LIST OF PUBLICATIONS. 



185 



Fewkes, J. Waltek. a prehistoric 

 stone collar from Porto Rico. 



Amer. Anthropologist 

 (n. s.), 16, No. 2, 

 Apr.-June, 1914, pp. 

 319-330, figs, 97- 

 109. 



Description of a prehistoric 

 Porto Rican stone collar the 

 knob of which is modified into 

 the head of a reptile. 



. Ai'clieology of the Lower Mim- 



bres Valley, New Mexico. 



Smithsonian Misc. 



Colls., 03, No. 10, 

 1914, pp. 1-53, pis. 

 1-8, figs. 1-32. 

 Preliminary report on the an- 

 tiquities of the Mimbres Valley, 

 New Mexico. The evidence thus 

 far gathered indicates that the 

 culture of the prehistoric in- 

 habitants of the Mimbres Val- 

 ley was a connecting link be- 

 tween that of the pueblos in the 

 north and of the people who 

 built the Casa Grandes in Chi- 

 huahua in the south. It is 

 closely allied, however, to a 

 form of culture known as the 

 " pre-puebloan," which preceded 

 the true pueblo culture charac- 

 teristic of New Mexico. 



Archaeology of Barbados. 



Proc. Xat. Acad. 8ci., 



1, No. 1, Jan., 1915, 



pp. 47-51. 



A brief preliminary account 



of the various mounds, caves, 



shell-heaps and other aboriginal 



sites found in the island of 



Barbados. 



Engraved celts from the An- 



Contr. Eeye Museum, 

 2, No. 3, May, 1915, 

 pp. 1-12, figs, 1-4. 



Discusses certain Antillean 

 celts with engraved figures on 

 one surface from the Heye Mu- 

 seum, the Museum fiir Volker- 

 kunde in Berlin, Germany, and 

 the Royal Museum in Copen- 

 hagen, Denmark. 



Prehistoric cultural centers in 



tilles. 



the West Indies. 



J o urn . Washington 

 Acad. Sci., 5, No. 12, 

 June 19, 1915, pp. 

 436-443. 



I'EWKEs, J. Walter — Continued, 



This article divides the pre- 

 historic culture of the West In- 

 dies into a certain number of 

 centers, distinguished from each 

 other by the character of such 

 artifacts as stone implements 

 and pottery, and is preliminary 

 to a more extensive discussion 

 of the subject which will later 

 be published by the Bureau of 

 American Ethnology, the work 

 having been done under a plan 

 of cooperation between the Mu- 

 seum and the Bureau. 



Holmes, W. H, Areas of American 



culture characterization tentatively 



outlined as an aid in the study of 



the antiquities, 



Amer. Anthropologist 

 (n. s.), 16, No. 3, 

 July -Sept., 1914, 

 pp. 413-446, pi. 32. 



Outlines the areas of the 

 numerous distinctive culture 

 groups of aboriginal America, 

 for convenience in conducting 

 comparative studies of prehis- 

 toric remains. 



Masterpieces of aboriginal 



American art : I. Stucco-work. 



Art and Arch., 1, No. 1, 

 July, 1914, pp. 1-12, 

 pi. 1, figs. 1-10. 

 The first of a series of brief 

 papers intended to convey an 

 impression of the achievements 

 of the American aborigines in 

 the several arts in which the 

 esthetic sense is especially in- 

 volved, and at the same time 

 to add to the sum of knowl- 

 edge of the evolution of the 

 esthetic side of human culture 

 in general. The intelligent use 

 of stucco in architectural em- 

 bellishment may well be re- 

 garded as representing the 

 highest art plane reached on 

 the American continent, and 

 the best examples existing to- 

 day, some of which have with- 

 stood the destructive agencies 

 of a tropical climate for 400 

 years or more, are described 

 and illustrated. 



Masterpieces of aboriginal 



American art : II. Mosaic work, mi- 

 nor, examples. 



Art and Arch., 1, No. 

 3, Nov., 1914, pp. 

 91-102, 1 pi., figs. 

 1-9. 



