108 EEPOKT OF THE SECRETARY. 



all appropriations heretofore expended by the Astrophysical Observatory, results 

 reached, and present condition of tlie work. In response to Senate resolntion of 

 February 25, 1901. Washington: (lovernment Printing Office, 1902. Quarto, pages 

 XXXIII+30S, with 44 plates. 



VI. PUBLICATIONS OF THE HUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY. 



Eighteenth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary 

 of the Smithsonian Institution. 1896-97. By J. W. Powell, Director. In two 

 parts. Part II. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1899. Imperial octavo, 

 pp. 521-997, with 67 plates. Contents: Indian Land Cessions in the United States. 

 Compiled l)y Charles C. Royce, with an introduction l)y Cyrus Thomas. 



The separate papers of Part I of the Nineteenth Annual Report were received from 

 the printer and distributed before the close of the fiscal year, but the l)ound volume 

 was not completed. The two parts of this report comprise the following papers: 



Report of the Director, pages xi-xcii, frontispiece. 



Myths of the Cherokee, by James Mooney, pages 3-548, plates i-xx, figures 1-2. 



Tusayan Migration Traditions, by J. W. Fewkes, pages 573-634. 



Localization of Tusayan Clans, by Cosmos Mindeleff, pages 635-653, plates xxi- 

 xxviii, figure 3. 



Mounds in Northern Honduras, by Thomas (xann, pages 655-692, plates xxix- 

 XXXIX, figures 4-7. 



Mayan Calendar Systems, by C'yrus Thomas, pages 693-819, plates xl-xliv, fig- 

 ures 8-22. 



Primitive Numbers, V)y W J McGee, pages 821-851. 



Numeral Systems of Mexico and Central America, by C-ynis Thomas, pages 

 853-955, figures 23-41. 



Tusayan Flute and Snake Ceremonies, by J. W. Fewkes, pages 957-1011, ]ilates 

 xlv-lxv, figures 42-r46. 



The Wild Rice Gatherers of the Upper Lakes, by A. K. Jenks, pages 1013-1137, 

 plates lxvi-lxxix, figures 47-48. 



Bulletin 26. Kathlaniet Texts, by Franz Boas. Washington: (4overnment Print- 

 ing Ottice, 1901. Octavo, pages 261, with 1 plate. 



vir. publications op American historical association. 



The Annual Report of the American Historical Association for tiie year 1901 was 

 sent to the printer toward the close of the fiscal year, and most of it was in type 

 before June 30. The report is in two volumes, with the following contents: 



Volume J: Report of Proceeding of Seventeenth Annual Meeting at Washington, 

 D. C, December 27-31, 1901, by Charles H. Haskins, corresponding secretary; An 

 Undeveloped Function, Inaugural address by President Charles Francis Adams; 

 The Massachusetts Public Record Commission and its Work, by Robert T. Swan; 

 The Relation of the National Library to Historical Research in the United States, 

 by Herbert Putnam, Librarian of Congress; The Sandemanians of New England, by 

 Prof. Williston Walker; James Madison and Religious Liberty, by Gaillard Hunt; 

 The Chronology of the I<>asmus Letters, by Prof. Ephraim Emerton; Moses Coit 

 Tyler, by Prof. George L. Burr; Herbert P>. Adams, by Prof. John M. Vincent; 

 Maryland's First Courts, by Dr. liernard C. Steiner; Southwestern History in the 

 Southwest, by Prof. George P. (iarrison; Connnittees of Correspondence of the 

 American Revolution, by Dr. Edward I). Collins; Jay's Treaty and the Slavery 

 Interests of the United States, by Frederic Austin Ogg; The Legislative History of 

 Naturalization in the United States, 1776-1795, by F. G. Franklin; The Influence of 



