26 ILLUSTRATIONS 



Page 

 18. a, Indian children, mission school at Anvik, lower middle Yukon. 



6, Indian children, mission school at Anvik, lower middle Yukon. 



c, Two women of Anvik, on the Yukon, somewhat Eskimoid 150 



10. Terminal piece of a lance or harpoon, northern Bering Sea. Black, 



high natural polish. Most beautiful piece of the fossil ivory art. 



(A. H., 1926, U.S.N.M.) 174 



20. Fossil ivory specimens showing the old curvilinear designs. Northern 



BeringSea. (A. H. coll., 1926, U.S.N.M.) 174 



21. Objects showing the old fossil ivory art, northern Bering Sea. 



(U.S.N.M., Nos. 1 and 3 coll., A. H.,' 1926.) 174 



22. Fossil ivory needle cases and spear heads, northern Bering Sea, show- 



ing fine workmanship. (A. H. coll., 1926, U.S.N.M.) 174 



23. a, Small, finely made objects in fossil ivory and stone (the head), 



from the ruins at Point Hope. (A. H. coll., 1926.) 6, Old fossil 

 ivory objects, northern Bering Sea. The article to the right is 

 almost classic in form; it is decorated on both sides. (A. H. coll., 

 1926, U.S.N.M.) 174 



24. Fossil ivory combs, upper Bering Sea. (A. H. coll., 1926) 174 



25. Fossil ivory objects from the upper Bering Sea region. Transitional 



art. (Museum of the Agricultural College, Fairbanks, Alaska.) 174 



26. Old black finely carved fossil ivory figure, from the northeastern 



Asiatic coast. (Loan to U.S.N.M. by Mr. Carl Lomen.) 174 



27. Wooden figurines from a medicine lodge, Choco Indians, Panama. 



(U.S.N.M. colls.) 174 



28. Left: Two beautiful knives lately made of fossil mammoth ivory 



by a Seward Peninsula Eskimo. (Gift to the U.S.N.M. by A. H., 

 1926.) Right: Two old ceremonial Mexican obsidian knives. 

 Manche de poignard en ivoire, avec sculpture representant un 

 renne. Montastruc (Peccadeau de l'lsle; in De Quatrefages (A.) — 

 Homines fossiles, Paris, 1884, p. 50.) 174 



29. Billings and Gall's map of Bering Strait and neighboring lands, 1811 __ 178 



30. Eskimo villages and sites, Norton Sound and Bay and Seward Penin- 



sula, and the Kotzebue Sound, from Zagoskin's general map, 1847. 178 



31. Graves at Nash Harbor, Nunivak Island. (Photos by Collins and 



Stewart, 1927.) 214 



32. The school children at Wales 214 



33. a, Children, Nunivak Island. (Photo by Collins and Stewart, 1927.) 



b, Adults, Nunivak Island. (Photo by Collins and Stewart, 1927.) _ 214 



34. King Island Eskimo; a family group 214 



35. King Island native 214 



36. A fine full-blood Eskimo pair, northern Bering Sea region, a, Young 



Eskimo woman, northern Bering Sea region. (Photo by Lomen 

 Bros.) 6, Eskimo, northern Bering Sea region. (Photo by F. H. 

 Nowell.) 214 



37. Typical full-blood Eskimo, northern Bering Sea region. (Photo by 



Lomen Bros.) 214 



38. Elderly man, St. Lawrence Island. (Photos by R. D. Moore, 1912. 



U. S. N. M.) 214 



39. The Wales people. (Photo by Lomen Bros.) 242 



40. The long broad-faced types, Wales. (Photo by Lomen Bros.) 242 



41. a, The broad-faced and low- vaulted Eskimo, St. Lawrence Island. 



(Photo by R. D. Moore, 1912. U. S. N. M.). b, Broad-faced 

 type, St. Lawrence Island. (Photo by R. D. Moore, 1912. U. S. 

 N. M.) 1 242 



