546 PROGRESS OF ANTHROPOLOGY IN 1890. 



India, Taveinier; Indo-China, Eosset; Japanese studies, Eemy; Kirghiz, 

 Khabouzine, Kurds and Yesides, Kovalewsky ; Tliibet, Delbard, Rock- 

 hill, Saudbeig. 



Africa. — Angolese, Topiuard ; Bantu stock, Haarhoft"; Congo tribes, 

 Stanley (the Stanley literature in geographic journals and scientific 

 periodicals). Ward; Dahomy, Delbard; Gaboon, Delbard; Madigas- 

 car, Oliver; South African Ethnology, Macdonald. 



Oceanica. — Australia, Porter, Howitt, Reclus; Borneo, Woodford; 

 Indian Archipelago, Baron Hoevell ; Flores and Celebes, Weber; New 

 Caledonia, Combette; New Hebrides, Iinhaus; Polynesian race, For- 

 nander; Solomon Islanders, Woodford; Tasmania, Roth; Torres Strait, 

 Haddon. 



Prof. A. H. Keane, of London, prepared for Chambers' Encyclopaedia, 

 new edition, articles on ethnographic titles. 



V. — GLOSSOLOGY. 



. The resources of linguistic studies in the United States are, on the 

 classical side, represented by the American Journal of Philology., and 

 on the ethnic side by the studies and publications of the American 

 Oriental Society, by Dr. Daniel Brinton's American series, and by the 

 collections of the Bureau of Ethnology in Washington. 



Abroad, the list of philological journals is too long to reproduce; 

 furthermore, in most of them language is studied quite apart from man 

 who uses it. Triibners catalogues, not forgetting the Journal of the 

 Royal Asiatic Society ; Revue de Linguistique ; Zeitschrift der Morgen- 

 landischen Gesellschaft, Lazarus and Steinthal's Zeitschrift and Fried- 

 lander's Catalogues must be consulted for works in special lines. The 

 following papers may be consulted : Asiatic affinities of Malay 

 languages. Wake; Blackfeet language, Tims; Category of Moods, 

 Grasserie; Chinook jargon, Hale ; Comparative Grammar, Grasserie ; 

 Eskimo Vocabularies, Wells; Ethnographic basis of Language, Luit- 

 ner; Evolutionof Language, Murphy ; Gothic languages, Balg; Indo- 

 European linguistics, Regnaud ; Language of the Missisaguas, Cham- 

 berlain ; Manual of Comparative Philology, Schrader ; New Linguistic 

 Family, Henshaw ; Phonograph in the Study of Songs, Fewkes ; Poule 

 language, Tautain ; Science of Langaage, Sayce; Semitic languages, 

 Wright; TextesManchu,Bang; Timucuatext,Gatschet; Tupi language, 

 Dom Pedro; Zulu Dictionary, Manner. - 



VI. — TECHNOLOGY. 



Klemm's plan of tracing out the lineage and migrations of human 

 inventions, perfected later by General Pitt-Rivers, is really the most 

 productive of scientific results among ethnologic methods. The study 

 of an art in its historic elaboration may be called techuography and the 

 tracing of an art through the tribes that practice it ethnotechnics. At 

 any rate, every year some one among the host of anthropologists gathers 

 the specimens and the evidence to show how one of our well known 



