310 SMITHSONIAN MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS VOL, 58 



History of tin— Continued. Reference 



A umber 



Feuchtwanger on 1321 



Flower on the tin plate trade 1390 



France 498, 1386, 1406, 1416 



Freiesleben on the mines of Germany 547 



Furman on discovery of tin in North Carolina 242, 242a 



Garrison on tin in the United States 1207 



Gatzschman on tin mining at Freiberg, Saxony 1391 



George on mining and use of metals by Egyptians 1392 



Germany 547, 550, 564, 570, 571 



Grant on Tasmanian tin deposits 1086 



Greathead on sources and uses of tin among ancients 1393 



Grecians, tin among the 1382 



Hallwich on mining at Graupen and Upper Graupen, Bohemia. . . .67, 550 



Hamilton on discovery of tin in Sumatra 294 



Hanks on discovery of tin 1394 



Hawkins on ancient tin trade in Cornwall 1395 



On tin mines of England 1395, 1396 



Headden on discovery of tin in Black Hills, South Dakota 1008 



Hill on York tin mines, Seward Peninsula, Alaska 28a 



Hunt on British mining 415 



On tin trade in Cornwall and Devon 413 



On tin and copper production in Cornwall 412 



On traditions and history of Cornish tin mining 1397 



Indian Archipelago 282 



Ireland 603 



Italy, discovery of tin, and antiquity of bronze in 611 



James on the Ictis of Diodorus 1398 



On Phoenician tin trade 1399 



Kayser on tin mining in Tasmania 1100 



Kenrick on Phoenician tin trade 1400 



Kinahan on antiquity of tin in Ireland 603 



Lakes on history, uses, and sources of tin 1334a 



Lewis on the English tin miner 1402 



Lewis on sources of Phoenician tin 1401 



Louis on 1340 



MacAlister on Cornish mines 427 



Maclean on the stannary roll 1403 



Maclean on tin coined in England between 1305 and 1607 1404 



Malay Peninsula 681, 747 



Mexico 765 



Missouri 1423 



New South Wales, discovery of tin in 798, 802 



North Carolina 237, 242 



Napier on sources of ancient tin 1405 



Paris on origin of Cornish names, etc 439 



