ATHAPASCAN LANGUAGES. 



23 



D. 



Daa (Ludwig Kristeusen). On thf aflin- 

 itu'H betwotMi the liinguages of the 

 iioithoru tribes of the old and new con- 

 tinents. By Lewis Kr. Daa, Esq., of 

 Christiauia, Norway. (Read December 

 the 20th.) 



In I'hilological Soc. [of London] Trans. 1R5G, 

 pp. 251-204, London [18!)7],8>. ((^onsrcss.) 



Ooinp.arativc tables sliowinj: atliuities be- 

 tween A.siatic and American languages, pj). 

 264-285, contain words from 7uany North 

 Aniirican languages, the Athapascan Ixdng as 

 follows: Athabasca, Beaver, Kutcliin, Sikanni, 

 Tahkall, Navajo, Jecorilla, Tlatskanai. Kinai, 

 Loncheux, Atnah, Ugalcui, Umkwa, Dogrib, 

 Navajo, and Apache. 



Dall (William Healey). Alaska | and ] 

 its resources. | By | William H. Dall, | 

 director of the scientific corps of the 

 late Western union | telegraph expedi- 

 tion. I [Design.] | 



Boston: | Lee and Shepard. | 1870. 



Frontispiece 1 I. title verso copyright and 

 printers 1 1. dedication verso blank 1 1. intro- 

 duction pp. v-viii, contents pp. ix-xii, half-title 

 verso blank 1 1. text pp. 3-526, appendix pp. 

 527-609, index pp. 610-627, notes etc. p. [628], 

 ni.-ips and plates, 8°. 



Comparative vocabulary of 26 words and the 

 numerals 1-10 of the Ugalentsi, Ahtena, Kenai- 

 tena, Tenan-Kutch'in, Kutcha-Kutch'in, Kai- 

 yulikhatiina (Ulukuk), Kdiyukhatana (north- 

 e.astern) and Unakhatana, pp. 550-551. — "Words 

 towards vocabularies of the Tinneh tribes," 

 constituting a comparative vocabulary of the 

 Nuliito In'galik, Ulu'kuk In'galik, TanauA 

 lu'galik, Unakhatdua, and Tendu Kutcbin, 

 pp. 566-575. 



Copies geen : Boston AtbeniBum, British Mu- 

 seum, Congress, Eames, Powell, Triuubull, 

 Watkiuson. 



A copy at the Field sale, catalogue no. -180, 

 brought $1.50. 



Some copies have the imprint, London: | 

 Sampson Low, Son, and Marston, | Crown 

 Buildings, 188, Fleet Street. | 1870. (British 

 Museum, Bureau of Ethnology.) 



On the Distribution of the Native 



Tribes of Alaska and the adjacent ter- 

 ritory. By W. H. Dall. 



In American Ass. Adv. Sci. Proc. vol. 18, pi). 

 263-273, and 2 folding sheets, Cambridge, 1870, 8°. 



Contains, on a folding sheet between pp. 272- 

 273, a vocabulary of 26 words .and the numerals 

 1-10 of the Ug.ileutsi, Ahtena, Tenan-kutchiu, 

 Kutcha-kutcliin, Unakhatana, Kaiyuhkhotaua 

 of Ululuk Kiver and Kaiyuh River, 



Dall (W. H.) — Continued. 



A<ldress by William H. Dall. Vice- 



])resident, section H, antliroi>ology, 

 The native tribes of Alaska. 



In American Ass. Adv. Sci. Proc. vol. 34, pp. 

 363-379, Salem, 1886, 8^. (Pilling.) 



General discussion of the habitat and atliu- 

 ities (tf the Tinneii or Atlial>ask.aus, p. 376. — 

 Tribal divisions of the Tinutili, pp. 378-379. 

 Issued separsitcly .is IVdlows: 



The native tribes of Ala.ska. | An | 



address | before the | section of 

 anthropology | of the | American asso- 

 ciation for the advancement of science, 

 I at I Ann Ai-bor, August, 1885. | By | 

 William H. Dall. | Vice president. | 

 (From the Proceedings of the American 

 Association for the Advancement | of 

 Science, Vol. xxxiv, Ann Arbor Meet- 

 ing, August, 1885.) I 



Printed at the Stilem press. | Salem, 

 Mass. I 1885. 



Cover title as above, title as above verso 

 blank 1 1. text pp. 3-19, 8°. 



General remarks upon the habitat and affin- 

 ities of the Tinneh or Atbabaskans, p. 16. — 

 Tribal divisions of the Tinneh, pp. 18-19. 



Copies seen : Eames, Pilling. 



William Healey Dall, naturalist, was bom in 

 Boston, Mass., Aug. 21, 1845. He was educated 

 at the Boston public schools, and then became 

 a special pupil iu natural sciences under Louis 

 Agassiz and in anatomy and nu'diciue under 

 Jeffries Wymau and Daniel Braiuard. In 1865 ho 

 was apiiointed lieutenant iu the International 

 telegraph exiiedition, and iu this capacity vis- 

 ited Alaska iu 1865-1868. From 1871 till 1880 

 he was assistant to the V. S. Coast Survey 

 and underits direction spent the years 1871 to 

 1874 and 1884 iu that district. His work, besides 

 the exploratiou and description of the geog- 

 raphy, included the anthropology, natural his- 

 tory, and g(>ology of the Alaskan and adjacent 

 regions. From the field work and collections 

 have resulted maps, memoirs, coast pilot, and 

 papers on these subjects or branches of them. 

 [Since 1884 he has been] paleontologist to the 

 tJ. S. Geological Survey, and since 1869 he has 

 been honorary curator of the department of 

 mollusks in the U. S. National Museum. In this 

 ottiee- he has made studies of recent and fossil 

 mollusks of the world, and esiieeially of North 

 America, fi'om which new information has been 

 derived concerning tlio brachiopoda, patellidae. 

 chitonidaj, and the mollusk fauna of the deep 

 sea. These studies have gi'own out of those 

 devoted to the fauna of northwestern America 

 and eastern Siberia. Mr. Dall has been liooored 



