LIST OP PUBLICATIONS. 



221 



Btjshnell, David I., jr. — Continued. 



the habits, customs and arts of 

 the earlier inhabitants of the 

 section wlio occupied the caves, 

 buried tlielr dead in stone cists, 

 used flint hoes lu cultivating 

 crops, and manufactured salt by 

 evaporation in great earthen- 

 ware bowls. The culture forms 

 an intosral part of that of the 

 great middle Mississippi Valley 

 region in general. A brief re- 

 port by Doctor Ilrdlic^ka on the 

 skeletal remains shows no unus- 

 ual features save in one case 

 where slight artiticiaJ flattening 

 of the cranium was observed. 



Dall, William Helaley. An Eskimo 



artist. 



The Nation, 97, No. 

 2510, New York. 

 Aug. 7, 19i:{, p. 121. 

 A brief account of an Eskimo 

 carver who made some remark- 

 able carvings now in the col- 

 lection of the National Museum. 



Fewkes, J. Walter. Great stone 

 monuments in history and geogi-a- 



piiy. 



Smithsonian Misc. 

 Colls., 61, No. 6, 

 Sept. 16, 1913, pp. 

 1-50, figs. 1-50. 

 Brief account of the origin, 

 character and probable signili- 

 cance of some M the better 

 known monolithic monuments 

 occurring throughout th(! world, 

 with remarks on various dis- 

 tinctive types. One of the large 

 stone flgures fi'om Easter Is- 

 land, on exhibition in the Na- 

 tional Museum, is referred to 

 and illustrated. 



FooTE, J. S. The comparative histol- 

 ogy of the femur. 



(Smithsonian Misc. 

 Coils., 61, No. 8, 

 Aug. 22, 1913, pp. 

 1-9, pis. 1-3. 

 Comprises in l)rief the results 

 of the original investigations of 

 Prof. Foote on many animal 

 and human femora. It shows 

 that the minute structure of 

 the bones dilTers remarkably ac- 

 cording to order and species, as 

 well as at different stages of 

 development of the same indi- 

 vidual. There are also prob- 

 ably racial differences in the 

 human family. The majority of 



FooTE, J. S. — Continued. 



the human material utilized by 

 Prof. Foote was from the an- 

 thropological collections of the 

 National Museum. 



Hough. Walter. (Hilture of the an- 

 cient puel)los of the upper Gila 

 River region, New Mexico and Ari- 

 zona. Second Museum-Gates Expe- 

 dition. 



Bull. U. <S'. Nat. Mus., 

 No. 87, Mar. 21, 

 1914, pp. i-xiv, 1- 

 139, pis. 1-29, flgs. 

 1-348. 

 A study of the material col- 

 lected by the second Museum- 

 Gates expedition on the upper 

 Blue, San Francisco and Tula- 

 rosa rivers, in the course of 

 which a large serh's of articles 

 from ceremonial and other caves 

 was gathered. Excavations 

 were also made in several pueb- 

 los, and thus a rather wide 

 view of the culture of this re- 

 gion was obtained. Natural his- 

 tory specimens were also se- 

 cured and their discussion forms 

 the flrst chapter of the book. 

 Following this, the objects of 

 stone, bone and shell, of pot- 

 tery or wood, or textiles, are de- 

 scril)ed, as well as various 

 classes of religious objects. The 

 concluding chapter describes a 

 number of mummies from the 

 ruins. 



TIrdlu'ka, AleS. a report on a col- 

 lection of crania and bones from 

 Sorrel Bayou, Iberville I'arish, Lou- 

 isiana. 



Journ. Acad. Nat. Sci., 

 Phila., 16, 191.3, pp. 

 95-99, figs. 1, 2. 

 Report on the measurements 

 and examination of seventeen 

 skulls and parts of one skeleton 

 received in the spring of 1913, 

 from Mr. Clarence B. Moore, 

 and proceeding in the main 

 from Sorrel Bayou, Iberville 

 Parish, Louisiana. It is a con- 

 tinuation of the I'eports on the 

 skeletal material collected by 

 Mr. Moore during his explora- 

 tions and preparatory to a 

 contemplated and more compre- 

 hensive anthropological survey 

 of the southern part of the 

 United States. The report 

 brings out a number of inter- 



