298 



SCIENCE 



[N. S. Vol. XXXIX. No. 999 



"Eesults of an Archeological Survey of the 

 State of New Jersey," by Leslie Spier. 



' ' The So-called Eed Paint People Cemeteries of 

 Maine," by Warren K. Moorehead. 



"Stone Implements of Surgery (?) from San 

 Miguel Island, California," by H. Newell 

 Wardle. 



"Etruscan Influence in West Africa and 

 Borneo," by Earnest Albert Hooton. (By title.) 



"Brief Account of Recent Anthropological Ex- 

 plorations under the Auspices of the Smithsonian 

 Institution and Panama-California Exposition, ' ' 

 by Ales HrdUcka. 



' ' Results of Excavations at Machu Picchu, ' ' by 

 Hiram Bingham. 



' ' The Human Monster-figure on the Nazca Pot- 

 tery," by Edward K. Putnam. 



"Note on the Archeology of Chiriqui," by 

 George Grant MacOurdy. 



"The Maya Zodiac at Acaneeh," by Stansbury 



"Chinese Antiquities in the Field Museum," by 

 Berthold Laufer. 



' ' Some Aspects of North American Archeology, ' ' 

 presidential address, by Roland B. Dixon, followed 

 by a symposium: "The Relation of Archeology to 

 Ethnology," by Franz Boas, W. H. Holmes, 

 Berthold Laufer, George Grant MacCuxdy. 



"The Horse and the Plains Culture," by Clark 

 Wissler. 



(o) "Wayside Shrines in Northwestern Cali- 

 fornia"; (fc) "Is there Evidence, other than 

 Linguistic, of Relationship between the Northern 

 and Southern Athapascans?" by P. E. Goddard. 



"Phratries, Clans, Moieties," by Robert H. 

 Lowie. 



"The Social, Political and Religious Organiza- 

 tion of the Tewa," by H. J. Spinden. 



"Tewa Kinship Terms from the Village of 

 Hano, Arizona," by Barbara Freire-Marreco. 

 (By title.) 



"The Cultural Position of the Plains Ojibway," 

 by Alanson Skinner. 



' ' Results of Some Recent Investigations Regard- 

 ing the Southeastern Tribes of the United States, ' ' 

 by John R. Swanton. 



(ffl) "Notes on Alonquian Grammar"; (6) 

 "Notes on the Social Organization of the Fox In- 

 dians," by Truman Michelson. 



"My Experiences in the South Seas," by A. B. 

 Lewis. (By title.) 



' ' Field Work Among the Pagan Tribes of the 

 Philippines," by Fay Cooper Cole. 



"The Sac-sac or Human Sacrifice of the Ba- 

 gobo?" by Elizabeth H. Metcalf. 



' ' The Boomerang in Ancient Babylonia, ' ' by 

 James B. Nies. 



(o) "The Huron and Wyandot Cosmogonic 

 Deities and the Iroquoian Sky Gods"; (6) "The 

 Wyandot Ukis, " by C. M. Barbeau. 



' ' The Clan and the Maternal Family of the Iro- 

 quois League," by A. A. Goldenweiser. 



"Daily Life of the Southern Pai-Utes Forty 

 Years Ago, ' ' by Frederick S. Dellenbaugh. 



"The Physical Type of the Burusheki of the 

 Northern Himalaya," by Roland B. Dixon. 



' ' The Eruption and Decay of the Permanent 

 Teeth," by Robert B. Bean. (By title.) 



"A Piebald Family of White Americans," by 

 Albert Ernest Jenks. 



' ' Condition Favoring the Development of To- 

 temie Organization, ' ' by Franz Boas. 



' ' Outline of the Morphology and Phonetics of 

 the Keresan Dialect," by J. P. Harrington. (By 

 title.) 



"The Relation of Winnebago to Plains Cul- 

 ture," by Paul Radin. (By title.) 



"Types of American Folk Songs," presidential 

 address, by John A. Lomax. 



' ' A Folk Dance from the Charente, France, ' ' by 

 Charles Peabody. 



"The Crow Sun Dance," by Robert H. Lowie. 



"Notes on the Folk -Lore and Mythology of the 

 Pox Indians," by Truman Michelson. 



"Iroquois Totemic Complex," by A. A. Golden- 

 weiser. 



"Home Songs of the Tewa Indians," by H. J. 

 Spinden. 



"The Ballad in South Carolina," by Reed 

 Smith. 



"Negro Lore in South Carolina: (o) Tales, Say- 

 ings and Superstitions; (6) Songs, A Plantation 

 Dance befo' de War," by Henry C. Davis. 



' ' The Bridge of Sunbeams, ' ' by Phillips Barry. 



' ' The Japanese New Year, ' ' by Mock Joya. 

 (a) ' ' Siuslauan, a Newly Discovered Linguistic 

 Family"; (&) "An Ethnological Sketch of the 

 Wailatpuan Tribes of Northeastern Oregon," by 

 Leo J. Fractenberg. (Both by title.) 



"Some Aspects of the Folk-lore of the Central 

 Algonkin, ' ' by Alanson Skinner. 



"An Introduction to the Study of Indian Re- 

 ligion," by Paul Radin. (By title.) 



GeokCtE Grant MacCurdy, 



Secretary 



