160 KANSAS ACADEMY OF SCIENCE. 



of some Anthropologic Data, by J. W. Powell; A Study of the Mortuary Customs of the North 

 American Indians, by H. C. Yarrow; Studies in Central American Picture Writing, by E. S. Hol- 

 den; Cessions of Land by Indian Tribes to the United States, by C. C. Royce; Sign Language 

 among North American Indians, by Col. Garrlck Mallery; Catalogue of Linguistic Manuscripts 

 in the Library of the Bureau of Ethnology, by J. C. Pilling; Illustration of the Method of Record- 

 ing Sign Languages, by J. O. Dorsey, A. S. Gatschet, and S. R. Riggs. 



Second Report, for the year 1880-'81, 520 pp., over 400 figs., and 77 plates, including a number 

 of colored lithographs. Accompanying papers: Zufii Fetiches, by F. H. Gushing; Myths of the 

 Iroquois, by Erminnie A. Smith; Animal Carvings from the Mounds of the Mississippi Valley, 

 by H. W. Henshaw; Navajo Silversmiths, by Washington Matthews, U. S. A.; Art in Shell of the 

 Ancient Americans, by Wm. H. Holmes; Illustrated Catalogue of the Collections Obtained from 

 the Indians of New Mexico and Arizona in 1879 and 1880, by James Stevenson. 



Third Report, for 1881-'82, 680 pp., 44 pi., including several colored lithographs and 200 figures. 

 Notes on Certain Maya and Mexican Manuscripts, by Cyrus Thomas; On Masks, Labrets, and 

 certain Aboriginal Customs, by Wm. H. Dall; Omaha Sociology, by J. Owen Dorsey; Navajo 

 Weavers, by Dr. Washington Matthews; Prehistoric Textile Fabrics of the United States, derived 

 from Impressions on Pottery, by W. H. Holmes; Illustrated Catalogues of Collections made in 

 1881, by W. H. Holmes and James Stevenson. 



Fourth Report, for 1882-'83, 596 pp., 83 plates. Including a number of colored lithographs and 

 664 figures in text. Pictographs of the North American Indians, by Garrick Mallery; Pottery of 

 the Ancient Pueblos, Ancient Pottery of the Mississippi Valley, and Origin and Development of 

 Form and Ornament in Ceramic Art, by William H. Holmes; A Study of Pueblo Pottery, as illus- 

 trative of ZuQi culture growth, by Frank Hamilton Gushing. 



Fifth Report, for 1883-'84, 620 pp.; 23 plates, including 4 double-page and 4 single-page colored 

 lithographs of Indian dry-painting; 77 figs, in text; and 1 map, 75x80 cm., of former Cherokee 

 country, in pocket. Burial Mounds of the northern sections of the United States, by Prof. Cyrus 

 Thomas; The Cherokee Nation of Indians, giving the different treaties and a history of the na- 

 tion from 1785 to 1868, by Chas. C. Royce; The Mountain Chant: a Navajo Ceremony, by Dr. 

 Washington Matthews, U. S. A.; The Seminole Indians of Florida, by Clay MacCauley; The Re- 

 ligious Life of the Zufli child, by Mrs Tilly E. Stevenson. 



Sixth Report, for 1884-'85, 736 pp.; 10 plates, including a one-page map of Chiriqui, and two 

 maps, 50x54 cm., of Eskimo countries in Arctic North America; 546 figures In text. Ancient Art 

 of the Province of Chiriqui, and a Study of the Textile Art in its relation to the Development of 

 Form and Ornament, by W. H. Holmes; Aids to the Study of the Maya Codices, by Cyrus Thomas; 

 Osage Traditions, by Rev. J. Owen Dorsey; The Central Eskimo, by Dr. Franz Boas. 



Seventh Annual Report, for 1885-''86, 452 pp., 27 plates (several colored), 39 figures in text. 

 Indian Linguistic Families of America North of Mexico, by J. W. Powell; The Mide'wiwin or 

 " Grand Medicine Society " of the Ojibwa, by W. J. Hoffman; The Sacred Formulas of the Chero- 

 kees, by James Mooney. 



Bulletins: Catalogue of Prehistoric Works East of the Rocky Mountains, by Cyrus Thomas 

 1891. 248 pp., 17 plates, consisting of two-page maps of various sections, and one larger map of 

 the eastern United States, folded. 



Omaha and Ponka Letters, by James Owen Dorsey. 1891. 128 pp. 



Bibliograi>hy of the Algonqulan Languages, by James Constantine Pilling. 1891. 624 pp., 82 

 fac-similes of title-pages of the publications of the early missionaries among the Indians. 



Bibliography of the Athapascan Languages, by James Constantine Pilling. 1892. 136 pp. 

 Smithsonian Institution — United States National Museum, G. Broivn Goode, Assistant Secretary 

 and Director: Bulletins — 



No. 39, Part A. Directions for collecting birds, by Robert Ridgway, Curator of the Department 

 of Birds. 1891. 28 pp., 9 figs. 



Part D. Directions for collecting, preparing and preserving birds' eggs and nests, by Charles 

 Bendlre, Curator of the Department of OOlogy. 1891. 10 pp. 



Part C. Notes on the preparation of rough skeletons, by Frederic A. Lucas, Assistant Curator 

 of the Department of Comparative Anatomy. 1891. 10 pp., 12 figs. 



Part E. Directions for collecting reptiles and batrachians, by Leonhard Stejneger, Curator of 

 the Department ot Reptiles and Batrachians. 1891. 18 pp., 4 figs. 



Part B. Directions for collecting recent and fossil plants, by F. H. Knowlton, Asslstani Curator 

 of the Department of Botany. 1891. 46 pp., 10 figs. 



Part F. Directions for collecting and preserving insects, by C. V. Riley, Curator of the Depart- 

 ment of Insects. 1892. 152 pp., 1 pi., 139 figs. 



Part G. Instructions for collecting niollusks, and other useful hints for the ccmchologlst, by 

 Wm. H. Dall, Curator of the Department of Mollusks. 1892. 56 pp. 



No. 40. Bibliographies of American Naturalists: IV. The Published Writings of George New- 

 bold Lawrence, 1844 '91, by L. S. Foster. 1892. 140 pp., with i)H-tralt. 



