ANTHROPOLOGY. 



409 



McGuiEE, J. D.— SheU-lieaps of South llher, Maryland. Tr. Anthrop. 

 Soc. Washington, i, p. 31. 



McLean, J. P.— A study of American arcbieology. UmversaUst Quar- 

 terly, July. 



Mastodon, mammotli, and man. 2d ed. Cincinnati, Robert 



Clarke & Co. 

 Martinet, Ludovic— Monuments prehistoriiiues du Berry. liev. (Van- 



tlirop., 1880, pp. 4G9-492. 

 Mason, Otis T.— Observation on Aztec and Guatemalan antiquities. Tr. 



Anthrop. Soc. Washington, i, p. C 

 Millescamps, G.— Silex taill«§s et emmanches de I'epoque mcrovin- 



gieune. Paris, 1880. p. 8. 8°. 

 Mitchell, Brainerd— Mounds in Pike County, 111. Smitbson. Rep., 



1879, p. 307. 



Morgan, Lewis H.— Description of an ancient stone pueblo on the 

 Animas River, N. Mex., with a ground plan. Rep. Peabody Miis., 

 ii, pp. 536-556. 



Morse, E. S.— Dolmens in Japan. Pop. So. Month., March. 



The Omori shell mounds. (From Xaiure, April 15, 1880.) Some 



recent publications on Japanese archciiology. (From the Am. JSat- 

 uralist, Sept., 1880.) Pamphlet pub. at Salem, JMass., 1880. 



Kewlon, W. S. (Oswego, Kans.)-Glacial sc^-atches and evidences ot 

 human agency in petrified wood. (Read at the 13th annual meet- 

 ing, Kansas Acad, of Sc.) 



isORRis, P. W.— Prehistoric remains in Montana, between ^Fort Lllis 

 and the Yellowstone River. Smithson. Rep., 1879, p. 327. 



OEnLER,ARTHUR-Stone cists near Highland, Madison County, 111. 

 Smithson. Rep., 1879, p. 366. 



Oppert, M.— La methode chronologique. Rev. hist., July. 



Peet Stephen D.— The emblematic mounds and the totemic system 

 of the Indian tribes. (Read before the Wisconsin Acad, of Sc. and 

 Art.) Am. Antiquarian, iii, No. 1. 



[Stephen D. Peet, of Clinton, Wis., editor of the American Anti- 

 quarian, a quarterly journal of anthropology, which, during 1880, 

 appeared in its second volume. Mr. Peet has contributed largely to 

 his own periodical, and also has published the following : The mound- 

 builders: a classification of the different groups of their works 

 (Read before the Congres des Americanistes at Luxembourg, Sept., 

 1876. Republished in Am. Antiquarian, ii, No. 3.] 



Pengelly, W.— The time that has elapsed since the era of the cave- 

 men of Devonshire. Scient. J/fln:, Oct. 7. 



Perkins, G. H. (Museum of Univ. of Vt.)— Archaeology of the Cham- 

 plain Valley. Proc. Am. Assoc, Saratoga meeting, pp. o28-o39. 



Relation of the archaeology of Vermont to that of the adjoining 



States. Science, Oct. 2, 1880. 

 Petrie, W. M. FLINDERS-Stouehenge: Plans, description, and tbe- 

 ories. London, Stanford. (Reviewed in Athenmm, Sept. 18, 1880.) 



