REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, l!t07. 



103 



nouGii, Walter. [Short articles oii 

 the followiiis topics: Altiir. awls, 

 hjifis and ixmchos, black drink, 

 hiankpt, l)()las. bowl, boxes and 

 chests, bull roarer, cements, clothing, 

 clubs, collectinfi, cotton, dishes, dyes 

 ;ind pigments, eagle, fermentation, 

 fire making, fishlio()ks, food, grass 

 work, gourds, hair work, lance, mes- 

 cal moccasins.] 



Handbiioh- of American Indians 

 yoilli (if Mexico. Bull. XXX, 

 I't. I. Hiir. Am. Eth., 1007. 

 These nrtifles are almost on I i rely 

 based on Jluseum collections. 



[Abstracts of papers based on Museum 

 m.'iterial and pui)lsli('d in the Pro- 

 ceedings of the Anthropological Soci- 

 ety of Washington (Nov. 7, 100.")- 

 May 22. lOOO).] 



Aw. Anthropologist, n. s., ix, No. 

 2, April-.Tune, 1907. 



Hrdlicka, Ales. Anatomical observa- 

 tions on a collection of Orang skulls 

 from Western Borneo ; with a bibliog- 

 raphy. 



Proc. U. S. yat. AIus., xxxi. No. 

 149.J, Nov. 17, 1906, pp. 539- 

 568, figs. 1-8. 

 A study, from the anthropological 

 point of view, of 26 orang crania col- 

 lected for the National Museum by Dr. 

 W. L. Abbott. The results show espe- 

 cially a great range of developmental, 

 sexual and individual, normal varia- 



IIkdlicka, Ales — Continued. 



tlon, and the presence of a number of 

 interesting formations and anomalies. 



Measurements of tlie cranial 



fosse. 



I'roc. U. S. Xat. Mus., xxxii. No. 



1521, March i:!, 1907, i)p. 177- 



2:'.2, pis. xiv-xv. 



An investigation of the absolute and 



relative lengths of the cerebral and 



cerebellar fosssB in human adults of 



several races and both se.xes, in human 



fetuses, in apes, and in other animals ; 



also in the main typos of the liumaii 



skull. 



The results of the measurements 

 have a direct I)earing on the subdi- 

 visions of the iirjiin contained in the 

 different fossa, and ostablisli a number 

 of new details of importance. 



[Short articles on Anatomy, pp. 



r),3-5G ; Artificial head deformation, 

 pp. 96-97; Health and disease, pp. 

 540-541 ; Medicine and medicine- 

 men, pp. 836-839.] 



Handbook of American Indians Nortlt 

 of Mexico. Bull, xxx, I't. 1, Bur. Am. 

 Eth., 1907. 



All of these papers are based in part 

 on Museum material. 



Beauty among the American 



Indians. 



Anthropological Papers written in 

 honor of Franz Boas. New York, G. 

 Stechert & Co., 1906, pp. 38-42, pis. 



IV-VL 



MAMMALS. 



Andersen, Knud. Brief diagnoses of 

 a new genus and ten new forms of 

 stenodermatous bats. 



Ann. Mag. A^at. Hist., sor. 7, xviii, 

 December, 1906, pp. 419-423. 

 Based in part on material in the 

 collection in the U. S. National Mu- 

 seum. A new genus, Enchisthenes (for 

 Artiheus Iiarti) and 5 new species and 

 5 new subspecies are described. New 

 forms in collection of U. S. National 

 ]Museum : — Artiheus hirsutus, p. 420; 

 .Irtihcus jamaicensis prwceps, p. 421 ; 

 Artibcus aztccu-f. p. 422. 



Caky, ilERRiTT. Some unrecorded Col- 

 orado mammals. 



Proc. Biol. Soc. Wa.<ih., xx, March 

 27, 1907, pp. 23-28. 

 Twenty species and subspecies of 

 mammals not previously recorded from 

 Colorado are listed. Based mainly on 

 mammals in the Biological Survey col- 

 lection. 



IIahn, Walter L. A review of the 

 bats of the genus llemiderma. 



Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., xxxii. No. 

 1514, February 9, 1907, pp. 

 103-118. 



A systematic account with remarks 

 on distribution and habits of Hemi- 

 dcrma. a .genus of neotropical bats, 

 based mainly on specimens in the U. S. 

 National Museum. 



Notes on mammals of the 



Kankakee valley. 



Proc. V. S. Nat. Mus., xxxii. No. 

 1537, June 15, 1907, pp. 455- 

 464. 



A description of the Kankakee ba- 

 sin, Indiana, past and present, with a 

 list of the mammals collected there 

 for the U. S. National Museum by the 

 writer in 1905. 



