Bulletin of the New York State Museum, Ausgaben 217-222University of the State of New York, 1920 |
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
abundant Adirondack Adirondack mountains Adult Albany aperture appears basal beads beds Bolivina Bone brachiopod Brady broad Bucks Bridge Bulimina Bulletin Cambrian carapace Carboniferous chambers cherts Clarke collection colored coral crinoid cross section d'Orbigny deposits Devonian dolomite Economic Geology eggs Entire specimen Entomologist evidence fauna feet figures Foraminifera formation fossil four-toed salamander gastropod genus Geol gills Globigerina H. D. House Hemidactylium Heuvelton Hughmilleria inch long insects June Lagena Lake later limestone living LL.D locality margin mound N. Y. State Mus occur Ogdensburg Orbulina Ordovician outcrops Paleontology Paleozoic parasitic perithecia pipe Pittsford plants Plate Potsdam sandstone Precambrian present Pulvinulina quarry Rep't Report Reuss river rocks Rotalia Ruedemann Sacc salamander sand sandstone segments shale shell Silurian slide species sponges spores stone strata surface swamp Textularia Theresa Thin section tion Truncatulina upper valley Virgulina York State Museum
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 126 - And the cares of this world, and the deceitfulness of riches, and the lusts of other things entering in, choke the word, and it becometh unfruitful.
Seite 7 - All scientific specimens and collections, works of art, objects of historic interest and similar property appropriate to a general museum, if owned by the State and not placed in other custody by a specific law, shall constitute the State Museum...
Seite 302 - Catalogue of the Cabinet of Natural History of the State of New York and of the Historical and Antiquarian Collection annexed thereto.
Seite 7 - ... officers shall annually inspect all such property not kept in the state museum rooms, and the annual report of the museum to the legislature shall include summaries of such property, with its location, and any needed recommendations as to its safety or usefulness.
Seite 2 - MLS, Pd.D. Director of Science and State Museum JOHN M. CLARKE D.Sc., LL.D. Chiefs and Directors of Divisions Administration, HIRAM C.
Seite 290 - Fort" has yielded metapodal scrapers, similar in every way to those found in Ohio mound sites. From these facts and from an examination of the entire field of the earlier Iroquoian occupation in New York and Ontario, we are led to believe that the Huron-Iroquois were the immediate successors of the mound building people in this area.