4 DAVENPORT ACADEMY OF NATURAL SCIENCES. 



25. Busby, Miss Alme B. Tmw Summers with t/ie Musqiiakies, 12 



[mo., 1886. 

 Recollections of a teacher among our Tama City Indians. 



26. Calvin, Samuel. Prehistoric Iowa, 8vo., pp. 5-29, 1892. 



Lecture; printed in pamphlet form by State Historical Society. 

 Mainly geological; refers to implements from Iowa loess, the 

 Neanderthaloid Skulls, and approvingly to the Elephant 

 Pipes. 



27. Campbell, Augustus. American Antiquaria)!, ix., p. 43. 



"Modern Mound Builders." Vaulted mound near East Du- 

 buque, contained sitting skeletons and a cup. 



28. Campbell, John. American Antiquarian, iv., 145. 



"Proposed Reading of the Davenport Tablets." Quite an 

 elaborate article. The tablet a Hittite relic. 



29. Trans.Am.Assoc.Ad7\Sci,\%'iT,,-^^.\\<:)-a^2\. 



"The Mound Builders Identified." Study of the Khitans. 

 Khita hieroglyphics compared with the Davenport Tablets 

 inscriptions. 



30. Catlin, George. 



Information about the Sacs and Fo.xes scattered through his 

 work are collected in Donaldson's article (No. 42). 



31. Churchill, A. D. Proceedings Davenport Academy, ii., 257. 



"East Davenport Mounds." ^Exploration of three mounds. 

 No remains. 



32. Claypole, E. W. Trans. Am. Assoc. Adv. Sci., 1887, p. 312. 



"What Is It?" Refers to the curious cast-like objects in the 

 form of shells, possessed by the Academy, and believes them 

 made by the Indians or for trade with them. 



33. CoNANT, A. J. footprints of Vanished Races in the Mississippi 



[^Valley, 8 vo., pp. 120, St. Louis, 1879. 



Cites Pidgeon at pp. 15-24, and p. 70, regarding Iowa mounds; 

 also, Iowa planter's opinion of "corn-field mounds." 



