LIST OF ACCESSIONS. 



101 



Smithsonian Institution — Contd. 

 mens of Middle Cambrian Holo- 

 thurians from British Columbia 

 (52790) ; 14 figured specimens of 

 Middle Cambrian Eurypterids from 

 British Columbia (52791) ; copy of 

 the M. C. Dow medal, presented to 

 the Secretary of the Smithsonian 

 Institution by The Ohio Humane So- 

 ciety (52847) ; medal of the Societa 

 Ligure di Storia Patria, Genoa, 

 Italy, commemorative of the celebra- 

 tion of its half-century anniversary, 

 1858-1908 (52921). 



Smithsonian African Expedition, 

 wider the direction of Col. Theodore 

 Roosevelt: Birds, mammals, reptiles, 

 plants, mollusks, fishes, and anthro- 

 pological material from British East 

 Africa and Sudan; skin, skull, and 

 leg-bones of Bongo, from British 

 East Africa ; 113 African mammals 

 (51769; 51805; 51884 J. 1 



Bureau of American Ethnology: 

 200 plants used by the Zuni Indians, 

 collected by Mrs. Matilda Coxe 

 Stevenson (52018) ; a dog travois 

 made by Mrs. Eagle Child, a full- 

 blooded Piegan Indian (52072) ; 6 

 boxes of human bones from the 

 ancient pueblo of Giusiwa, Jemez 

 Valley, and 10 boxes of Indian skele- 

 tons from the ancient Tewa ruins 

 of Puye, on a mesa above the Santa 

 Clara Canyon, about 10 miles west 

 of Santa Clara pueblo, N. Mex. — all 

 collected during the summer of 1910 

 by the joint expedition of the Bu- 

 reau of American Ethnology and 

 the School of American Archaeology 

 of the Archaeological Institute of 

 America (52073; 52218); pottery 

 fragments collected by J. A. Jean- 

 con, of Colorado Springs, Colo., in 

 the upper part of the Rio Grande 

 Valley, N. Mex. (52167) ; 19 archeo- 

 logical specimens from McPherson 

 County, Kans., obtained by the Bu- 

 reau from Dr. Vance N. Robb 

 (52230) ; a wa-xo-be, or sacred 

 pack, of the Osage Indians, pre- 



Smithsonian Institution — Contd. 

 sen ted by Mr. and Mrs. Arthur 

 Bonnicastle through Francis La 

 Flesche (52278) ; a buffalo-hide 

 scraper collected from the Piegan 

 Indians of Montana by Dr. Truman 

 Michelson (52297) ; more than 500 

 archeological objects collected by 

 Dr. J. Walter Fewkes from the 

 Navaho National Monument and at 

 the ancient Hopi pueblo of Wukoki 

 at the Black Falls of Little Colorado 

 River, Ariz. (52301) ; 2 plants used 

 by the Chippewa Indians in making 

 medicine, collected by Miss Frances 

 Densmore (52927). 



National Museum, collected by 

 members of the staff: Bassler, R. S. : 

 About 300 specimens illustrating si- 

 licification of fossils and the forma- 

 tion of geodes (51745) ; about 2,000 

 specimens of Mississippian and Silu- 

 rian fossils from Kentucky and Ten- 

 nessee (51746). Bean, Barton A., 

 assisted by Herbert K. Bean : Fishes 

 collected in the Susquehanna River 

 and Conoy Creek, Pa. (52131) ; 

 fishes collected in the District of 

 Columbia (52887). Brown, E. J., 

 Lieut. Col. E. A. Mearns, U. S. Army 

 (retired), and J. H. Riley: Mam- 

 mals, birds, reptiles, batrachians, 

 mollusks, insects, crustaceans, 

 plants, and a fragment of prehis- 

 toric pottery from South Carolina 

 (52823). Hollister, N. : Mammals, 

 fishes, reptiles, birds, crustaceans, and 

 mollusks from Wisconsin (52115) ; 

 skins and skulls of 5 mammals col- 

 lected near Hyattsville, Md. ; also 

 an alcoholic specimen (52682). 

 Hrdlicka, Ales" : 13 specimens of 

 crustaceans from Tabogan Island, 

 Panama (52036) ; facial masks, in 

 plaster, of 6 Aztec Indians from 

 Xochimilco, Valley of Mexico, made 

 by Dr. Hrdlicka from life subjects 

 while in Mexico (52045) ; 8 living 

 specimens of Cactacese from Peru 

 (52086) ; embryo turtle, Terrapene 

 Carolina, from the District of Co- 



x The earlier collections received from this source were entered under accession num- 

 bers 50755, 50756, 50757, 50827, 51209, 51304, and 51495, and a notice of them will be 

 found on page 107 of the Report for 1910. 



