448 SUMMARY OF PROGRESS IN ANTHROPOLOGY IN 1891. 
history. The society has published three volumes of transactions. A 
journal was founded entitled “Problems in Philosophy and Psychology.” 
A grant was made to the Toronto University for the equipment of a 
laboratory of experimental psychology. Offers were made to students 
at once to furnish such apparatus as should be needed for the present 
purposes, and promises given that the provincial government would 
print the results of the investigation should these results warrant it. 
For the study of psycho-physies and kindred branches of anthropol- 
ogy, the American Journal of Psychology is the standard authority. 
The current literature of the world is there reviewed and the titles of 
foreign periodicals and journals contributing to the science are given. 
Outside of this eminent journal the entire literature of the subject is to 
be sought in the following: 
Allgemeine Zeitschrift fiir Psychiatrie und psychisch-gerichtliche Medicin. 
Annales Médico-Psychologiques. 
Archives de Neurologie. Charcot, Paris. 
Archiy fiir die gesammte Physiologie. Pfliiger. 
Archiv fiir Physiologie. Dubois-Reymond. 
Archiv fiir Psychiatrie und Nerven-Krankheiten. 
Brain. 
Deutsche Zeitschrift fiir Nervenheilkunde. 
Mind. 
Philosophische Studien. Wundt. 
Revue de ’Hypnotisme. Bérillon. 
Revue Philosophique. Ribot. 
Rivista sperimentale di Freniatria e di Medecina Legale. 
Zeitschrift fiir Psychologie und Physiologie der Sinnesorgane. Ebbinghaus. 
ETHNOLOGY. 
Two contributions to ethnographic science made in this year should 
be named together, Powell’s Linguistic Map of North America and 
Brinton’s‘‘American Race.” The former is the gathered resultof all that 
has been done hitherto in locating North American stocks and tribes, 
systematized and put into shape by thirteen years of continuous effort 
of Major Powell and the Bureau of Ethnology. The latter may also be 
called the result of a life-iong inquiry. The ethnography of South 
America has been in an unsatisfactory condition, and the first thing to 
do was to sum up carefully previous knowledge. This Dr. Brinton has 
accomplished, thus paving the way for systematic effort in the future. 
Below will be found the North American stocks as arranged by Major 
Powell, followed by a list of stocks as laid down by Dr. Brinton. The 
two form a continuous series from one end of the continent to the other, 
the stocks being arranged alphabetically under three titles, North 
America, Middle America, South America. 
NORTH AMERICAN STOCKS. 
Algonquian: Of the North Atlantic seaboard and west through the Northern States, 
Lake region, and Canada to the Rocky Mountains. 
Athapascan: Of the interior of British America; isolated communities on the Co- 
lumbia River, Oregon, California, Arizona, and New Mexico. 
