LIST OF PUBLICATIONS. 



147 



FINE ARTS. 



Catalogue of an exhibition of litho- 

 graphs of war work in Great Britain 

 and the United States, by Joseph 



Pennell. 



City of Washington, 



Nov., 1917, 12rao., 



pp. 1-29, and paper 



cover. 



This interesting collection, 



which was on view in the Na- 



tional Gallery of Art from Nov. 

 1 to 24, 1917, comprised a large 

 portion of the artist's sketches 

 made under Government aus- 

 pices in the various factories, 

 shipyards, and other establish- 

 ments in Great Britain and the 

 United States engaged in war 

 work. The catalogue includes 

 an introduction and explanatory 

 notes by the artist. 



ANTHROPOLOGY. 



Oasanowicz, I. M. Two Jewish amu- 

 lets in the United States National 

 Museum. 



Journ. Amrr. Oriental 



Soc, 37, 1917, pp. 



43-56, pis. 1, 2. 



Contains a description of the 



original texts, a translation and 



commentary. 



Douglass, William Boone. Notes on 

 the shrines of the Tewa and other 

 Pueblo Indians of New Mexico. 



Proc. 19th Int. Cong. 

 Americanists 

 (1915). Washing- 

 ton, 1917, pp. 344- 

 378, pis. 1-13, figs. 

 1-28. 

 Describes the location, form, 

 and contents of Tewa and other 

 pueblo shrines on the Jemez 

 plateau, New Mexico. These 

 shrines were discovered in the 

 course of surveys for the Gen- 

 eral Land Office by the author, 

 and from the collections made 

 from several of these shrines he 

 presented a large series of sac- 

 rificial objects to the National 

 Museum, most of them from a 

 " world center " shrine on one 

 of the loftiest peaks in the 

 Jemez Mountains. 



Fewkes, J. Walter. A prehistoric 

 stone mortar from southern Arizona. 

 Journ. Wash inffton 

 Acad. Sci., 7, No. 

 14, Aug. 19, 1917, 

 pp. 459-463, figs. 

 1-3. 

 Description with figures of 

 stone objects found not Ear 

 from Casa Grande, Arizona. 

 One of these is a circular paint 

 mortar decorated on the out- 

 side with a rattlesnake, partially 

 coiled and in high relief. A fig- 

 ure of a rectangular paint pa- 



Fewkes, J. Walteb — Continued. 



lette from the same locality is 

 also introduced in conjunction 

 with a similar Egyptian paint 

 palette. 



Far View House — A pure type 



of pueblo ruin. 



Art and Arch., 6, No. 

 3, Sept., 1917, pp. 

 133-141, 6 illustra- 

 tions. 

 Discussion of the architectu- 

 ral features of Far View House, 

 Mesa Verde National Park, Colo- 

 rado, showing the structural 

 characters of a pure type of 

 pueblo ruin, to which are added 

 remarks on the " unit type " and 

 references to cliff-dwellings and 

 modern pueblos. 



A prehistoric Mesa Verde 



pueblo and its people. 



Rep. Smithsonian Inst., 

 1916, Pub. No. 2469, 

 pp. 461-488, pis. 

 1-15, figs. 1-7. 



Account of the excavation and 

 repair of Far View House, one 

 of the sixteen mounds of a pre- 

 historic Indian village near the 

 reservoir called Mummy Lake, 

 Mesa Verde National Park, Colo- 

 rado. The work was in con- 

 tinuation of a cooperative plan 

 of the Department of the Inte- 

 rior and the Smithsonian Insti- 

 tution and revealed the archi- 

 tectural structure of the first 

 pueblo ever excavated on the 

 park. Except for its site, this 

 building is identical with a Mesa 

 Verde Cliff dwelling. 



Points out the structural fea- 

 tures of the pure type of pueblo 

 architecture to which it belongs 

 and shows that it illustrates the 

 highest form of architectural 

 skill of the American Indian 

 north of Mexico. 



