LIST OF PUBLICATIONS. 



131 



TRUE, Frederick W.— Continued. 



ton I Published by the Smithsonian Insti- 

 tution I 1904. 



4to., pp. I to VII, 1-332, pis. 1 to .50, text figs. 

 1 to 97. (August 29, 1904.) 



GENERAL ZOOLOGY. 



STILES, Charles Wardell. Zoological 

 pitfalls for the pathologist. 



Proc. N. Y. Path. Soc. X. )'.. 1904 (190.",), 

 pp. 1-20. 

 A general review of zoological errors of inter- 

 pretation into which pathologists have fallen. 



ANTHROPOLOGY. 



PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY. 



URDLICKA, Ales. Directions for collect- 

 ing information and specimens for phys- 

 ical anthropology. 



Bull. U. S. Nat. Mvs., No. 39, Part R, 



Nov. 3, 1904, pp. ri]-[2.5], pis. i-viii. 



Instructions to collectors of skeletal, brain, 



andemljryological material, and other ol)jects 



for physical anthropology, with color stand 



ards, after Broea. 



Two artificially deformed crania. 



Am. Anthropologist (new series), vi, Oct.- 

 Dee., 1904, pp. 7.56-7,58. 



Head deformation among the Kla- 

 math. 



Am. Anthropologist (new series), vii, 

 Apr.-June, 1905, pp. 300-.3(il. 



Brain weight in vertebrates. 



Smithsonian Misc. Colls., xlviii, Quar. 

 issue, HI. pt. ], No. 1.582, June 10, 1905, 

 pp. 91-112, pis. xxxii, xxxiii. 

 A collection of data obtained in the labora- 

 tory of the Division of Physical Anthropol- 

 ogy, IT. S. National Museum, on the absolute 

 and relative weights of the brains of 48-5 ani- 

 ■ mals, received in the Division within two 

 years; with a bibliography. 



The painting of human bones among 



the American aborigines. 



Rep. Smithsonian Inst., 1904 (1905), pp. 

 607-617, pis. I-lil. 



ARCHEOLOGY, 



CASANOWICZ, I. M. Identification of 

 some Graeco-Egyptian portraits. 



Am. Anthropologist (new series), vi, No. 2, 

 April-June, 1904, pp. 361-363. 

 A discussion of the religious and artistic 

 historical import and development of the 

 Egyptian mummy portraits, and tne sup- 

 posed identity of some of them with cameos, 

 coins, etc., which represent royal personages. 



CASANOWICZ, I. M. The Wat Chang 

 pagoda of Bangkok, Siam. 



Smithsonian Misc. Colls., xlvii. Quar. 

 issue, II, pt. 2. No. 1483, Nov. 9, 1904, pp. 

 273, 274, pi. I. 

 Description of the structure, after a model 

 in the U. S. National Museum, with a discus- 

 sion of the significance \and' architectural 

 development of this rehgious edifice in various 

 Buddhist countries. 



HOLMES, W. H. Contributions of Ameri- 

 can archeology to human histoiy. 



Smithsonian Misc. Colls., xlvii, Quar. 

 issue, II, pt. 4, Apr. 5, 1905, pp. 412-420. 

 Read before the Congress of Americanists at 

 Stuttgart, Germany, Aug. 21. 1904. 



Notes on the antiquities of Jemez 



Valley, New Mexico. 



.4;?;,. Anthropologist (new series), vii. No. 

 2, April-June, 1905, pp. 198-212, figs. 6-12. 



ETHNOLOGY. 



FEWKES, J. Walter. Porto Rican stone 

 collars and tripointed idols. 



Smithsonian Misc. Colls., xlvii, Quar. 

 issue, II, pt. 2, Oct. 10, 1904. pp. 16:>-186, 

 pi. XXI-XXVII. 



HAWLEY, E. H. Sympathetic drums. 



Science (new series), xx. No. 518, Dec. 2, 

 1904, p. 768. 

 The film on the gourd resonator of African 

 xylophones is thought to act as a sympathetic 

 drum. 



HOUGH, Walter. Kava drinking as prac- 

 tised by the Papuans and Polynesians. 



Smithsonian Misc. Colls., xlvii. Quar. 

 issue, II, pt. 1. Aug. 6, 1904, pp. So-92. pi. 

 XVII. 



MILLER, E. Y. The tugda, or rice planter 

 of the Coyunos, Philippine Islands. 



Smithsonian Misc. Colls., xlvii, Quar. 

 issue, n, pt. 3, No. 15.56, Mar. 2, 1905, pp. 

 375-376, pis. LI, Lii. 

 Describes and illustrates a very primitive 

 method of rice planting suggestive of the mod- 

 em grain drill. 



PHOTOGRAPHY. 



SMILLIE, Thomas W. Photographing on 

 wood for engraving. 



Smithsonian Misc. Colls., xlvii, Quar. 

 issue, II, pt. 4, May 6, 1905, pp. 497-499. 

 A brief technical paper giving instructions 

 in photographing on wood for engraving. 



