ADMINISTRATIVK liEPORT XXVII 



logical Survey ; and Mr E. L. Howett has cari'ied forward i)rac- 

 tically to completion a corresponding AVf,rk in Colorado and 

 New Mexico. The several maps have l)pen completed so far 

 as the data are at hand. Accompanying the maps is a card 

 catalogiie of the various sites, giving information regarding 

 location, character of remains, and explorations previously 

 carried on. These maps and catalogues are at the disposal 

 of the departments when called for. 



In New Mexico the following sheets embrace 512 sites of 

 sufhcient interest to be catalogued: Santa Ve, Santa Clara, 

 San Pedro, Pajarito park, Bernal, Las Vegas, Chaco canyon. 

 Mount Taylor, Largo, Lamy, Wingate, Jemez, Taos, Tierra 

 Amarilla, Quemado, Acoma, Manzano, Pinos Wells, Tularosa, 

 Chloride, San Marcial, Fort Stanton, Big Hatchet, Chama, 

 El Paso, Fort Baj'ard, Las Cruces, San Juan, Albucjuerque, 

 and Tres Hermanos. In Colorado the Mesa Verde sheet alone 

 includes 54 sites. On the 21 Arizona sheets (Tusayan, Fort 

 Defiance, San Francisco mountain, Echo cliff, St Johns, Pres- 

 cott, Verde, Florence, Holbrook, Canyon de Chelly, Solo- 

 monsville, CJlobe, Phoenix, Casa Grande, Fort Apache, Dia- 

 mond creek, Chino, Marsh pass. Tombstone, and Tucson) 270 

 sites are recorded, and on the Utah sheets (Ashley, Beaver, 

 Escalante, Fish lake, Henry mountain, Kanab, Manti, Salt 

 lake, San Rafael, St George, Price river, Uinta, La Salle, 

 Abajo, and Utah) are noted 122 sites. The 1,008 archeo- 

 logical sites thus catalogued are scattered over an immense 

 teri'itoiy and come under the jiu'isdiction of the Interior, 

 Agricultiu'al, and War Departments. 



EXPOSITION WORK ' 



The exhibit of the Bureau installed in the Smithsonian 

 section of the Government building of the Louisiana Pur- 

 chase Exposition at St Louis during 1904, and descril)ed in 

 the report for that year, was dismantled at the close of the 

 exposition and a large part of it transferred to Portland, 

 Oreg., where it has been installed as a part of the Insti- 

 tution's exhibit at the Lewis and Clark Exposition. The 

 remainder of the material has been returned to Washington 

 and deposited in the National Musevmi. 



