ACT OF SECOND PAN AMERICAN SCIENTIFIC CONGRESS. 169 



The Figures of the So-called Scarifiers of Northwest Argentina. (Illus- 

 trated with slides.) 



JUAN B. AMBROSETTI, Director, Ethnological Museum, Faculty of 

 Philosophy and Letters, Buenos Aires, Argentina. 



Humanizing of the Science of Man. (Read by title.) 



CHARLES F. LUMMIS, The Southwest Museum, Los Angeles, Cal. 



A Study of Family Names in Chile. (Read by title.) 

 Luis THAYER OJEDA. 



Mongoloid Signs in some of the Ethnical Types of the Andine Plateau. 



(Read by title.) 

 ARTHUR POSNANSKY. 



Chronological Relations of Coastal Algonkin Culture. 



ALANSON SKINNER, American Museum of Natural History. 



TUESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 19159.30 A. M. 

 Joint Session B. 



NATIONAL MUSEUM, ROOM 42. 



A. C. SIMOENS DA SiLVA, Chairman. 



Notes on Venezuelan Archaeology. (Read by title.) 

 Luis R. ORAMAS. 



Food Plants and Textiles of Ancient America. (Illustrated with slides.) 

 A Forgotten Food of Ancient America. (Illustrated with slides.) 



WIUJAM E. SAFFORD, Economic Botanist, United States Depart- 

 ment of Agriculture. 



A New Type of Ruin Lately Excavated in the Mesa Verde National Park, 



Colorado. (Illustrated with slides.) 

 J. WAI/TER FEWKES, Ethnologist, Bureau of American Ethnology. 



Archaeological Work in Northern Nova Scotia. (Illustrated with slides.) 

 Remarkable Stone Sculptures from Yale, British Columbia. (Illustrated 



with slides.) 

 HARLAN I. SMITH, Geological Survey of Canada. 



Notes on the Orientation of Certain Ancient Pueblos, Reservoirs, and 



Shrines in New Mexico. (Read by title.) 

 Notes on Shrines of the Tewa and other Pueblo Indians of New Mexico. 



(Read by title.) 

 WIUJAM BOONE DOUGLASS, Surveyor, United States General Land 



Office. 



