112 



RErORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1909. 



Fewkes, J. Walter — Contiuuecl. 



made, and for tlio first time au 

 accurate ground plan was se- 

 cured. The repairs leave the 

 ruin as it appi'ared before the 

 demolition by vandals, and pre- 

 serve it as a type ruin for edu- 

 cational purposes. 



Holmes, William H. The Tomalia\Aiv. 



Am. Anthrotwlof/int (n. s.) 

 X, No. 2, April - June, 

 1908, pp. 264-276, figs. 

 79-88. 

 Much uncertainty surrounds the 

 nomenclature of the aboriginal 

 stone ax and hatchet, the name 

 tomahawk having been ai)plied 

 loosely by the whites to numerous 

 forms of native implements and 

 weapons, such as the celt-hatchet, 

 the grooved ax, the falchiou-Iike 

 club, the spiked club and the globe- 

 headed dub. There is no evidence 

 in literature to show that the na- 

 tives applied the term to any 

 single form exclusively, or in fact 

 that they actually applied it to 

 either the grooved ax or the celt- 

 hatchet, cuiiseiiagirus being the 

 only term definitely applied to the 

 native stone hatchet in the litera- 

 ture of the colonists. 



The First Pan-American Scien- 



tific Congress, held in Santiago, 

 Chile, December 25, lOOS-January 0, 



1909. 



Science (n. s.) xxix. No. 

 742, March 19, 1909, pp. 

 441-448. 

 The paper contains a historical 

 review of the inception of the Con- 

 gress, an accoimt of its personnel 

 and of the meetings. The Con- 

 gress, it is felt, has fully justified 

 the plans of its projectors. 



Hough, Walter. Otis Tufton Mason. 

 Am. Anthrojiologist (n. s.) 

 X, No. 4, Oct.-Dec, 1908, 

 pp. 661-667, pi. XLvi. 

 An obituary notice of the life 

 and work of the late Head Curator 

 of Anthropology in the U. S. Na- 

 tional Museum, who was for nearly 

 forty years identified with the 

 work of the Smithsonian Institu- 

 tion. 



Hrdlicka, Ales. Physical anthropol- 

 ogy and its aims. 



Science (n. s.) xxviii. No. 

 706, July 10, 1908, pp. 

 33-43. 



Hrdlicka, Ales. Physical anthro- 

 pology and its aims. 



The Anat. Record, ii. No. 

 5, Aug., 1908, pp. 182- 

 195. 

 This paper is based only in a 

 general way on the National Mu- 

 seum collections. It is the an- 

 nual address of the writer as 

 I'resident of the Anthropological 

 Society of Washington, given under 

 the auspices of the Washington 

 Academy of Sciences, Feb. 11, 

 1908. It refers to the history of 

 physical anthropology, the actual 

 status of that branch of science, 

 to its accomplishments, and the 

 scope of ifs future activities. 



Iteport on a collection of crania 



from Arkansas. 



Jour. Acdd. Kat. ScL, Phila., 

 XIII, 1908, pp. 558-563. 

 The paper gives the results of 

 the examination of 12 interesting 

 crania from Arkansas and Jeffer- 

 son counties in Arkansas. Six of 

 the crania were of various degrees 

 of artificial, intentional deforma- 

 tion of the " flat-head " type. The 

 undeformed skulls of the collection 

 were all brachycephalic, belonging 

 to the same type. 



Contributions to the knowledge 



of tuberculosis in the Indian. 



The Southern Workman, 

 xxxvii. No. 11. Nov., 

 190S, pp. 626-634. 

 Contains in full the paper on 

 tuberculosis among Indians read 

 by the writer before the Sixth 

 International Congress on Tuber- 

 culosis, held September, 1908, in 

 Washington. (See notes on the 

 same paper in final form published 

 as Bulletin 42, Bureau of Amer- 

 ican Ethnology.) 



Tuberculosis in the Indian. 



( An abstract of the foregoing papt-r.) 

 Charities and the Com- 

 mons, XXI, No. 6, Nov. 

 7, 1908, pp. 245-247. 



Tuberculosis among certain In- 



dian tribes of the United States. 



Bull, p. Bur. Am. Eth., 

 1909, pp. i-vii, 1-48, pis. 

 1—22 



Final report of the writer's in- 

 vestigations into the suljject of 

 tuberculosis among the Indians 

 during the summer of 1908. Re- 

 lates particularly to the Menomi- 



