46 
12. A STIGMARIA FRAGMENT of exceptional size from Indian 
Territory. Exhibited by J. J. Stevenson. 
13. Mortusca from the Asphalt Beds of Indian Territory. Ex- 
hibited by J. J. Stevenson. 
ETHNOLOGY AND ARCH A0L@Gx 
N 
In CHARGE OF FRANZ Boas AND M. H. SEVILLE. 
1. THE ANIMAL ForRM IN THE ART OF ANCIENT PERU. From 
the collections of the American Museum of Natural His- 
tory. Exhibited by Mr. Harlan I. Smith; collected by 
Mr. A. F. Bandelier. 
Representations of animal forms of pottery, painting, 
weaving, gold, stone and wood in the art of ancient Peru. 
. Portrair Heaps in Pottery of Ancient Peru. From the 
collections of the American Museum of Natural History. 
Exhibited by Mr. Harlan I. Smith; collected by Mr. A. 
F. Bandelier. 
3. PATHOLOGICAL SPECIMENS from an ancient burial ground in 
Kentucky. From the collections of the American Mu- 
seum of Natural History. Exhibited and collected by 
Mr. Harlan I. Smith. 
These specimens were excavated on the Fox Estate, 
i) 
May’s Lick, Mason County, Ky., on an area of about 
forty acres. Part of them were found in stone graves, 
others in mounds, but both groups probably belong to the 
same people. Both sexes were equally subject to inflam- 
mation and suppuration of the bones, 19 among 55 adults 
(35%) being affected with it. The disease was rarely 
present in children and youths. 
4. BurraL Customs oF A PREHISTORIC PEOPLE OF UTAH. 
Collected and presented to the American Museum of 
Natural History by Messrs. B. T. B. and F. B. Hyde; 
exhibited by Messrs. B. T. B. Hyde and George. H. 
Pepper 
