lO DAVKNPORl' Ae■Ar)K.M^■ OF NAl'URAr. SCIENCES. 



75. Henderson, John J. Smithsonian R., 1882, 686. 



" Aboriginal Remains Near Naples, III." Thirty-five pages on 

 mounds and builders. Pages 713-717 is list of "Fauna of 

 Mound-Builders' Era," in which various Iowa pipes are men- 

 tioned. 



76. Henshaw, H. W. Bureau of EtJinoIogy, 2d Ann. Rept., IJ3. 



"Animal Carvings from Mounds in Mississippi \^alley." At- 

 tacks Elephant Pipes on ])p. 155-157. 



77. Holmes, Wi\r. H. Ancient Pottery of Mississippi J^alley, 8 vo., 



[PP- 73- 



"A Study of the Davenport xAcademy's Collection." Printed 



in advance of vol. iv. of Davenport .Academy's Proceedings. 



■ Proeeei/ini^s Dai'enpo't Aeademy, iv., 123 et seij. 



The same. 



78. Hoi.MES, W.M. H. Fourth Ann. Rept. Bureau 0/ Ethnolo^^y, 



[pp. 361-436. 



" Ancient Pottery of Mississippi Valley." Many specimens 

 from Academy described. Iowa specimens described on pp. 

 427-429. 



7(). Howe, S. S. Annals of Io7va, i., No. 3, p. 7,7,. 



"Indian Mounds." 



80. Jordan, Cora M. Ameriean Antiquarian, 1892, pp. 226-227. 

 "A Stone Dam in Iowa." A stone dam, a mound (entirely 

 artificial?), and a copper cup (lost) from Plum Creek, 

 Knowlton Township, Ringgold County, described. 



8i. KiiMisERLiNO, L. G. Kfwxville Journal, 1883. 



Various papers on mounds of unusual interest (see No. 109) in 

 the vicinity of Knoxville, published during 1883-84 in the 

 Journal of Knoxville, F. C. Barber, publisher. 



82. Lewis, T. H. Science, v., 131. 



" Notice of Some Recently Discovered Effigy Mounds." Re- 

 fers only to Iowa. Mounds mostly Minnesotan. 



