SUMMARY OF PROGRESS IN ANTHROPOLOGY. 607 



do not need any further lie)]) in following- up the literature of the 

 science: 



(1) Tiie American AnthropoJoguij Washington; (juarterly; Judd & 

 Detweiler, Extended bibliography on all studies relating to man. 



(2) The Index Mediciis and the Index Catalogue of the Surgeon-Gen- 

 eral's Office, Washington, especially thorough in anthropo-biology. 



(3) The catalogues of the Literary Bureau, Boston. 



(4) Archiv fiir Antltropologie, Braunschweig-; quarterly. Most 

 exhaustive lists, with short digests of books and papers. 



(5) MittheUungen der Anthropologlschen Gesellschaft in Wien. Full 

 bibliographies. 



(6) Annuaire des Journanx, etc., Paris, 1892, 



Mr. G. W. Bloxam has placed anthro])ologists under lasting obliga- 

 tions to hiiu by his printing a complete index to the publications of the 

 Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland (1843-1891). 

 This includes also the journal and transactions of the Ethnological 

 Society of Loudon (1843-1871), the journal and memoirsof the Authro 

 pological Society of London (1863-1871), the Anthropological Eeview, 

 and the journal of the Anthropological Institute (1871-1891). 



OencraUiteratnre. — The literature of the world has become impregnated 

 with anthropc^logy. Science, The American Naturalist, and especially 

 The PoimJar Science Monthly, in America, give a large share of their 

 pages to this topic. Nature, The Academy, The Athenanim, and all the 

 great quarterlies of London; Revue Sciottifique in Paris; Globns and a 

 host of other journals in Germany, are common carriers of the best 

 kind which send weekly, monthly, and quarterly cargoes of information 

 to intelligent readers. 



The gallery of anthropology is still in the future. At the World's 

 Columbian Exposition, as mentioned, groups of lower races in costume 

 were well set up, and photography was efficient in putting life into 

 accounts of peoples inaccessible to the most of us. Gabriel de IMortillet 

 has advocated the extension of the work of the camera, and im Thurn 

 makes a good argument for its use in South America. 



There is no good guide to anthropological studies published in 

 America. The reprint of the British Notes and Queries was a timely 

 piece of work by the British association. 



ANTHROPO BIOLOGY. 



The sources of information concerning the biology of man are, first 

 of all, the organs of the anthropological societies. In Germany and 

 France far more attention is paid to craniology, measurement of the 

 other parts of the body, the teeth, comparative anatomy of man and 

 the lower animals, and greater stress is laid ui)on the importance of 

 these studies. In England and the United States crauiological meas- 

 urements are discounted. All the literature of this branch of the 

 science may be sought in the bibliographies of Surgeon-General's 



