A LIST OF SOURCES 



X. ANTHROPOLOGY AND ARCH/EOLOGY 



American Anthropologist. F. W. Hodge, editor, Washington, 

 D. C. Published quarterly for the American Anthropo- 

 logical Association ($4.50 per annum). Technical (or 

 semi - technical). "A medium of communication be- 

 tween students of all branches of anthropology." Much 

 space devoted to Indian language, etc. a very good 

 journal. 



American Journal of Archceology. 

 American journal of Sociology. 



Archivo per /' antropologia e V etnologia, Florence. Three 

 numbers a year. A journal devoted to anthropology and 

 ethnology. 

 AVEBURY, LORD (Sir John Lubbock). 



The Origin of Civilization and the Primitive Condition 

 of Man. Mental and social condition of modern savages. 

 New York, 1870. 

 BRINTON, DANIEL GARRISON, M.D. 



The Basis of Social Relation, a Stiidy in Ethnic Psychol- 

 ogy; edited by L. Farrand, New York, 1902. 

 CLODD, EDWARD. 



Myths and Dreams, London, 1885. Story of Primitive 

 Man, 3d edition, London, 1897. The Childhood of the 

 World. A simple account of man in early times. Lon- 

 don, 1893. 

 DAWKINS, W. BOYD. 



Early Man in Britain, London, 1880. Cave Hunting. 

 Researches on the evidence of caves respecting the early 

 inhabitants of Europe. London, 1874. 

 DELLENBAUGH, FREDERICK S. 



The North Americans of Yesterday, New York, 1901. 

 DENIKER, JOSEPH. 



Races of Man. An outline of anthropology and ethnol- 

 ogy. London, 1900. 

 GRIERSON, P. J. H. HAMILTON. 



The Silent Trade. A contribution to the early history 

 of human intercourse. London, 1903. 

 HAECKEL, DR. ERNST HEINRICH. 



Anthropogenie; oder Entivickelungsgeschichte des Men- 

 schen, 4th edition, 2 vols., Leipzig, 1891. 

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