ANTHROPOLOGY. 509 



— Chipped stoue implements. Wheeler's U. S. Geog. Surr. "W. of 100th Merid., 

 vii, pp. 49-69, pi. 1-4, figs. 1-16. 



— Historical sketch of the discovery of the palaeolithic implements of the Tren- 

 ton gravels. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist. June 19. xxi. 



and F. W. Putxam. — Implements and weapons made of bone and wood. 



Wheeler's U. S. Geog. Surv. W. of 100th Merid., vii, pp. 222-203, pi. xl, figs. 

 100-114. 



— Miscellaneous objects made of stone. Wheeler's U. S. Geog. W. of 100th 

 Merid., vii, pp. 190-217, figs. Gl-99. 



— Mortars and pestles. Wheeler's U. S. Geog. Surv. W. of 100 Merid., vii, pp, 

 70-91, pi. 5, figs. 17-31. 



— Musical instruments made of bone. Wheeler's U. S. Geog. Surv. W. of 100th 

 Merid., vii, pp. 234-23d, figs. 115-120. 



— Primitive Industry ; or illustrations of the handwork in stone, bone, and clay, 

 of the native races of the northern Atlantic seaboard of America. Salem, Mass., 

 560 pp. 8vo. [Reviewed in Nature, Nov. 10.] 



Smoking pipes of stone. Wheeler's U. S. Geog. Surv. W. of 100th Merid., 



vii, pp. 125 — , pi. vii-ix, tig. 43. 



Steatite cooking pota, plates, and food vessels. Wheeler's U. S. Geog. Surv. 



W. of 100th Merid., vii, pp. 93-116, pi. vi, figs. 32-38. 

 Ameghino, F. — La antiguedad del hombre en el Plata. Paris, ^lasaon. 25 plates, 



1881. 8vo. 

 Barber, Edwin A. — Pueblo pottery. Am. Naturalist, June. pp. 453-462. 

 BiXKLEY, S. H. — A (iloth robe from a mound-builder's tomb. Am. Antiquarian, iii, 

 pp. 325-3.>8. 



Nest of flint relics. Am. Antiquarian, iii, 144. 



BiRNiE, Rogers, Jr. — Report on ruins visited in New Mexico. Wheeler's U. S. Geog. 



Surv. W. of 100th Merid., vii, pp. 346-350. 

 BooTU, Henky. — Notes on some ancient remains in Arizona. Proc. Poughkeepsie Soc. 



Nat. Hist. No imprint, pp. 37-43. 

 Braxsford, J. F. — Archioological researches in Nicaragua. No. 383, Smithsonian 



Contributions. Published by the Smithsonian Institution. 4to. 

 Brixkley, C. H. — Ancient stone mounds — were they objurgatory burial heaps? Am. 



Antiquarian, ii, pp. 189-194. 

 Buckingham, Harriot. — Oregon and prehistoric relics. Am. Antiquarian, iii, 135-" 



137. 

 Butler, J. D. — Wisconsin copper finds and lake-dwellings. Am. Antiquarian, iii, 



141. 

 Carr, Lucien. — statement relating to finding an implement in the Trenton gravel. 



Proc. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist. Jan. 19. xxi. 

 Charney, D£sirtS. — The ruins of Central America. North Am. Review : 



Part V. Resemblances and analogies between Teotihuacan and Tula. Jan. 

 Part VI. The village of Comalcalco, in the State of Tobasco. Feb. 

 Part VII. The ruins of Palenque, May. 

 Part VIII. The ruins of Palenque. June. 



Part IX. The probable age and origin of the monuments of Mexico and Central 

 America. Oct. 

 [Translated in Petefraann's Mittheilungen.] 

 C^A^^F;RO, Alfredo. — La piedra del sol. (Continuacion.) Anales del Mus. Nac. de 



Mexico. II. Parts iv and v, pp. 234-266, 291, 403-410. 

 COLLETT, John. — Mounds and stone graves of Shelby County, Indiana. Rep. State 



Geologist, 1881. 

 ■ The mammoth and the mastodon. Remains in Indiana and Illinois. A 



Vincennes Mound. Indiana Geolog. Rep., 1879-1880. Indianapolis, C. Hollen- 

 beck, 1881, pp. 16-28. 



