LIST OF PUBLICATIONS 19 
VoLUME IT, 1890 [1891]: 
The Klamath Indians of southwestern Oregon, by Albert Samuel Gatschet. 
Two parts, evil, 711 p., map; iii, 711. p. 
VoLuME III, 1877: 
Tribes of California, by Stephen Powers. 635 p., frontispiece, 44 fig. (incl. 
42 pl.), 3 p. music, pocket map. 
Appendix. Linguistics, edited by J. W. Powell. P. 439-613. 
VOLUME IV, 1881: 
Houses and house-life of the American aborigines, by Lewis H. Morgan, 
xiv, 281 p., frontispiece, 57 fig. (incl. 28 pl.). 
VOLUME V, 1882: 
Observations on cup-shaped and other lapidarian sculptures in the Old 
World and in America, by Charles Rau. 1881. 112 p., 6Y fig. (form- 
ing 25 pls.). 
On prehistoric trephining and cranial amelets, by Robert Fletcher, M. R. 
C. S. Eng., act. asst. surgeon U. S. Army. 1882. 32 p., 9 pl., 2 fig. 
A study of the manuscript Troano, by Cyrus Thomas, Ph. D., with an intro- 
duction by D. G. Brinton, M. D. 1882. xxxvii, 287 p., 9 pl., 101 fig., 
25 small unnumbered cuts. 
Votume VI, 1890 [1892]: 
The Gegiha language, by James Owen Dorsey. xviii, 794 p. 
VotuME VII, 1890 [1892]: 
A Dakota-English dictionary, by Stephen Return Riggs, edited by James 
Owen Dorsey. x, 665 p. 
VotuME VIII: Not published. 
VoLuME IX, 1898 [1894]: 
Dakota grammar texts, and ethnography, by Stephen Return Riggs, edited 
by James Owen Dorsey. xxxii, 239 p. 
INTRODUCTIONS 
(All of the volumes of this series are out of print) 
(1). Introduction to the study of Indian languages, with words, 
phrases, and sentences to be collected. By J. W. Powell. [Seal of 
the Department of the Interior.] Washington Government Printing 
Office 1877 
4°, 104 p., 10 blank leaves. 
Second edition as follows: 
(2). Smithsonian Institution—Bureau of Ethnology J. W. Powell 
director—Introduction to the study of Indian languages with words, 
phrases and sentences to be collected—by J. W. Powell—Second edi- 
tion—with charts—Washington Government Printing Office 1880 
4°. xi, 228 p., 10 blank leaves, 4 kinship charts in pocket. A 16° 
“Alphabet ” of 2 leaves accompanies the work. 
(3). Smithsonian Institution—Bureau of Ethnology—Introduc- 
tion to the study of sign language among the North American Indians 
as illustrating the gesture speech of mankind—by Garrick Mallery, 
brevet lieut. col., U. S. Army—Washington Government Printing 
Office 1880 
4°, iv, 72 p., 838 unnumbered figs. 
