LIST OF PUBLICATIONS. 



149 



Holmes, William H. — Continued. 



toward the status of culture 

 known as civilization. The 

 works are shown to be worthy 

 of comparison with the famous 

 masterpieces of the Old World. 



On the antiquity of man in 



America. 



Science (n. s.), 47, No. 

 1223, June 7, 1918, 

 pp. 561, 562. 

 Suggesting the desirability of 

 extreme conservatism in esti- 

 mating the value of evidence 

 purporting to establish the the- 

 ory of the Pleistocene appear- 

 ance of man on the American 

 continent. Unless great cau- 

 tion is exercised erroneous con- 

 clusions are liable to become fix- 

 tures on the pages of human 

 history. 



Hough, Walter. The Sio Shalako at 

 the first mesa, July 9, 1916. 



Amer. Anthrop. (n. s.), 

 19, No. 3, July- 

 Sept., 1917, p. 410- 

 415. 

 Description, with commentary 

 by Dr. J. Walter Fewkes, of a 

 picturesque ceremony observed 

 by the author at Sichomovi dur- 

 ing a visit to the Hopi Indians 

 in the interest of the United 

 States National Museum. Dr. 

 Fewkes compares the con- 

 duct of the ceremony at the 

 present with his observations 

 made in 1894, bringing out the 

 changes which have taken place 

 during the period. 



Ceremonial and other practices 



on the human body among the In- 

 dians. 



Proe. 2nd Pan Amer. 

 Set. Cong. (1915- 

 16), Washington, 

 U. S. Government 

 Printing Office, 

 1917, pp. 125-228. 

 Also in Proc. 19th 

 Int. Cong. Ameri- 

 canists (1915), 

 Washington, 1917, 

 pp. 283-285. 

 Discusses the probable origin 

 and the distribution of types of 

 mutilation and other practices 

 on the human body. The meth- 

 ods employed and the results 

 produced by such practices 

 among the American Indians is 

 supplemented with data gath- 



Hough, Walter — Continued. 



ered from the Catlin and John 

 White paintings, and from 

 archeological specimens, such as 

 labrets, ear plugs, etc., in the 

 National Museum. 



The Hopi Indian collection in 



the United States National Museum. 



Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., 

 54, No. 2235, Apr. 

 6, 191S, pp. 235- 

 296, pis. 19-53, 

 figs. 1-48. 

 Aims to give an impression of 

 the arts and industries of a tribe 

 of Pueblo Indians at a period 

 when they were little modified 

 by outside influences. It em- 

 bodies the researches of the au- 

 thor among the Hopi Indians 

 with descriptions of the collec- 

 tion forming a handbook of the 

 material from this tribe in the 

 Museum. 



Hrducka Ales. Proceedings of the 

 19th International Congress of Amer- 

 icanists held at Washington, Decem- 

 ber 27-31, 1915. 



City of Washington, 

 1917, large 8vo., 

 pp. 1-649, illus- 

 trated. 

 As secretary-general of the 

 congress Dr. Hrdlieka was re- 

 sponsible for the preparation for 

 publication of the important 

 volume of proceedings, which 

 contains upward of 90 original 

 communications on all branches 

 of American anthropology. More- 

 over, the volume includes 50 

 pages of the secretary's report 

 dealing with the organization 

 and general activities of the 

 congress. 



The genesis of the American 



Indian. 



Proc. 19th Int. Cong. 

 Americanists 

 (1915), Washing- 

 ton, 1917, pp. 559- 

 568, pis. 1-9, 1 fig. 

 Also Proc. 2nd Pan 

 Amer. Sci. Cong. 

 (1915-16), 1917, 1, 

 pp. 12S-137. 

 Summary of the author's con- 

 clusions regarding the antiquity, 

 origin, and racial identity of 

 the American Indian. It is 

 shown that the physical charac- 

 teristics of the tribes are identi- 

 cal with those of the old popu- 



