BIBLIOGRAPHY. 177 



In Primitive Times. Saginaw P^vening News, April 



9th, 1894. 



The ^^aginau' Valley Collection, The culture of the 



people once inhabiting a limited area near Saginaw, 

 Michigan, as illustrated by material in the Anthrop- 

 ological Department of the American Museum of 

 Natural History. Illustrated, 2 maps, 24 pp. Supple- 

 ment to American Museum Journal, Vol. I, No. 12, 

 November-December, 1901. A popular account. 



Anthropological Matters in Michigan, read at the 



43rd Meeting of A. A. A. S. at Brooklyn, N. Y., 1894. 



Relics of an Early Race, Detroit Free Press, Octo- 

 ber 21, 1894, refers to sites in Saginaw and Kalamazoo 

 Counties. 



Study of Man, Detroit Free Press, Nov. 12, 1893. 



Legendary Invasion of the Saginaw Valley, Ameri- 

 can Antiquarian, Chicago, Vol. XIII, No. 6, Nov. 1891, 

 pp. 339-340. 



Reprinted under the title — The Invasion of Saginaw 



Valley. A legend of northern Michigan as told by an 

 Indian, Detroit Free Press, Sunday, January 3, 1892, 

 p. 11, column 4, also in daily issue of Saginaw Courier- 

 Herald, Januarv 7th, and in the weeklv issue of the 

 same January 14, 1892. 



The Archaeology of the Saginaw Valley as illus- 

 trated at the World's Columbian Exposition. 



Also reprint. 



Voles on th^ Data of Michigan Archaeology. Pre- 

 sented at the first meeting of the Michigan Academy 

 of Science, Dec. 26, 1894. American Antiquarian, Vol. 

 XVIII, No. 3, May, 1896, p. 144, part I. 



Also reprint. 



The Development of Michigan Archaeology. Pre- 

 sented at the first meeting of the Michigan Academy 

 of Science, Dec. 26, 1894. The Inlander, VI, 8, May, 

 1896, part II. 



Also reprint. 



Partial Eeprint in Preservation of Local Archae- 

 ological Evidences, Report of the Museums Associa- 

 tion of the United Kingdom. Brighton Meeting for 

 1899. 



Also reprint, 1900. 



Also reprint Sci. Am. 



23 



