ANTHROPOLOGY. 433 



American Association — Continued. 



14. Engraved tablet from a mound in Oliio. W. J. Knowlton. 

 • 15. Japanese caves. E. S. Morse. 



16. Ancient agricultural implements of stone. Wm. McAdams. 



17. Alabaster quarries, flint mines, and otber antiquities of Mam- 



moth, Wyandot, and Luray caverns. H. C. Hovey. 



18. The classification of kindred by the North American Indians. 



J. W. Powell. 



19. On the Iroquois languages. Erminnie A. Smith. 



20. On the rank of the Indian languages. J. W. Powell. 



21. Remarks on the mound-builders. J. F. Everhart. 



22. Contemporaneous existence of mastodon and man in America. 



R. J. Farquharson. 



23. Conventionalism in ornamentation of ancient American i^ot- 



tery. F. W. Putnam. 



24. On the occurrence in New England of carvings by the Indians 



of the northwest coast of America. F. W. Putnam. 



25. Sign-language and jiantomimic dances among North American 



Indians. J. G. Henderson. 



26. The topographical survey of the works at Aztalan, Wis. S. D. 



Peet. 



27. The military system of the emblematic mound-builders. S. 



D. Peet. 



28. Improved stereograph for delineating the outlines of crania. 



A. S. Bickmore. 



29. Feeling and function as factors in human development. Les- 



ter F. Ward. 



30. The uses of the " chungkee-stone." Alfred M. Mayer. 



31. Relation of the archaeology of Vermont to that of the adjacent 



States. Geo. H. Perkins. 



32. Exhibition of some gambling games of the Iroquois. Ermin- 



nie A. Smith. 



33. Parturition in a kneeling posture as practiced by the women 



of the mound-building and stone-grave peoi)les. C. Foster 

 Williams. 



34. The antiquity of man in Eastern America geologically con- 



sidered. Henry C. Lewis. 



35. A comparison between the shells of Kjokkenmoddings and 



present forms of the same species. E. S. Morse. 



36. Antiquities of Onondaga County, N. T. W. M. Beauchamp. 

 Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland — Published 



vol. ix, No. 3 & 4 ; x, No. 1 & 2. 

 Anthropological Society of Washington — Science^ i, l^p. 202; 262-, 

 286. (A volume entitled "Abstracts of transactions of the Anthro- 

 pological Society of Washington, D. C," with the annual address 

 of the president, for the first year, ending Jan. 20, 1880, and for 

 the second year, ending Dec. 31, 1880.) 

 S. Mis. 31 28 



