEITH, W. SCOTT KIMBALL, EUGENE S&S. KIMBALL, MRS. MARK LAMB, FRANK H. LAY, A. TRACY LEFENS, THIES J. LEIGH, EDWARD B. LINCOLN, ROBERT T. LINN, W. R. LOGAN, F. G. LORD, J. B. LOWDEN, FRANK O. LYTTON, HENRY C. McCREA, W. 8. McWILLIAMS, LAFAYETTE MacFARLAND, HENRY J. MAGEE, HENRY W. MANSON, WILLIAM MANSURE, E. L. MAYER, LEVY MERRYWEATHER, GEORGE “AIOYSIFA [BINJEN jo Whosnyfy PIPIH PUL JO UOTSUIYXY [O0YYIS IT Qud SLIICH OM ON 94} IOf 9SBO UT suoljonpoidai OINPEIUIU INOT jo 9UuQ) “ONIAVAM ONV SNINNIDG NAWOM LOYOD] "HITX SLW1d ‘SLYOd3uy “AYOLSIH 1VYNLYN 4O WN3ASNW Q71314 WAN., IQ13. ANNUAL REPORT OF THE DIRECTOR. 273 MEYER, MRS. M. A. MILLER, CHARLES P. MOORE, L. T. MOORE, N. G. MORRIS, EDWARD MULLIKEN, A. H. MULLIKEN, CHARLES H. NATHAN, ADOLPH NOLAN, JOHN H. NORTON, O. W. NOYES, LA VERNE W. . OEHNE, THEODORE ORB, JOHN A. OSBORN, HENRY A. PALMER, PERCIVAL B. PARKER, FRANCIS W. PEARSON, EUGENE H. PINKERTON, W. A. PORTER, WASHINGTON RIPLEY, E. P. ROSENBAUM, JOSEPH ROSENFELD, MRS. MAURICE RUNNELLS, J. S. SCHMIDT, DR. O. L. SCHWARTZ, G. A. SEIPP, MRS. C. SELZ, MORRIS SHEDD, JOHN G. SKINNER, THE MISSES SOPER, JAMES P. SOUTHWELL, H. E. SPENCE, MRS. ELIZABETH E. SPOOR, J. A. STOCKTON, JOHN T. STUART, ROBERT TEMPLETON, THOMAS TOBEY, FRANK B. UIHLEIN, EDWARD G. WACKER, CHARLES H. WALKER, JAMES R. WALKER, WILLIAM B. WALLER, EDWARD C. WEBSTER, GEORGE H. WHITE, A. STAMFORD WHITEHEAD, W. M. WILSON, MRS. E. C. WILSON, M. H. WOODCOCK, LINDSAY T. DECEASED. FRASHER, JOHN E. L. SEARS, JOSEPH SEIPP, W. C. THE LIBRARY OF IHE DEC 2 2 1942 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS ee iim 071770561