520 REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1892. 



R. W. Shufeldt. Inspirational Archaeology. 



The Beligio- Philosophical Journal, n. s., II, No. 14, Chicago, August 29, 1891, pp. 214-216, 



3 figures in text. 



Exposing Mr. Hudson Tuttle, who in The Progressive Age claims to have had the spirit of 

 an Indian instruct him in the manufacture of Indian arrow-points, which Mr. Tuttle states 

 to he a lost art. The present article makes a study of the archaeological material in the 

 Smithsonian Institution, and through it, refutes all that Mr. Tuttle has to say. 

 R. W. Shufeldt. On the comparative osteology of the United States Columbidw. 

 Proc. Zool. Sue. of Lond. Part 11, London, August 1, 1891, pp. 194-196. 

 A comparative description of the skeletons of the pigeons in the collections of the National 

 Museum, together with remarks upon the classification of the Columbidcr, and their proha- 

 ble affinities. 

 R. W. Shufeldt. Snake Dance of the Moquis. 



The Great Divide, VI, No. 2, Denver, Colo., October, 1891, pp. 24, 25, 1 plate. 

 R. W. Shufeldt. Fossil Birds from the Equue Beds of Oregon. 



The American Naturalist, xxv, No. 297, Philadelphia, September, 1891, pp. 818-821. 

 Preliminary abstract of the complete work, which did not appear until October, 1892, in The 

 Journal of the Academy if Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. 

 R. W. Shufeldt. Tertiary Fossils of North American Birds. 



The Auk, VIII, No. 4, New Tork, October, 1891, pp. 365-368. Abstract; see supra. 

 Alludes to many new species. Description of a very large collection of fossil birds from 

 Oregon, belonging to Prof. E. D. ('ope and Prof. Thos. Condon, of the Oregon University. 

 Comparisons made with the entire collection of skeletons of existing birds in the National 

 Museum, and with the fossil forms from Prof. A. C. Milne-Edwards of Paris. 

 R. W. Shufeldt. Morphology of the Avian Brain. 



The Amer. Nat., xxv, No. 298, Philadelphia, October, 1891, pp. 900, 901. 

 R. W. SHUFELDT. Indian Types of Beauty. No. 1. 



The A mil lean Field, xxxvi. No. 23, New York and Chicago, December 5, 1891, pp. 544, 545, 2 

 figures in text. 



The first of a series of three papers on thi^s subject which originally appeared in the Ameri- 

 can Field, but was subsequently copied by a number of other magazines and journals. There 

 were also 250 reprints of the combined articles republished and distributed, repaged, same title, 

 heavy paper covers. The work gives full-page figures of Indian women selected from among the 

 Navajos, Zunians, Moquis, Apaches, Tumas, Mojaves, and other tribes, for their beauty, that 

 is, women considered to be beautiful by the tribe to which, in any instance, they belonged. 

 Comparative studies were made by the author of the ethnological material in the National 

 Museum bearing upon this subject, especially in the matter of dress and ornaments used by 

 Indians with the view of enhancing their native beauty. 

 R. W. Shufeldt. Indian Types of Beauty. No. 2. 



The American Field, No. 24. December 12, 1891, pp. 566, 507, 3 figures in text. 

 R. W. Shufeldt. Some observations on the Havesu-pai Indians. 



Proceedings 77. S. National Museum, xiv, pp. 387-390, pis. xxv. xxvi, Washington, 1891. 

 Gives photographs of men, women, and children of this now nearly extinct tribe of Indians. 

 The style of their houses is also shown, and the nature of the country where they now I've. 

 R. W. Shufeldt. The Navajo Belt-Weaver. 

 Ibid, pp. 391-393, pi. xxvil, Washington, 1891. 



The plate shows a Navajo woman weaving a belt, the figure being taken from a photograph 

 made by the author in New Mexico. 

 R. W. Shufeldt. Indian Types of Beauty. No. 3. 



The American Field, XXXVI, No. 25. New York and Chicago, December 19. 1891, pp.590, 591; 

 3 figures in text. 

 The last of the series. 

 R. W. Shufeldt. Concerning the taxonomy of the North American Pygopodes, 

 based upon their osteology. 



Jour. Anat. <C-Phys. (London), January. 1892, XXVI, pp. 199-203. 

 R. W. Shufeldt and E. D. Cope. A contribution to the Vertebrate Paleontology 

 of Texas. 



Proc. Amer. l'liil. Soc, xxx, April, 1892. 



Dr. Shufeldt' s share in this paper consists in his description of Oreccoides bsbomii Shuf. 

 gen. et sp. nov., on pp. 125-127. Based on a taisonietatarsus of a fossil rail found by Prof. 

 Cope in Texas. The species is dedicated to Prof. H. F. Osborn, of Columbia College, New 

 York. Osteological collections of National Museum extensively used in comparison. 



