10 The Belies Indorsed as Genuine. 



a wide bay. He added, " Inasmuch as I have failed in the great object 

 for which I went out, it is my intention to try again in the following 

 spring." 



The Eskimo family, Ebierbing, Too-koo-li-too, and their child, 

 Tu-ker-li-ke-ta (the Butterfly), who had come down from Groton in 

 their full arctic dresses of deer and seal skin, were introduced to the 

 audience. They exhibited a variety of costumes and implements, and 

 with their young child were the objects of much interest, and were 

 called on for many replies to questions interpreted to them by Hall. 

 Valuable donations of relics were sent to the Smithsonian Institution. 

 A part of the geological collections was presented to the New York 

 Lyceum of Natural History, and was the subject of brief reports to 

 the lyceum by Mr. Iv. P Stevens and Mr. Thomas Egleston. [An 

 account of this, and a discussion of another part of his collections, 

 afterward presented to Amherst College by J. J. Copp, Esq., of Groton, 

 Conn., will be found in Appendix III, illustrated by drawings of some 

 of the fossils. This discussion, by Prof B. K. Emerson, of Amherst 

 College, is indorsed by Prof C A. White, of the United States Geolog- 

 ical Survey of the Territories, as a desirable addition to our knowledge 

 of the mineralogical and geological character of the Arctic Regions.] 



A number of other relics were exhibited at the residence of Mr. 

 lleiuy Grinnell for some time before their transmission to England. At 

 the close of the year they were presented to the English people, through 

 the Royal Geographical Society, London, whose acknowledgment of 

 their receipt names: 3 cases and 1 cask of relics; and I piece of iron 

 weighing 20 pounds. Hall sent with them a carefully prepared out- 

 line sketch of Frobisher's Bay, and three diagram maps, one being that 

 ot the (Jduiitess of Warwicke Sound of Frobisher. In connection 



