428 Thomas Thomsen. 



Page. 



467. Fig. 174 (L.b. 661) was brought over by Ryder 1892. 



468. Fig. 175b (L.b. 671 1 ) likewise brought over by Ryder 1892. 

 471. Fig. 180b (L. 4920) was brought over by W. Thalbitzer 1906. 

 473. Fig. 181b (L.b. 660 1 ) is from С Ryder's voyage of 1892, as also 



Fig. 182f (L.c. 1293). 



476. Fig. 186 left (L. 4848) is from W. Thalbitzer's voyage 1906; cor- 

 rection should also be made in text p. 475. 



Linie 15 — 27. Olearius' statement is misunderstood. The knives 

 from Southampton Island have stone, not iron blades {vide supra 

 pp. 404—05). 



Note 6. The illustration in Graah's work is PI. VIII, not VII. 



477. Fig. 187b (L.c. 371) was not brought over by Holm, but was found 

 by Graah as far back as 1829 at Malingiset, on the East coast of 

 Greenland, Lat. 62°20' N. The scale of Fig. 187 is not 7 6 but 1 j 5 . 



Fig. 188b (L.c. 1291 1 ) was brought over by С Ryder 1892. 



478. Fig. 189 is not a hammer, but a chisel (vide supra pp. 398 — 99). 



Fig. 190 is not a drill, but a whetting iron (vide supra pp. 396 — 97). 



479. Fig. 191c (L. 1495) was collected by Johan Petersen 1897. 



480. Line 1; vide supra pp. 396 — 97 L. 2 "likewise" should be deleted,, 

 as the former of the two objects was not brough tover by Holm. 



Fig. 192b (L.c. 896) was presented in 1883 by Konferentsraad 

 Ryberg: it was procured from East Greenlanders, but is hardly 

 from Angmagsalik. Figs. 192c and d (L. 1506 1 and L. 1506 6 ) were 

 brought over by Joh. Petersen 1897. 



481. Lines 8 — 9. Finger and knee protectors are also used on the West 

 Coast. 



482. Fig. 195, the scale is incorrectly stated; should be 1 / 2 - 



489. Note 1. Peary has brought home 3 meteorites to America (cf. 

 Meddel, om Grønland vol. 32, p. 513). 



496. Figs. 205a and b (L. 4446 and 4447). Presented by Johan Peter- 

 sen 1909. c. (L.c. 1296) brought over by Ryder 1892. 205 d-g 

 and 206 a-b we have been unable to identify. If preserved in the 

 National Museum, it must be presumed that they are from West 

 Greenland: they are in any case insignificant fragments. 



497. Lines 21 ff. As the objects shown in Fig. 206 cannot be identified 

 it is impossible to say whether a. is a scraper ; this cannot be seen 

 from the illustration, b. is a fragment of one of the flakes of stone 

 which are of very frequent occurrence in West Greenland : they are 

 found in hundreds, especially in the same small size. It is not likely 

 that any important archæological results can be obtained from this. 



499. L. 25; The point shown in Fig. 2101 is of bone, not of slate. 



501. Cf. Porsild p. 246. 



502. Fig. 218a-b (L.c. 1292 2 and 1292 1 ) were brought home by Ryder 

 1892. Fig. 218 c is not a whetstone, but a whetting iron (cf. supra 

 pp. 397—98). 



