25G ANNUAL RECORD OF SCIENCE AND INDUSTRY. 



1. Antliropotomy, including the comparative anatomy of 

 man and of the lower animals ; called also anatomical anth- 

 rojyology. 



2. Biological Anthropology ', comprehending somatology and 

 comparative p>sychology, the former embracing comparative 

 physiology and external racial or tribal characteristics. 



3. Ethnical Anthropology, in which are grouped ethnog- 

 raphy, or the description of tribes and peoples ; ethnology, or 

 discussions concerning the races of men ; and demography, or 

 the application of statistics to anthropological investigations. 



4. Linguistic Anthropology and Comparative Philology. 



5. Cultural Anthropology, or comparative culture, including 

 the treatment of the following subjects: food; dwelling and 

 other domestic structures, and their appurtenances; vessels 

 and household utensils ; dress and ornament ; implements of 

 war and the chase; implements of industry; means of loco- 

 motion ; methods of measuring and valuing; aesthetic cult- 

 ure in music, pastime, and art; the family ; the community; 

 the o-overnment : and religion. 



6. Anthropological Instrumenta, embracing terminology, 

 apparatus of research, instructions to observers, records of 

 meetings, courses of instruction and lectures, transactions of 

 societies, expositions and congresses, museums, jjeriodicals 

 and published works. 



In order to render the references the more accessible, they 

 are arranged, where convenient, under the following geo- 

 graphical divisions: North America, Middle America, South 

 America, Europe, Africa, Asia, Malaysia, Australasia, Poly- 

 nesia. 



ARCHAEOLOGY. 



NORTH AMERICA. 



Several papers were read before the Congress of American- 

 ists at Luxembourg on the antiquities of Greenland and the 

 primitive habitat of the Eskimos. In the first volume of 

 Powell's " Contributions to American Ethnology" is an elab- 

 orate communication, by Mr. Wm. II. Dall, upon Succession 

 in the Shell -heaps of Alaska. The report of F. W. Put- 

 nam, the curator of the Peabody Museum, upon his labors 

 during the year is given in the tenth annual report. The 

 following papers upon North American archa?ology have ap- 



