lb DAVENPORT ACADEMY ()!• NAIl KAl. SCIENCES. 



150. Schmidt," E. Kosmos, 1884, 146. 



"Mound- Builders and Their Relation to Historic Indians." 

 Quoted by C. Thomas against Davenport Tablets. 



151. -• 



"Die Prcchistorischen Kupfergerathe Nord-Amerikas." De- 

 scribes the Davenport celts. 



152. Science. Vol. i., No. 7. 



Mentions Mr. Gass' gift of thirteen " Mound-Builder Pipes" to 

 Academy's collection, making fifty-six in whole series. 



153- Vol. i., No. 9, p. 263. 



Mention of Effigy Mounds in North-western Iowa. 



154- viii., 1886, p. 186. 



Note upon the Louisa County exploration of the Academy. 



155- xix., 1892, p. 2 1. 



Notice of arrowhead from loess near Muscatine, and of im- 

 plements from Council Bluffs loess. 



156. Seyffarth, G. Proceedings Davenport Academy, iii., 72. 



"The Indian Inscriptions of Davenport." Elaborate classifi- 

 cation and comparison of characters. Syllabic. Allied to 

 Japanese, Chinese, and Corean. Considers the designs a 

 "sacrificial scene" and a 'record of the deluge." 



157. Shaw, James. Stniihsonian R., 1877, 257. 



"The Mound-Builders of the Rock River Valley." Mainly 

 Illinois, but refers somewhat to Mercer County. 



158. Short, John G. North Americans of Antiquity, 8vo. 



Pp- 37-40? refers to Iowa Mounds and Davenport Tablets ; 

 169-170, quotes Farquharson's cranial measurements; 530- 

 531, refers to Louisa County pipes. 



159. Sloan, Judge. History of Wapello Co., Chicago, pp. 336-342. 



Quoted in reference to mounds near Ottumwa. The same 

 article is given in History of Van Buren County, pp. 334- 

 341- 



