592 PROGKESS OF ANTHROPOLOGY IN 1890. 



Ottolenghi, S. L'olfatto ed il gusto nei criminali in rapporto ai normali. Anomalo, 

 Napoli, II, 138-142. 



Owen, Mary A. Ole Rabbit an' de Dawg he Stole. J. Amer. Folk-L., Bost. and N. 

 Y., Ill, 135-138. 



Packard, A. S. Symbolism among the dolmens and standing stones of France. 

 Amer. Antiquar., Meudon. xii, 273-282. 



■ The effect of cave life on animals and its bearing on the evolution theory. Pop. 



Sc. Month., N. Y., xxxvi, 389-397. 



Painter, A. W. The Hill Aryans. Journ. Anthrop. Soc. Bombay, ii, 146-155. 



Pajeken, F. J. Die kinder der Indianer Nordamerikas, Das Ausland, LXiii, 157; 

 Wie die Indianer Fleisch raiichern, id., 439: Religion, id., 1011. 



Papers of the Archaeological Institute of America.. American series, in. Final report 

 of investigations among the Indians of the Southwestern United States, carried on 

 mainly in the years from 1880 to 1885. Part 1, by A. F. Bandelier. Cambridge, 

 John Wilson & Sou. 



Parant, V. L'anthropologie criminelle, I'etat mental des regicides. Echo med., Tou- 

 louse, 2. s., 493, 505. 



Paulhan, F. Historic and prehistoric relics. Am. Antiquarian, Mendon, 111., xii, 

 52-60. 



The monuments of the stone age. Am. Antiquarian, Mendon, 111., xii, 26-41. 



Pauli, GnsTAV. Durch den siiden Mexikos und durch Central-Amerika. Das Aus- 

 land, Stuttgart. LXIII, 101-105, 121-125, 141-145, 161-166. 



Payne, F. F. A lew notes upon the Eskimo of Cape Prince of Wales, Hudson's Strait. 

 Proc. Am. Ass. Adv. Sc. 1889, Salem, xxxviii, 358-360. 



Peabody Museum of American Archieology and Ethnology, in connection with Har- 

 vard University, xxiv. An. report in 1890, Vol. x. 



Pector, D. Essai de localisation des habitants precolumbiensde I'AmeriqueCentrale. 

 Internat. Arch. f. Ethnog., Leiden, in, 31-33. 



Peet, S. D. Did the boomerang precede the bow and arrow ? Amer. Antiquar., Men- 

 don, XII, 179-183, 3 figs. 



Historic and prehistoric relics. ll>id.. 52-61, 6 figs. 



Museums and societies. Ibid., 363-364. 



Phallic worship and fire worship. Ibid., 352-358, 3 figs. 



Quivira, the phantom city. Ibid., 293-294. 



The cliff-dwellers and their works. Ibid., 85-104, 15 figs., 5 pi. 



The difference between Indian anil mound-builders' relics. /6/(/., 251-272, 35 



figs. 



The great serpent and other effigies. Ibid., 211-228, 4 figs., 2 pi., 9 maps. 



The island of Mackinaw and native myths. Ibid., 112-114. 



The monuments of the stone age. Ifnd., 26-41 . 



The mound-builders and ancient Mexicans. //;('(?., 359-362. 



The "sacred enclosures" of Ohio. Ibid., 131-154, 8 figs.. 2 maps. 



The Snake Clan among the Dakotas. Ibid., 237-242, 8 figs. 



The stone grave people. Ibid., 329-344, 12 tigs. 



Were the Druids in America ? Ibid. 294-302. 



Pena y Fernandez, M. de la. Manual de arqueologia prchistorica. Sevilla. 963 

 pp. 4to. 



Pendleton, Louis. Notes on negro folk-lore and witchcraft in the South. J. Amer. 

 Folk-L., Bost. and N. Y., in, 201-207. 



Penka, Karl. Die ariscbe Urzeit im Lichteder neuesten Anschauungen. Das Aus- 

 land, Stuttgart, LXIII, 741-744, 764-771. 



Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography. Phila. Hist. Soc, Vol. xin, in 1890. 



Periostitis aud atrophy of ancient Ej^yptiao bones. Lancet, Lond., i, 404. 



